Showing posts with label Miffy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miffy. Show all posts

Sunday, 4 August 2024

Miffy Vanilla & Lavender Marshmallows (using meringue powder)

 After coming up with the recipe of using egg white powder to make marshmallows, of course I have to try using meringue powder to make marshmallows. Here's what I made!


The Miffy marshmallows come in two flavours. Vanilla and lavender vanilla. 

Here are some pictures of the piped marshmallows.



I made a total of 44 Miffys! So it really tested my patience 😆. If you are interested to see the marshmallows made from egg white powder, you may refer to this post.

I shared how you can use meringue powder instead of fresh egg whites, as well as a comprehensive comparison between fresh egg whites, egg white powder and meringue powder in marshmallow making in this reel:


You may see the squish and piping tutorial in this reel:



Please refer to my book Deco Marshmallows for the details of the basic recipe and various delicious marshmallow flavours!


with love,

Phay Shing

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Monday, 6 February 2023

Miffy Patterned Cake


This is another Miffy creation I made for PokkaxMiffy. Hope you like it! 

Watch the piping video tutorial here

I've also shared the recipe in my post. 

Piping batter 
1 egg, 50g flour, 50g icing sugar, 50g butter 
Divide into 3 colors: black, white and pink 

Chiffon cake (12" cake) 
Egg yolk batter 
4 egg yolks 
54g oil 
54g milk 
1.5 tsp vanilla 
80g cake flour 
Pink food color 

4 egg whites 
85g sugar 

Mix all ingredients in piping batter and pipe Miffy pattern. Chill in the fridge. 

Mix ingredients in egg yolk batter. Whip egg whites with sugar till firm peaks. Fold and pour over the Miffy pattern. Bake at 160C for 25 min. 

With love,
Susanne


 

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Monday, 30 January 2023

Miffy Chiffon Cakes

 


Happy Year of the Rabbit!❤️ 
Chiffon Plushie Cakes inspired by Miffy rabbit, made for Pokka's #pokkaxmiffy 
Hope you liked them! Watch a reel of the assembly here
With love, 
Susanne 


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Wednesday, 25 July 2018

Rainbow Miffy Coconut and Sweet Potato Sponge and Pudding Cake

My friend's daughter is a big fan of Miffy so she requested for a few Miffy macaron cake toppers which she can use over a few birthday celebrations for the little girl, and one rainbow sponge and pudding cake topped with one of the cake toppers I made!


You may refer to my previous post for the detailed recipe for Miffy macarons. You may fill it with fillings of your choice. I will focus on sharing the recipe for the cake in this post.

I used a reduced egg yolk chiffon cake recipe in order to get a nice blue and pink sponge without adding too much colouring. The great thing about sponge and pudding cakes is the pudding keeps the sponge moist during storage and the complentary textures of soft fluffy chiffon and smooth pudding is really nice.

Reduced yolk coconut chiffon cake
Ingredients (makes one 15cm chiffon cake):
1 egg yolk (about 17-18g)
3g castor sugar
45g coconut oil
54g coconut milk
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
A few drops pandan flavouring (optional)
A few drops coconut flavouring (optional)
1/8 tsp salt
60g cake flour
Pink, yellow and blue gel food colouring

3 egg whites
1/5 cream of tartar
40g castor sugar

Note, you can choose to bake all colours at once then slice horizontally to separate the different coloured layers or bake them individually in three rounds of baking.

I baked the colours individually as I didn't want to have the stress of ensuring all layers are perfectly level and then slicing them in perfect layers. I baked each layer for about 30-35 minutes. You may also bake the cake or cakes in regular 15cm round pans with the base lined with parchment paper.

Steps:
1. Preheat oven to 150℃ and set oven rack to lowest or second lowest position. You may choose to place a tray of water at base of oven to create steam but this is optional. Increase baking time if using steam baking.

2. Prepare egg yolk batter. Whisk egg yolk with castor sugar until pale and thick. Add oil and whisk until combined. Add coconut milk and flavourings until combined. Gradually sift in flour and salt and whisk until no trace of flour is seen. Divide the batter and add colouring as desired.

3. Prepare the meringue. In a clean metal bowl, beat egg whites with cream of tartar until firm peaks form or stiff peak is just reached, gradually adding sugar once the egg whites are foamy.

4. Quickly but gently fold the meringue into the egg yolk batter in two additions. Pour or spoon batter into chiffon tin/ baking pan.

5. Bake for 10 minutes. Reduce temperature to 130℃ and bake for another 15-20 min if you are baking single colour at a time. If you are baking a full chiffon cake, extend baking time for another 15-20 min or so. Do note that temperature and time suggested here is just a reference. Each oven behaves differently so adjust accordingly. Always use an oven thermometer at all times. Cake is done when a skewer inserted comes out clean. Invert chiffon tin (if using one) to cool completely before unmoulding by hand.

Baked chiffon layers

Store the layers in cling wrap to prevent drying out.

I baked extra chiffon sheet cakes to fill the hole in the middle and for the name on the cake. I cut out circles from the sheet cake for filling the holes.

I make use of the natural colours of different types of sweet potatoes to create the rainbow pudding layers. Here are the steamed and mashed sweet potatoes!

Steamed and mashed orange, Japanese and purple sweet potatoes.

I prepared some pandan juice that has been kept in the fridge for two days to become more concentrated, and added some to the Japanese sweet potato to colour it green.

Adding concentrated pandan juice to colour Japanese sweet potato green

As you can see the colour is rather dull. I still needed to add 1/4 tsp pandan paste to make the green more vibrant. I added 2 drops of liquid orange colouring to orange sweet potato as the natural colour is a little light when mixed with coconut milk.

A key to creating such layered sponge and pudding cakes is to carefully prepare the flexible plastic cake ring. I have tried using springform pan and adjustable metal cake rings before to assemble sponge and pudding cakes. But I find using clear flexible plastic cake rings the best option as it is versatile in the sense that it can be adapted for different cake diameter and height.

As the sponge layers are about 2-2.5cm tall, the pudding layers have to be about that height. I carefully stuck two strips of plastic together using scotch tape to form a taller wall. I also used a marker to make little dots to mark out 2cm intervals along the height so I know how much pudding to fill during assembly.


Measure out the circumference of the cake ring needed using a layer of baked sponge cake and tape the ring.

The sweet potato pudding recipe below is for one layer of pudding. You need to prepare three portions for all three colours. Recipe is adapted from here.

Recipe for sweet potato pudding
Ingredients (for one layer of pudding):
A)
200g pandan water (boil several pandan leaves in saucepan of water for 10 min.)
12g castor sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp agar powder

B)
73g sweet potato puree
90g coconut milk

C)
20g cornflour
34g fresh milk
1/2 tsp coconut oil (optional)

Steps:
1. Combine A) in a saucepan. Mix B) in a bowl and set aside. Mix C) in a jug and set aside.

2. Bring A) to boil while stirring, making sure all agar has dissolved before adding B) to A). Bring to boil again while stirring.

3. Stir C) again before pouring into contents in the saucepan. The mixture will thicken suddenly. Just remove from heat for a while and stir vigorously. Put back on heat and stir for another minute. Strain the mixture through a sieve to remove any lumps.

Note that you should prepare one pudding layer at a time and assemble one pudding and sponge layer at a time.

Assembly
1. Place cake ring on a sheet of aluminum foil with sides folded up. You don't need the foil if you are assembling sponge layer first and you can assemble directly on the cakeboard.

2. Place a piece of circle cutout on top of the foil in the middle.of the cake ring. This is necessary as the cake will slide off the cakeboard easily if there is no sponge to anchor the cake to the cakeboard. Spoon some purple sweet potato pudding to cover the sponge cake. When you have filled about 2cm height worth of pudding, place the blue sponge on top carefully and gently press in down. Fill the hole in the sponge with a other circle cutout cake.

3. Chill the cake in fridge while you prepare the green pudding. Repeat layering of pudding and yellow sponge. Repeat for orange pudding and pink sponge.



4. Cover the top of the cake with cling wrap to prevent the sponge from drying out. Chill for at least two hours before attempting to move the cake to the cakeboard. Carefully remove cake ring when cake is carefully positioned onto cakeboard.

I just used simple deco for the cake with marshmellows and the name in cream coloured sponge.


Not forgetting topping it off with Miffy!

My friend sent me some lovely pictures of the cut cross section. Here's a slice with Miffy too!



With love,
Phay Shing

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Sunday, 22 July 2018

'Miffy with Rainbow Scarf' Blackforest Macarons

My friend requested for a few Miffy macaron cake toppers for her daughter's birthday as the celebrations span over a couple of weeks. I made Miffys with rainbow scarves as requested :)

The round macs with little Miffy heads were made with extra batter.

I usually prefer the Italian method for making character macarons as it is easier to adjust the colouring. But because this batch is so small, I decided to use French method. The recipe is a little different from what I normally use as I would like to keep the white colour on the shell whiter without adding too much white colouring. I replaced 20% of almond with rice flour and a bit of cornflour. You may replace the rice flour with almond in the recipe below if you find it too troublesome to include another ingredient.

You may refer to my video tutorial for the basics of French method over here.

Recipe for Miffy macaron shells
Ingredients (makes about 12 macarons):
Powdered ingredients
40g superfine almond flour
10g rice flour
1/8 tsp cornflour
1/8 tsp salt
50g icing sugar

Food colouring
1/8 white powder food colouring
Orange gel food colouring

Meringue
40g egg whites
36g castor sugar
1/8 tsp cream of tartar (optional)

Steps:
1. Sift together all powdered ingredients. Divide into two equal portions. Add white powder into one portion.

2. In a clean metal bowl, beat egg whites with cream of tartar until stiff peaks form, gradually adding sugar. Divide into two equal portions. Add orange food colouring to one portion.

3. Add half of sifted ingredients into meringue for the respective colours. And gently fold in. Add the second half of the powdered ingredients and gently fold until combined. Deflate the batter with spatula against sides of bowl until consistency is like lava (please see video tutorial).

4. Transfer both coloured batter into piping bags fitted with a Wilton #7 round tip. Pipe the Miffys!


5. Bang the tray on the table to release trapped air. I piped the parts in stages to create some definition between boundaries. Dry in air-con room or under a fan until surface is dry to touch.

6. Towards end of drying time, preheat oven to 150℃ and set the rack to lowest position. Bake 7 min and reduce temperature to 110℃. The oven temperature will gradually fall. Bake for another 15-20 minutes or until feet doesn't appear wet. Cool completely on tray before peeling parchment paper away from macaron shells.

I drew the eyes and mouth with black edible marker and iced the rainbow scarf with royal icing.

All decorated!

I made my own cherry jam. You may refer to this post for the recipe but blend the pitted cherries before cooking the jam as this is for macaron filling, unless you prefer chunky cherry pieces in your macarons

Jam in piping bag, ready to fill!

I made a rather firm dark chocolate ganache as the full body Miffys are supposed to be cake toppers. You don't want the macaron shells to start sliding halfway through display. You may refer to this recipe for the dark chocolate ganache but reduce the amount of cream to 25g.

Filling the Miffys!

You may include some stabilized whipped dairy cream into the filling to make it truly a blackforest macaron. It will definitely be really delicious! I was making the Miffys mainly as cake toppers so I had to make sure that overall the filling is still firm enough so I didn't include the cream.

As it was, these were really well received in looks and taste according to my friend :).

Stay tuned for my next blog post with one of the Miffys on top of a coconut sweet potato rainbow chiffon sponge and pudding cake!

With love,
Phay Shing
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Thursday, 7 September 2017

Miffy and Flowers Snowskin Mooncake



My family loves snowskin mooncakes. I've had 3 mooncake playdates with little kids so far! The kids love playing "playdoh" with them =). I made these simple Miffy and normal 3D flowers snowskin mooncake together with the kids. I used the Redman brand reduced sugar white lotus paste from Phoon Huat for the filling, an all-time favorite. A lighter colour paste will help the mooncakes to look cleaner on the outside for light coloured skin. I also used olive oil to replace shortening for healthier mooncakes. They keep soft slightly shorter than those with shortening (around 3-4 days airtight). After that, we found that bringing them to room temperature will make the mooncakes soft again. Here's the recipe I used, adapted from Baking taitai and Phay shing's CAM session.

Snowskin Mooncake (makes 17 of 50g mooncakes)

150g cooked glutinous rice flour (kou fien)
180g icing sugar
35g olive oil (choose a light-colored and low-odor type)
190g water
500g lotus paste

Extra kou fien for dusting

1. Sift cooked glutinous rice flour and icing sugar together in a mixing bowl and stir well.

2. Combine water and olive oil in another bowl.

3. Add the liquid mixture gradually into the flour mixture (do not pour all at once). Use a spatula or gloves to mix until a smooth dough is formed.

*For multicolour, I divided the dough into 3 and added 1/2 tsp strawberry paste, 1/2 durian paste and the plain dough plain. For one colour, you may add the flavouring/colour directly to the liquid mixture.

4. Cover with cling wrap and let the dough rest for 15 minutes. 

5. Divide the snowskin dough into 20g for each mooncake (for my small 50g moulds).

6. Divide each lotus paste into 30g lotus paste per portion for each mooncake filling.

7. Pair the white lotus paste with the snowskin:
- Dust the mooncake moulds.
- Wrap each portion of filling with a portion of snowskin.
- Press into mooncake mould firmly.
- Push out (letting go at the same time) and chill before serving.

*For Miffy, after wrapping a portion of filling with the snowskin, I rolled into a ball instead of pushing into the plunger. The ears used 1/2 the lotus paste and 1/2 the snowskin.


We had lots of fun making them!

With lots of love,
Susanne =)

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Saturday, 20 February 2016

Miffy Hazelnut Dark Chocolate Macarons

My friend and her cousin are fans of Miffy so here are some Miffy macarons for them :).


This is actually my second time making Miffy macarons. You may take a look at my first attempt at making them last year along with other cute characters in this post.

These Miffies are of the same flavour as the Meeple macarons since it's the same friend that requested for them. Hazelnut dark chocolate ganache filling! You may refer to my Meeple macaron post for the shell and filling recipe. Just note that baking temperature is slightly lower for white Miffy at 130°C to prevent browning. The temperature has to be lowered further to about 115°C after 20 minutes of baking to continue drying the shells thoroughly without browning. Bake with the tray at the lowest rack of the oven.

Just to share some photos of the process...

Piping Miffy heads

Piping full bodied Miffy! Left the teeny buttons to pipe

Freshly baked heads!

Freshly baked full-bodied Miffy!

I used edible black marker to draw the face.

Filling up Miffy heads

Filling up more Miffy!

There were smiles and exclamations of "Miffy!!" when these were received :). Thank God that these macarons were very well received in terms of looks and taste! The hazelnut dark chocolate filling is highly recommended as there is no sugar added, perfect to pair with sweet macaron shells. So if you can afford it, do make from scratch. Not too troublesome to make and much better than Nutella!

With love,
Phay Shing

Pre-orders for Creative Baking: Macarons is now open from 10-21 Feb! Don't miss the dates!


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Wednesday, 28 October 2015

'Miffy Birthday' Strawberry Yoghurt Chiffon Cake


This is a sweet Miffy cake for a sweet church friend. I am thankful and blessed for the opportunity. The Strawberry Yoghurt flavour was chosen by the hubby and it matched perfectly with the sweet Miffy theme. The recipe for Strawberry Yoghurt chiffon cake is from here but scaled down to 7-inch chiffon tin. I aliquoted out 8 tsp of batter and added in a drop of strawberry paste to get a darker line for the base. I cut a cute mini birthday smash cake and pink balloon from excess pink batter.

Strawberry Yoghurt Chiffon Cake (7-inch chiffon tin)
3 egg yolks
20 g sugar
39 g vegetable/corn oil
47 g strawberry yoghurt drink
60 g cake flour, sifted
4 ml vanilla extract
Strawberry paste

4 egg whites
43 g sugar
¼ tsp cream of tartar

1. Preheat oven to 160°C. Prepare a tray of water at the bottom of the oven (I used the lowest rack to bake the cake). *You may omit steam baking; I like to use it to control my oven temperature rise.
2. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till pale yellow before stirring in oil, yoghurt and vanilla extract.
3. Add in sieved flour and whisk till no trace of flour found. Stir in few drops of strawberry paste and pink beetroot powder.
4. Scoop out 8 tsp batter and add 1 more drop strawberry paste. Mix well.
5. Meringue: Beat the egg whites with ¼ tsp cream of tartar till firm peaks or just reach stiff peak, mixing in caster sugar in 2 additions. Scoop over 18 tbsp meringue into darker pink batter.
6. Fold in the meringue gently into the respective batter 1/3 at a time.
7. Pour the light pink batter into the chiffon tin from a height till 2/3 full.
8. Scoop over the dark pink batter leaving 2 cm from the top.
9. Gently tap the tin on table 3x to remove air bubbles (but do not overdo it!).
10. Bake the chiffon cake for 15 min at 160°C and then at 140°C for 30 mins.
11. Scoop leftover dark pink batter into 2 cake pop molds and bake for 12 min at 160°C.
12. Invert the chiffon cake immediately once out of the oven to cool
13. Unmould by hand after the cake is cool. Gently pull the cake from the sides of the tin at each angle and push the removable base up to unmould the sides. To unmould the cake from the base, gently lift up the cake from the base using hands, repeating this at each angle before turning the base over (see 'Hand Unmoulding Chiffon Cakes for a Smooth Finishing' video tutorial).

The Miffy face is baked using Vanilla chiffon cake (1 egg recipe) in an egg shell (for face) and 6 cake pops (from which I cut out feet, hands and ears). The Miffy body is baked using recipe for Lemon chiffon cake (also 1 egg recipe) for her body in a paper cone (snipped at the top) and 2 cake pops (for arms).

Vanilla Chiffon Cake ( 1 egg yolk)
1 egg yolk
7g sugar
13g vegetable oil
12 ml boiled water
2 ml vanilla extract
20g cake flour

2 egg whites
10g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

*Follow the previous steps for chiffon cake.
Baking time and temperature for egg and cake pops:
Cake pops: 12 min at 160°
Egg: 20 min at 160.

Lemon Chiffon Cake (1 egg yolk)
1 egg yolk
14g sugar
13g vegetable oil
15 ml lemon juice
20g cake flour
Zest of ¼ lemon
Lemon emulco

2 egg whites
10g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

Baking time and temperature for cone and cake pops:
Cake pops: 12 min at 160°
Cone: 25 min at 160.


Thankful cake was well-received and the word delicious was used! Happy birthday to Hui Min!

With lots of love,
Susanne

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Sunday, 25 October 2015

Miffy Shortbread Cookies

Here are some really easy Miffy shortbread cookies! You may be wondering why am I posting something so simple in our blog. Well, why not :p. To be honest it's because I have been really busy with bakes and writing for the chiffon book I am co-authoring with Susanne and the macaron book I am doing on my own. This is a bake that I recorded but haven't had the chance to publish some time back.


I used the cookie cutter that is sold at Isetan to make these cookies. Keep in mind that any recipe that you use to make cookies with imprints should not expand too much during baking. That means no baking powder, baking soda or yeast.

 (Makes 42 Miffy cookies)
Ingredients:
130g icing sugar
260g unsalted butter
380g plain flour
10g corn flour (you may replace with plain flour for a firmer cookie)
1/4 tsp white powder colouring (optional)
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp vanilla extract

Steps:
1. Sift all dry ingredients together. Cut the butter into the dry mixture using a pastry cutter or knife. Add vanilla and form a ball of dough with your hands.

2. Roll the dough between two baking sheets to thickness of 5-6mm. Chill in fridge until firm. At least 30 minutes or overnight.

3. Cut out the Miffy heads using the cutter and lay out the cutouts on a baking tray lined with baking sheet. Clean the cookie cutter every time there is dough stuck on it. You may lightly dust the cutters with plain flour but I find it unnecessary.


4. Chill the whole tray of cookie cutouts while preheating the oven to 150°C. Bake for 15-18 minutes or until the base of the cookies turn very slightly brown. Be careful to watch for browning as each oven is different.

Freshly baked!

5. Prepare some black royal icing by adding some charcoal powder to white royal icing. Use a Wilton #2 tip to pipe on the eyes and mouth of Miffy, using the cookie cutter imprints as guides. Air dry for 45 minutes to let the icing to dry completely.


Store in airtight container. These cookies taste better as they mature with age. You may store them up to a month in a cool, dry place.

All packed!

With love,
Phay Shing

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Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Miffy Lemon Vanilla Chiffon Cake



This is a sweet Miffy chiffon cake for a friend’s sister who likes Miffy! The yellow base is naturally colored with turmeric-based yellow colouring and lemon zest. I’m loving the rare natural colours (Queen’s) from Cold Storage Malaysia (thanks PS!). To my surprise, there is not a strong turmeric taste which is important for natural coloring. I preferred a yellow cake base as yellow is a typical Miffy colour and also makes for a cheerful background to contrast with the creamy white Miffy. I found out recently that vanilla with a tinge of lemon actually goes very well, so the chiffon cake is lemon vanilla flavoured (lemon zest is also yellow).


Lemon Vanilla Chiffon Cake (9-inch chiffon tin)
8 egg yolks
53g sugar
105g corn/vegetable oil
101ml water boiled with lemon zest (1 lemon)
160g cake flour
13ml vanilla extract
2 tsp turmeric-based natural coloring (Queen’s)

11 egg whites
120g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

1. Preheat oven at 160°C. *I used steam baking like ogura cakes but it is optional.
2. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till pale yellow before stirring in oil, boiled water with lemon zest and vanilla extract.
3. Add in sieved flour and tumeric-based powder (2 tsp) and whisk till no trace of flour found.
4. Meringue: Beat the egg whites with ¼ tsp cream of tartar till stiff peak, mixing in caster sugar in 2 additions.
5. Fold in the meringue gently into the batter 1/3 at a time.
6. Scoop the chiffon tin and gently tap on table to remove air bubbles
7. Bake for 160°C 15 min, then 150°C 10 min, 140°C 20 min, 130°C 15 min.
8. Invert once out of the oven and unmould by hand when cake is cool (see 'hand unmolding chiffon cakes for a smooth finishing' video).

I used a reduced egg yolk recipe to get a whiter chiffon cake for the Miffy. To shape the Miffy face, the Miffy face was baked in a small round bowl (11 mm OD Iwaki), the limbs from a cake pop maker (makes small semi-spheres), and ears cut from cake from an oval bowl. The pink body from another oval bowl, and the arms from mini swissrolls. If you do not have oval bowls, you can substitute with chiffon cake in layers and cut into the required shape.

Miffy cream vanilla chiffon cake
1 egg yolk
20g sugar
39g corn/vegetable oil
37 ml water
5 ml vanilla extract
60g cake flour
Pink beetroot powder (also Queen’s)

4 egg whites
45g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

1. Preheat oven to 160°C.
2. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till pale yellow before stirring in oil, water and vanilla extract.
3. Next add in sieved flour and whisk till no trace of flour found. Scoop over 15 tsp for pink batter and add a tsp of pink beetroot powder and a drop of strawberry paste (you can substitute with pink wilton colour if you do not have).
4. Meringue: Beat the egg whites with ¼ tsp cream of tartar till stiff peak, mixing in caster sugar in 2 additions. Scoop over 30 tbsp meringue to the pink batter and fold in 1/3 at a time.
5. Fold in the rest of the meringue gently into the plain colored batter 1/3 at a time.
6. Scoop the plain batter into the bowls and cake pop maker. Scoop the pink batter into a 6-inch tray lined with baking paper and an oval bowl (or tray if you do not have).
7. Gently tap the bowls on table to remove air bubbles.
8. Bake the bowls for 15 min at 160°C and then 15 min at 150°C, and layer cake and cake pop for 15 min at 160°C.
9. Unmould after the cakes are cool. For the swissrolls, roll while cakes are still hot. Cut the cakes into the appropriate sizes/shapes.
10. Arrange them onto the base chiffon cake and glue with melted marshmallows. I had black cake from a concurrent bake, else you can draw the features on using food markers or charcoal paste.

Enjoy baking! Thankful that the birthday girl is happy and the children had fun =).

With lots of love,
Susanne

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Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Rilakkuma and Miffy Macarons

I had a request for Miffy macarons from my friend the same week as the assorted Peppa pig and friends macarons. So I made them together in one single session! Here's Miffy along with Rilakkuma!

Retro look :p
Pardon my poor photography skills. I took many photos of the various macarons (Peppa pig and friends, Garfield, My Melody and this set) in a hurry and this set didn't turn out too well.

Recipe for Miffy macarons is the same as my panda macarons. Recipe for Rilakkuma is the same as my Mickey and Minnie macarons except that I omitted the charcoal powder.

It was surprisingly tough to get Miffy's ears piped well! Or maybe I was just harried with too many different macs to pipe in one session :p

Running out of batter to play with so piped smaller heads :p

Freshly baked and paired shells!

Freshly iced along with Garfield and My Melody. This is only half the batch I made! There were still another 21 Peppa Pig and friends macarons!

Filling up half of Miffy with strawberry swiss meringue buttercream and half with lemon curd and lemon smbc.

Filling up Rilakkuma with cookies n cream smbc.

Glad that the Miffy macarons were well received! My kids got to eat the Rilakkumas and as usual they were happy to eat any leftover macarons!

You may think that I am very good at piping weird shaped macarons. Actually I am still learning and still making mistakes! But with every practice, I learn something new :).

Keep a lookout for my next attempt at Rilakkuma macarons! Made with a different flavour but naturally coloured too ;)

With love,
Phay Shing


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Thursday, 30 October 2014

Miffy and Hello Kitty Lotus Paste Steamed Buns (莲蓉包)

I still have some lotus paste leftover from Mid-Autumn Festival so I made a small batch of cutesy baos for my kids :). All naturally coloured!

Hello Miffy! Hello...Kitty! 

Check out the awesome fluffiness!


It's a challenge to make these with kids to take care of because of the proofing times and steps involved. I experimented with doing the first proofing in the fridge until I was free to deal with the dough. You should proof the dough in a warm place whenever possible but I was hard pressed for time. I didn't stick to the proper proofing times and roughly kept track of the second proofing time before rushing the baos into the steamer. So I was pleasantly surprised that the baos were very soft and fluffy and had no hint of alcoholic taste (an indicator of overproofing). It's a pity the mooncake filling as bao filling didn't taste so great :p. My kids would have preferred liu sha (salted egg custard) filling but they had so much fun eating the cute, soft and fluffy baos! So feel free to use any savoury or sweet filling that you like. Just remember not to be over-generous with the filling if you are making cute baos.

So here's the bao recipe for busy people!

Ingredients (makes 6-7 Miffy/ Hello Kitty baos):
Dry ingredients
110g Hong Kong bao flour plus extra for dusting
20g corn flour
20g icing sugar or caster sugar
A pinch of salt
1/10 tsp baking powder (double acting or regular is fine)
3/4 tsp instant yeast

Wet ingredients
70g water
8g vegetable shortening

Colouring/paint
1/4 tsp Tumeric powder (or yellow gel food colouring)
1/2 tsp Beetroot powder dissolved in a few drops of water (or red gel food colouring)
1 tsp egg yolk
1/8 tsp charcoal powder (or black gel food colouring)

90-100g lotus paste (divided into balls of 15-17g)

Steps:
1. Mix all dry ingredients except baking powder together in a bowl. Take 1/2 tsp of water from the 70g batch and dissolve the baking powder in it.

2. Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients and pour the water in. Stir with a spoon until a sticky dough forms.
 
3. Pour the dough onto a non stick mat and gradually knead in baking powder wth water. Gradually knead in shortening.  Continue kneading until dough is smooth and elastic and passes windowpane test. About 25 minutes total hand kneading time. You may choose to use an electric mixer to do the job but you will have to triple or quadruple the recipe.

4. If you have time, let the dough proof in a lightly greased bowl covered with cling wrap until double in size or about 30 minutes in hot Singapore. I placed my dough in a measuring cup with cling wrap and placed the dough in the fridge immediately to proof. This helps me to estimate how much more the dough needs to proof if necessary.


5. Punch down the dough and knead a few times to expel all the trapped air. My dough proofed to double its size in the fridge over 3 hours! So I didn't need to proof it further. Divide the dough in the following manner:
Miffy/ Kitty head: 28-30g
Miffy ears: 4g each
Red/pink dough: 12g
Yellow dough: 4g
Extra plain dough for Kitty ear supports: 5g

Colour the dough yellow with tumeric or gel food colouring. Colour the dough red with beetroot juice or gel food colouring. If you have to rush off somewhere again like me, you can colour the dough and chuck it back in the fridge after wrapping them up.


6. To make Miffy, simply wrap a ball of lotus paste with 30g of plain dough, placing seam side down onto a small piece of baking sheet. Lightly dust your work surface with flour. Roll out 2 long ears and place one edge slightly under the wrapped dough. Loosely cover with cling wrap and proof for 40 minutes.


7. To make Kitty, please refer to Fong's Kitchen for the lovely tutorial. I snipped Kitty's ears a little too high up on the ball of wrapped dough so the shape is a little wrong. Snip the ears slightly towards the back of the head instead. Remember to add a bit of plain dough to support the ears at the back. Add on the nose and ribbon and proof it in the same way as Miffy.


8. Steam on high heat for 6 minutes. Turn off the heat and let it sit in the steamer/ wok for 2 minutes before taking the baos out. Mix the charcoal into the egg yolk. Use a chopstick to print on the eyes, dragging it downwards a bit to create an oval imprint. Use toothpick to draw on Miffy's mouth and Kitty's whiskers.  Return to steam on high heat for another 1-2 minutes. Let it sit in the wok covered for another 2 minutes before taking the baos out.

Enjoy while it is hot! If you are not consuming immediately, keep them in airtight bag or container and freeze after they have cooled completely. Resteam for 15-20 minutes before eating. They will taste almost as good as freshly steamed.

With love,
Phay Shing

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