The Boy Who Bakes

Edd Kimber
  • Home
  • Recipes
  • My Books
  • Blog
  • Recipe Index
  • About
  • Home
  • Recipes
  • My Books
  • Blog
  • Recipe Index
  • About

Recipes

  • All
  • baking
  • Biscuits and Cookies
  • Breads and Quickbreads
  • Bundts
  • Cakes
  • Chocolate
  • Dessert
  • drinks
  • Holidays
  • Pastry
  • Scones and Quickbreads
Buche de Noel 3.jpg

Milk Chocolate Tahini Buche de Noel

Edd Kimber December 20, 2019

This Post is Sponsored by Doves Farm Organic Flour

I can’t quite believe that 2019 and another decade is about to end. It has been a massively busy year and I have been working on a few exciting projects that I cannot wait to share with you in the new year. Can you also believe that next year marks 10 years since I first stepped foot in the Bake Off tent? Feels like it just happened. Feeling all the feels about that anniversary! But before I get stuck down memory lane I think we need one last recipe for the year, something very special for Christmas. 

For the final recipe in my Christmas baking series with Doves Farm Organic Flour I have created something very, very special. It uses one of the ingredients that was incredibly popular this year, something that I became a little bit of obsessed with, tahini. I have paired the sesame paste with chocolate to make a twist on a classic Christmas recipe, the Buche de Noel. The cake is a chocolate sponge using Doves Farm Organic Plain Flour and the filling is a milk chocolate and tahini whipped cream. To decorate, the cake is coated in a thin layer of milk chocolate ganache (which is there as an edible glue) and it is finally coated in little shards of sesame caramel, a great textural addition to a cake that is normally on the softer side. 

If you fancy something a little different for Christmas and you want to make this, I would suggest making the cream the day before and baking the cake and assembling on the day you want to serve. The cake needs to be rolled relatively soon after baking and once the cake is decorated the caramel will start pulling moisture out of the ganache and will eventually become sticky and weep.

Doves Farm Organic Plain White Flour is available at Ocado, Sainsburys, Tesco

Buche de Noel 5.jpg


Milk Chocolate Tahini Buche de Noel
Serves 8


Chocolate Sponge Cake
3 large eggs, separated
1/8 tsp cream of tartar
80g caster sugar, divided
50ml vegetable oil
50ml whole milk
30g Doves Farm Organic Plain White Flour
30g cocoa powder

Tahini Milk Chocolate Whipped Cream
300ml double cream
75g tahini
75g milk chocolate
Pinch of salt
1 tsp vanilla bean paste

Milk Chocolate Ganache
75g milk chocolate, finely chopped
60ml double cream

Sesame Caramel Shards
150g caster sugar
1 tbsp sesame seeds (I use a mix of black and white)

sesame caramel-3.jpg


Preheat the oven to 180ºC (160ºC Fan) and line the base a 9x13 baking tin with parchment paper. You can lightly grease the base of the pan to help the parchment stick but make sure the sides remain clean, we want the cake to cling to the sides of the tin as it bakes. 


Make the filling in advance as it needs at least 4 hours to chill before whipping. Place the cream, tahini, chocolate, salt and vanilla into a small saucepan and heat over low heat, stirring regularly, until the chocolate is melted and the mixture is smooth. Pour the cream into a small bowl, cover with clingfilm and refrigerate for at least four hours until cold. I generally make this day before I want to serve the cake, so there is less work on the day.

To make the cake place the egg yolks into one bowl and the egg whites and cream of tartar into another. Add half of the sugar to the yolks and using an electric mixer whisk for 3-4 minutes or until pale and creamy. Add in the oil and the milk and whisk briefly to combine. Add the flour and cocoa powder and mix to form a smooth batter. Set this bowl aside for the moment. Using an electric mixer (cleaned after making the cocoa batter) whisk the egg whites and cream of tartar on medium speed until foamy then slowly sprinkle in the sugar, a tablespoon at a time whisking until the whites hold medium peaks. The final meringue wants to be stiff but still flexible, if the mixture becomes over whisked and dry it will be hard to fold into the cocoa mixture without losing volume.  

Add the meringue to the cocoa batter in three additions, gently folding until streak free. Once fully combined pour into the prepared tin, gently levelling out. Bake in the preheated oven for 12-14 minutes or until the cake springs back to a light touch. Use a rounded blade knife to cut the cake away from the sides of the tin then immediately invert the cake onto a sheet of parchment. Whilst the cake is still warm gently peel the parchment from what is now the top of the cake.

For the filling remove the cream mixture from the fridge and in a large bowl whisk briefly until holding soft peaks. Spread the filling over the cake leaving the short edge near you clean. Carefully roll up the cake and then refrigerate for a couple hours before serving.

For the ganache filling place the cream and chocolate into a small saucepan and place over low heat and stir constantly until melted and smooth. Pour into a small bowl and set in the fridge aside until thickened but still spreadable. Spread the ganache over the outside of the cake, leaving the exposed ends clean, setting aside for the moment. 

To make the caramel shards place the sugar into a medium sized saucepan and cook over medium heat until the sugar has melted and caramelised turning the colour of an old rusty penny. Immediately pour the sugar onto a parchment lined baking tray and tilt the tray to spread into a thin layer. Before the sugar sets sprinkle over the sesame seeds. Set aside for 30 minutes before breaking up into small pieces and sticking to the cake. 

The cake is best served on the day it is made.

In Cakes, Holidays, Chocolate
2 Comments
Christmas Braid 6.jpg

Rye Flour Mincemeat Braid

Edd Kimber December 13, 2019

This Post is Sponsored by Doves Farm Organic Flour

Christmas means mince pies and Christmas cake right? Whilst I love both of those recipes I also enjoy putting exciting twists ontraditional options by addinga little…something extra.

Puff pastry always sounds like a scary recipe, something we avoid, something to be bought and not made. Why would you make it when you can buy it? As much as I think shop-bought puff pastry is a valuable tool, in my opinion, it doesn’t always have the best flavour or texture. This homemade version is a rough puff, a cheat’s puff pastry, a quick version that is worth skipping the supermarket for. There are a couple of different ways of making rough puff and for today’s recipe I have gone with the easiest version. The resulting pastry puffs like traditional puff pastry but even if you screw it up a little you’ll end up with a flaky pastry which is equally good for this recipe, so don’t sweat it, I’ve got you. To make the pastry more than simply a vessel for the filling I am using a blend of Doves Farm Organic Wholemeal Rye Flour and Plain Flour. I would use 100% rye flour for other bakes but it doesn’t have the same amount of gluten as other flours, which can mean it’s trickier to use to make puff pastry. It also tends to absorb more water and can become brittle and trickier to roll out when used solely on its own. For this rough puff I found a 50/50 blend gave a nice texture and a vastly improved flavour compared to regular puff pastry made solely with plain white flour. The rye adds a real warmth and depth of flavour that works brilliantly in this recipe and pairs beautifully with the spices in the mincemeat.

Yes, it’s Christmas so I am still using mincemeat. This puff pastry braid is filled with a simple pastry cream and topped with mincemeat. Those of you that find mincemeat too sweet or rich - this is for you. The custard mellows out the flavour a little and gives a wonderful vanilla tone to the dish, but still keeps all those Christmas spices we love, just in a slightly more subtle way. Whilst I will make mince pies each and every year this braid may be my new favourite way of using mincemeat.

For the decoration of the puff pastry braid I kept it simple, using a liberal sprinkling of demerara sugar to add a little sparkle. If you want something more you could also add flaked almonds which would work brilliantly with the filling (you could also add a few drops of almond extract to the custard if you are an especially big almond fan). Whilst this is a dessert it reminds me a little of a Danish pastry, so I won’t stop you if you fancy serving this for breakfast over the Christmas period, just save me a slice if you do.

Doves Farm Organic Plain White Flour and Wholemeal Rye Flour is available at Ocado, Sainsburys, Tesco

Wholemeal Rye Flour Rough Puff Pastry
115g Doves Farm Organic Plain Flour
115g Doves Farm Organic Wholemeal Rye Flour
200g unsalted butter, diced and chilled
1/2 tsp salt
100-120ml ice cold water

Mincemeat and Custard Filling
250ml whole milk
1 large egg
2 large egg yolks
100g caster sugar
25g cornflour
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
150g mincemeat

To make the pastry place the plain flour, rye flour and salt into the bowl of a food processor and pulse a couple times to combine. Add the butter and pulse until broken up a little but there are still large chunks of butter showing. Tip the flour mixture into a large bowl and drizzle in the water a couple tablespoons at a time, stirring with a butter knife. When enough water has been added for the mixture to start clumping together use your hands to briefly bring together as a uniform dough. Press into a flat rectangle, wrap with clingfilm, and refrigerate for 15 minutes.

Rough Puff.jpg

As this is a cheat’s puff pastry the lamination has no additional butter but this folding does help to increase the layering in the finished dough. On a lightly floured worksurface roll out into a rectangle that is roughly 15cm by 45cm. With the short side of the rectangle facing you fold the dough in thirds, like you are folding a business letter. Wrap the dough in clingfilm and refrigerate for 15 minutes. Repeat this rolling and folding twice more before refrigerating the dough a final 20 minutes (or overnight) before using.

To make the custard place the milk into a medium sized saucepan and bring just to a simmer. Meanwhile place the egg, yolks, sugar, cornflour and vanilla into a large bowl and whisk together until smooth and pale. When the milk is at temperature pour over the egg mixture, whilst whisking to prevent it from curdling the eggs. Pour this custard back into the pan and over medium/high heat whisk constantly until the custard has thickened and is bubbling. Scrape the finished custard into a clean bowl. Press a sheet of clingfilm onto the surface of the custard and refrigerate for at least 4 hours before using.

Preheat the oven to 190C (170C fan) and lime a baking tray with parchment paper.

To assemble roll out the pastry until just bigger than a 35cm x 30cm rectangle, trimming to size. Place the pastry in front of you, horizontally, so one of the longer sides is facing you. Use a knife to score the dough into thirds vertically (see step by step video for reference). With the two outer thirds make 1 inch wide cuts, on a slight diagonal to make strips, removing the corner strips.

Spread the custard filling over the central third of the pastry, leaving the top and bottom flaps of pastry clear. Dot the mincemeat on top of the custard. Fold the top and bottom flaps of pastry up and over the filling and then taking alternate strips, from side to side, braid the pastry strips over the filling. Brush the finished pastry with a beaten egg and sprinkle liberally with demerara sugar. Bake in the preheated oven for 35 minutes or until the pastry is a deep golden brown.

Remove and allow to cool fully before serving. Best served within a day or two.

In Holidays, Pastry
1 Comment

Gingerbread Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting and Sugared Cranberries

Edd Kimber December 6, 2019

This post is sponsored by Doves Farm Organic Flour

The weather has well and truly changed and winter is without a doubt here, stepping outside the warmth of my kitchen is something I’d rather avoid at the moment, I’d much rather be inside baking, no change there then. For the second recipe in my Christmas baking series with Doves Farm Organic Flour I’ve gone with something we all know and love, gingerbread, using Doves Farm Self Raising Flour. 

Gingerbread is a mainstay of my family baking history and over the years I have made a few different versions. This version is one of the easiest but also one of the most festive. The cake is a simple wet to dry method and takes just minutes to make. To serve the cake I’ve opted for a classic cream cheese frosting, the tang and creaminess really pairs well with the gingerbread. If you want to layer in a little more flavour you can add a couple tablespoons of the syrup from a jar of candied ginger. Whilst these two elements would be more than enough I have also added a little festive cheer in the form of some lightly candied cranberries. The cranberries look great on top of the cake but also give a nice sweet-sour pop of flavour that balances out the sweetness in the cake. 

For the flavouring of the cake I have stuck with traditional spices, the stuff you would add to a classic gingerbread, but if you want you can play around with more intense spices like cloves or nutmeg, or more floral sweet spices like cardamom and fennel. Whatever spices you use remember that as with most gingerbread made using golden syrup the cake will keep incredibly well and without its frosting will keep for at least 4 days and will definitely be better with a day’s rest before serving - the flavour deepens and the cake gets a little stickier. 

Doves Farm Organic Self Raising Flour is available from Sainsburys, Ocado and Tesco

Gingerbread 5.jpg

Gingerbread Layer Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting and Sugared Cranberries
Serves 10

Sugared Cranberries
200g fresh cranberries
250g caster sugar
150g water

Quick Ginger Layer Cake
250g Doves Farm Organic Self Raising Flour
1 tbsp ground ginger
2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp mixed spice
1 tsp baking soda
200g golden syrup
125g light brown sugar
125g unsalted butter, diced
250ml whole milk
2 large eggs

Cream Cheese Frosting
75g unsalted butter, room temperature
125g cream cheese
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
400g icing sugar
Pinch of salt

A few hours before you bake the cake prepare the sugared cranberries. This is a form of candying but unlike something like orange peel, we don’t want to simmer the cranberries in a sugar syrup as it break the more delicate cranberries down. Instead we simply soak the berries in the syrup, off the heat. To make, sort through the berries and remove any cranberries that feel soft. Place 150g of the sugar and the water into a small saucepan and over medium heat cook until the sugar has dissolved then simmer for about 3 minutes. Turn off the heat, add the cranberries and set aside for at least an hour to soak. If you’re making these in advance you can leave these to soak overnight (they’ll take on more sugar as the mixture sits). Use a slotted spoon to remove the cranberries from the syrup and set them on a wire rack to cool for an hour. Meanwhile spread the remaining sugar onto a small baking tray. Once the berries have dried for an hour tip them onto the sugar and toss to coat. Remove from the sugar and set aside until needed. The cranberries are not fully candied so don’t last as long as truly candied fruit but they’ll keep for a couple days before the sugar starts to turn syrupy and sticky, just keep them in a sealed container away from heat and direct light.

Preheat the oven to 180ºC (160ºC Fan) and lightly grease two 8 inch round cake tins and line the bases with parchment paper. 

Mix together the flour, spices, baking soda and set aside for the moment. In a large saucepan place the golden syrup, brown sugar and butter and over medium heat cook, stirring occasionally, until the mixture is smooth and combined. Remove the pan from the heat and whisk in the milk. Add the eggs to the syrup mixture and whisk until smooth, then pour into the bowl with the dry goods. Whisk the batter until smooth and no lumps remain but no longer, you don’t want to overmix the batter as the cake will end up a little tough. 

Divide the batter evenly between the two tins and spread into even layers. Bake in the preheated oven for about 20-25 minutes or until the cakes are just starting to come away from the sides of the tin and they spring back to a light touch. Remove the cakes from the oven and set on a wire rack, leaving for 10 minutes to cool before turning out onto from the tins onto the wire rack to cool completely. 

To make the frosting place the butter into the bowl of an electric mixer and beat until soft and creamy. Add the cream cheese and vanilla, beating just until combined, we don’t want to mix too long as the cream cheese will become wet and loose if beaten for too long (this is the reason the cream cheese must be at room temperature before starting). Add the salt and then the icing sugar in two additions and beat until light and fluffy, just a couple minutes.

To decorate place the first cake layer on a plate or cake stand and top with a layer of the frosting. Top with the second cake layer and spread the remaining frosting over the tops and sides of the cake. Finish with a sprinkling of the sugared cranberries and serve.

Note: the recipe for the sugared cranberries makes more than you need but I like to make a large batch as they’re great to have on hand as a sweet nibble if your having a Christmas party or you just want a little festive snack. You’ll also be left with most of the syrup you made and whilst it wont have much flavour from the cranberries it can be kept and used in cocktails where a simple syrup is required. 

Gingerbread cake-2.jpg
In Cakes, Holidays
4 Comments
biscotti-2.jpg

Chocolate Orange Spelt Biscotti

Edd Kimber November 29, 2019

This Post is Sponsored by Doves Farm Organic Flour

It is now irrefutably Christmas baking season and I am throwing myself in to it wholeheartedly. We always have plenty of cakes and puddings, but I think we need more cookies. Those recipes that are great to have on hand for when relatives drop round or for when you’re fed up of shop bought mince pies. 

These biscotti are incredibly easy to make, requiring almost no equipment and a few delicious ingredients. The hero ingredient is Doves Farm Organic Wholemeal Spelt Flour, which adds a slightly sweet nutty flour. Now for those of you who haven’t used spelt, it’s a great introduction to using alternative grains. Firstly it’s important to note that whilst Spelt has less gluten than regular wheat flour it is not a gluten free flour, so it is not appropriate for those with gluten allergies or for coeliacs.. Because of its high protein content and its relatively good level of gluten I find you can often switch it for plain flour fully, although for some recipes like cakes/muffins I tend to use a blend with regular wheat flour to get the texture I want. This is mainly because in recipes where gluten is needed to create structure, like in cakes, the gluten the flour has isn’t as good at creating this type of structure. In cookies or pastry I will often use 100% spelt with less noticeable differences and just an improvement in flavour. With recipes like breads or cake an important thing to note is the flour’s absorption level. The flour tends to absorb more moisture than regular wheat flour so less liquid ingredients are required. If you are wanting to experiment with spelt or other ancient grains I find a good place to start is to use spelt for 25% of the required flour and then work upwards. 

Also for those of you that followed my recent sourdough adventures you might remember that I love to add a small amount of spelt when making sourdough, because the type of gluten present in spelt flour leads to dough with greater extensibility which in my experience gives a more open crumb.

For these biscotti which I make on the smaller side (almost like the size of cantucci) I wanted to go with a flavour we often associate with Christmas without being out and out Christmas and what better than chocolate orange? Growing up my grandfather would regularly make me and his other grandkids a batch of orange chocolates and it was always one of my favourite things. For the chocolate element I have included cocoa nibs in the biscotti and coated the biscuits in milk chocolate. Normally biscotti, which is an unusually crunchy biscuit, is served alongside coffee and dunked to help it soften. With my version being coated in chocolate when you dunk them it ends up giving the coffee a mocha vibe, so a double win as far as I am concerned. 

Doves Farm Organic Wholemeal Spelt Flour is available from Morrisons, Ocado, Sainsbury’s, Tesco

biscotti-3.jpg

Chocolate Orange Spelt Biscotti
Makes Around 25

Biscotti
335g Doves Farm Organic Wholemeal Spelt Flour
3/4 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp fine sea salt
150g caster sugar
3 tbsp honey
50g unsalted butter
Zest of 2 oranges
2 large eggs
100g raw, skin on, almonds
50g cacoa nibs

Coating
200g milk chocolate 
Zest of 1 orange

Preheat the oven to 180ºC (160ºC Fan) and line a large baking tray with parchment paper. 

In a large bowl mix together the flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Place the honey, butter and orange zest and place into a small saucepan and over low/medium heat cook until the butter has melted and the mixture is combined. Set aside for 5 minutes to cool.

Pour the butter mixture, eggs, almonds and cacoa nibs into the bowl with the flour and use a wooden spoon to stir together to form a soft dough. Dust the worksurface with more flour and turn out the dough and cut into two even pieces. Roll each piece into a log that is 5cm wide and place onto the prepared baking tray.

Bake in the preheated oven for about 25 minutes or until golden brown then remove from the oven and allow to cool for 10 minutes. Once cooled use a large serrated knife to cut into slices, about 2cm wide. Turn the slices cut side up and bake for a further 10 minutes. Remove and allow to cool fully. At this stage you can store the cookies in an airtight container for up to two weeks. But if you want to serve them as I prefer, melt the chocolate and dip the cookies halfway into the chocolate. Allow any excess to drip back into the chocolate before transferring to a sheet of parchment. Once all of the cookies have been dipped grate the orange zest over the cookies. Set in the fridge for 15 minutes or until the chocolate has set. Made like this the cookies are best within a week or so. 

In Holidays, Biscuits and Cookies
1 Comment
  • Recipes
  • Older
  • Newer

Twitter

  • Was 8 original films, 3 spin off films, a two part play not enough. Can we have something new. https://t.co/cBZdGEGeyv
    Apr 4, 2023, 1:46 PM
  • RT @deliciousmag: Cacio e pepe, but make it buns! These seriously cheesy bread rolls from @TheBoyWhoBakes are inspired by his favouri… https://t.co/oDZlaDgnN2
    Apr 2, 2023, 11:08 AM
  • RT @TheDailyShow: Congrats to Donald Trump on finally winning a majority of votes! https://t.co/ezP55HZgl0
    Mar 31, 2023, 12:43 AM

Instagram

This weeks bonus recipe, for subscribers to my newsletter, is this gorgeous sour cherry and coconut gateau basque. The crust is a buttery cross between pastry and cake, think a cakey cookie. The filling is a layer of sour cherry topped with a rich coconut custard. A real fun one to make too! Link to my newsletter can be found in my bio - #gateaubasque #pastrycream #coconut #sourcherry
In this months @olivemagazine (out today) the team came and photographed my petit kitchen and we talked about how we put our stamp on the place, without spending a fortune. We hated the bland kitchen that we inherited but, as it was relatively new an
In this months @olivemagazine (out today) the team came and photographed my petit kitchen and we talked about how we put our stamp on the place, without spending a fortune. We hated the bland kitchen that we inherited but, as it was relatively new and in good condition, it felt a waste to rip it out and we also didn’t want to spend the money it would take to rip out the whole thing and replace it (it’s a howdens shell so we could have done something cheaper like @plykeakitchens @holte.studio @madebyhusk) so instead I painted all of the cabinets, using @makeitrustoleum kitchen cabinet paint, to give it some personality and lighten the whole thing. Check out the magazine for the full run down. - #kitchendesign #kitchenremodel #rustoleumcabinettransformations #rustoleumkitchencupboardpaint #kitcheninspiration #theboywhobakes #olivemagazine
Are you making scones all wrong? Maybe, maybe not? But I do want to show you how I make them! This recipe is based on the method I learnt at @belmondlemanoir 12 years ago when I did a stage, and it makes the absolute lightest scones. And shock horror, it involves kneading the dough, albeit very lightly. You can get the full recipe in this weeks newsletter (free) linked in my bio. - #scones #bakingday #worldbakingday #afternoontea #hightea #englishscones #clottedcream #creamtea #theboywhobakes
facebook
  • Contact

The Boy Who Bakes

Edd Kimber

facebook