Sunday, May 6, 2012

Chocolate peanut butter brownie recipe


 
Popular in America since the first half of the 20th century, this dense chocolate cake is slightly under-baked and cut into individual servings. This decadent version pays homage to the American love of peanut butter, which is swirled through the base and added as a topping.


Ingredients

200g dark chocolate, chopped
200g unsalted butter, chopped, at room temperature
4 eggs, lightly beaten
295g (1⅓ cups) caster sugar
100g (⅔ cup) plain flour
Melted chocolate and ice-cream, to serve

Peanut butter mixture
500g peanut butter
100g unsalted butter
55g (⅓ cup) icing sugar


Preparation

Preheat oven to 180°C. Fill a small saucepan one-third full with water and bring to a gentle simmer. Place the chocolate and butter in a small heatproof bowl, place over pan and stir until chocolate is melted (don’t let the bowl touch the water). Allow to cool slightly.

Meanwhile, whisk eggs and sugar for 4 minutes or until thick and pale. Stir in chocolate mixture, flour and ½ tsp salt. Pour mixture into a greased, lined, deep 20cm square cake pan. Set aside to slightly thicken.

Meanwhile, to make peanut butter mixture, heat all the ingredients in a saucepan over medium heat for 45 seconds or until just starting to soften. Stir to combine. Reserve one-third of the mixture to serve. Drop spoonfuls of remaining peanut butter mixture into chocolate mixture and lightly swirl with a skewer or knife. Bake for 1 hour or until just firm to the touch. Cool for 5 minutes. Remove from pan and transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

Cut into squares and serve topped with warmed reserved peanut butter mixture and melted chocolate, with ice-cream on the side. Store in an airtight container in single layers separated by baking paper for up to 1 week.

Anzac biscuits recipe


 
4/ 5 stars 29 Votes
  • Cuisine: Modern Australian
Nothing beats an Aussie icon, and Anzac biscuits are certainly that. Anzac biscuits can be purchased (and enjoyed!) at cafes, takeaway food outlets, cake shops and supermarkets, all year round. My personal preference, at anytime, is for a home-baked biscuit. Our family recipe for Anzac biscuits has been handed down, from generation to generation, since its creation at the time of World War I (1914-1918).

At that time, and since, handwritten recipes were swapped over kitchen tables, sent in the post in letters to friends and relatives, passed over back fences, and written into recipe books. In my heritage, with an Aussie background of six generations, many of the recipes in my collection are for baking: biscuits (cookies), slices and cakes. Whatever your cultural background, collections of family recipes, can be a treasured part of a family's heritage.

While, thankfully, home baking is now more egalitarian and enjoyed by both sexes, at the time of World War I, making biscuits was part of a woman’s home duties. Shipping biscuits to the soldiers overseas as part of "care" packages was seen as part of a woman’s role in supporting the war effort.

The recipe for Anzac biscuits was born out of necessity. With long transport times to reach the soldiers overseas, one opinion is that the recipe was developed for the required long storage. (In my family, the story is that this is why the biscuits are made without eggs.)

Depending on the combination of oven temperature and cooking time, Anzac biscuits can be soft or crunchy. Preferences in my family are divided. While my choice is for crunchy, there are sometimes special requests for me to bake the softer style of lower temperature and shorter time.

Our family recipe for Anzac biscuits is shared in loving memory of my mum.

Ingredients

1 cup rolled oats
3/4 cup coconut
1 cup (plain) flour
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter
1 tablespoon golden syrup
1 1/2 teaspoons bicarb of sda
2 tablespoons boiling water

Preparation

Mix oats, flour, sugar and coconut.

Melt syrup and butter together. Mix bicarb of soda and boiling water, then add to the melted syrup and butter mixture.

Add the liquid mix to the dry ingredients.

Place dessertspoons of mixture on a greased baking tray. (I use a small flat dessertspoon, not heaped, as the mixture spreads considerably. Place the rounds of mixture well apart.)

Bake in a slow oven for 20 minutes. Leave biscuits to cool on tray 2-3 minutes before moving to a cooling rack.

Tiramisu recipe

Vanessa Martin shares her special tiramisu recipe with Food Safari's Maeve O'Meara. Tiramisu means "pick me up" and this easy tiramisu recipe is sure to do just that.
For tasty variations on tiramisu, try Italian chef Giuseppe Vargetto's tiramisu recipe, or Graziella Alessi's tiramisu made with strega, Sambuca, and Italian meringue. Also, browse our cake recipes for more sweet inspiration.

Ingredients

6 eggs, separated
1 cup caster sugar
500g mascarpone
Hot, strong espresso coffee
Liqueur (as little or as much as you like according to taste – Vanessa loves a mixture of Tia Maria, Kahlua and Amaretto)
Pavesini biscuits (a slim version of Savioardi, which also work in this recipe)
Small block chocolate, to garnish


Preparation

In a bowl, beat the egg yolks with the sugar until thick and white. This will take at least 15 minutes. Add the mascarpone, and beat until smooth and just combined.

Combine the coffee with the liqueurs. Quickly dip biscuits, a few at a time, into the coffee mixture. Set aside on a plate to cool.

In a clean bowl, whisk the egg whites until thick and stiff. Gently fold into the mascarpone mixture.

Alternative layering the biscuits and mascarpone cream in individual glass bowls. Refrigerate for 2-3 hours or longer, preferably. Grate the chocolate over the top to serve.

Paella recipe

Ingredients

3 tbsp olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
1 red capsicum, chopped
1 large tomato, peeled and chopped
2 garlic cloves, crushed
300g chicken breast fillet, diced
200g calamari, diced
300g Spanish Calasparra rice (allow about 80g per person)
750ml fish stock
10 strings of saffron
2 tsp Spanish paprika
4 large green prawns
8 fresh mussels
12 fresh pippies
200g peas
100g roast capsicum
1/3 cup chopped parsley


Preparation

Heat oil in the paella pan over medium heat. Add onion, capsicum, tomato, garlic, chicken and calamari. Add rice and stir for 1 minute. Stir in stock, saffron and paprika.

When the stock is boiling and rice grains begin to swell, add crab and prawns. Cook over medium heat for about 10 minutes until the stock has reduced and the rice has begun to swell. Push the mussels and pippies into the rice and cook until the shells open. Finally add the peas, strips of capsicum and parsley and leave it for five more minutes on low heat.

Note:

- Grind the saffron thread with some salt in a mortar and pestle until it is like a fine powder. It will help to distribute it through the paella evenly giving a better colour and flavour to the finished dish.

- The perfect time to add the seafood to paella is when enough of the stock has been absorbed to allow the rice to be seen.

- Do not stir the paella during main cooking.

Chocolate peanut butter brownie recipe



Popular in America since the first half of the 20th century, this dense chocolate cake is slightly under-baked and cut into individual servings. This decadent version pays homage to the American love of peanut butter, which is swirled through the base and added as a topping.


Ingredients

200g dark chocolate, chopped
200g unsalted butter, chopped, at room temperature
4 eggs, lightly beaten
295g (1⅓ cups) caster sugar
100g (⅔ cup) plain flour
Melted chocolate and ice-cream, to serve

Peanut butter mixture
500g peanut butter
100g unsalted butter
55g (⅓ cup) icing sugar


Preparation

Preheat oven to 180°C. Fill a small saucepan one-third full with water and bring to a gentle simmer. Place the chocolate and butter in a small heatproof bowl, place over pan and stir until chocolate is melted (don’t let the bowl touch the water). Allow to cool slightly.

Meanwhile, whisk eggs and sugar for 4 minutes or until thick and pale. Stir in chocolate mixture, flour and ½ tsp salt. Pour mixture into a greased, lined, deep 20cm square cake pan. Set aside to slightly thicken.

Meanwhile, to make peanut butter mixture, heat all the ingredients in a saucepan over medium heat for 45 seconds or until just starting to soften. Stir to combine. Reserve one-third of the mixture to serve. Drop spoonfuls of remaining peanut butter mixture into chocolate mixture and lightly swirl with a skewer or knife. Bake for 1 hour or until just firm to the touch. Cool for 5 minutes. Remove from pan and transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

Cut into squares and serve topped with warmed reserved peanut butter mixture and melted chocolate, with ice-cream on the side. Store in an airtight container in single layers separated by baking paper for up to 1 week.

USA recipes and USA food


About USA Food

From the wonderfully fresh produce of sunny California to the plentiful seafood of Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay – this is a country rich in resources and know-how. Food from the United States is much more than hotdogs, burgers and fries…there is a fantastic range of classic dishes from delicate crab cakes to the more hearty fare of the Deep South. Native cooking traditions, and those brought by early settlers and waves of immigration have developed a sophisticated cuisine that is distinctly ‘American’.

The Mississippi Delta is rich in fish, crab and shrimp. It’s also ‘soul food’ central: The huge population of African Americans in this region resulted in culinary delights like jambalaya, gumbo, fried chicken, collard greens and grits. The African black-eyed pea is also an important ingredient in southern ‘soul food’. African slaves were resourceful when it came to cooking; chickens were easy to keep, catching a fish was free, and collard greens grew like weeds. The South is also famed for its delicious meringue-based Key Lime Pie (small key limes are found throughout the Florida Keys).

Further north, the New England region is renowned for its pure maple syrup, baked beans, brown bread, clam chowder and clambakes. In Buffalo – Buffalo wings (fried chicken wings) are always served with blue cheese and celery. Almost every kind of cooking can be found in New York City while in the other parts of the mid-Atlantic, Dutch influences are prominent – particularly among the Amish community of Pennsylvania who are famed for their ‘Shoofly Pie’ (a molasses pie that can be either "wet bottom" — consisting of a layer of sweet, gooey molasses beneath a crumb topping or "dry bottom" which is more thoroughly mixed into a cake-like consistency). Local produce of course plays a role when it comes to regional favourites - from Alaska where moose-burgers are popular to Hawaii where Polynesian pit bakes and pineapples reign supreme.

A key national holiday commemorated with food is Thanksgiving, which is a reminder of the first harvest feast which the new settlers celebrated with the local Indians. Native produce like cranberries, pecan nuts and turkey are all on the menu, the turkeys stuffed with a cereal-based stuffing and roasted. Sage is the traditional herb added to the stuffing, along with chopped celery, carrots, and onions. Other more inventive Thanksgiving dishes include the ‘Turducken’: Originating in Louisiana, it’s a turkey stuffed with a duck stuffed with a chicken. The not-so-wholesome but ‘oh so delicious’ deep-fried turkey is also becoming a popular alternative to the traditional thanksgiving turkey roast.

Like Thanksgiving, the all-American ‘Cook Out’ is a proud tradition for the summer months. For centuries, North Americans have perfected the art of barbecuing, using many different types of wood to achieve a wonderful smokey flavour and combining dry spices to make rubs for meats as well as marinating.
When it comes to desserts, North Americans love their pies, which are found in large generous slabs in every diner across the nation, each region using local produce to make wonders like Key Lime Pie, Shoofly Pie and Pecan Pie.
 

About USA Food

From the wonderfully fresh produce of sunny California to the plentiful seafood of Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay – this is a country rich in resources and know-how. Food from the United States is much more than hotdogs, burgers and fries…there is a fantastic range of classic dishes from delicate crab cakes to the more hearty fare of the Deep South. Native cooking traditions, and those brought by early settlers and waves of immigration have developed a sophisticated cuisine that is distinctly ‘American’.

The Mississippi Delta is rich in fish, crab and shrimp. It’s also ‘soul food’ central: The huge population of African Americans in this region resulted in culinary delights like jambalaya, gumbo, fried chicken, collard greens and grits. The African black-eyed pea is also an important ingredient in southern ‘soul food’. African slaves were resourceful when it came to cooking; chickens were easy to keep, catching a fish was free, and collard greens grew like weeds. The South is also famed for its delicious meringue-based Key Lime Pie (small key limes are found throughout the Florida Keys).

Further north, the New England region is renowned for its pure maple syrup, baked beans, brown bread, clam chowder and clambakes. In Buffalo – Buffalo wings (fried chicken wings) are always served with blue cheese and celery. Almost every kind of cooking can be found in New York City while in the other parts of the mid-Atlantic, Dutch influences are prominent – particularly among the Amish community of Pennsylvania who are famed for their ‘Shoofly Pie’ (a molasses pie that can be either "wet bottom" — consisting of a layer of sweet, gooey molasses beneath a crumb topping or "dry bottom" which is more thoroughly mixed into a cake-like consistency). Local produce of course plays a role when it comes to regional favourites - from Alaska where moose-burgers are popular to Hawaii where Polynesian pit bakes and pineapples reign supreme.

A key national holiday commemorated with food is Thanksgiving, which is a reminder of the first harvest feast which the new settlers celebrated with the local Indians. Native produce like cranberries, pecan nuts and turkey are all on the menu, the turkeys stuffed with a cereal-based stuffing and roasted. Sage is the traditional herb added to the stuffing, along with chopped celery, carrots, and onions. Other more inventive Thanksgiving dishes include the ‘Turducken’: Originating in Louisiana, it’s a turkey stuffed with a duck stuffed with a chicken. The not-so-wholesome but ‘oh so delicious’ deep-fried turkey is also becoming a popular alternative to the traditional thanksgiving turkey roast.

Like Thanksgiving, the all-American ‘Cook Out’ is a proud tradition for the summer months. For centuries, North Americans have perfected the art of barbecuing, using many different types of wood to achieve a wonderful smokey flavour and combining dry spices to make rubs for meats as well as marinating.
When it comes to desserts, North Americans love their pies, which are found in large generous slabs in every diner across the nation, each region using local produce to make wonders like Key Lime Pie, Shoofly Pie and Pecan Pie.