citrusandcandytest | Just another WordPress.com site

Web Name: citrusandcandytest | Just another WordPress.com site

WebSite: http://citrusandcandytest.wordpress.com

ID:243216

Keywords:

another,Just,citrusandcandytest,site,com,WordPress,

Description:

keywords:
description:Just another WordPress.com site
citrusandcandytest Just another WordPress.com site Skip to content HomeAbout Older posts Hello world! Posted on by citrusandcandytest

Welcome to WordPress.com. After you read this, you should delete and write your own post, with a new title above. Or hit Add New on the left (of the admin dashboard) to start a fresh post.

Here are some suggestions for your first post.

You can find new ideas for what to blog about by reading the Daily Post.Add PressThis to your browser. It creates a new blog post for you about any interesting  page you read on the web.Make some changes to this page, and then hit preview on the right. You can alway preview any post or edit you before you share it to the world. Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment Chocolate Granola Posted on by citrusandcandytest



I remember my first foray into granola production:

Recipe ingredients: bowl of cornflakes with a token handful of oats and a generous drizzling of warm honey.

Method: Mix it all together to a sticky paste, carefully slather it on a baking sheet then bake it till its golden perfection. Grab the scraper to expunge the sweet gummy mess off the baking tray to a bowl to cool till its crunchy. Break into clusters and serve with a thick sprinkling of sugar and a generous pouring of milk.

I was such a healthy child. Thankfully I grew up a little. And so did my granola. I admit I dont eat it as much as I use to, simply because Im not a breakfast person anymore. Dont get me wrong, I love my brekkie food but not at the ungodly hours of well, morning (vampire rarr). But you gotta love the granola because it isnt just for morning sustenance


You can use anything you like in the dry ingredients; rolled oats, seeds such as pumpkin or flax, nuts, dried fruit and dessicated coconut, cocoa powder or ground hazelnuts for added flavour. To bind the dry ingredients I used honey, brown sugar syrup and melted butter. And oh baby, chocolate.


I havent made
chocolate granola in ages but after a bit of online food-porning, it was all I could think about to munch on. I followed my usual honey granola recipe only with added melted chocolate. The addition of cocoa for added chocolatey oomph was inspired by these beauties, which were the instigators behind the cravings.


You can of course, have this plain with milk for a bit of cereal love. But its also brilliant sprinkled on yoghurt, ice cream, rice pudding, baked or poached fruit or berries. This stuff is so easy and quick to make and it keeps for ages in an airtight container so you can always have some on hand to throw on whatever you desire. Or you could do what I do; leave a (hefty) jar of it on the coffee table so you can greedily pick at it while watching TV.


Chocolate Granola

Ingredients

500g rolled oats
100g dried cranberries or sour cherries, chopped (or substitute with any dried fruits)
50g raisins
50g pumpkin seeds (pepitas)
50g dessicated coconut
3 Tbl cocoa powder
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/8 tsp salt

125g brown sugar
100ml water
30g butter
125ml honey
1.5 tsps vanilla extract
150g dark chocolate, chopped

Method

Preheat oven to 180°C and line three baking trays with baking paper.

Place the oats, dried cranberries, raisins, pumpkin seeds, coconut, cocoa, cinnamon and salt in a large mixing bowl and toss until combined (hands are the easiest tool here).

In a pot over medium heat, heat the sugar, water and butter until sugar has dissolved and butter has melted. Add the honey and vanilla and stir to combined.

Remove from heat and add the chocolate and stir until melted and everything is combined.

Pour the chocolate mixture into the oats and with a wooden spoon, mix until everything is coated and combined.

Spread the clusters of granola on the trays in a single layer. Or if you wish, break up the clusters if you prefer a looser granola (just like The Captain because crunchy clusters hurts his old man teeth, poor thing).

Bake each tray separately for 20-25 minutes until its dried out (granola will get more crunchy as it cools). Make sure to turn the granola and move it around halfway through the baking time to make sure it bakes evenly and doesnt burn.

The longer you bake it, the browner it gets, which means super crunchy granola but it also burns quickly after 20 minutes so keep an eye on it.

Remove from oven and allow to cool completely before storing it in an airtight container.

Serve it with fresh fruit, baked fruits, yoghurt, as a cereal with milk, on ice cream or as crumble on your favourite dessert.

Print this recipe

Recipe lovingly inspired by Nigella Lawson and Delicious Days.

Posted in Breakfast and Brunch, Chocolate | Leave a comment Autumn Pig andBeer Posted on by citrusandcandytest



With autumn settling in, the stockings and jackets are coming out and so is my cast iron pot. Once again, brawn meets beer for another hearty and soulful tryst and I couldnt be happier. I love my one pot cooking. For my family, its easy and effortless and it never fails to fill our stomachs for days.


This is another deep and flavoursome concoction; a chicken stock based stew that is permeated by the flavour of pork, beefed up with potatoes and fragranced with pale ale. Crusty bread is an essential here but it is equally heavenly with a side of braised cabbage, particularly
this one which, as Ive already shouted from the rooftops, is the best cabbage dish Ive ever tasted.

Stew with Braised Cabbage in Balsamic


I mustve cooked every type of meat in every type of grog under the sun but the
Pig and Beer is one of our favourites. The comfort level is high but its not overly rich and heavy. And despite the increasingly cool weather outside, this autumn beauty goes down very well with a few cold pints.


• • •
Related Recipes
Irish StewBeef and Red Wine Pot PieSunday Gravy
Flashback
6 months ago: Cream of Asparagus Soup1 year ago: Gubana (Sweet Italian Easter Bread)


Autumn Pig and Beer Stew

Ingredients

2kg of pork leg chops, excess fat and rind removed
2 brown onions, chopped into small pieces
6 cloves of garlic, finely diced
3 rashers of middle bacon, sliced thinly
800ml of pale ale
800ml chicken stock (low-sodium)
A few sprigs of fresh thyme
1 Tbl of worcestershire sauce
1/2 tsp of smoked paprika
6 large waxy potatoes, peeled and chopped
Handful of chopped fresh parsley to serve (optional)

Method

In a large pot over high heat, melt a knob of butter with a dash of oil and brown pork chops on both sides until golden. Remove and set aside. Reduce heat to medium.

Add the onions, garlic and bacon and sauté for 5 minutes until veges have softened and bacon is golden.

Add the pork back into the pot and pour in the beer and stock. Bring to a boil.


Reduce heat to low, stir in the herbs, worcestershire sauce, paprika and simmer gently for 2.5 hours until pork is pull-apart tender and the stock is reduced and flavoursome (the thick leg chops will need a bit of time to really tenderise).

Add the potatoes for the last 45 minutes to cook until tender (as in after 1hr 45 mins). Season to taste with salt and freshly ground pepper.

If you wish, use a bit of cornflour (mixed in a little cold water to form a paste) to thicken the stew to your preference.

Serve with a scattering of chopped fresh parsley and crusty bread (and beer!).

Print this recipe



Posted in Meat, Pork, Soups and Stews | Leave a comment Braised Cabbage inBalsamic Posted on by citrusandcandytest



Friends, theres a breeze up my skirt and it aint from the autumn wind. Ok sit down and look into my eyes. You trust me, dont you? Because Im going to tell you one thing thats going to change your life. Ya ready?

Braised. Balsamic. Cabbage. You need to make this now.

Who couldve guessed that a humble cabbage could give this carnivore a nice lofty breeze in her tail (hold the cabbage wind jokes peeps). But seriously, this is the best cabbage dish youll ever taste and for a vegetable that is pretty bloody boring, its a big claim. But then again, the cabbage is cooked in butter, sugar and balsamic vinegar. And it does sit all pretty and tender in a spiced, syrupy, sweet-but-with-a-bite glaze. Not hard to love it at all, no siree.

You can serve it as a side dish to any rich red meat but I reckon any game especially duck, would be the most divine. I never thought I could be in love with a vego dish and now I cant imagine preparing cabbage any other way. Far be it for me to mess with magic right?


Braised Cabbage in Balsamic

Ingredients

1 red cabbage (about 700g), outer leaves removed, quartered, cored and sliced thinly
2 tart Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored and sliced thickly
150g butter
150g light brown sugar
150ml balsamic vinegar (substitute with cider vinegar if you wish)
2 cinnamon sticks
1/4 tsp ground cloves

Method

Preheat oven to 180°C.

In a casserole dish over medium heat, stir together the butter, sugar and vinegar until butter has melted and sugar has dissolved. Add the cinnamon and cloves and remove from heat.

Add cabbage and apple and toss to coat. Cover the surface with a sheet of wet, crumpled baking paper (a.k.a a cartouche) and bake in the oven for 1-1.5 hours or until the cabbage is tender but with a slight bite and the liquid has reduced to a slightly syrup consistency.

Give it a stir every 30 minutes or so but be sure to re-wet the baking paper each time you do to prevent it from burning.

Serve warm on the side to any meat dish.

Print this recipe

Recipe adapted from Cooking For Friends by Gordon Ramsay.



Posted in Side Dish, Vegetable, Vegetarian | Leave a comment The Bananarrot (Layered Carrot and Banana Cake with White Chocolate Cream CheeseFrosting) Posted on by citrusandcandytest



As if the title wasnt clear enough, but just in case you didnt know,
The Bananarrot is basically one layer of awesome atop another layer of awesome, slathered with one helluva creamy smooth frosting to make one epic awesomemest of awesome cake. Ok short and sweet confession, Im not feeling the most articulate and eloquent today so forgive my teenage-esque superlatives hehe.

These cakes comes from my favourite cookbook, Heavenly Cakes by Rose Levy Beranbaum, a beloved member of my family with its well-thumbed flour-covered pages and a few noticeable stains of grease. If you love baking cakes like I do, then I demand beg implore you to get this book. I want Rose to adopt me as her long lost niece so we can spend many afternoons together baking cakes and drinking tea. Umm I promised myself that I wasnt going to sound like a gushing fan-girl but looks like I failed!

Ive made the banana cake and the frosting so many times before that it has pretty much earned the lifetime achievement award (you can read me getting all hot and dreamy about it here). Needless to say, the carrot cake is a worthy competitor for my affections. Both, as you can gather, works brilliantly with the subtle sweet and tangy frosting so instead of picking one of the two to make for a lunch gathering, I decided to sandwich the two together, which led to its new brilliant moniker, The Bananarrot.

A few nutrition fairies will probably die when I say this but this has to be most amazing (albeit naughty) way to get my daily serving of fruit and veges. Hmmm lets have another perve at the cake shall we? Hello!


Classic Carrot Cake

Ingredients

150g of plain flour
3/4 tsp of baking powder
1/2 tsp of bicarb soda
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 Tbl of cocoa powder
1 tsp ground cinnamon
150g caster sugar
50g light brown sugar or muscovado
150ml of canola oil
2 large eggs
1 tsps vanilla extract
1.5 cups or 227g of coursely shredded carrot

Method

Preheat oven to 175°C and grease and line a 22cm cake tin (9-inch).

In a bowl, sift and whisk together the flour, baking powder, bicarb, salt, cocoa and cinnamon.

In another large bowl, beat together the caster sugar, brown sugar, oil, eggs and vanilla on medium speed for a minute or until well blended. Add the flour mixture and beat on low speed until just incorporated.

Add the carrots and beat for another 10 seconds or until combined. Scrape batter into cake tin, level the top and bake for 45-55 minutes or until a cake tester inserted comes out clean and the centre of the cake spring back when lightly pressed.

Cool in tin for 10 minutes then turn out to cool completely.

Banana Cake

Ingredients

2 large very ripe bananas, peeled and broken into pieces
116g sour cream
2 eggs
1.5 tsps vanilla extract
1 tsp lemon zest
170g caster sugar
120ml canola oil
200g cake flour (or 30g cornflour plus 170g plain flour)
1/4 tsp salt
1.5 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda

Method

Preheat oven to 175°C. Grease and line a 22cm springform cake tin (9-inch).

In a food processor, add the bananas and sour cream and blend until smooth. Make sure to scrape down the sides with a silicone spatula to incorporate it all.

Add the eggs, vanilla and zest and process for about 10 seconds until smooth. Scrape out into a large mixing bowl.

Add the sugar to banana mixture and with an electric mixer on medium speed, whisk until combined. Gradually add the oil, beating it until its completely mixed through.

Sift over combined dry ingredients (flour, salt, baking powder and bicarb) and mix on low speed until the ingredients have moistened and it has combined.

Scrape batter into cake tin, level the top and bake for 45-55 minutes or until a cake tester inserted comes out clean and the centre of the cake spring back when lightly pressed.

White Chocolate Cream Cheese Frosting

Ingredients

255g white chocolate, chopped
340g cream cheese, softened but still cool
85g (6 Tbl) unsalted butter, softened but still cool
21g sour cream

Method

In a double boiler or bowl over gentle simmering water (make sure the bottom of the bowl isnt touching the water), melt the white chocolate. Remove from heat and set aside until it is cool but still fluid.

In a food processor, process the cream cheese, butter and sour cream until mixed and smooth. Make sure to scrape down the sides with a spatula to incorporate it all. Add the cooled white chocolate and mix until its all smooth and mixed. If its a little soft, firm it up in the fridge before icing.

To Assemble Cakes

Trim your two cakes if necessary to get two even layers. Use about 3/4 cup (or 180ml) of frosting to sandwich the two cakes together. Use remainder to frost the top and if you have enough the sides too. Garnish with chopped walnuts and/or raisins if you wish.


Print these recipes.

Recipes adapted from Heavenly Cakes by Rose Levy Beranbaum.


Posted in Cakes, Fruit, Vegetable | Leave a comment Sweet Thyme and Choc ChipMuffins Posted on by citrusandcandytest



Ive always been taught to be grateful for what you have and never take things for granted. In an unpredictable world where circumstances can change for the worse in a snap, theres really no other motto that I ardently live by.

Im grateful for The Captain and my dog The Fi, both of which, have the awesome ability to soothe and calm my frazzled soul.

For my amazing friends; the special kind who truly knows who you are and will stand by your side unconditionally and without hesitation. To have one is miracle enough but to have a handful, well I count myself extremely lucky (insert love heart here).


Im also thankful for the simple joy of baking and for eggs, butter, milk, flour, sugar, chocolate

Finally, for the ritual of sipping hot tea and taking a bite out of a warm, freshly baked muffin that has been lovingly slathered with butter. These muffins aint fancy but the pleasure it brings is immeasurable.

For all of that, I am grateful.


Sweet Thyme and Chocolate Chip Muffins

Makes 12 large muffins

Ingredients

200g light brown sugar
2-3 Tbls of thyme leaves (this gives a subtle flavour but feel free to adjust and ramp it up!)
2 large eggs
250ml milk
125ml of canola or vegetable oil
1 tsp vanilla extract
400g plain flour
4 tsps of baking powder
1/2 tsp of salt
150g chocolate chips (dark, milk, white, your choice!)

Method

Preheat oven to 200°C and line a 12-muffin tin with patty cases.

Whisk the sugar, thyme leaves, eggs, milk, oil and vanilla extract until combined.

Sift over the flour, baking powder and salt and lightly mix with a whisk until just combined. Fold through the chocolate chips. Its totally fine for a muffin batter to be slightly lumpy because itll yield softer muffins. Overmix it until smooth and theyll end up dry and hard (and honey, nobody likes a hard muffin!).


Spoon out the batter into muffin cases to about 3/4 full. Bake for 20 25 minutes until golden and the centre springs back when lightly pressed or the skewer comes out clean when inserted.

Transfer muffins to wire rack and cool slightly. Serve warm with a dusting of icing sugar and butter on the side.

Print this recipe.

Recipe adapted from Paul A. Youngs Adventures with Chocolate.



Posted in Breakfast and Brunch, Chocolate, Cupcakes and Muffins | Leave a comment Irish Stew (must be St. Patricks Dayagain!) Posted on by citrusandcandytest



Time for the cows to come home and crack a few bevies because March is here, which means everybodys Irish on the 17th! Awesome long-time readers of le Citrus and Candy would know that
St. Patricks Day is one of my favourite holidays of the year and a regular fixture on my culinary calendar. Because theres nothing that this robust girl loves more than hearty, manly stews. Its all about the meat but when brawn meets beer? Ooh baby!


The humble stew is something Ive grew with just as much as laksas and one of the first things I learnt to make when I was a wee child. We may have been an Asian family but Mother Superior definitely knew how to whip up many a beef stews for the kiddies which we would attack like crazy with baked strips of puff pastry to lovingly soak up the gravy. We
loved our Brit food and beef so this was like a special treat for us, usually served on nights when the parentals were going to hit Perths Burswood Casino, leaving us in the care of Big Bad Bro. Mean ol bastard use to make my sis and I wash all the dishes for him! Sometimes hed make up for it by bringing out the blankets so we could all play princess together, other times, the parents would just come home to a whole lotta tears and tantrums.

Aah memories


Anyway, you certainly cant think of Irish food without thinking of
Irish Stew. Oh my gawd, I love this stuff in all shapes and forms but always with a good sloshing of extra stout and a deadly serving of spuds (ummm carbs). As with most stews, following a recipe strictly to a point is totally unnecessary because you can throw in anything you want (except the kitchen sink) and itll always cook up beautifully. So take my recipe with a grain of salt because I may or may not have measured 100% accurately (I never do for ye olde stews oops), but rest assured that no matter what you choose to do with it, itll turn to a big pot of hearty, meaty goodness.

Final lesson: dont forget the extra pints of stout to wash it all down with!


Irish Stew

Serves 6-8

Ingredients

• 700g beef chuck, diced into 2cm pieces
• 700g deboned fatty lamb, diced into 2cm pieces (leg, shoulder or neck)
• 1 large leek, halved lengthwise and sliced into 1cm thickness
• 8 cloves of garlic
• 4 Tbl (1/4 cup) of plain flour
• 140g tomato paste
• 375ml of Guinness Extra Stout
• 1 L of beef or lamb stock (or a combo of the two)
• 1.5 Tbl of worcestershire sauce (magical stuff, I add it in everything lol!)
• Bouquet Garni
4 sprigs of rosemary, 6 sprigs of thyme, 3 bay leaves tied together
• 2 large carrots (about 450g), peeled and chopped into 1.5cm pieces
• 5-6 large waxy potatoes (about 800g), peeled and chopped into 2cm pieces (soak in cold water if preparing ahead)
• 1-2 Tbl sugar (or to taste)
• 1-2 tsp of salt (or to taste)
• 1 tsp ground black pepper
• 1 Tbl freshly chopped parsley to garnish (optional)

Method

In a casserole pot, heat up some oil, then brown the beef and lamb in small batches until evenly seared all over. Remove and set aside while you brown the rest but keep the beef and lamb separate.

Add another dash of oil in the same pot, then sauté the leeks and garlic until softened.

Add the beef and all the meat juices. Shower over the flour and stir to coat (dont worry when it starts to look grossly gluggy). Cook for a minute or two.

Add the tomato paste, Guinness, stock and worcestershire sauce and stir, making sure to scrape the bottom. Bring to a boil, then lower the heat to the lowest, add the fresh herbs and simmer gently for about an hour.

Add the lamb, carrots and potatoes and simmer for another 45 minutes to an hour or until the veges are cooked and the meat is tender.

Remove the bouquet garni and add the sugar, salt and pepper and season to taste.

Serve immediately (or even better, the next day) with crusty bread and garnish with parsley.

Print this recipe

Cooking Notes

• Do not trim all the fat off the lamb because this will help keep the meat tender and flavoursome. But make sure to simmer the stew slowly. If you cook it too rapidly it will break down the meat and fat into the stew and make it overly greasy.

• Irish Stew traditionally contains lamb but feel free to substitute with anything you like. The meat is also not normally browned so skip this step if you wish to save time.

• I like using a combination of beef and lamb stock in the stew. I do this by simmering lamb leg bones in a ready made beef stock for about an hour to give it an extra oomph in flavour. But if you only have beef, then that is totally fine too.

• Lamb doesnt take long to cook and tenderise so thats why I always add it after the beef. Beef normally takes around 2-2.5 hours depending on the cut and thickness and lamb takes around 45-60 minutes.

• Feel free to change it up or adjust the ingredients and measurements whether its changing the stock, meat, veges, or adding more or less sugar, salt or beer (more beer I say!). The beauty of stews is that its totally versatile.

Omg did that all just sound like a lecture? :S



Posted in Irish, Meat, Soups and Stews | Leave a comment Kuih Kodok with Sangkaya (Fried Banana Dumplings with Thai Coconut and PandanCustard) Posted on by citrusandcandytest



I was going to start off this post by reminding you of my fetish for a bit of banana and hot oil action. And then launch into the fact that this dumpling is not to be confused with a fritter and that its more like a dense and chewy steamed Malay glutinous rice dessert. I guess I could quickly mention how kodok means toad and then fire some silly comeback or cheesy joke about toad cakes. But Ill just put this simply; this is one of my favourite Malay snacks and its so damn easy to make that even a monkey can do it (I do recommend adult primate supervision for the hot oil action though!).

Banana dumpling with coconut and pandan custard (its actually greener in real life stoopid photos).

But I will demand you to make this gorgeous Thai coconut and pandan custard to go with it. Yes, demand! I first tried this custard at Sydneys Chat Thai and I immediately swooned. It was a lighter version of my favourite Malaysian kaya and oh lordy, it was amazing! The problem was they dont serve the dessert all the time and I always have to wait more than a hour for a table at Chat Thai.


Ever since I found the recipe from one of my favourite
cookbooks, Ive been as happy as unicorns. You can seriously churn out litres of this magical stuff within 10 minutes at home and avoid the Chat Thai queue rage. And oh baby, every day, Ive been shamefully dunking my face in this sexy custard and dipping everything in it bread, man tou, yu tiao and of course my little alien banana dumplings.

Alien critters!

Like this little guy! My little tadpole! Aah toad, geddit?

TAGS:another Just citrusandcandytest site com WordPress 

<<< Thank you for your visit >>>

Just another WordPress.com site

Websites to related :
Latin GRAMMYs | LatinGRAMMY.com

  keywords:Latin GRAMMY, Latin GRAMMY Awards, Latin GRAMMYs, Latin Music, Music
description:Únete a la conversación usando #LatinGRAMMY
Jump to

▷ Freexcafe.com at IPAddress.co

  keywords:
description:ℹ️ On ipaddress.com you will get detailed website analytics and statistics about domains like freexcafe.com including traffic ra

Intecsea - Offshore Engineering

  keywords:
description:Intecsea is a world leader in subsea systems, offshore pipelines, floating systems and overall field development. As a service l

UNDP:n Pohjoismaiden toimisto

  keywords:
description:
Maailmalla Suomi

TAKE Solutions

  keywords:
description:TAKE Solutions
HomeAbout UsOur BusinessesInvestor RelationsNewsroomContact Us The TAKE Solutions manag

Clipo.net

  keywords:Best Electronic Music, Best EDM Music, Electro House Music, Gaming Music, Best EDM, Dubstep, Electro House, Addictive electronic music, Best

Home | Faculty of Oriental Studi

  keywords:
description:
Skip to main content

PsiPog.net

  keywords:
description:
from underground...20002013The Legacy ContinuesPsiPog.net2014...to research

Hyve Solutions HyperScale Rack

  keywords:
description:
Skip to content Main Menu HomeOur StoryMenu Toggle G

Shopping cart Ecommerce softwar

  keywords:
description:Ecommerce software integrated into shopping cart software themes or design your own online store. Responsive Design, WordPress,

ads

Hot Websites