Monday 16 December 2019

Dark Chocolate and Ginger Fudge

In cooking, my nemesis for a long time has been anything that involves caramel or boiled sugar. Having had the successes earlier this year with jams, I decided to tackle my ultimate adversary... fudge. I can't work out why this recipe has worked when loads of others have failed but it did and I'm not going to question it too much. I added ginger to this recipe but I would imagine you could swap it out for many other classic fudge flavours - rum and raisin, chocolate orange, perhaps a caramel and pecan. Now I have this recipe I will be experimenting with loads of different flavours and I have a feeling this will feature in a lot of peoples Christmas presents. Please be careful when making this, hot sugar obviously will burn and it hurts A LOT.


Ingredients:

120ml soy milk
250g dark brown sugar
56g plant based butter
100g dark chocolate
1 tsp vanilla extract
3 balls ginger in syrup

 
Method:

Line a loaf pan with baking paper and set to one side.

Chop up your chocolate into small pieces and place on a plate with the butter. Finely chop the ginger and pop on the same plate. In a large pan, mix together the sugar and milk and bring to the boil. Keep it boiling for exactly 7 minutes ( I dont know why this works but it does) stirring continuously. The mixture should thicken and darken, it will bubble quite viciously so be careful not to splash yourself with molten sugar.


Immediately take the pan off of the heat and stir in all of the other ingredients. Keep stirring until everything has melted together then pour the mixture into the prepared loaf tin. Smooth it out with a spatula to create an even layer.


Place the tin in the fridge for at least 30 minutes until set and then turn the fudge out. Chop into bite-sized pieces and enjoy.

I would recommend keeping these in the fridge once cut for the best results but they don't last very long  with people scoffing them so I wouldn't worry either way!

When you make this, please take a picture and tag me using #diaryofadefectivehousewife

Thank you.

Sunday 8 December 2019

Stollen Swirl

Christmas seems to be all to fast approaching this year with a scant 3 weeks to go. I have been trialing different traditional Christmas cakes over the last few weeks with varying degrees of success and then realised, my family don't do Christmas in the traditional sense - especially not when it comes to the food. The Stollen swirl was then born; mashing up my love for a good cinnamon swirl, my other halfs new found love of stollen (which I'm yet to find a vegan version of) and the total excess of Christmas with the finished product sizing well over the average dinner plate and stuffed with treats. You could also skip coiling the dough round to create a giant swirl and cut through the rolled dough to create a more traditional cinnamon bun look but I love seeing people's faces when presented with a slice of this. The dried fruit measurements are a rough guide - use your favourites to personalise the cake to your family. I really hope you make this giant bun and that it brings some festive cheer to your kitchen.



Ingredients:
Dough:
800g strong white flour plus extra for dusting
7g fast action yeast
1/2 tsp salt
100g caster sugar
500ml soy milk
150g plant based butter

Filling:
2 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp nutmeg
1/4 tsp clove
2 tbsp raisins
2 tbsp cranberries
2 tbsp mixed peel
1 tbsp crystalised ginger
3 tbsp glace cherries
4 tbsp cinnamon
75g plant based butter
75g caster sugar
1 block marzipan

Icing:
6 tbsp icing sugar
2 tbsp water
1 tsp orange extract

Method:

Pop the butter and milk for the dough into a jug and microwave fora  couple of minutes until warm and the butter melted. Place the other dough ingredients into the bowl of your mixer and combine before adding in the warmed milk and butter. Mix for around 10 minutes until the dough is stretchy, bouncy and has a spring to it. The dough should feel like the lobe of your ear!

While the dough is mixing, chop the cherries and crystallized ginger then add to a bowl with the other dried fruit, ginger, clove and nutmeg. Stir well to ensure all of the fruit is coated. In a separate bowl, mash together the cinnamon, butter and sugar then place to one side.

Roll out the marzipan as thin as you can, around 2mm thick then place to one side. I would recommend rolling out out between 2 sheets of greaseproof paper to stop it sticking.

Once the dough is ready, flour a large sheet of baking paper and tip out the dough onto it. Roll out the dough, adding more flour as needed, to a large rectangle around 4 mm in thickness. Gently spread on the cinnamon butter - I find using my fingers gets the best results over a knife or pastry brush. Sprinkle on the dried fruit then tear of little pieces of the marzipan and lay over the top. Leave some gaps between the marzipan so its not in every bite so as not to overwhelm the cake.


Beginning at one long side, carefully fold the dough over to create the start of the roll, pulling gently to keep the dough taught and to help it release from the baking paper. Keep rolling until you reach the other side then smooth the edge of the dough onto the roll with your fingers. Create a spiral from the dough on a well floured baking sheet and leave to rest for half an hour.


Preheat your oven to 160c fan then bake the swirl for 20-25 minutes until golden brown and slightly crisp on the outside. Allow to cool for 15 minutes once baked.

Mix together the icing sugar with the orange extract then slowly add water until the mix resembles single cream, Drizzle over the still warm swirl to help the icing melt in.


Serve warm with ice cream for desert or a drizzle of plant based cream for a christmas appropriate snack!

Please make this and take a picture, tagging me using #diaryofadefectivehousewife

Enjoy!

Sunday 1 December 2019

Friday Night Takeaway at the Alleycat

I know that if you've been around for a while (thank you if you have), you absolutely will have heard me raving about Inverness' one and only fully vegan restaurant - The Alleycat. Serving amazing food all year round, they have recently come up with a new initiative -  recreating everyone's favourite takeaways, vegan style. They recently hosted a 'fish' and chip shop night which I was gutted to miss out on so when they announced they would be recreating classic chinese takeaway dishes I grabbed my food bestie and off we went.


The absolute worst part of the entire evening was having to try to decide what to have, so we didn't and ordered just about one of everything off the menu to share between us (yes, we are VERY fond of food). The food was delivered to our table in takeaway containers and the staff even 'forgot' an item from each diners order to ensure the true takeaway experience.

We shared a portion of spring rolls which were perfectly stuffed and oh so deliciously crispy that my mouth is watering again just thinking about them. Alongside those we had a noodle, beansprout and mushroom dish which had an excellent balance between the noodles and beansprouts and somehow also had them evenly distributed which I struggle with when cooking.


I ordered the vegetables in blackbean sauce as soon as I spotted it on the menu, I LOVED the Alleycat's tempura veg with black bean dipping sauce when they were 'just' a pop-up restaurant and knew that this would be a massive hit. The dish was a mix of green and red peppers, mushrooms and baby corn in a beautifully balanced sauce. I have to admit, I normally hate green peppers and my heart sank a little when I opened the dish but I would happily eat them in this sauce every day of the week. My order came with a portion of wonderfully crispy little fries, ideal for mopping up any sauce left over.


My friend ordered the sweet and sour 'chicken' which I nabbed a few pieces of. I don't remember, having been veggie for 20 years, what chicken tasted like but I can vouch for this being delicious. My friend is an Omni and happily tucked into her portion leaving not a trace on the plate. This came with a lovely and fluffy fried rice which was the perfect accompaniment to the sauce.


The drinks menu at the Alleycat has a brilliant selection of soft drinks, most of which are now made in house. We had a smokey cherry sparkling juice as well as a mango and orange one both of which were a treat for the taste buds.

The Alleycat is a stockist of the wonderful mallownuts and teafakes from Prissy Queen of Deserts so we finished off the meal with a chocolatey treat, or two.


We did order a lot of food but it was all so delicious that our plates were scraped clean and our waistbands were fortunately elasticated!

Rumour has it that the Alleycat are planning a pizza night and I would thoroughly recommend cancelling all plans to be there. I know I will.

Apologies for the lack of photos, I was far too busy stuffing my face!

If you haven't heard of The Alleycat before check out these posts...

http://whatsaffydid.blogspot.com/2019/02/the-alleycat.html

http://whatsaffydid.blogspot.com/2019/08/sunday-market-and-afternoon-tea.html

http://whatsaffydid.blogspot.com/2018/08/jvnk-pop-up-by-friends-not-food.html