Tuesday 15 September 2015

Wagon Wheel Slice


Wagon Wheels are a favourite biscuit of mine - they remind me of my childhood, although I swear they were much bigger in those days. Over here in the UK, you get a choice of wagon wheels with or without jam in them. In my opinion, what's the point of leaving the jam out? I am 'Team Jammy' all the way!

Anyway I saw this recipe posted on a fab Facebook group I am in, and knew straight away I wanted to give them ago. The original post came from a FB page called Aussie Tucker - The Great Australian Bite.


The biscuit base is quite soft like the original, not crunchy at all. Interestingly enough I didn't have quite enough jam in the house, so I thought that layer would be quite thin, but in reality it is plenty and any more would be too sickly sweet I think.


Wagon Wheel Slice
Ingredients
For the base:
60g (¼ cup) unsalted butter, melted
1/3 cup caster sugar
1 egg, beaten
1 cup + 3 tablespoons plain flour
¼ teaspoon baking powder
Pinch salt


For the jam:
1/3 cup raspberry jam


For the marshmallow:
2 dessertspoons gelatine powder
1 cup water
1 cup caster sugar
1 cup sifted icing sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla essence


For the chocolate layer:
185g dark chocolate, broken into pieces (I used dark choc chips)
1 T sunflower oil


Method
Preheat oven to 180°C/160°C fan-forced. Grease a 3cm-deep, 16cm x 26cm slice pan. Line base and sides with baking paper, extending paper 2cm from edge on all sides.


Melt butter. Set aside to cool slightly. Add sugar and egg and mix well. Add sifted flour, baking powder and salt and stir until dough comes together. Press mixture into prepared pan. Bake for 15 minutes or until golden. 
Spread warm base with jam.
Meanwhile, soak gelatine powder in 1 cup of water (give it at least 10 minutes to soak properly), after 10 mins add 1 cup caster sugar and dissolve gently in a saucepan over a low heat, then raise heat and boil for 8 minutes. Allow to cool slightly and then add 1 cup of sifted icing sugar. 
In a large, deep bowl, beat with an electric mixer until white and thick (should take about 3-4 minutes). Add vanilla essence, and beat until well combined. Spoon almost all (*SEE NOTE BELOW) of the mixture over jam layer and place in refrigerator to set.
Place the chocolate and oil in a small, clean, dry heatproof bowl. Place the bowl over a small saucepan of barely simmering water over low heat (make sure the bowl doesn't touch the water). Use a dry metal spoon to stir gently for 2 minutes or until chocolate melts and is smooth. Pour evenly over marshmallow layer and smooth the surface with a knife.
Refrigerate for 2 hours or until set. Stand at room temperature for 5 minutes (I waited about 30 just to make sure the chocolate wouldn't crack) before cutting into pieces with a hot knife and serving.
*NOTE: I find that this makes a little more than needed, but this isn't a problem! Just lightly grease a small plastic container and pour excess in. I put my excess into some silicon jelly moulds for a bit of fun!
Place in refrigerator for about 20 mins to set; a nice, but sugary treat for the kids!



Enjoy! xx



Monday 7 September 2015

Grandma Shipway's Apple Pie





My Grandma made the best apple pies. A simple statement, but true. She also made the best pickles...she used a vegetable called choko to make the pickles. I hated choko with a passion, but I loved her pickles.

Now in my garden I have an apple tree that gives us a pretty healthy crop of cooking apples each year. This year they seem ripe earlier than usual so we started picking them yesterday. I had also been out the back of our street to collect what looked like the last of the wild summer blackberries to add to the apples for this pie.



The pastry for this recipe can very easily be made diary free, in fact up until this year, I HAVE made it dairy free for my son - he can now tolerate butter in baked goods so I used real butter within the recipe.

The photos I took this time aren't great - it was night time, we were all eager to eat and it just didn't cut well....so you are going to see the realities of baking and eating for the family, not just for the blog! Let's face it, that's how most people cook anyway, don't you?

Inside...it was jam packed full of apple and blackberries - possibly the highest pie I have ever made!
I'll add some more photos of other ones I have made with the same recipe - in tart tins, cute little individual ones with just plain apple.


Righto, so I'm guessing you want the recipe?

Grandma Shipway's Apple Pie

Ingredients:
Filling
4 - 6 green apples   (cooking apples preferably)
4 cloves
5-6 tablespoons sugar
1 c water
1 c blackberries (optional)

Pastry                                             
1 cup plain flour (150g)
1 c self raising flour (150g)
1/3 c caster sugar (80g)
2/3 c cold butter (150g)
1/3 c water (85ml more if needed)

Method:
      
Apple filling
1. Peel, core, slice and cook the apples with the cloves in 1 c water for 10-15 mins. My apples cooking very fast and in seconds can go from looking underdone, to being mush, so do watch them.
2. Drain and then add sugar, mix through and then remove the cloves. I added the blackberries in at this stage too.
3. Pre-heat oven to 220°c.

Pastry
4. Cube the cold butter and lightly rub in the sugar and sifted flour, both plain and self raising, until the mixture looks like fine bread crumbs. You could do this in the food processor if you have one, which I tend to do these days.
3. Add water and mix to a soft, but not sticky, dough. Wrap in cling film and rest in the fridge for 20 minutes.
4. Roll half the dough between two sheets of grease-proof paper to make it big enough to cover the pie dish.
5. Place the pie dish on top of pastry upside down and lift the paper and pastry (and pie dish) up and over to get the pastry onto the dish without breaking it.
6. Fill with apple mixture and top with the rest of the pastry (rolled out).
7. Trim excess pastry from the edge of the dish and use a fork to press down around the edges. Decorate with extra pastry if you want - I always use cookie cutters to match a theme - this time it was woodland creatures.
8.Brush with beaten egg and sprinkle sugar on top. Use a fork to pierce a couple of steam holes on the top. To avoid the egg (allergies!!), I brushed mine with some soya milk - did the same job equally as well, in my opinion.
9. Cook for about 10 minutes and then reduce the oven to 150°c until brown on top - total of about 35-40 mins.

Enjoy this delicious apple pie fresh from the oven, with custard, cream or ice-cream.

Notes: 

  • I don't ever blind bake the pastry - and I never have a soggy bottom! However, if you'd like to blind bake, then line the raw base with baking parchment and then fill with baking beads or rice - cook for 10 mins, then remove the beads/rice and paper and bake for another 10 mins. Then, add filling and proceed.
  • Add the sugar to the fruit after cooking and draining, or the sweetness (which you really need with cooking apples) will go down the drain too.