Rabu, 28 April 2010

Baklava


Baklava is one of my favorite desserts. It’s something to be savored slowly and best enjoyed with tea or coffee. It’s so sweet you only need one teensy-weensy slice and you’ll be contented.

Some say it originated from Turkey while some say it’s from Greece. Wiki said that Baklava has been enjoyed as early as the time of the Ottoman Empire. How cool is that? Doesn’t matter where it originated, it’s still in my top ten best desserts of all time.


I’ve first tasted baklava from Anatolia Cuisine at the Salcedo Market a few years back. I’m a cake person, I don’t really crave for pies, puff pastry based desserts but when I tasted Baklava for the first time, I knew I was a convert.

Everytime I buy from Anatolia’s, I try to dissect how they did the pastry. At first glance it looks so intimidating and screams hard work and besides, where can I find phyllo pastry in Manila? I don’t have a slightest clue. So I’ve put of making baklava at the back of my mind. Until I noticed that Landmark is selling the elusive phyllo pastry after all! Baklava is so in my list of desserts to try

For my first try, I watched YouTube videos of how to do it exactly then looked for the best recipe in Recipezaar. After memorizing the procedure and the mise en place I started making my first baklava.

I’ve cut the recipe in half. It seems that the recipe will create a tall Baklava so I’ve cut the recipe in half. I want my baklava to be short and stout (like that tea pot in an old nursery rhyme). Instead of half a pound of phyllo sheets, I used the whole box which is 375 grams. I’m hoping adding more phyllo sheets in the recipe would somehow make the Baklava crispier. Also, instead of waiting for the eighth sheet to be buttered before putting in a batch of ground nuts, I just buttered three sheets, put in a layer of nuts, then buttered three sheets again, then nuts, you get picture… basically until I ran out of phyllo and nuts to use. But make sure the last layer is phyllo okay?

________________
Baklava
By: evelyn/athens
Recipe#: 59863
1¾ hours 40 min prep


Syrup
2 cups honey
1 cup water
1 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 tablespoon lemon juice
lemon peel (without pith - 4 inch-long piece)
orange peel (without pith - 4 inch-long piece)

Pastry
4 cups coarsley ground walnuts
2 cups coarsley ground almonds
4 tablespoons sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
3 tablespoons melted butter
1 lb phyllo dough
1 lb unsalted butter, melted (don't use less, this is what will make your baklava taste exceptional, and it has to be BUTTER!)
whole cloves

Directions

1 Make syrup first so that it can come to room temperature: In a small saucepan, combine honey, sugar and water. Bring to a slow boil, stirring occasionally, until the sugar is dissolved. Add lemon juice, cinnamon sticks and peels and cook over a medium heat for 10 minutes, until slightly thickened. Remove peels and cinnamon sticks and allow to come to room temperature before using.

2 Combine walnuts, almonds, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, ground cloves and 3 tablespoons melted butter together in a bowl and mix thoroughly.

3 Place phyllo between sheets of waxed paper and cover with a slightly damp towel to prevent phyllo from drying out. Brush bottom and sides of an 18x12-inch inch pan generously with melted butter.

4 Place 8 phyllo sheets into bottom of pan, brushing each sheet generously with butter. Take an additional 4 sheets of phyllo and place in pan allowing sheets to drape over each of the 4 sides of pan. Brush these with melted butter.

5 Spread 2 cups of nut mixture into pan, distributing evenly over bottom. Fold over the overlapping phyllo sheets brushing each with butter, to envelop the nut mixture.
6 Repeat layering process 2 more times to form 3 nut layers.

7 Top pastry with remaining phyllo dough and generously brush top layer with melted butter. Tuck in the buttered phyllo neatly around.

8 Score through top layers of pastry with a sharp knife making 6 strips lengthwise then cut 10 strips diagonally to form diamond shaped pieces. Stud each diamond-shaped piece (and any odd looking ones near the ends of the pan) in the centre with a whole clove per piece. Pour remaining melted butter over pastry and lightly sprinkle some water on top too (wet your hand under the tap twice and shake this out over the pastry).

9 Bake pastry in a 325°F oven for 1 hour, until nicely golden-brown. Allow to cool for 5 minutes. Carefully spoon cool syrup over pastry. Allow to stand at least 3 hours or overnight. Cut through the scored pieces and serve.
_____________

Since I’ve cut the recipe in half, the baking time has also been shortened. The whole thing was done in 30 minutes. I waited for 10 minutes for it to cool down a little before adding the syrup.

The recipe is good. The baklava is sooo sinful. After the three hour waiting period, I just have to sample it. One small square doesn’t seem to be good enough but eating another one makes me feel so guilty! But what the heck, I still ate another one and I still craved for more. I can’t seem to help myself!

This is a kind of dessert that gets better and better as the days go by, much like wine (but that one takes years!). If you plan to serve it on a Saturday, make it the Wednesday before so the flavors could marry.

If I won’t be out of town this weekend, I’ll definitely head straight to the grocery and buy as much phyllo pasty boxes as I can!

Happy cupcaking!

Aikko


Sabtu, 24 April 2010

Magnolia Bakery Cookbook Series: Cranberry Orange Bread



I assure you, no muffins were made this week. I moved on to baking bread this time.


I’m not particularly fan of using yeast when making bread. That’s why I steered away from making bread. Although baking requires lots of patience, I seem to have no patience to wait for the dough to rise, punch it and wait for it to rise again. Good thing there are such things as the quick breads. I’ll only need to use baking powder and it’s all set.


The recipe called for fresh cranberries and orange juice. I’m not a fan of cranberries, I made a few alterations, fresh cranberries are difficult to find here so I just made do with the dried variety. The bread turned out a bit dry for my taste but then again it must have been how the texture of a bread must be like. Or I must have left it a bit longer in the oven… again.



Happy Cupcaking! Or it is Breading now?
Aikko

Sabtu, 17 April 2010

Magnolia Bakery Cookbook Series: Oatmeal Muffin



Third installment to the Magnolia Bakery Cookbook Series - The Oatmeal Muffin.

As you can see I’m still on the muffin mode. I’m trying to conquer that “make a well” method. Or, is there any other way or method of making muffins? Could the creaming method work? Could there be anything safer to do… because this one is soo rubbery. I failed this time. This batch reminds me of Lucy Liu’s “Chinese Fighting Muffins” while Lisa is reminded of a Pangasinense delicacy, the “Tupig”. How can an Oatmeal Muffin taste like Tupig?! Apparently it can. Ooohhh yesss it can!


Makes me wonder if I did something wrong. And a quick question to Allysa and Jennifer, at what stage do you put in the butter? It didn’t clearly say in the book. It just categorized the ingredients as dry or wet. Is butter dry or wet? The book didn’t say that it should be melted so it shouldn’t be wet, right? But then again, it isn’t exactly dry eiher or am I confusing “liquid” with “wet”?! Should butter be included in the wet ingredients? My mind is boggled.


Muffins are not my thing. It’s making me feel like a fish out of the water. There are other recipes in the book I’m excited to try. I think this will be the last muffin recipe for now. Unless I discover a fool proof, tried and tested method other than “making a well”.

Happy Cupcaking!

Aikko





Sabtu, 03 April 2010

Magnolia Bakery Cookbook Series: Corn Muffin



I have "the complete Magnolia Bakery Cookbook" for sometime now. It's just now that I started trying recipes from the book.

Second installment to the Magnolia Bakery Cookbook Series - The Corn Muffin. I'm not a fan of corn muffins or the muffin itself. I don't even know what the difference of a muffin and a cupcake (too lazy to Google) is but I want to give it a try. There are differences on the way you make a cupcake and a muffin. The recipe doesn't call for the creaming method. Basically what should be done was to mix all dry ingredients, make a well and pour the wet ingredients in the center. Then mix until just combined – never mind if there are lumps – don't be too "o.c.". When I read the "make a well part", I thought, "Wow, they still do that?" The last time I "made a well" was when my aunt taught me how to bake and I would kneel on a chair just to see what she was doing… it was that long ago.

It looks simple but something tells me it should be more complicated than that. I'm pretty sure I'm missing something but it good thing it turned out okay… well… not that okay since when it rose fairly tall on the oven and when I took it out it just shrunk… or does it really behave like that? It's just that Alyssa and Jennifer forgot to tell me through the book? It's a bit on the rubbery side but then again, I might have overbeaten it. But overbeating is relative, how can you tell when it's time to stop? Up to know that's still my problem. On the plus side, it's not overly sweet (the book said that, no surprises there) and I like the gritty taste of the corn meal. I'm not sure if I'll try to do this again, I'm not a fan of the corn muffin but other muffins I think I have to try just so I can familiarize myself on how to make muffins.




Corn Muffins
from the Magnolia Bakery Cookbook


Ingredients
1 1/4 cups yellow cornmeal
1 1/4 cups all purpose flour
1/3 cup sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs, lightly beaten
1 1/2 cups milk
3/4 cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly


Directions


Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 


Grease well 9 cups of a 12-cup muffin tin. 
In a large bowl, mix together the dry ingredients, making a well in the center. Stir in the liquid ingredients until just combined, being careful not to over mix. The batter maybe lumpy. 


Fill the muffin cups about three quarters full. Bake for 18-20 minutes until lightly golden or a cake tester inserted into center of muffin comes out with moist crumbs attached. Do not overbake.





Happy cupcaking!

Aikko