Chocolate Pudding Cake

Chocolate Pudding Cake

190ml flour
60ml cocoa powder, sifted
80ml granulated sugar
1,2ml salt
10ml baking powder
1 egg
55g butter, melted
80ml milk
5ml vanilla
80g chocolate, chopped
125ml pecan nuts, chopped
80ml granulated sugar
80ml brown sugar
80ml cocoa powder, sifted
375ml strong coffee

Preheat your oven to 180℃ and spray a 20cm x 20cm baking tin with cooking spray.
Add the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, salt and baking powder to a mixing bowl and stir together with a whisk.
Add the egg, melted butter, milk and vanilla to a jug and whisk together.
Pour the wet ingredients in to the dry ingredients.
Add the chopped chocolate and nuts and stir to mix.
Spoon the batter in to the prepared baking tin.
Add the 80ml granulated and brown sugar and the cocoa powder, to a bowl and mix.
Sprinkle the mixture over the cake batter.
Pour the coffee over and bake in the oven for 25 minutes.
Serve the chocolate pudding cake with cream or ice cream.

Jan’s Balsamic Toffee Tomatoes

Jan’s Balsamic Toffee Tomatoes

This recipe is not mine to give out as it belongs to the South African chef Jan Hendrik van der Westhuizen BUT you should make these for your next drinks party …. delicious just got so much better!

These tomatoes are incredibly tasty and the balsamic toffee perfectly balances with the toasty sesame brittle on which it sits. Easy and quick to make EXCEPT on a rainy day! The moisture in the air prevents the toffee from “sitting” on the tomato…

You can find this recipe in Jan Hendrik van der Westhuizen’s book The French Affair (Struik; 2013) (p. 19).

Gnocchi-Noodle Mushrooms

Gnocchi-Noodle Mushrooms

Not quite gnocchi but also not quite noodle…. You will need a clean wine or beer bottle to shape the noodles into a mushroom shape. The top must be clean and dry.

400g potato, peeled and cubed
120g cornflour (or potato flour)
5ml salt
80ml chives, very finely chopped
30ml butter
200g mushrooms, finely chopped
1 onion, finely chopped
45ml salad onion, finely chopped
15ml thyme leaves

Cook the potato in salted water until very soft.
Drain, add the potato back into the hot saucepan and place over a medium-high heat. Stir around for a minute or two until the potato is dry and there are no trace of water.
Take off the heat and mash to a fine texture.
Add the cornflour, salt and chives and mix through.
Knead/squeesh the ingredients together until it forms a dough. If you REALLY can’t bring it together, add a few drops of water and knead again.
Scoop up about 15ml of the dough and squeeze/roll into a ball shape.
Press the dough balls into the top of a dry wine bottle and carefully lift it off. Put aside and continue shaping the rest of the dough.
Fill a saucepan with water, bring to the boil and then turn it down to a simmer.
Add the gnocchi to the water and simmer for 4 minutes – they will float once they are done.
Remove and drain. Set aside.
Add the butter to a pan set over medium-high heat.
Add the mushroom, onion and salad onion and cook for about 5 minutes.
Scatter in the thyme leaves and add the gnocchi-noodles.
Reduce the heat to medium and stir-fry for 3 minutes until the noodles are warmed through.
Serve immediately.

Naked Milk Tart

Naked Milk Tart

This is a crustless milk tart, easy to put together and produces one large (38cm x 26cm) or two medium (28cm x 20cm) tarts.

6 eggs
375ml sugar
90g butter, melted
375ml flour
7,5ml baking powder
a pinch of salt
1,5litres of milk
15ml vanilla
ground cinnamon

Preheat your oven to 180℃ and spray a 38cm x 26cm ceramic dish with cooking spray.
Add the eggs and sugar to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment.
Mix on medium-high speed for 2 minutes.
Turn the mixer to a low speed and drizzle in the melted butter.
Turn off the mixer.
Sift the flour, baking powder and salt into the bowl and turn the mixer back on to a low speed until the ingredients are incorporated.
Add the vanilla to the milk and drizzle the milk in to the batter with the engine running.
Scrape the batter into the prepared ceramic dish.
Bake in the oven for 1 hour.
Take the milk tart from the oven and immediately sift over some ground cinnamon.
Set aside for at least 30 minutes before slicing.
Keep refrigerated.

Feta-Filled Flatbreads

Feta-Filled Flatbreads

200g self-raising flour
170g greek yoghurt
Filling:
50g baby spinach
50g feta cheese, crumbed
30ml cream cheese, room temperature
1 clove of garlic, minced
a few grindings of black pepper
40ml frozen peas, defrosted
a handful of mint leaves, chopped

Add the flour and yoghurt to a mixing bowl and bring together.
Knead the dough by hand for 5 minutes – you want a soft, bouncy dough. (Add more flour if you have to, but the dough becomes less sticky as you knead it).
Cover with plastic wrap and set aside.
Place the spinach in a bowl and pour boiling water over. Stand for 1 minutes, drain and squeeze the spinach as dry as you can get it, in a tea towel.
Chop it up and add it to a bowl.
Add the feta, cream cheese, garlic, pepper, peas and mint and mix together.
Unwrap the dough and divide it into 4 equal portions.
Make a ball from each portion and then press it into a circle with your fingers.
Spoon a tablespoon full of filling in the centre and then bring in the edges and seal by squeezing it together.
Turn the filled disc over and flatten out with your fingers until about 1,5cm thick.
Set aside and repeat the process with the rest of the dough and filling.
Place a non-stick pan on medium-low heat and add a small knob of butter.
Place the flatbreads in the pan and cook for 4-5 minutes PER SIDE.
Serve warm.

Steri Stumpie Pancake

Steri Stumpie Pancake

Steri Stumpie is a popular South African flavoured milk drink that comes in 350ml bottles. The South African chef Jan Hendrik van der Westhuizen caused a stir when he cooked a pancake from this drink. Now is your chance to give it a try…

1 x 350ml Steri Stumpie of your choice, for one pancake

Pour the flavoured milk in to a frying pan set over a medium heat.
Bring to a simmer and wait……
Regulate the heat so that the milk cooks/evaporates but does not burn.
As long as the “pancake” sits/sticks to the pan, it is not cooked.
Remove from the heat once done and puff/fold into an interesting abstract shape.
Enjoy with another Steri Stumpie to wash it down????

Lemon Donuts

Lemon Donuts

The recipe yields a small batch of around 16 small donuts. Feel free to double-up!!

80ml greek yoghurt
45ml lemon curd
10ml lemon zest
190ml self-raising flour
vegetable oil for deep frying
icing sugar

Add the yoghurt, lemon curd and zest to a mixing bowl and mix together.
Add about two thirds of the flour and mix through.
You should have a very thick, sticky dough.
To test the consistency, break off a piece and roll between your palms. If you can’t form a ball and the dough is too sticky, add sour flour, mix again and give it another try. You want as little flour as possible so that you produce a light, airy donut.
Scoop up 15ml of the dough with a measuring spoon and roll between your palms to make a ball.
Place the balls on a tray lined with baking paper.
Pour some vegetable oil about 5cm deep, into a small saucepan. Heat to 170℃.
Add the donuts to the preheated oil and fry in batches until golden brown.
Drain on kitchen paper.
Arrange on a serving plate and dust with icing sugar.

Beef Stroganoff Pie

Beef Stroganoff Pie

1kg beef, cut into 2cm cubes
30ml flour
45ml vegetable oil
1 onion, chopped
2 cloves of garlic, minced
10ml smoked paprika
30ml tomato paste
15ml wholegrain mustard
250ml beef stock
300g brown mushrooms, sliced
80ml + 80ml sour cream
1,2kg potatoes, peeled and quartered
50g butter, cubed

Add the cubed beef to a bowl and sprinkle over the flour.
Season with salt and pepper and toss to coat.
Place a saucepan over medium-high heat and pour in the oil.
Cook the beef in 3 batches, for 5-6 minutes or until browned all over.
Spoon the beef into a bowl and keep on the side.
Add the onion to the saucepan and cook until translucent.
Add the garlic and paprika and stir-fry for one minute.
Add the tomato paste, mustard and stock and bring to the boil.
Return the beef to the saucepan, reduce the heat to low and cover with a lid.
Simmer the beef for one hour, stirring every now and then.
Preheat your oven to 200℃.
Remove the lid, add the mushrooms and simmer without a lid for 30 minutes more.
Remove the saucepan from the heat and stir in 80ml sour cream.
Spoon the mixture into an ovenproof casserole dish.
Cook the potato until very soft, drain and return to its saucepan.
Add the remaining 80ml sour cream and half of the cubed butter and mash together.
Season the mashed potato with salt and pepper.
Spoon the potato on the beef and spread it evenly to cover the beef.
Dot with the remaining butter and bake in the oven for 30 minutes.
Stand the pie for 10 minutes before serving.

Lemon Curd Pancakes

Lemon Curd Pancakes

This entire dish can be put together with store-bought/ready made components. For those of you that like to slave away in the kitchen, here are the recipes.

Butter
8 pancakes/crêpes
lemon curd
125ml cream
icing sugar

Pancakes/Crêpes:
250ml flour
1,2ml baking powder
2,5ml salt
250ml milk
125ml water
62ml vegetable oil
2 eggs

Add the flour, baking powder and salt to a bowl of a stand mixer fitter with the whisk attachment.
Add the milk, water, oil and eggs to a jug and whisk together by hand until the eggs are fully incorporated.
Turn the mixer on low speed and slowly drizzle in the milk mixture.
Set the mixer on its highest speed and whisk for 2 minutes.
Take the bowl from the mixer and check whether there are any lumps in the batter. If there are, set a sieve over a large bowl and pour through.
Cover with a tea towel and set aside to rest for an hour.
Place a crêpe pan on medium-high heat, wait for it to warm up and pour a few drops of oil into the pan.
Spoon a soup ladle full of batter into the pan and swirl around to cover the surface.
Cook for a minute or two, flip the crêpe over and cook for another minute or so.
Keep going until you have no batter left.
Cover the crêpes and allow to cool completely.

Lemon curd:
grated zest of one lemon
220g caster sugar
110g butter, cubed
125ml lemon juice, strained (about three lemons)
3 eggs, lightly beaten

Add the zest, sugar and butter to a small saucepan and set over the lowest heat.
Stir the mixture until the butter has melted and the sugar has dissolved.
Add the lemon juice to the saucepan and stir through.
Now add the egg and keep stirring until the mixture is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.
Take the curd from the heat and pour into a glass jar.
Allow to cool completely.

Putting the dish together:
Preheat your oven to 200℃ and butter a ceramic tart dish.
Spoon 2-3 teaspoons of lemon curd on a crêpe and spread it with the back of a spoon.
Roll the crêpe up and place it in the ceramic dish.
Keep going until all the crêpes are filled.
Pour the cream over the pancakes and sift the icing sugar over.
Bake in the oven for 20 minutes.
Serve warm.