On air on Byron Bay’s community radio station Bayfm 99.9 on April 2, 2012
Sister T and Miss April, Alison Drover from Fork in the Field, had fun today talking about Easter food. We had eggs hidden around the studio, lambs and Easter bunnies running around, hot cross buns in the oven, smelling great… In the Byron area for many of us this time of year is also all about the Bluesfest, so most of the tracks today are from this year’s Bluesfest artists.
HOT CROSS BUNS
This year for Easter I thought I would focus on these delicious cross topped raisin and spice buns. There is a really good recipe here, from the very reliable Australian Gourmet Traveller magazine. They are pretty simple to make, a bit like muffins in that you mix all the dry and all the wet ingredients separately first, but yeast risen. This makes them very easy to change, glam up, complicate or simplify. Heston Blumenthal makes earl gray tea flavoured buns, a chocolate chip variation is apparently particularly Australian, you can get coffee, sour cherry, gluten free, in Newtown, Sydney, you can find them with frankincense glaze so you feel like you are in church – which is a bit odd becuase you shouldn’t eat in church. Or even filled with flavoured mousse or bread & butter pudding.
Every year in Australia someone complains that shops are selling them in January, in the UK you can get them all year round.
For a sweet little bun, they were always controversial – in England at one stage forbidden by Protestants as too Catholic, then limited to Good Friday (maybe it was easier to get people to obey then – an eye for an eye, a head for a bun…)
Now there is also controversy among historians about whether they used to be made in honour of the goddess of light or of the moon, the cross originally the horns of a sacred ox.
Certainly there were many superstitions about them – if you bake them on good Friday they will never go off, you can hang one in your kitchen to bring luck, they were even used ground up as medicine.
Have a look at the recipe link,I love the mix of orange zest and candied orange in it, or try your own favourite hot cross bun recipe with one of these belly lab variations:
Tuscan bun – skip sugar glaze and sugar in dough, add rosemary
Pagan bun – The cross is normally made with a simple paste of flour and water (see recipe link). Make a sunburst instead of a cross by adding 2 more lines, or try other designs, moon, starts, happy face, flowers …, colour the flour – or just leave the cross off, call them buns, eat them all year round
Ultra traditional bun – make cross shape with a wooden ‘bun docker’ – see here for how to make your very own docker – probably useful to give yourself stigmata too…be careful
MISS APRIL’S BEST IN SEASON
Out with the nectarines in with apples it’ April!
Celebrate the new life with eggs and a roast lamb or if you are not a meat eater perhaps a fish pie for Good Friday.
Crack a real egg over a chocolate one and make a baked egg custard and serve with a roasted stuffed apple or simply the custard paying homage to the egg.
Give your garden a new life by getting in there and weeding and treating it to some worm juice make your own or look at the farmers’ market or community garden for some and see everything spring to life.
Miss April Alison Drover Fork in the Field X
What’s in season NSW
Almonds
Apple
Avocado
Banana
Beetroot
Broccoli
Brussels Sprouts
Cabbage
Capsicum
Carrot
Celery
Chestnuts
Chilli
Coriander
Cucumber
Eggplant
Fennel
Fig
Garlic
Ginger
Grapes
Green Beans
Hazelnut
Lemon
Lime
Lobster
Mushrooms
Okra Olive Onion Oregano
Papaya Parsnip Pear Persimmon Pistachio Plums Pomegranate Potato Pumpkin
Quince
Sage Shallots Silverbeet Spinach Squash
Thyme Tomato Turnip
Walnut
Northern Rivers Locally best is … silverbeet, basil, avocado, and tomatoes.
MISS APRIL’S EASTER RECIPES
EASTER POMEGRANATE AND YOGURT LAMB
Serve with crunchy rosemary potatoes
Shoulder of lamb – deboned approximately 1.6 kg or more
• 1 tsp. cumin
• 1tsp coriander
• juice of lemon
• 3 cloves of garlic (not imported) minced
• 1 tsp. fennel seeds
• 1 tsp. chopped thyme
• 4 tablespoons of olive oil
• 4 sprigs thyme
• 1 tsp. cinnamon
• 1 tsp. salt
• 3 cinnamon sticks
• 4 tablespoons yogurt
• 1 pomegranate – seeded
• 2 onions
Heat oven to 160C/140C fan/gas 3.
Take each onion cut top and bottom off (don’t cut off the skin).
Place onions in the bottom of baking tray. This will be used to rest the lamb on.
Place all the pomegranate seeds in a saucepan and 2 tablespoons of water and heat gently on a low heat on the stove for about 5 minutes or until the seeds have softened. This is a simply way of making a syrup to rub over the lamb.
Mix all the spices except the thyme and the cinnamon quills add the yogurt.
Take a paring knife and cut across the lamb. Ensure you have clean hands and then rub the spice and yogurt mix into the lamb. Take the pomegranate syrup/seeds and rub this all over the lamb.
Push the cinnamon quills into the lamb and then the thyme sprigs into the cinnamon.
Place the lamb in the oven and then cover the dish with a lid or the tin with a large piece of foil. Roast the lamb, undisturbed, for 3 hrs, then remove the lid or foil and continue to roast for 30 mins to give the lamb colour. When the lamb has had its time, pour off the juices, remove as much fat as possible, then pour the juices back over the lamb.
BAKED EGG CUSTARD
• 425ml organic full-cream milk
• 300ml organic double cream
• the zest of 1 orange
• 140g natural caster sugar
• 5 large, free-range eggs
• 4 large egg yolks
• a few drops of real vanilla extract
• a few gratings of nutmeg
• a 25cm deep ovenproof dish
Preheat the oven to 120 C/gas mark . Put the milk, cream and orange zest into a largish saucepan over a low to medium heat, and slowly bring the contents to a simmer. Immediately remove the pan from the heat, pour in the rum and leave the milk to infuse for about 15 minutes. In the meantime, whisk the sugar, whole eggs and yolks until thoroughly combined. Strain the milk on to the egg mixture (discarding the zest), stir well and add the vanilla extract.
Pour the custard mixture into the dish, grate on nutmeg, and bake on the middle shelf of the oven for 1 hour, or until the custard has set (gently push the top with a finger to test). Serve at room temperature.
MUSIC
Love You More, Bobby Alu
Trouble Somehow, The Audreys
Rocksteady Woman, Nicky Bomba
Magdalena, Watussi
In the ghetto, Candi Staton and Elvis Presley
love and chocolate hot star buns, Sister T
ps – if this is all too much Easter sweetness for you, check out the Easter bunny and Ghengis Khan going head to head in a rap battle on Youtube here
