Tag Archives: truffles

cooking up presents

On air on bayfm 99.9 community radio in Byron Bay on 5.12.11

Christmas trees are going up and carols are in the air from Bangkok to Buenos Aires, from Tokyo to Doha. I know because I looked at the Twitter carols thread. Doha is in Qatar, I had to look it up,but even there people are getting into the carols, yes this is your annual belly carols alert. And we are getting into another tradition, presents, which is older than all the Christian traditions of this festival. Especially the giving of food gifts. We are cooking up the presents on belly today, with Miss December & our new baking bellysister Deanna.  Miss December also brought us the most abundant December fruit & veg, and we launched a new series that will turn you into a confident pastry cook. Chock full of goodness today on belly.

 

Merry Everything from Sister Christmas!

 

 

The lovely Miss December, Alison Drover, is sharing her father’s Royal Easter Show winning Christmas cake recipe, and great easy to make cheese biscuits.

 

MISS DECEMBER’S BELLY CHRISTMAS – TRIED AND TRUE EDIBLE GIFTS

 

DON’S‭ (‬ALISON DROVER’S FATHER) CHRISTMAS CAKE‭


[This is an old family recipe,from before Australia went metric, so these are Imperial measurements, not American cups if you are looking at Belly from the USA]

1 &1/2‭ l‬bs sultanas

1/2‭ l‬b raisins

4‭ ‬oz currants

4‭ ‬oz mixed peel

3‭ ‬oz dates

1/2‭ ‬cup macadamias‭

1/2‭ ‬cup rum brandy or sherry

8‭ ‬oz butter

1‭ ‬vanilla pod‭ ‬-‭ ‬scraped

1‭ ‬tablespoon grated orange range

1‭ ‬tablespoon grated lemon rind

5‭ ‬eggs

1‭ ‬cup brown sugar‭ ‬-‭ ‬firmly packed

2‭ ‬tablespoons orange marmalade

2‭ & ‬1/2‭ ‬cups plain flour

1/2‭ ‬teaspoon salt

1/2‭ ‬teaspoon cinnamon

1/2‭ ‬teaspoon nutmeg

4‭ ‬tablespoons rum or ‭ ‬brandy

 

Soak mixed fruit in brandy.‭ ‬Cream butter until smooth,‭ ‬add vanilla and rinds.‭ ‬Add sugar,‭ ‬beat well until mixture is combined,‭ ‬do not overcream or cake will crumble when cut.

Add eggs,‭ ‬one at a time,‭ ‬beating well before adding the next one.‭ ‬Add marmalade and mix well.‭ ‬Add creamed mixture to fruit mixture,‭ ‬mix thoroughly,‭ ‬sift dry ingredients,‭ ‬add in two lots to fruit mixture,‭ ‬mix thoroughly.

Put mixture into a‭ ‬71/2‭ ‬inch square cake tin lined with four layers of greaseproof paper.‭ ‬Spread mixture level.‭ ‬Bang tin on table to settle mixture.

Bake in a slow oven for‭ ‬3‭ ‬to‭ ‬3‭ ‬1/2‭ ‬hour.‭ ‬Remove cake from the oven and test with a skewer.‭ ‬If it comes out free of cake mixture,‭ ‬remove cake from oven.‭ ‬Brush the cake evenly with extra rum brandy‭ ‬-‭ ‬you can use a little less or more than‭ ‬2‭ ‬tablespoons.

Cover immediately with some tin foil then a towel.‭ (‬This traps the steam giving a moist cake‭)‬.‭ ‬When the cake is cold‭ (‬about‭ ‬12‭ ‬hours‭) ‬remove from the tin and‭ ‬wrap in foil.‭ ‬Wrapped in this way it will keep for several months.

 

CHEESE BISCUITS – By Alison Drover

 

Ingredients

1oog fresh goat’s cheese or blue cheese

1 & 1/2 tablespoons freshly grated parmesan cheese

1 teaspoon fennel seeds

150g softened unsalted butter

scant pinch of salt

1/4 teaspoon pepper

175g plain flour, sifted

 

Method

Blend cheeses, butter, salt and fennel seeds quickly in food processor until smooth. Remove to a bowl and fold in flour.  Spoon mixture onto baking paper and roll into a log about 5cm in diameter. Refrigerate for several hours until firm.

Preheat oven to 180 Celsius. Slice thinly and put on baking trays lined with baking paper.

Bake for 10-15 minutes until golden. Cool, then store in airtight tin.

 

DEANNA’S CHRISTMAS TRUFFLES

 

BASIC TRUFFLES

 

200g good quality eating dark chocolate

1/3 cup cream

½ tsp vanilla extract

¼ cup cocoa powder or icing sugar

 

Combine chocolate and cream in the top of a double boiler or in a heat proof bowl over a pot of simmering water. Stir with a metal spoon until just melted and smooth. Remove from heat and stir in vanilla

Place in fridge to chill for approx one hour or until firm enough to roll into balls

Using approx. 2 tsp of mix at a time, roll into balls, place on a baking sheet covered in baking paper and refrigerate again until firm.

Place cocoa powder in a shallow dish, roll truffles in cocoa powder to coat.

Store in an airtight container in the fridge

 

PEPPERMINT TRUFFLES

 

400g good quality dark eating chocolate

2 tbsp peppermint liqueur (or 2 tsp peppermint essence)

70g peppermint chocolate (could be peppermint crisp, or mint flavoured chocolate, but not cream filled or green) crushed,

50g white chocolate chopped

 

Melt 200g of dark chocolate and cream as in method for basic truffles. When melted, take off heat and add liqueur or essence. Allow to cool for 10 minutes and add peppermint crisp.

Chill and roll as in previous recipe.

Melt remaining 200g chocolate. Place a toothpick in each truffle and dip into melted chocolate to coat. Place back on baking tray and allow to chill in refrigerator.

When chilled, melt white chocolate. Using a piping bag or small ziplock with the corner cut off, place chocolate in bag and pipe white chocolate over truffles. Refrigerate until set.

 

HAZELNUT TRUFFLES

 

450 g good quality milk chocolate, chopped

40g butter chopped

20 roasted whole hazelnuts

100g roasted hazelnuts chopped finely

50g dark chocolate chopped

 

Melt 250g milk chocolate and butter as described in basic truffle recipe, mix in chopped nuts and chill.

 

When firm, roll into balls pushing one whole hazelnut into centre of ball. Chill until firm.

 

Melt remaining 200g milk chocolate and place toothpick in each ball. Dip in melted chocolate and allow to set. Melt dark chocolate and pipe over truffles as described in peppermint truffle recipe.

 

 

TOFFEE TRUFFLES

 

140g packet of werther’s original hard toffees

 

400g good quality milk chocolate, chopped

 

1/3 cup cream

 

½ tsp vanilla extract

 

50g good quality dark chocolate.

 

Place werther’s in food processor and process until fine crumbs. Melt 200g chocolate and cream as in basic truffle recipe. Stir toffee through chocolate mixture. Chill as in previous recipes, and roll, then chill again. Melt 200g milk chocolate and dip truffles in melted chocolate using toothpick to hold on to truffle. Allow to chill and then pipe melted dark chocolate over top.

 

WHITE CHOCOLATE COCONUT

 

450g good quality white chocolate chopped

 

1/3 cup cream

 

30g butter

 

2 tbsp dessicated coconut

 

2 cups shredded coconut

 

2tsp coconut essence

 

Melt 250g white chocolate, cream, and butter.  The method I use for the white chocolate truffles is a bit different when I melt the

chocolate: I heat the cream and butter until almost boiling, and then pour it quickly on top of the white chocolate pieces and stir to melt.

Stir through desiccated coconut and essence. Follow steps for chilling and rolling as in above recipes. When chilled, melt remaining white chocolate and dip truffle in melted chocolate using toothpick, immediately afterwards rolling in shredded coconut. Allow to cool.

Truffle recipes adapted from “Superfood Ideas” December 2007

 

BELLY BULLETIN

 

Northern Rivers Food Links would like to connect food businesses who have leftover food going to waste with food aid groups who could put their leftovers to good use. If you have a food business operating in the Ballina, Byron or Richmond Valley local government areas, give them a call on (02) 6681 4772 or email

kim@northernriversfoodlinks.com.au

 

Shark fins are an expensive delicacy in Chinese restaurants. Scientists estimate between 26 and 73 million sharks are killed for their fins worldwide each year. Hong Kong is the major market, but local campaigns are successfully changing customer habits. About 60% of people there now say they wouldn’t eat shark fin, the price has dropped by 20%, and almost 100 caterers and hotels have signed up to the shark free menu campaign of the World Wildlife Fund, including the prestigious Peninsula group.

 

Global warming could be getting you drunk. More sun means riper grapes, which means more alcohol in your wine. Estimates are that global warming alone is increasing alcohol content by about 1 degree per decade. Wine writers and judges are also responsible, as many have praised big, full flavoured wines which also have a high alcohol content. Twenty years ago, most wines were 12 to 13%, now many are 15% or more. The smh has an interesting article listing average percentages in many wines, and reports calls to put alcohol content on restaurant and bar wine lists to help customers who are looking for a less potent drop.

 

If you want to trap a fire ant, give it a hot dog. Introduced fire ants have become a problem in Northern Queensland. They’ve displaced up to 95 per cent of the native ants, they can blind pets, they sting people as they garden or in their swimming pools. Biosecurity Queensland staff are luring the ants to footpaths and nature strips with traps baited with hot dog meat. Field staff put down the hot dog and leave it down for an hour and come back and pick it up and see what ants they’ve got. Spokesman Gary Moreton said “These ants are quite generalist eaters so they like all sorts of things, they like sugars, oils, proteins, and I think probably with those hot dogs, they’ve got a bit of everything in there.”

 

EDIBLE QUOTE

Irene Kangasniemi, a neighbour of Santa Claus from Lapland “When we are visiting places we don’t bring flowers, we bring food”

 

MUSIC

Amy Winehouse – I Saw Mummy Kissing Santa Claus

The Temptations – Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer 2:58

 

Eileen Barton – If I Knew You Were Coming 2:51

W.A. Mozart, “Sleigh Ride”, opus K605 no.3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

June temptations: apples, silverbeet, truffles and farmers

On air on bayfm 99.9 on June 6, 2011

A belly full of temptations – Ms June  tempted us with apples and silverbeet and the other good things in season in June, I dreamt of Australian  truffles, and found out how to get a truffle dog, and we found out what sustainably grown food really means.

COMMUNITY GARDENS SURVEY BY TARA BAKER AT SOUTHERN CROSS UNI

https://scuau.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_9ubtlzfLcBV57ms

An invitation to participate in important research!  Do you support the establishment of community food gardens within the
Northern Rivers?   You are invited to participate in a region wide online survey taking no more  than 5 – 10 minutes of your time.

Southern Cross University Bachelor of Environmental Science with Honours  candidate, Kara Baker, is currently seeking input from community members, regarding the attitudes towards the establishment of community food gardens.
She is interested in hearing from local community members from the Northern   Rivers region in order to determine the likely community support for new  garden establishment throughout the region.   The survey is anonymous and you do not have to answer all questions if you do  not want to or can’t.   The survey closes 5pm, Thursday 30th June 2011.
The results of this research will form a part of Kara’s Honours thesis and  may also be published.
If you have any questions   Kara Baker, k.baker.11@scu.edu.au

 

MISS JUNE’S RECIPES (BY Alison Drover)

 

Silverbeet, sweetpotato and goats fetta pies

Serves 6
Cooking Time Prep time 45 mins, cook 1 hr 20 mins (plus resting, cooling)

120 ml  olive oil
4  onions, thinly sliced
8 oregano sprigs
2 tbsp  Vinegar
2  sweet potatoes (about 480gm each), coarsely chopped
2  fresh bay leaves
2  garlic cloves, finely chopped
1 bunch  silverbeet, trimmed, coarsely chopped
150 gm  goat’s feta – look for Nimbin orange feta at the market as this adds great flavor

For brushing:  Eggwash

To serve:  green salad

Cream cheese pastry
400 gm (2¾ cup)  plain flour, sieved
170 gm  cold unsalted butter, coarsely chopped
140 gm  cold cream cheese, coarsely chopped
30 ml  white vinegar
¼ tsp  baking powder

Place all the ingredients for pastry into the food processor, pulse ingredients adding 30ml iced water in a food processor until coarse crumbs form. Turn onto a work surface and push dough with the heel of your hand to bring together. Shape into a disc, wrap in plastic wrap, refrigerate to rest (1-2 hours).

Meanwhile, heat half the oil in a large saucepan over low-medium heat, add onion and four thyme sprigs and sauté, stirring occasionally, until onion is very tender and light golden (30-45 minutes). Add vinegar and stir until evaporated (30 seconds-1 minute), season to taste and set aside.

Meanwhile, combine sweet potato, bay leaves and remaining thyme sprigs in a large saucepan, cover with cold water, bring to the boil over medium-high heat, then simmer until tender (30-40 minutes). Drain well (discard herbs), then process in a food processor until smooth, season to taste and set aside.

Heat remaining oil in a large saucepan over medium heat, add garlic and sauté until beginning to soften (1-2 minutes), then add silverbeet and 2 tbsp water, cover with a lid and toss occasionally until wilted (1-2 minutes). Drain well, squeeze out excess water, season to taste and spread on a tray to cool to room temperature.

Preheat oven to 190C. Divide pastry into 6 pieces. Working with one piece at a time, roll out on a sheet of baking paper into 3mm-thick rounds. Spread each circle with sweet potato purée, leaving a 1.5cm border. Top with onion mixture, scatter with silverbeet and feta. Brush edges of pastry with eggwash, then fold and pleat to create an open pie. Transfer pies to oven trays lined with baking paper, brush pastry with eggwash and bake, swapping trays halfway through baking, until golden and cooked through (15-25 minutes). Rest for 5 minutes, then serve with a green salad.

 

Baked Apples with honey, pecans – homemade real egg custard

4 (or 1 for each person)  large apples
1 cup of water
2 tablespoons of honey
2 tablespoons brown sugar
2 tablespoons lemon juice – zest first
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup of pecans

Preheat oven to 350ºF.

Wash all apples. Core apple to within a 1/2 or 1/4 inch from the bottom of the apple.
Peel and remove skin from top one fourth of apple.
Half way down apple, thinly score through the skin. Make score completely around entire outside of apple to help keep apples from spliting.
Place apples in baking dish.
Mix water and lemon juice together. Fill each apple with approximately 1 tablespoon of this mixture. Pour remaining mixture into baking dish.
Place 1/4 of butter in each apple.
Mix pecans, brown sugar, and cinnamon, butter together. Fill the center of each apple with a portion of the mixed ingredients.
Prior to baking, spoon liquid from bottom of  baking dish into each apple.
Bake uncovered 45 minutes or until apples are soft. Every so often open the oven and pour  juices over  while baking.

Fresh Organic Egg Custard

Ingredients

1 fresh vanilla pod

500ml full-fat milk

5 organic free-range egg yolks

80g caster sugar

Make sure you use the best milk possible which makes sense as this is the basis of custard. Look for Country Valley at your Farmers Market and read all about how happy their cows are.

Pour full-fat milk into a heavy-based saucepan. Split a vanilla pod, scrape out the seeds and add the seeds and pod to the pan. Bring just to the boil, then remove from the heat. Set aside until required.

2. Put egg yolks into a large bowl with golden caster sugar. Using a hand whisk, whisk until thick and pale.

3. Pour the vanilla-infused milk through a sieve onto the whisked egg yolk and sugar mixture, stirring well. Discard the pod (the seeds will fall through into the custard). Quickly wash out the pan and return the mixture to the clean, dry pan.

4. Return the pan to a low heat and cook slowly, do not let it boil or raise the heat, stirring continuously with a wooden spoon until the custard is thick enough to coat the back of the spoon. This will take about 10 minutes.

Use a finger and drag it through through the custard on the spoon: if it leaves a straight, clear line, it’s ready.

Custard requires patience and cooking slowy over low heat stirring at the same speed until it thickens and it coats the back of a wooden spoon. Boiling point is the enemy once you have added the eggs, so always keep the temperature of the custard just below the boil.

If it boils, the eggs will begin to separate, much as they would if you were making scrambled eggs. If this happens, you may be able to save the custard by quickly straining the egg mixture through a sieve into a blender and whizzing it until smooth. You may then reheat it with a little blended cornflour and milk to help it stabilise, but all this will depend on how far it has curdled in the first place. It will only take about 8 minutes to cook, and remember: a fresh egg custard thickens only to something akin to fresh pouring double cream.

She’ ll be apples or pears cake ­
80 g unsalted butter
190g sugar
1 organic free range egg
Zest from one large lemon
185ml cream liquid
1 1/3 cups plain flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 pears 2 apples or all apples or all pears
1 tsp cinnamon

20 g melted butter
60 raw sugar

Preheat oven to around 350 F

Cream butter and sugar together ­ making sure it is white and fluffy not
greasy. Add the egg, lemon zest, cinnamon beat for few minutes ­ do not
over beat as you are making a batter mixture for the cake.Add the cream and
mix. Note to cook ­ sometimes it looks like it is curdling do not worry it all
comes together at the end.
Sift in the flour, baking powder and salt and the beat until smooth.

Peel and core apples and pears ­ cut them into thin wedges like you see in
the pastry shops on the top of tarts. Brush the fruit with melted butter and
sprinkle with sugar and arrnage in a fan like pattern around the top of the
cake. Sprinkle with remaining sugar.

Bake for around 1 hour ­ check on it by inserting a skewer into the cake and
it should come out clean. The fruit will brown and caramelise with the
sugar.

This is a great winter cake for dessert and even better surrounded by warm
organic custard.

 

SUSTAINABLE FARMS

I played part of a talk by Greg Reid from Industry and Investment NSW, given at the recent Sustainable Agriculture forums.

Here is a whole lot more from his talk.

 

TRUFFLES

If you have a very special friend with a birthday coming up, or several deserving friends, this may be the year to spoil them with Australian truffles. Truffles, the vegetable not the chocolate, look like  potatoes with a really bad skin condition and smell and taste like sex and garlic and roses and fallen autumn leaves. The season is just starting and goes until early August, and it looks like a very good year.  We have been growing truffles in Oz for about 15 years.  There are now growers in every state except the Northern Territory – even in Queensland, which is surprising because they need cold winters.  There is a good website,  www.trufflegrowers.com.au/
that can tell you everything about growing and using truffles.  You can even find out where to buy Australian truffle dogs.  You can get fresh truffles by mail order, a 50 gram one the size of a large chook egg will cost you about 150 dollars, but that is enough to make 10 to 15 main courses for those deserving friends.
There are more and more countries trying to grow truffles, from China, to the UK, New Zealand and Chile.  They are grown by infecting trees with truffle spores, which are a type of fungus.  Scientists have just discovered that there are boy truffles and girl truffles, which may explain why many attempts to grow them failed.  Maybe with truffles you need both.  In Europe truffles were traditionally found in secret patches under oak and hazelnut groves, but apparently a lot of the people who knew where to find them were killed in WW2, or moved to the cities after the war.  Pity they didn’t leave a treasure map.
If you ate out in the 90s you would have tasted truffle oil, it was everywhere, but almost all of it is made with artificial truffle flavour, real truffles are both more delicate and more intense.

According to the Australian Truffle Growers Association:

Truffles go with anything as they are a flavour enhancer (they contain glutamic acid!  like msg but natural I suppose) and have the ‘umami’, or savoury taste.
Truffles go best with simple dishes involving eggs, mushrooms, chicken, pasta, potatoes,risotto, Jerusalem artichokes, celeriac.
They have a great affinity for fats, any fats, which retain the aroma.

In Australia we only grow black truffles, which can be cooked.  I think white Alba truffles from Northern Italy are much better, but I am a bit biased as I was born in Alba.  White truffles are best just sliced very thinly, raw on top of quite plain dishes to enjoy the true truffle scent, but I think if you are using truffles for the first time that is the best thing to do with the black ones too.  They are great on scrambled eggs or egg pasta with an egg and parmesan sauce, or in the ultimate mashed potatoes.

I have just found this recipe for Italian style dumplings with ricotta and pea shoots, which looks delicious with or without lots of truffles.  And unlike truffles, there were fresh pea tips at the Byron farmers market today. And of course beautiful local ricotta.  Yum.

 

EDIBLE QUOTES

There are looots of quotes about truffles!  The French writers Colette and Alexandre Dumas were certainly fans.

“The most learned men have been questioned as to the nature of this tuber, and after two thousand years of argument and discussion their answer is the same as it was on the first day: we do not know. The truffles themselves have been interrogated, and have answered simply: eat us and praise the Lord.”
Alexandre Dumas

“[Truffles] can, on certain occasions, make women more tender and men more lovable.”
Alexandre Dumas

If I can’t have too many truffles, I’ll do without truffles.
Sidonie Gabrielle Colette

 

MUSIC

Manteca : Dizzy Gillespie, Funky Lowlives remix

Juke Box : Fred Buscaglione

Hearts and Minds : Pigram Brothers

Interlude : Pigram Brothers

The truffle song : Johann Strauss II and Panforte

The Truffle shuffle : Million Dolla Records

Home on the Wave : Love Connection and Pets with Pets

 

Love and chocolate truffles, sister T