Monday 25 November 2013

Orange Chocolate Fudge (Naturally Gluten-Free)

Want to know what the most delicious thing is in the world? Orange chocolate. I'll let the photo do the talking.



Let's move onto the recipe...

INGREDIMENTS
This is a large quantity that will make about 1¼ pounds (570 grammes) of fudge, but I've found it can be easily halved or even quartered. Just be really careful when making small batches because it can burn or crystallise easily.
  • 16 ounces (450 grammes) caster sugar
  • 4 fluid ounces (120 millilitres) cream
  • 4 fluid ounces (120 millilitres) milk
  • 4 ounces (115 grammes) butter
  • Finely grated zest of 1 orange or a few drops of orange essence
  • Orange food colouring
  • 6 ounces (170 grammes) milk or dark chocolate
  • 1½ ounce (40 grammes) sunflower oil
  • Optional: sugar strands, hundreds and thousands or coloured sugar

HOW-TO
  • Prepare an 8 inch (20 centimeter) square tin by either greasing it lightly or lining it with non-stick baking paper. You could also use a silicone baking tin, which needs no greasing or lining.
  • In a heavy-based large saucepan, heat the cream, milk and butter until the butter has melted.
  • Pour the sugar into the middle of the pan so that it forms a little mountain in the middle, then gently bring in the milk mixture from the edges. Your aim here is to get as little sugar as possible on the edges of the pan, as this can cause your fudge to go grainy.
  • Stir the mixture over medium-low heat until the sugar has completely dissolved. Using a pastry brush dipped in hot water, wash the sugar crystals from the side of the pan. Alternatively, you can just pop the lid on the pan for a minute to allow the steam to wash it all away instead.
  • Once the sugar has dissolved and there is no evidence of sugar crystals left, bring the mixture to the boil and once boiling clip a sugar thermometre to the side of the pan. Cook over medium-high heat until the whole thing reaches 118°C (245°F). Please don't stir!
  • While the fudge is cooking, fill your sink or wash basin with about 2 inches (5 centimetres) of cold water.
  • Once the fudge has reached temperature, take the pan from the heat and dip the bottom in the cold water to stop cooking immediately. Leave the mixture to cool for 12 minutes (a minute per ounce (28 grammes) of sugar).
  • Add the zest or orange essence and add enough food colouring to make it a nice pale orange. 
  • Beat vigorously with a wooden spoon until thick, creamy and opaque. The mixture will slightly lose its shine and become more matte, and the consistency will be like freshly made Mr Whippy soft serve ice-cream. 
  • Pour into your prepared tin and allow to cool at room temperature for about 30 minutes until cool to touch.
  • Melt the chocolate in a basin over simmering water or in the microwave and then mix in the sunflower oil. Pour this glaze over the top of the orange layer and shake until level. If you like, you can decorate with the sugar strands, hundreds and thousands or coloured sugar.
  • Allow to set for at least 6 hours or overnight.


Do not even think of setting it in the fridge: you can store it in the fridge once set, but setting the fudge in the fridge will cause crystallisation. Store in an air tight container to avoid it catching any unwanted odours or flavours.

Thursday 21 November 2013

Peanut Butter Fudge (Naturally Gluten-Free)


Here in Ireland and the UK, peanut butter is something you put in the sandwiches of school children, or eat by the spoonful if you're trying to body-build, however in the United States of America, it seems like a national institution. People here would never really think of it as something to put in or around sweets, due to its use as a savoury sandwich filling, and the only homegrown sweetie on would find peanut butter in is a Peanut Butter KitKat, and I think that was only invented in repsonse to the influx of American sweeties, particularly Reese's Peanut Butter Cups.

I'd never seen a Reese's cup until I was i my late teens, and I remember a few of my American college mates waxing lyrical about the fact that Ireland had started importing 'real candy' (and I resisted the urge to tell them that all this time they could've been making them at home with great ease using chocolate bars, peanut butter, normal butter, icing sugar and paper cake cases)


Now however, I have leapt onto the peanut butter sweetie bandwagon and uploaded my own version of the Usonian classic: Peanut Butter Fudge. Unlike most recipes on the internet, this version doesn't need (the abomnible invention that is-) Marshmallow Creme or white chocolate chips, it just needs five ingredients that are commonly found in an Irish or British kitchen.

INGREDIMENTS
This is a large quantity that will make about 1¼ pounds (570 grammes) of fudge, but I've found it can be easily halved or even quartered. Just be really careful when making small batches because it can burn or crystallise easily.
  • 12 ounces (340 grammes) light brown sugar
  • 3½ fluid ounces (100 millilitres) cream
  • 3½ fluid ounces (100 millilitres) milk
  • 3½ ounces (100 grammes) butter
  • 3 ounces (85 grammes) smooth peanut butter
  • Optional: 1 teaspoon (5 millilitres) of vanilla essence

HOW-TO
  • Prepare an 8 inch (20 centimeter) square tin by either greasing it lightly or lining it with non-stick baking paper. You could also use a silicone baking tin, which needs no greasing or lining.
  • In a heavy-based large saucepan, heat the cream, milk and butter until the butter has melted.
  • Pour the sugar into the middle of the pan so that it forms a little mountain in the middle, then gently bring in the milk mixture from the edges. Your aim here is to get as little sugar as possible on the edges of the pan, as this can cause your fudge to go grainy.
  • Stir the mixture over medium-low heat until the sugar has completely dissolved. Using a pastry brush dipped in hot water, wash the sugar crystals from the side of the pan. Alternatively, you can just pop the lid on the pan for a minute to allow the steam to wash it all away instead.
  • Once the sugar has dissolved and there is no evidence of sugar crystals left, bring the mixture to the boil and once boiling clip a sugar thermometre to the side of the pan. Cook over medium-high heat until the whole thing reaches 118°C (245°F). Please don't stir!
  • While the fudge is cooking, fill your sink or wash basin with about 2 inches (5 centimetres) of cold water.
  • Once the fudge has reached temperature, take the pan from the heat and dip the bottom in the cold water to stop cooking immediately. 
  • Add the peanut butter to the mixture, then leave the mixture to cool for 12 minutes (a minute per ounce (28 grammes) of sugar).
  • Add the vanilla essence and beat vigorously with a wooden spoon until thick, creamy and opaque. The mixture will slightly lose its shine and become more matte, and the consistency will be like freshly made Mr Whippy soft serve ice-cream. 
  • Pour into your prepared tin and allow to cool at room temperature for at least 6 hours or overnight.
Do not even think of setting it in the fridge: you can store it in the fridge once set, but setting the fudge in the fridge will cause crystallisation. Store in an air tight container to avoid it catching any unwanted odours or flavours.

Monday 4 November 2013

Confectionary Failures and New Job (thus Temporary Pause in Blogging)!

Well, I'm back from the North in one piece! I returned last Friday, and it was a fantastic trip. Also, since returning I've acquired a new job which has six o'clock in the morning starts. At least I get paid.

But, back to baking.

Every once in a while, I get bored of the recipes I have and want to try something new, and sometimes that can be as simple as making a variation on a recipe I have already. Since my return from my travels I've been trying to make a few different kinds of fudge just to keep my culinary mind stimulated. I'm not sure why, but every batch I made failed miserably and never set.

I thought maybe it was the recipes I was using, so I went back to an old faithful recipe that always works and that didn't work either. I've been picking my brains trying to work out what has been going wrong: atmospherics? Incorrectly calibrated thermometer? Whatever it is, it's been seriously annoying me.

As such, my little baking bubble has been a little burst and I don't know what to make to get my mojo back, as I'm sick and tired of making the same old things. I think it's time to do some research....

Until I get fully settled into my new job and get used to the change in body clock I will be taking a little break from blogging. I'm not going to say exactly how long I will be gone for, but it'll certainly be less than a month.

Thanks to all my followers and readers for your patience! x

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