Nov 12, 2011

Roll-in dough pastry

Now, what I did this time is to take some store-bought roll-in dough (they had a sale on it) and made some pastry with different fillings.
In this case you can pretty much make experiments and add anything there is in the fridge as a filling and bake it in. Though for me there still are some very simple rules to follow:
- The filling should go together in terms of taste, cause you want it to taste good
- It shouldn't melt way too much in the process, you'll have your filling and your pastry separately
- And it shouldn't be too moist, otherwise it won't bake well inside and might burn on the outside

Now, that's pretty much everything I used this time except for salt/pepper/sugar etc
So, I have:
roll-in dough - 1kg total
broccoli - approximately 400 gr, but I used only half of it for the pastry
cheese (not too hard one) - 200 gr
hard-boiled eggs - 2 pieces
cooked rice - 1 pack of 125 gr
onion - 1 small
mango - 1
apple - 1
some salt, sugar, cinnamon and all-purpose flour

The longest to cook was rice with eggs, so I boiled the eggs and cooked the rice in salted water first. When it cooled down a bit I chopped the eggs, chopped the onion and mixed everything with the rice and voila! - the first filling is done. I really like this one.

My mom loved the broccoli filling, because who doesn't like broccoli and cheese. You rinse the broccoli, cut it in separate small flowers and boil in salted water for about 4 minutes (doesn't have to be all mushy, cause it'll cook extra in the oven).

Then you grate the cheese. When broccoli is done you chop it in small pieces for easier filling and mix it with cheese. Now here are two ways to do it: one, the broccoli is still hot and the cheese melts right away even before you put it in the oven, two, the broccoli isn't warm anymore and the cheese melts inside the pastry while it's baking. I used the second one.

Then I rinsed and chopped apples and mango and made three fruity fillings with those:
- mango filling (this one was sweet, so I didn't add sugar) - mango changes its taste a bit in the oven
- mango with apples - apples are no tropical fruit but they go well together
- apples with cinnamon - classics! - for this you mix your chopped apples with 1 tbsp of sugar and 2 tsp of cinnamon (or less if you don't like cinnamon much)

My little 3 y.o. sister helped me roll out the dough, so making something like this serves many more fun purposes: you spend time with your siblings or children, get them usefully occupied, they develop movements in fingers and learn to cook the fun way. ^^ And then you can be proud of your little helpers.
So, you get yourself a clean and dry working space like a table, where you can roll the dough out to your heart's content. Then you cut or tear the dough in portions, sprinkle the table with all-purpose flour, knead it a bit and use a rolling pin or something round to roll out the dough (my sister uses a small round wooden spinner, the one for pressing berry juice out). Be sure to roll it out evenly in all directions, carefully lifting it up and turning upside down and sprinkling it with flour when it starts to stick. Then I take a round cutting form - a glass or a cup will do too - and press it into the dough to make even round pieces or I cut the dough squares with a knife. And then fill it with all the fillings mentioned above and pinch the edges together. Then they go on a tray and into a preheated oven (180 Celsius) for about 10-15 minutes (depend on how well the oven bakes - in our it takes about 13 minutes for the best result). All left-over dough gets rolled out again and again till there's no more left. I made cinnamon rolls with the left-overs.

And here's the result: with 1 kg roll-in dough I got about 120 small (5-7 cm long) pastries.

Nov 4, 2011

Pancakes with Strawberry Jam

And another recipe on pancakes.

I'll write about such wonderful dessert/drink as Kissel and will definitely play some with its variations in some post in the future. The recipe for the Jam-Sauce used with these pancakes is pretty much the same as in the previous recipe here: Pancakes with Red Currants 'Kissel' Sauce


Pancakes with Strawberry Jam

Ingredients (for 2-4 people):
2 eggs
500 ml milk
200 g flour
2 tbsp oil
2 tsp baking powder
1 tbsp sugar
pinch of salt

Cooking (cooking time about 30 minutes):
Beat eggs with sugar and salt. Add oil and stir well. Then add milk and stir well again. Add baking powder, flour and mix the batter with a mixer. Preheat a pan, smear it with some oil and bake the pancakes. When the lower side is yellow, flip and bake for some more seconds on the other side. If the pancakes tear and won't flip, ad some more flour. Eat with berry jam (you can make a quick one by cooking some berries with water and sugar, adding some starch if needed) or sour cream. You can also wrap fruits, ice-cream, or any other filling like meat in the pancakes.


Now other fillings for the pancakes is another topic I'll write someday. In general, just put anything you like (or anything you have in the fridge at the moment).

Pancakes with Red Currants 'Kissel' Sauce

I'll start with reposting some recipes from my previous blog - that one didn't last active for too long as I stopped practicing the hobby it was associated with. Hope this Notebook lasts longer. And of course the recipes are really great and shouldn't go to waste.

This one and the following recipes were associated with a pagan holiday celebrated in Slavic countries. As it's celebrated in spring I'll probably come back with some more pancake recipes and the history of the holiday in one of my spring posts - if I get to that point.


Thick Pancakes with Red Currants 'Kissel' Sauce

The Pancakes

Ingredients (for 2-4 people):
3 eggs
150 ml milk
130 g flour
1 tsp baking powder
small pinch of salt
cooking oil

Cooking (cooking time about 30 minutes):
Separate egg yolks and whites. Put the yolks into a bowl, add milk and mix well. Add flour, baking powder and salt to the bowl and mix the dough well. Whip the egg whites to stiff peaks and carefully add to the dough. Bake small pancakes on a hot pan using a bit of oil.

The Sauce

Ingredients:
400 g frozen red currants (or other berries)
2 tbsp sugar
1 tbsp potato starch

Cooking (about 7-10 minutes):
Put frozen berries and sugar into a pot and cook the berries and the juice (from unfreezing the berries) until boils. Dissolve the starch in some water and gradually add to the berries while stirring at the same time. To be sure the sauce isn't too thick don't pour all starch at once. Cook for some more seconds till thickens and serve. If the sauce is really thick - you can also serve it as a separate dessert called "Kissel". Serve Kissel as it is or with milk.

First Post

So, the first post in my Notebook. :]
Hello and Welcome to anyone who is reading or planing to read.

Some words about me and this [Notebook] - as I'll be calling it.
I'm a girl from Latvia, Riga. And I love to cook, mostly sweets and pastry. Can't get rid of my sweet tooth no matter what I do. And why get rid of it, if I really enjoy it? (Yeah, too many sweets and an office job can lead to excess weight problems, I know... So I'm taking it slow one recipe at a time.) As I don't have much free time, my cooking posts won't come often and are very simple. So I'm planning to use this space as a digital Notebook with the recipes I tried and liked. I have a paper notebook as well, but I tend to loose notes if I use paper. -_- And besides it's good not to be greedy and share.

Oh, and as I'm from Europe, I'll be mostly using metrics like kilos, grams, tablespoons and teaspoons, cups, liters (no ounces etc).
Temperature in is C - Celsius
Kilogram = kg
Gram = g
Liter = l
Tablespoon = tbsp
Teaspoon = tsp
Cup = cup or c
(I usually use standard 250 ml cups/mugs, but if the recipe is 1 to 1 cup, then you can use any cup you have, but be sure to check the consistency and taste when you're done mixing.)
Very simple. If there are any problems with converting - just ask. All the rest will come in words any of us can understand with ease.

Putting it short, I'll be posting:
- Different tasty recipes, all checked and approved by me in my kitchen.
- Photos of what I get as a result. (I hope my camera loves me and there will be pictures and not just simply bland text.)
- Tips and advice on making cooking life easier.
- Step-by-step tutorials with photos.
- Any other weird ideas that come to my mind along the way.

All food made from very simple ingredients you can probably get anywhere, my fridge is not empty only thanks to the rest of the family, so the simplicity rules.

Disclaimer: All photos here belong to me unless stated differently. The original recipes belong to original authors (like my granny or the aunt from next door), the ones here are my own interpretation.

Riin