Category Archives: Recipes

Apricot Bakewell Slice

A is for Apricots

Apricot Bakewell Slice

Everyone has their favourite bars and cakes, this is one of Brian’s. His Gran made it for him with apricot jam because he can’t eat raspberry or any berries without coming out in a delightful rash. Might be more information than you want to know but that’s why this is not the usual raspberry jam version.

The key components of a bakewell slice, are a bottom, a middle and a topping, ( I sound like my old English teacher describing how to write an essay, hah!) and there must be fruit in there and there must be ground almonds. Having said that, there are probably nut free versions out there too. Some bakewells are topped with white icing and cherries, this one was finished off with handcut almond chips, because we had run out of flaked almonds. With hindsight the almond chips made it almost impossible to cut this rich soft bar cleanly, though being home blanched and cut, they were of course fresher tasting than those packet ones you buy ( and a bit cheaper).

To print this recipe off as a pdf click here.

This slice used an 8 “ x 10 “ tin.
I lined the bottom with baking parchment. Another time I might line the sides as well, but it did lift out with a knife run round the edges once it had cooled down a bit.

For the pastry base

Use whatever pastry makes you happy – I used a creme fraiche shortcrust pastry made with 100 grams plain sifted flour and a pinch of salt rubbed together with 50 grams cold butter cut into little bits plus a tablespoon of creme fraiche to bring the pastry together.

You might be better off doubling this as it only makes just enough for a very thin base and you might want some more pastry to play with.

Chll the pastry before you roll it out.

I cut the parchment for the tin first, then used that to cut the pastry base by placing the parchment on top of the rolled out pastry.

Before I worked out how to do labels!

Then I pricked the pastry lightly with a fork and spread half a jar of homemade apricot jam over it, about 220 grams in all and put the tray in the fridge to chill for about half an hour.

The topping was made as the Bakewell Bar recipe in Rachel Allen’s lovely book Bake: From Cookies to Casseroles. She uses a different base more like a shortbread biscuit.

I made the topping with:

100 grams of ground almonds (almond meal)
100 grams of fine semolina
2 eggs beaten lightly with a fork
100 grams of melted butter
100 grams of golden caster sugar
2 heaped teaspoons of mahlab (optional and not particularly traditional)

but you could use a little almond essence if you like the taste of it, that’s what it tastes of traditionally, but I always think it tastes a bit artificial. You could use something like kirsch to add a hint of bitterness to the almonds maybe?

Mix the eggs with the melted cooled butter and almond essence, then add the dry ingredients and mix it all up really well. I let it sit for about ten minutes so that the nuts and semolina could fluff up.

The topping is quite stiff, so you need to be careful about how you put it on top of the jam as you want the jam to stay put as a separate layer. I put small blobs all over and then joined them up with a palette knife, it works fairly well.

Then press the flaked or chipped almonds into the top and bake for about 25 minutes in a 180 º  C  (350 º F)  oven until the top is golden brown. Leave to cool in the tin before cutting, it is very soft and crumbly so take your time doing this.

A slice of apricot bakewell – hope Brian’s Gran would approve…

Like so many cakes made with almonds, if you can bear it, it is better to leave this for a couple of days before eating. It will taste better, more almondy. But I understand if you can’t wait! It is incredibly filling and calorific but very delicious!

Is Allinsons really no good for sourdough?

Boules away!

This post was written for Dan Lepard’s forum. I am republishing it here for those of you who don’t visit his forum as it was a lot of work and it might be of interest. The back story is that various people have consistently had problems with using Allinsons strong bread flour to make sourdough and so Gill the Painter and others, have had a go at doing comparison bakes. (Edit: Dan’s forum no longer exists) I have put more pictures here than on Dan’s forum, that’s the only difference.

Continue reading

Sourdough chicken parmesan potato birthday dog treats

Happy Birthday dear Zeb!

Before bread making, (BBM)  I had a dog, in fact two,  but I didn’t bake.  I had one recipe for liver cake which the dog trainer gave me which I made, froze and doled out for reward based training. Apart from that the dogs had cheese squares, bits of sausage, toast, the less disgusting dog chews, dried fish bits, dried ostrich bits, dried tripe. The usual sort of stuff a spoilt western dog gets given. It’s a huge industry – pet food. If you worry about the origins of your own food, don’t keep a pet unless you are prepared to start fretting about where their food comes from too. The ‘pet food’ industry is a murky place. I work on the principle that if it is pink and tastes of sugar and synthetic bacon it is probably not something I want my dog to eat. Dog tooth decay is endemic and dogs smell bad a lot of the time because of it. Really they don’t need treats at all, any more than we need chocolate brownies!

Crumb shot - looks better than my loaf does...

Then, the first time I made bread sticks, the dogs became very interested and for a while I experimented with variations on the bread stick theme…but the dogs were trained by the time they were about a year old and didn’t need so many exotic treats to get them to do what they should be doing… I made the odd batch of liver cake, but it wasn’t really needed. Then we discovered that the supermarkets did small boxes of cocktail sausages and lazily we moved on to those for those days when the dogs needed some little something extra or were being looked after by someone else who needed a hand.

But Steve’s comment today (see his recent post on his delightful blog Burntloafer) reminded me that not so long ago he had used some sourdough to make tasty treats for his fussy dogs and Abby says she doesn’t mind the odd dog post… So today, having made a very flat pain de campagne, one of those breads, that sticks to the banneton and then collapses and spreads on the peel, to rouse itself into a light arc in the oven, sighing all the while, “Forgive me, I know I was supposed to be a jaunty, springy little number but this is all I can manage today, honest… whine, whinge….”

(Does sourdough suffer with depression sometimes?)

Please love me anyway....

Sorry where was I?

So being the dog’s birthday and all, what the hell, make him some sourdough treats, he eats enough bits of toast… he knows what it tastes like. If he doesn’t eat them I will offer them around with some taramasalata.

This is what I made:

Sourdough chicken parmesan potato birthday dog treats

  • Strip 3 ounces of chicken off last night’s roast chicken pieces
  • Blitz in small food processor to crumbs
  • Mix with 1 cold cooked potato
  • Add an egg
  • Add 75 – 100 grams white sourdough starter
  • Throw in a tablespoon of left over parmesan (Zeb would walk over his mother to get to the cheese)
  • Mix together
  • Add enough bread flour to make a sticky but manageable dough
  • Knead a bit
  • Sprinkle lots of flour on a board, pat the dough out
  • Hunt for your dog bone biscuit cutter
  • Cut out shapes
  • Put on parchment lined tray
  • Cover with towel, leave to prove for about an hour
  • Heat oven to 200 C Fan
  • Put trays in oven
  • After 20 minutes take little biscuit sized treats out
  • Turn down the oven to 180 C and give the big bone shaped treats another 10 minutes
  • Take out and allow to cool

Do a taste test. Yes, they’re acceptable to everyone.

This is a crazy world. We shouldn’t be baking for our dogs.  On the other hand if you see the rubbish or dare to taste the stuff that the pet food industry wants you to give your dogs as treats, you would consider doing the same.  Given that I have a pair of dogs in my home, the deal is they give me eternal love, I give them food, a walk a day, a warm bed and just once in a while  – sourdough chicken biscuits.

I like presents!