Archive for the 'Baking' Category

Oraynu Passover Recipes

Sunday was the most fun (and chaos) that I have had in a long time. I worked with the wonderful children of the Oraynu children’s school. From JK to grade 7 we made some special passover foods. Specifically we made the Nut Free Charoseth for the Oraynu congregation’s passover seder.

Here are the cast of characters

and the recipe:

Nut Free Charoseth for the Oraynu Congregation  - Serves 1 seder

Ingredients
225    gram    Raisins
100    grams    Figs
200    gram    Dates
50    gram    Apricots
2        Apples
2        Orange — zest and juiced
1/4    cup    Honey
1/4    tsp    Cloves, Ground
1    tsp    Cinnamon, Ground
1/2    tsp    Ginger, Ground
160    ml    Wine, Dessert, Sweet
Instructions
Chop figs, dates and apricots into small pieces. Use knife or scissors. Peel and core apples. Chop into small pieces. Using microplane zester or grater remove zest from oranges.
Cut oranges in half and juice.
Put all dried fruits into saucepan, add chopped apple, orange zest and orange juice, spices and wine. Bring to boil, then turn to low heat and simmer for 1 to 1 1/2 hours until everything coheres into a sticky mass. If your mixture seems too chunky you can put in into a food processor or use an immersion blender to make it finer.

Sorry that my recipe is bilingual (metric/imperial), it’s much easier to weigh figs than to figure out what 1/2 a cup is. The proportions aren’t really important you just need about 2 cups of dried fruit.

Here it is simmering away.

This is the recipe that you’re waiting for. I called it Chocolate Matzo Buttercrunch. It really went over well with everyone who tried it. It’s sweet, crunch, buttery, chocolatey and addictive.

Chocolate Matzo Buttercrunch - Serves 12
Recipe By: Michelle Wolfson

Ingredients
4 1/2    sheet    Matzo
1    cup    butter
1    cup    brown sugar
12    ounces    chocolate chips

Instructions
Line a cookie sheet with aluminim foil or parchment. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Fill cookie sheet with matzo, you may have to break a few. In a medium size saucepan over medium heat melt butter and brown sugar, increase heat and bring to a boil. Boil for exactly 3 minutes stirring constantly. Spread butter/sugar mixture evenly over matzo. Bake pan for exactly 5 minutes.
Take out and let cool for a  minute or so and then sprinkle the chips over the top. Wait 5 minutes or so until the heat of the matzo mixture melts the chocolate chips. Spread out choclate evenly. Put in refrigerator to harden.
Break up into pieces.

Recipe Notes

Notes:    This is one of my favourite Urban Legend recipes. Using only 4 ingredients you create an irrestitable treat that is quick to make.
Little ones can help out lining up the matzo at the beginning but some of the later steps are too close to the heat for preschoolers.
You don’t need any cooking skills to produce excellent results but you do need to pay attention and follow the timing as given.
This should yield at least 40 pieces but I have known it to disappear in about 5 minutes.

First we lay out the matzo

 Then we bring the butter and brown sugar to a boil

 Once it comes to a full boil we start timing and let it boil for 3 minutes.It will look something like this.

Pour the mixture out over the matza, use a spatula to spread it out and then pop it in a 400 degree oven and let it bake for 5 minutes.

 After baking the sugar will be more even and it will look something like this

We use the heat of the baked buttercrunch to melt the chocolate chips. Wait a minute or so for the buttercrunch to set up after you remove it from the oven. Distribute 10 to 12 oz of chocolate chips over the surface and then wait 5 minutes.

Use a spatula to spread out the chocolate and then put it in the fridge to harden.

I hope that you enjoyed making the buttercrunch. Write to me and tell me how it went.

Our day also included Matzo Ball Soup. I didn’t include the recipe earlier but I’ve had a request for our recipe (thanks Omri) so here it is:

Streit’s Matzo Ball Recipe - Serves 12

Ingredients
1    cup    Matzo meal
4    large    Egg — beaten
1/4    cup    Oil
1/4    cup    Soda water
1    tsp    Salt
1.5    litres    Stock, Chicken

Instructions
In a bowl beat eggs, add soda water, oil and salt.  Mix well.
Add matzo meal and stir thoroughly to combine. Leave to rest for 30 minutes.

Bring chicken broth to a boil, reduce to simmer. Using a small scooper, scoop matzo balls into soup and let simmer for 15 minutes. If you don’t have a scooper just use a small spoon and drop little balls into the broth.

If you don’t have any home made chicken stock President’s Choice Organic Chicken broth makes a good substitute.

The secret to good matzo ball soup is Love, throw a little into every matzo ball.

 

Gingerbread House Day 2009!

Our annual gingerbread building day was absolutely wonderful! Early in the morning I whipped up the royal icing

and then I assembled the houses.

putting the chimneys on last

The troups showed up with their bags and bags of candy and started to work.

Here they are about half way through.

And here are the finished homes.

I love this yearly tradition. This year we wrapped up with home made pizza courtesy of the DH

Christmas Cookies

Nothing says Christmas like whipped shortbread.

but sometimes when you need a good cookie for your tea an almond and craberry biscotti, dipped in chocolate, can be just the right thing.

Gingerbread Houses

are very important to me. Perhaps the most important thing is that every kid who ever made one will tell you about it. The memory of making gingerbread houses totally justifies the  huge amount of time that you need to devote. Baking your own gingerbread leaves that spectacular aroma in your house for days.

I try my best not to orchestrate the appearance of the house. I should probably make my own next time

each house is unique and they are getting more and more elaborate as the kids’ fine motor skills become more developed. They last just til someone starts breaking pieces off of the roof and then that’s it they’re gone.

Carb Conscious Baking

Oh my little blog how I have missed you. The month of April was brutally busy and the blog was the first thing to be neglected. April saw a wide variety of cooking and events and I’ll try and catch up over the next couple of days. One of the things that I haven’t done in a long time is a lower carb baking day. One of my clients’ suggested that I do some G.I. (glycemic index) diet baking. We did and some of the recipes were great and others well just didn’t pan out. I will be tinkering with them over the next couple of weeks to get them just right. I will not be controlled by a recipe failure….I will persevere….I will succeed.

Our first stuff out of the pan were these Oatmeal pancakes. Yum!

Next out of the oven were these Chocolate Zucchini muffins. These were also successful!

Next up is a photo of the batter for some Cranberry Nut muffins. The batter looked oh so delicious but the final results were not as nice.

These blueberry scones tasted OK hot out of the oven but didn’t freeze well.

I’m not sharing photos of the more unsuccessful of the bunch, I mean why torture you and me! I’ll be going back to the ‘lab’ to fix the recipes and hopefully I’ll have some successes to report to you.

In the meantime I have a little housekeeping issue. I had to ‘force’ my readers to register in order to comment. I was getting over 100 spam comments every day on the site. I’m sorry to make you jump through this hoop but I was spending more time filtering than working on the site. If any of you have suggestions please let me know.

There is always cooking going on…

but there aren’t always photos.

The trade show job necessitated some baking. Banana bread, oatmeal cookies, chocolate cookies, banana/raisin/chocolate chips squares, cornmeal & cheddar mini muffins and my favourite carrot cake.

I love baking, the smell says “I love someone”. I didn’t taste anything, of course ’cause of my low carb diet.

Funny isn’t it, as a chef I taste and season just about everything that I make but when I bake I can’t. Imagine getting a cake with a wedge missing and the little note “tasted the cake, it’s fine”. Baking is where you really have to trust your recipes. I have some favourite authors but my most favourite baking book is an obscure one called Secrets of a Jewish Baker. This book is foolproof, wether you are baking their bread recipes or muffins or loaves, it’s just wonderful. It doesn’t have pies & cakes but I have other cookbooks for that .

We are cooking vegetarian this week as well as a host of other little projects. See you tomorrow.

Have you ever heard of chocolate drizzled florentines?

Well we made some this week. I just love them, they are so…….caramel and nuts and shortbread and chocolate. O.K. I love them to death. Would you like to watch us make them?

We started off by making the shortbread base, we made ours realllly big, 15×21 actually.

Then we dissolved the sugar, corn syrup and brown sugar and brought it boil and cooked it until it reached 350. (you need a candy thermometer for this).

I added the butter

brought the sugar mixture back to a boil and cooked it til it reached 250 F.

then I added a ton of sliced almonds and poured the sticky mess onto the shortbread base and baked it in the oven for about 18 minuts. I’d show you pictures of the sticky mess but there were only 2 of us in the kitchen and all of our hands were holding hot things.

Once the florentines had cooled we dumped them upside down, scored the back first with a bread knife and then cut through the whole cookie/nut caramel with a chef’s knife. The cutting part is the easy party. The we tempered some semi sweet chocolate and drizzled the babies.

Phew they’re in the package and they are done!

These cookies and all of our holiday sweets are truly one of a kind creations. Our cookies are made from scratch with all natural ingredients and they are all baked by hand. They make an excellent gift….if you don’t eat them yourself first. We’re all sold out this year but if the thought of sending the best cookies EVER appeals to you please let us know by about August so that we can schedule you it too!

Cookie Heaven!

I baked and baked today. Whipped shortbread and chocolate drizzled hazelnut spritz. Can you get fat from cookie aroma? If so, I’ve gained at least 10 lbs.

The cookies are for a variety of catering events this December. We are going to make Florentine cookies this week! They are fairly difficult to make but oh so rewarding. Check back in a couple of days,  in the meanwhile here are some cookie photos: Cookie exchange anyone?

 

Gingerbread Heaven!

This Friday was supposed to be my day off after my email was caught up and my client menus were sent out. I was supposed to have a glorious afternoon shopping at the One of a Kind Show but somehow life gets in the way and by the time that I had my ‘work’ done I only had 2 hours til I had to pick up my son from school so……I baked off some gingerbread. It’s snowy here in Toronto and I wanted the house to have a holiday feel to it so what better way then to make gingerbread cookies.
I baked cookie ornaments.

I will decorate these and then package them up for sale to make your tree beautiful and edible at the same time.
I use the Wilton Gingerbread recipe. I truly have been using it for about 20 years. It is reliable, extremely tasty and very sturdy. It’s the perfect dough for gingerbread houses which I will make a little later on in the month. I make the dough in my 5 quart mixer. The dough is pliable and easy to work with while it’s still warm but as it sits it becomes tougher so don’t be tempted to make this dough in advance (I learned the hard way with a full 23 litre pail of g/bread dough).

Keep tuned to watch the decorating in progress. If you looking for a good client gift a dozen of these gingerbread cookie ornaments sells for $15.

See you next time.

Witch’s Fingers

Carpool day for me, so I get to spend an hour with my favourite carpool girls and we made witch’s fingers. Myself and Zoe rolled them out and added knuckles, Georgia used a paring knife to score the knuckles and Isabelle put the almonds fingernails on.

We baked them and voila, we are ready for Halloween.

witch fingers