Tag: spices

Red Currant Upside Down Cake with Red Wheat and Buckwheat


| © 2018 |

| © 2018 |

This easy, delicious red currant cake is lightly sweetened with coconut sugar and made with a mix of home milled red wheat and buckwheat flour. It is a simple and delicious way to enjoy summer fruit.

  • 150 +20 g Unsalted butter, softened
  • 100+20 g Coconut sugar
  • 300 g Red currants, stripped from their stalks
  • 2 Large eggs, room-temperature
  • 1 tsp Vanilla extract
  • 150 g Red wheat berries, milled into flour
  • 100 g Buckwheat berries, milled into flour
  • 2 tsp Baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp Baking soda
  • 1/3 tsp Nutmeg powder
  • 1/2 tsp Cinnamon powder
  • Pinch of sea salt
  • 2 tbsp Berentzen red currant liquor
  • 120 ml Kefir
  • 2 tbsp Sunflower seeds, optional
  1. Preheat oven to 180C/350F. Line the bottom of a 26-cm springform pan with parchment and grease with 20 grams of butter. Sprinkle the coconut sugar over, then place in the stripped currants.
  2. Cream 150 grams of unsalted butter and 100 grams of coconut sugar until light and fluffy. Add in eggs, one at a time, beating until fully incorporated. Stir in vanilla extract.
  3. Whisk together the milled red wheat, buckwheat, baking powder, baking soda, spices and salt. Beat in half of the flour mixture, then red currant liquor and kefir until roughly combined. Now beat in the rest of the flour mixture until smooth. Spread batter over the currants, smoothing top with a spatula. Sprinkle with sunflower seeds if using.
  4. Bake for 35-40 mins until a skewer inserted into the centre of cake comes out clean. Cool in the pan for 5 minutes before inverting onto a serving plate. Dust with a little of icing sugar if desired.

| © 2018 |

| © 2018 |
Eat,Drink And Be Merry!

Minimal Monday: Quick and Spicy Refrigerator Pickles

On this blog I’ve worked through most of the basic techniques and processes related to cooking and food prep: I’ve turned flour and water into bread with the help of yeast, I’ve harnessed enzymes to make cheese, and bacteria to make yogurt,  I’ve preserved, whipped, frothed, churned, infused, extracted, fermented, dehydrated, foraged, emulsified, and jellied, but, until today, I’ve never actually pickled anything.

Refrigerator pickles don’t require sterilization, so they’re a good first pickling project.  All you really need to do is heat the vinegar, salt and sugar until the solids dissolve, then add spices, pour the mixture over the cucumbers, seal and refrigerate.  You can eat them as soon as they’re chilled!

I put together an especially spicy pickling mix, with whole spices and hot peppers.  Since these are quick pickles, I beefed up the flavorings to make up for the short marinating time.  Toasting the whole spices first deepens their flavor.  I don’t strain them out, because I want them to keep flavoring the pickles as they sit in the jar.

You want to find small, unwaxed cucumbers. sometimes called pickling, or Kirby cucumbers. They are generally smaller, have thinner skin and fewer seeds.  If you want to use ready made pickling spice, use about 3 tablespoons in place of the whole spices.  Use wide mouth jars to make it easy to get your pickles in and out, I used Kerr wide mouth pint jars for this project.

Quick and Spicy Refrigerator Pickles
makes 2 wide mouth pint jars
about 8 small pickling cucumbers 
2 fresh Serrano chili peppers, thinly sliced, seeds and all.
fresh tarragon sprigs
2 bay leaves (fresh if you can find them)
2 cups white or white wine vinegar
1/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup kosher salt
1 Tbsp yellow mustard seeds
1 Tbsp rainbow pepper corns
1 tsp allspice berries
1 tsp whole coriander
2 star anise
1 cinnamon stick, broken in half
6 cardamom pods

  • Cut off the stem end of your cucumbers so that they fit inside your jars, with their tips ending just below the rim.  Cut them lengthwise into quarters.  Fit the cucumber spears tightly in the jars, with a couple of sprigs of tarragon, the bay leaves, and the Serrano pepper slices fitted in between the spaces. 
  • Put the spices in a dry pan and toast over medium heat for a few minutes, shaking the pan often.  Set aside.
  • In a saucepan, heat the vinegar, sugar and salt, stirring to dissolve the salt and sugar.  Heat to a simmer, then turn off the heat and add the spices.  Let cool.
  • Pour the liquid into the jars, filling to cover the cucumber spears.  Make sure the spices get into the jars as well. 
  • Cap the jars and refrigerate.  You can eat them right away, but they will be more flavorful the next day.  They will keep a couple of weeks in the refrigerator.

Have a great week!

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