Showing posts with label ginger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ginger. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Rose's Alpha Bakers: Gingersnaps

I skipped last week's Alpha Bakers recipe, Golden Orange Panettone with Chocolate Sauce, because I'm not a fan of Panettone (no candied fruit for me, please!)...however, everyone's loaves look so beautiful and delicious that I may try it another time with orange zest and raisins. Or, I may just go all in and make my own candied orange peel, as did several of the Alpha Bakers.

Moving on to this week of the bake-through adventure with the Rose's Alpha Bakers were the quick and easy Gingersnaps, from Rose Levy Beranbaum's The Baking Bible. These cookies were delicious and my British husband declared them very authentic!


lovely crackled gingersnaps

a close-up view

As promised by Rose, the cookies were chewy, not hard and crunchy as some gingersnaps are, and the cookies baked-up with a gorgeous crackly top. Add a cuppa or glass of cold milk and they were the perfect snack.

The only thing missing from the recipe (IMO) was actual, fresh ginger, so I added some! I absolutely love ginger so would have been happy with more, but having never made the recipe before I didn't want to push it. I added about 1 teaspoon. Bakers tip: use a spoon to peel ginger...saves you from worrying about cutting yourself with the knife and you don't lose any of the ginger flesh.

Overall, it was a very simple recipe. Mix up the dry ingredients, melt the Lyle's Golden Syrup and butter, add that to the dry ingredients and stir, then add the eggs and...you're done! Shape into balls and bake. Bonus? The house smelled amazing while they were baking!

Here are my photos:

mise en place...very easy!

peeling my fresh ginger

and grating it...watch your fingers!

I added the fresh ginger into the dry ingredients

the golden syrup and butter are melted together

everything all lined up and ready to mix

adding the golden syrup-butter mixture to the dry ingredients

mix until it looks like sand

add the eggs, mix again, and voila the dough is done!

roll into balls...

...and bake

the smell was amazing!!

enjoy with a nice cup of hot tea


Bye for now...

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Lemon Ginger Ice Cream



I made this delicious Lemon Ginger Ice Cream to go with my Blueberry Galette. The blueberries, lemon and ginger were a wonderful combination. And the ice cream just on its own is delicious. A light lemon flavor with the spicy kick of ginger. I think I'll try a lemon raspberry ice cream next - using some of my favorite raspberry sauce, of course - yum!

My recipe is adapted from David Lebovitz's White Chocolate And Fresh Ginger Ice Cream. I highly recommend visiting his website: drool-worthy recipes and lots of beautiful pictures.

Lemon Ginger Ice Cream
Ingredients
3 oz (approx) unpeeled ginger, sliced into strips
about 1 c water (enough to cover the ginger in a saucepan)
zest of 2 lemons
3/4 c sugar
1 c whole milk
2 c heavy cream, divided in half
5 large egg yolks

Directions
Pour 1 cup of heavy cream into a large bowl. Set a fine strainer over the bowl and set aside.

Place ginger slices and water (enough to cover them) in a medium saucepan, bring to a boil and cook for 2 minutes. Remove ginger slices, rinse them and set aside. Rinse the saucepan, return ginger slices to pan and add the lemon zest, sugar, milk and the remaining 1 cup of cream. Warm this mixture then remove from heat and set aside. Allow to steep for about 1 hour, or to taste. I steeped for about 45 minutes because I didn't want the ginger to be overpowering.

the ginger and lemon smelled so good

steeping the ginger in the milk-cream mixture

Before the next step, prepare an ice bath and set the bowl with the cup of heavy cream in the ice bath.

Remove the ginger slices using a fork or tongs. Reheat the milk-cream mixture. In a small bowl, lightly whisk the egg yolks, then - as you whisk - pour a few tablespoons of the hot milk-cream into the eggs to temper them. Still whisking, add a bit more of the milk-cream mixture.

Pour the warmed egg mixture into the saucepan, return to heat. Whisking continuously, cook over low heat (use a large wooden spoon or spatula to scrape the bottom and sides of the saucepan) until the custard reaches 170 degrees or coats the back of the spoon.

Strain the custard mixture into the bowl with the cup of heavy cream. I wanted to add my lemon zest to the final ice cream so I removed it from the saucepan/strainer and added it back into the ice cream.

saving my zest

Cool the ice cream mixture over the ice bath then refrigerate for about 5 hours (or overnight). I used a flat container so the mixture would chill faster since I wanted to serve the ice cream the same evening.

ready to chill

After the ice cream mixture is completely chilled follow your ice cream maker's instructions to finish. I have a Cuisinart ICE-21 Frozen Yogurt, Ice Cream & Sorbet Maker and love it. It is easy to use and very fast. My lemon ginger ice cream was done in about 15 minutes!

the day it was made, the ice cream was almost like soft serve and
was delicious with my Blueberry Galette

the next day the ice cream was much more firm...but just as delicious!


Bye for now...

Avid Baker's Challenge: Blueberry Galette with Lemon Ginger Ice Cream

This month's Avid Baker's Challenge recipe is the Glazed Apricot-Plum Galette on page 228 of The Weekend Baker by Abby Dodge. I was planning to make my galette for a dinner party but one guest is allergic to plums, so I decided to use blueberries instead of the apricots/plum combo. This is my Blueberry Galette.

I absolutely love blueberries and since they are now in season, I've been getting two pints per week added on to my Boston Organics (love!) delivery. Over the past five or so weeks, I've made Blueberry Crumble, Blueberry Muffins (from Baking with Julia), Warm Cinnamon-Spiced Blueberry Cake (from ABC's The Weekend Baker) and Blueberry Crisp with the blueberries left over from this recipe. Wow, I'm surprised my skin hasn't turned blue!

For this week's Blueberry Galette, I also wanted to make some homemade ice cream. I decided that lemon and ginger would be the perfect flavors to go with blueberries. My Lemon Ginger Ice Cream is detailed in a separate post.

my finished galette

The recipe for the galette crust is from The Weekend Baker. Once again, I struggled with a recipe from this book. Frustrating. The dough for the crust was pretty easy to make and work with (despite it being 90+ and humid), but during cooking it split open in several places and most of the blueberry juice leaked out onto the sheet pan. I know that blueberries release a lot of juice, but it seems that many other ABC bakers had a similar problem using different kinds of fruit, so I do think it was the dough. Although, I will add that even though the bottom of the galette cooked in its own juices, it still had a firm, cooked bottom crust, which I wasn't expecting.

The other thing that was very difficult was that after baking and cooling the galette "slightly" (not very specific!) you have to use two large spatulas to lift it onto the serving plate. I could have used about 3 extra hands for this part. Due to the juices having leaked out, the galette was almost suctioned onto the parchment paper. Trying to lift it off the parchment - while not completely breaking it in half - was a huge challenge. I ended up using a huge spatula and two cardboard cake rounds to transfer it. But, in the end, I got it onto the serving plate in one piece and everyone at dinner loved it, so I guess that's all that matters!

Here is the recipe for my blueberry filling:

2 pounds fresh blueberries (I used slightly more than 2 lbs but about 1 lb of this mixture was used for my Blueberry Crisp)
juice from 2 lemons (about 1/4 cup)
zest from 2 lemons (about 2 heaped tablespoons)
2/3 c sugar (to taste, 1/2 would have been fine since the crust and crisp topping were slightly sweet)
3 T cornstarch
1/2 t ground cinnamon
1/4 t salt

Pour the lemon juice over the blueberries and mix gently so you do not crush the berries. Combine the remaining ingredients and mix thoroughly. Add the sugar mixture to the blueberries and mix (gently) until the berries are coated. Pour into the middle of the galette dough or, for the crisp, spoon into ramekins.

mise en place for the crust

I prefer to mix my pie crusts by hand, instead of a food processor,
so I can feel how the dough is coming together

after adding the water and lemon juice, I turned it onto the counter-top to finish it.
I used my bench scraper to finish cutting all the ingredients together.

for a tender crust, stop when everything has just come together

fresh blueberries - yum!

mise for the filling

so sweet and lemony, I could have just eaten the berries like this

the berries go into the center and the edges are folded up toward the middle

voila! The crust gets a brushing of milk and sprinkling of sugar before baking.

finally got it safely onto the serving dish

served with my homemade lemon ginger ice cream...
the combinations of flavors was fabulous!


Bye for now...

Friday, April 6, 2012

Fresh juice! Carrot, apple & ginger

My friend and I decided to do a juice cleanse to celebrate spring so, first things first, it was time to buy a new kitchen gadget. We both bought the Breville BJE200XL 700-Watt Compact Juice Fountain. The motor sounds as powerful as a mini jet engine (but luckily not as loud) and it only took seconds to grind up the veggies and fruit. My friend's first juice was a cucumber-apple-ginger, mine was a carrot-apple-ginger juice. Both were delicious! I wasn't quite sure I could jump right into some of the green veggie juices (kale in a juice?! I'll get there soon) so I started with something a little newbie-friendly.

I took a handful of baby carrots, one Rainier apple and about 1/2 inch of fresh ginger. They all went into the juicer and delicious carrot-apple-ginger juice came out. It was so fresh tasting and chock full of vitamins! Both the carrot and apple taste came through and the ginger added a spicy kick.

It was really fun. I can't wait to try some more adventurous recipes.

my new juicer...exciting!

fresh carrots, an apple and a bit of ginger go in...

and voila, juice!

it was so fresh and tasty

I'll have to figure out different ways to use the pulp - so much healthy fiber!


Bye for now...