Archive | March, 2012

Easy individual warm chocolate pavlovas

31 Mar

At the the risk of alienating myself from, well, everyone, I am not a fan of pavlova. I find it too sweet and it is my least fav dessert. Sadly for me but luckily for the rest of the country, it is a staple at barbecues and parties everywhere. I’ve been known to make pavs when we’re having a do and it is always pounced upon before every other sweet.

This choc version of the aforementioned sweet is designed to be served warm with a chocolate custard sauce. I made the sauce but it didn’t make it into the photo as it is, well, super ugly. It serves 4. The recipe comes from my bible, The Australian Women’s Weekly ‘Bake’, a behemoth of a book that never lets me down. And thanks to photographer Anna Warr [www.facebook.com/AnnaWarrPhotography] for these lovely photos. Aren’t they great?

ImageGATHER:

2 egg whites at room temperature

1 1/3 cups icing sugar [sifted]

1/3 cup boiling water

1 tablespoon cocoa powder [sifted]

LET’S DO IT:

Preheat oven to 180C and line a large oven tray with baking powder.

Beat egg whites, icing sugar and water in bowl of electric mixer for about 10 minutes or until firm peaks form. Fold in cocoa.

Drop four equal amounts of mix onto tray leaving considerable space between each.

Bake 25-ish minutes or until firm to the touch. Serve immediately with ice cream and dusted with extra cocoa.

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When good holidays go bad or why I’m off food

28 Mar

The Hungry Mum is, for the first time in a very long time, not hungry. A nasty bout of gastro has put paid to the idea of food, cooking or even – gasp – baking. So far Miss 4 and 6 have been spared the bug but this thing is so contagious that I’m on constant gastro alert. Nothing more substational than dry crackers has passed my lips in four days and for me to not even by thinking about food is honestly a first.

To make matters worse the gastro hit while I was in Brisbane, catching up with a girlfriend. Child-less, husband-less, footloose and fancy free. This reunion was 7 years in the making and highly anticipated by both of us. Holed up in a swanky hotel when you are hit by a ‘both ends’ bug in the middle of the night while your friend is also struck down by said bug is unfun. We saw each other at our very worst and couldn’t do much about it. In a hotel room with a shared bathroom there is nowhere to hide. In years to come we will laugh about this. So I’m told…

I was meant to be on an early morning flight home the next day but there was *no* way that was going to happen. Cue 6am incoherent phone calls to the front desk to extend my stay [and send more toilet paper, please] and to the airline to re-arrange my flight. All the while running to the loo. Calling The Hungry Dad and then doing the frantic school drop off/pick up shuffle with mother-in-law and lift home from Sydney airport request to my mum. My lovely friend, despite being sick herself, insisted on caring for me and driving back and forth to the hotel to drop off water, crackers and Gatorade. Bless. 

Hopefully I’ll get my food mojo back soon. In the meantime I’m down to my goal weight, an event that caused the Hungry Dad to remark that I should market my getaway/weight loss regime to mums everywhere. Any takers?

Fast golden caramel bundt cake

27 Mar

This blog should rightly be called The Hungry Mum Who Bakes Quick & Easy Cakes. Yes I’m hungry and yes, I’m impatient, dammit! I want cake and I want it now. Often the baking urge arrives right in the middle of cactus hour or trying to put the kids to bed so I need a no-fuss recipe that can be bunged into the oven.

This caramel cake recipe, courtesy of the kitchen goddess at the Australian Women’s Weekly & their book ‘Quick Mix Cakes’, is so quick and simple. Baking it in a bundt tin & dusting with copious amounts  of icing sugar makes it look fancy with all the faffing around of icing.

These beautiful photos were taken by Anna Warr [annawarr.com], a photographer who has an eye for detail & patience by the kilo…

GATHER:

185g softened butter, cubed

1/2 soft brown sugar

2 eggs

1 1/2 cups self-raising flour

1/2 cup plain flour

1/2 cup golden syrup

3/4 cup milk

LET’S DO IT:

Grease a Bundt tin, ensuring you get into all the crevices.

Preheat oven to 170C.

Place all ingredients into a bowl of electric mixer and mix on low speed until everything is combined.

Increase speed to medium and beat until there are no lumps and the colour has changed.

Dollop mixture into pan and using a spatula, gently smoosh batter up the sides so it reaches into all the crevices of your pan.

Bake 40-ish mins/until a skewer comes out clean. You may need to cook a little longer depending on your oven.

Cool in pan 10 minutes before turning onto wire rack to cool.

When cold dust with icing sugar.

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Breakfast in Brisbane

24 Mar

A child-free weekend in Brisbane to catch up with a girlfriend required an early morning flight. Actually, considering that it was pitch black when I left home, it seems more accurate to call it a pre-crack of dawn flight. After arriving at such an ungodly hour the first thing to do was seek out breakfast, which was at a teeny cafe called Nest. Sourdough toast + avocado + strong coffee = bliss. Viva BrisVegas.

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Easy peasy egg-free coconut and lime mini loaves [perfect for kids to cook]

17 Mar

This recipe is, as Miss 4 would say, easy peasy lemon squeezy. The original recipe, which I’ve tweaked, is from my primary school’s fundraising cookbook, along with taste sensations such as fish finger kebabs and prunes & bacon [subtitled, and I kid you not, ‘a delicious combination] from *many* moons ago. Fear not, this cake is super yum and so super easy that kids can make it without much help. The original makes a very small loaf but I decided to use my mini pan this time & the results were great. It made 4 mini loaves which is ideal if you don’t want to be a guts and eat all the cake  are just having one friend over for a cuppa.

This is such a versatile recipe: it can de doubled and if you don’t like lime use orange or lemon zest. Or omit the zest and just add mixed spice or vanilla.

And what about these amazing photos by Anna Warr? Don’t they make you want to lick the screen? Or is that just me? Check out more of her amazing work at annawarr.com.

GATHER:

1 cup self-raising flour

1 cup coconut [dessicated]

1/4 cup caster sugar

slightly more than 1/2 cup milk

zest from 2 small or one large lime

LET’S DO IT:

Preheat oven to 170C and grease 4 holes from a mini loaf tin.

Place everything in bowl and stir until combined. It will be a stiff batter.

Pour into 4 holes, bake 20-25ish minutes/until a skewer inserted comes out clean. Allow to cool five minutes before removing to a wire rack.

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Finally, some decent food photos for my blog!

15 Mar

I am blessed to count many professional photographs as friends and this week, one such person came to my rescue. As Anna Warr [thefestivalphotographer.com / annawarr.com] looked at my blog a little while back she tactfully asked me if she could perhaps take some photos of my baking. Not that there was anything wrong with my hastily snapped iPhone photos, of course…

And so it was that the delightful & talented Anna spent a recent Monday at The Hungry Mum house, styling, tweaking, lighting and shooting a whole heap of baked stuff. That girl has the patience of a saint and made my baked goods look super duper.

I’ll upload some new recipes and Anna’s wonderful pix soon. In the meantime check out her fab music pix at http://www.annawarr.com.au/galleries/music/ 

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Quick & easy baked custard

9 Mar

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The Hungry Mum household is a little bit addicted to custard. The Hungry Dad believes it should be included in the food pyramid and Misses 4 and 6 insist upon it at dessert time.
This baked custard is so speedy and healthy. It can be prepared in an ad break and is perfect for those times when you have a glut of milk about to go off. Simply beat together two large eggs or three small eggs with a tablespoon of sugar, a big dollop of golden syrup and two cups of milk. Whisk until all combined then pour into 4 oven-proof tea cups or ramekins. Place into a large, deep metal tray and add enough boiling water to come halfway up the side of the ramekins. Sprinkle nutmeg over the top and carefully place in a 160C oven for 30 mins. Remove, cool on bench for 10 mins then place in fridge for a few hours. Serve cold.

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Bundeena on a sunny day

4 Mar

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The sky was blue, we had a free Sunday, there was a market on – time for a drive to Bundeena. The markets were small but perfectly formed and with a view like this, what’s not to love?

After exploring the markets we descended upon Manna Cafe for lunch. My halomui burger was a behemoth and I protested that I could never finish such a meal but guess what? I did.

Bundeena is such a lovely little village and a few hours there felt like a mini-holiday. Ahhhh, the serenity…

Two quick and easy soup lunches

3 Mar

I *adore* soup. Even in summer I’m happy to eat soup for lunch and dinner and happily Misses 4 and 6 have inherited my love for a bowl of soup. As such soup features frequently in the Hungry Mum household.

Now that autumn is here and the skies are dark I have a real, legitimate excuse to partake in the medicinal beauty that is soup.

I make a super speedy Asian inspired soup for THE quickest meal ever but I must say, I have yet to get the girls to grow to love this.

Start by gently frying some minced garlic and ginger in a saucepan and add a splash of fish sauce and lime juice. Add some boiling water and when it returns to the boil add some dry noodles [such as soba]. Add sliced Chinese greens and sliced tofu and a generous splash of soy sauce. When noodles are ready ladle into a bowl and garnish with copious amounts of corriander. If you have some kaffir lime leaves floating around you can add one to the pot during cooking and finely slice another for garnish. Remove the one used for cooking prior to serving. Sluuuuurp.

My other fast soup recipe is another Asian-sinpred one, based on the Chinese restaurant classic of corn and crab meat. If you are Chinese please look away now lest you are mortified by this Anglo-ification of a centuries old recipe…ImageIn a pan gently fry minced garlic and ginger until beginning to colour. Add some vegie stock and half a can of creamed corn and a tin of drained crab meat. Stir, then increase heat. Add one beaten egg and a good splosh of sherry. Throw in some sliced spring onions and you are done.

Both quick, cheap and delicious.

Are you a soup fan?

Child’s play: super simple sprinkle biscuits even a 4-year-old can make

1 Mar

When it rains, it pours and when there is a bored four year old in the house, look out. So it was that Miss 4 and I were up to our elbows in sprinkles during the non-stop rain today to create a batch of probably the easiest bickies in the world. I used to make this recipe as a kid and it gets wheeled out when the children want to bake and I can’t be bothered being challenged. Aside from using the oven [and perhaps the Kitchen Aid] these little lovelies can be made by the junior chef in your home. As you can see from the pix, Miss 4 loves getting hands on in her baking.

They can be decorated with 100s & 1000s, nuts, choc bits… whatever floats your boat.

GATHER:

140g softened butter
3/4 cup caster sugar
1 egg
1  1/2 cups SR flour
splash of good vanilla
decorations of choice [I *always* use 100s & 1000s and for this batch I also used peanut butter chips – swoon]
LET’S DO IT:
Preheat oven to 160C, line 2 trays with baking paper.
Using KitchenAid or electric beaters mix everything except your decoration items until all combined [this won’t take long].
Roll into small balls [about the size of a 20 cent piece] and place on tray and using a fork dipped in flour gently press until flat. These biscuits spread a fair bit so ensure there is plenty of space between each one.
Add decorations, then cook for 12-ish minutes/until golden. Allow to cool for  a few minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool. Eat.
Told you they were super simple.

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