Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Hiding the vegetables


My oldest used to eat anything, now he's completely unpredictable, and pretty difficult when it comes to vegetables. So I went to my pile of Practical Parenting magazines, and found a recipe for hidden vegetable tomato sauce. I can't print the recipe, as I assume that it's covered by copyright.

The principle is to chop up the vegetables finely and then puree the sauce after it's done. That way it looks like a plain tomato sauce, and the child is none the wiser. It worked for us. Instead of chopping, I blitzed the vegetables, and I used a can of chopped tomatoes instead of the tomato passata. When it had finished cooking, I think I could have gotten away with serving it as is, as it looked unthreatening, but I didn't take any chances, and went ahead and pureed it.

It certainly made for a much more tasty tomato sauce than the one I usually make, and both kids devoured it.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Wheatgerm and bran bread


When I first started baking bread, it seemed that all my recipes called for wheatgerm and bran. So I bought one packet of each, and guess what? None of the recipes I have used since then call for them. So I'm trying to use them up. I found a nice recipe for wheatgerm bread, which I'll post here next time I make it. But I need to use up my bran! I'm also trying to use up some linseed. My grandmother gave me the seeds, and I'm not a huge fan of overly-seedy bread, so it's taking me time to use up the linseed.

BTW - all my bread recipes yield two small loaves. I use a Tupperware UltraPlus loaf pan (1.9 l) and a metal pan. You need to calculate extra baking time in the Tupperware pan, but it's deeper than my metal pan, which makes for taller loaves.

Wheatgerm and bran loaf
45 g wheatgerm
45 g bran
120 g coursely-ground whole wheat flour
75 g wholegrain
15 g linseed
600 g plain flour
12 g rock salt
30 g walnut oil
1 packet quick-rising yeast
6 dl water
  1. Mix wheatgerm, bran, whole wheat flour, wholegrain, linseed and half the water in a bowl, and leave it to rest for 1 hour.
  2. After 1 hour, add remaining ingredients to (1), and knead.
  3. Leave to rise, shape into loaves, then leave to proof.
  4. Bake at 200 C for 45 minutes.
Result? The bread was slightly less dense than the whole wheat loaves I wrote about yesterday. A good bread for spreads, and good flavor.
Definitions
Hvetekim = wheatgerm
Kruskakli/hvetekli: bran

Monday, March 12, 2007

Basic whole wheat bread (2 loaves)

I started baking bread regularly a couple of months ago, and am always trying out variations on a basic recipe.

Whole wheat bread

180 g wholegrain
240 ml water
480 g finely-ground whole wheat flour
420 g plain flour
600 ml water
1 packet quick-rising yeast
2 ts rock salt

  1. Mix the wholegrain and water, and leave to soak fo 3-4 hours, or overnight.
  2. Mix the remaining ingredients, add to (1), and knead.
  3. Leave to rise until doubled.
  4. Divide in two, shape into loaves, and leave to proof.
  5. Bake at 175C for 1 hour.

RESULT? Nice and dense, but a bit bland. A good bread to eat with soft cheese.

Definitions
Sammalt hvetemel, fin = finely-ground whole wheat flour
Helkorn = wholegrain (just grains)

Let me know if you use different translations for these terms.

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Birthday Month is Over

March is finally here! That means the dreaded birthday month of February is over. What do you do when you have birthdays 3 out of 4 weekends, and the ages to celebrate are: 1, 3 and 38? You bake en masse. And you suddenly start experimenting with food coloring. Not to mention fancy cake decorating!

I've baked for years and years, and stuck to fairly simple frosting of cakes. But now that I've got kids, I got inspired. So here's a look at what I did. There's plenty of room for improvement!

1-year-old

Apple cake for the birthday child, followed by chocolate cake for the guests (no photos, sorry).

3-year-old

3 years old and 3 parties: Help!

Party 1: "Sun cake" (butter cake), apple cake, Belgian waffles (Brussels style) and buns.

Party 2: Winnie-the-Pooh chocolate cake, chocolate cupcakes, yellow cupcakes and buns.

Party 3: Sent a batch of Norwegian "sveler" to the child's nursery (no photos).


38-year-old:

Chocolate cake and sour-cream cake with Oreo pieces. Then we suddenly remembered that one of our guests is allergic to chocolate, so we had to quickly whip up an apple cake (no photo).








CONCLUSION:
It was all doable, but I need to practice cake decorating before next February comes around. Maybe get to know Wilton better...