Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts

Fennel Pollen Apple Roti Tart

Fennel Pollen Apple Roti Tart

Fennel Pollen Apple Roti Tart

Hey! How are you all doing? We have just a few short weeks before our big move back to India, so things are pretty crazy around here. We sold some of our furniture and gave away the rest of our stuff that we had accumulated over the years. Surprisingly I did not feel much of anything to see them go, except an unexpected sense of relief. The kid was quite confused when they hauled the sofa away but immediately reveled in all the new space he had to run around!
I am trying not to let go of most of my kitchen stuff though, and that is what I am packing first, forget clothes and shoes! My baking pans are covered in bubble-wrap and packed away in suitcases and I am itching to bust them out, and bake one last time before we leave.

Today we had to make a trip up to the city, so we also took a short drive up to take one more look at this:
Golden Gate Bridge, SF

(I didn't take my camera along so this picture is from an earlier trip up to the breathtaking Marin Headlands.) Initially, to me, The Golden Gate Bridge was just a pretty red bridge, but over the years I formed a deep attachment to it, and so has the three year old who's whole face lights up every time we see it. Driving up to the city it is always an awe inspiring sight to see the bridge shrouded by fog and surrounded by the green hills,  just as we emerge from a tunnel. A truly dramatic sight I can never get tired of, and always have to photograph and then of course share with you all here!  I am sure you don't mind :) Just look at that! We must be pretty crazy to leave right?

As you can guess, I am already missing California deeply but I just cannot wait to be all settled in my next kitchen on the other side of the world, and get cooking & baking again.
I can't wait to re-discover Bangalore, the bustling South Indian city we are moving to. It has changed so much from the green and quiet little town I once lived in long ago as a child, and over the years that we have been away, I am sure it has changed even more.

But before that, there are hundreds of things to wrap up here, and a loooonnggg 30 hour trip to make. Do say a prayer for us and send good wishes our way!

So what am I doing here? escaping my never ending to-do list for just a little while, with a delicious and beautiful apple tart dusted with fennel pollen. It looks like a flower in full bloom doesn't it? Like these gorgeous spring flowers- something else I just cannot stop photographing!

flowers

daffodils

This is a guest post for my good friend Viji at her blog Spices and Aroma, which always inspires me to cook and eat healthier. You will find Viji cooking with a lot of whole grains, South Beach diet friendly recipes and also making some absolutely brilliant, not so sinful desserts.

Fennel Pollen Apple Roti Tart

When she requested a fruit tart for this guest post, I had something else in mind initially. Something involving cooking down berries and the rolling out of a buttery tart base like in this fantastic strained Greek Yogurt Tart here

Then one day when I was flipping channels on the TV, my three year old surprised me by loudly exclaiming "that's Pepin!" on seeing Jacques Pepin! A little later, he also confirmed that he was familiar with Julia Child.  We are a little addicted to PBS, him and me, and I am so not proud of the fact that he can name most of the characters of "Downtum Abbey".

Fennel Pollen Apple Roti Tart

Anyways, Pepin on that day was making a tortilla-tart with pears that looked so delicious and easy, that I could not resist making it, and decided to use up the last of the pink lady apples that were a steal at our farmer's market, perhaps because they were on their way out. Since it is quite healthy too without all the fat and sugar that goes into most tarts, I thought this is just the sort of recipe that Viji would like- not so sinful and bound to be a hit with her little toddler too.

I also decided to test some of the fennel pollen I received as a sample from the wonderful people from Pollen Ranch whom I met at the Fancy Food Show and got to learn a lot about this spice that I had not used before.

Fennel Pollen from Pollen Ranch at the Fancy Food Show

Most of us are familiar with fennel bulbs and of course fennel seeds, which are widely used in many cuisines, and very common in Indian cooking. Fennel is one of my favorite spices, both in savory and increasingly, sweet uses as well. In India bowls of fennel seeds are offered after meals to refresh your palate, aid digestion and serve as a natural mouth freshener. So that is my association with it, fresh, sweet, slightly anise-like.

But what is fennel pollen? As you would guess, it is the pollen collected from flowers on the fennel plant. I was expecting it to be like dust, but it is more granular than powdery, and tastes sweeter and less anise-like than fennel seeds, at-least to me. 

Fennel pollen from Pollen Ranch is hand picked from fields of fennel growing wild in the Sonoma area. I was intrigued to learn that fennel grows wild throughout much of California and the US West Coast. I hope to visit those fields one day and would love to watch how they harvest it.


Fennel Pollen Apple Roti Tart

In this easy tart, left over tortillas or rotis are spread with a tablespoon of butter or margarine and sprinkled with sugar, instead of using a regular tart shell. Slices of apples or pears are arranged on the top, dotted with a little more pieces of butter,  sprinkled with spoons of sugar and a pinch of fennel pollen, and then baked at 400 F for about 20 mins until the sugar and butter form a fennel scented caramel over the softened apples. The top of the apples are brushed after baking with preserves or honey that make them look shiny and glazed and adds just a touch more sweetness. The roti gets baked into a crisp and crunchy sweet base. Easy, delicious and pretty all in one go? Ingenious!

Head over to Viji's blog Spices and Aroma for the full recipe and a lot of inspiration to eat healthy!

diy ice cream maker and bourbon peach egg-less ice cream with rice crispies



There is nothing like a peach when it is in season. Sweet, soft and  juicy, the way it is meant to be. Right now the farmer's markets here are filled with  glorious stone fruits, and not so many berries as the weeks before. Dizzying varieties of peaches and nectarines, pluots and plums. From a deep ruby red, to white and soft rose tinged. We had a fabulous time, eating our way through the samples, sweet juicy fruits making out fingers sticky and stained pink. The little monkey clutched a strawberry, completely besotted by it. He refused to eat it with the expression that clearly stated that he found it too pretty to eat. He was very upset when it slipped out of his fingers after a while. A slice of sweet, golden peach  quickly helped him forget his loss and he had no problems devouring slice after slice, like the rest of us!


A mom of two walked past carrying a basket filled with fruits that her children were gorging on, both hanging on to the handles and fruit juices around their mouth and dribbling down their chins. "This is even better than a leash!"I heard her exclaim. I agree. If you were carrying a basket of these peaches, I might follow you around too!

I had a carton of cream and inspired by my new copy of Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams at Home, I decided to make her bourbon ice cream and add some roasted peaches, to use up some of the peaches that were not as sweet as the others, which we had quickly finished.
Since I am hosting Sugar High Friday with the theme of Rice Sweets, I decided to serve the ice cream on a bed of rice crispies for a bit of crunch in lieu of a cone or wafer. Fabulous, if I may say so myself :)

Since I no longer have the ice cream maker that helped me with glorious salty caramel icecream and pistachio ice cream,  I decided to make one myself!


If you look at the popular ice cream makers you will see that all they really are is a bowl with inbuilt jel like liquid which becomes frozen so that the bowl becomes really cold, and a mixer attachment which churns the ice cream base so that it prevents ice crystals from forming and making the ice cream gritty.

balsamic roasted wild strawberries with greek yogurt


Each trip to the farmer's market that I have the great blessing of living just walking distance to,  is like a treasure hunt. I am always excited about what I will find that day. A few weeks ago when berries ruled, where now there are mountains of peaches and nectarines and plums, I chanced upon a stall with tiny strawberries. The cheerful woman missing one front tooth, who had woken up at 3 am to bring this bounty to us, pointed  out that this was the same variety of the regular larger strawberries, just those growing wild on the mountains.


I bought some of each, the regular ones and these tiny ones to compare. The wild berries had a concentrated strawberry flavour and tartness and crunchy seeds while the plumper ones were juicier, being fleshier and I actually preferred those to eat. 
The mountain berries however, would be wonderful in dessert and jam, being incredibly flavorful. 

small wild mountain strawberries 

larger fleshier regular strawberries sliced 

Both types were nothing like the tasteless ones from the supermarket. From thinking that organic produce was just overpriced hype, I have become a locavore convert! Seriously the difference in taste between something that is grown in small farms organically and brought fresh to the market to that which is grown on a large scale God-knows-where to look pretty and last longer on supermarket shelves but taste like water balloons is something you have to taste yourself to understand! So get yourself to your local markets or farms where ever in the world you are, if you haven't already! 

I had grand ideas of making balsamic roasted wild strawberry ice-cream and cut up whatever strawberries remaining I hadn't greedily eaten ( both kinds) into a roasting dish with a tablespoon or so of sugar,  a squeeze of lemon juice, a scraped vanilla bean and a drizzle of balsamic vinegar and after about 8 minutes at 350 F in the oven I just about died when I tasted the sweet  juicy warm goodness.


Forgotten was the ice cream and we happily ate it by itself or topped some greek yogurt with sweet juicy red spoonfuls. It would make a great cake or ice cream topping too, but sadly it was all gone before I could investigate further!

Roasting fruits is a great way to experience them completely differently. Adding just a few spoonfuls of sugar and nothing else even, while roasting or stewing with a little water on the stove top, turns fruits that are slightly tart and sour and thus untouched on your dining table into something that everyone will fight to finish! They break down a little and become soft and slightly jam like, releasing delicious juices.
I had tried this with peaches last summer, (and again this time in roasted peach and bourbon icecream) where the edges get browned and caramelized. Bananas are great to roast too, as are a lot of other fruits. 


Am playing around with my camera settings and very slowly learning about exposure and the other nuts and bolts about photography. The awesomely talented and wonderful Xiaolu, Aparna, Prerna have been awesomely patient and not laughed at my embarrassingly noobie questions. Thank you! 

I submitted the first photo to Food Pixel's fruit as core ingredient themed photography event. I am now liking this darker feel that I achieved shooting against a dark back ground and by reducing the aperture and also reducing the exposure bar by a couple of points, and further increasing the shadows on a simple editor like Picasa tho I need to look into a more powerful editor soon. This is new for me, after  years of obsessively trying to make my pictures brighter! 

For those of you who want to learn more like me, here is what I'm reading and trying to get into my small brain!
Will update this list with more as I find them, but first, going to have to force myself to read beyond the first few pages of my tedious and boring camera manual :(

Berry Banana Frozen Yogurt-Vegan, Dairy Free




Is it getting hot where you live? It sure is, here in sunny California. Good thing I have a big bag of frozen berries in my freezer, ready to whipped up into berry smoothies, berry desserts and this easy-peasy berry banana frozen yogurt.

Berry Banana Frozen Yogurt
Recipe source: My own

Ingredients
  • 2 cups yogurt (for vegan version use soy yogurt)
  • 2 ripe bananas mashed
  • 1 cup frozen mixed berries ( I used strawberries, blueberries, raspberries and black berries)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tbs maple syrup
  • 1/4 tsp cinnamon pwd
  • Mint leaves for garnish- a few

Method
  • In the bowl of a stand mixer, take the yogurt and the mashed bananas attach the paddle and mix until well combined.You could also use a hand held beater or blender for this
  • Add the vanilla, maple syrup and cinnamon powder and continue mixing.
  • Transfer the contents into the ice cream attachment of your stand mixer/ice cream maker so that the ice crystals are broken up while freezing.
  • Take the frozen mixed berries in your blender and pulse it a couple of times until powdery.
  • Mix it with the frozen yogurt in the last 5 minutes of the ice cream maker's rotation. I love how it takes on a beautiful swirly pinkish-purplish colour (depending on the berries used)
  • Garnish with a few berries and mint leaves
  • The frozen yogurt will have a soft serve consistency so serve immediately. If you are freezing the leftovers, it might become hard in the freezer so leave it out for about 10 mins before serving.
  • Serve it over warm lemon cake for extra points!


Verdict
Ease:  ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ 
Taste: ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ 
I don't have an ice cream maker yet, though I have just ordered my Cuisinart ICE-40 Flavor Duo Ice Cream Maker
after a lot of research  and am excited about all the glorious ice creams I'll be making this summer!  You don't really need one you just have to make sure you regularly take the contents out of the freezer and mix to avoid the formation of ice crystals and keep your froyo or ice cream smooth and creamy. 

Check out these useful tips on how to make ice cream without a machine  and how to make ice cream softer
I guess I wasn't religious enough and mine had some crystals. It also melted quite fast so make sure you serve it at the last minute and eat up fast! Which shouldnt be a problem since it tastes goood :)
If you like this you should totally check out my dessert recipes are here
All my favourite vegan recipes are here

Orange Cuptail Cupcakes- Easy & Vegan ( Dairy-free, Eggless)

Summer's here and so is the glue that bonds girls from New York to New Delhi- Sex and the City 2!!! So when you get together with your best gal pals to watch back-to-back episodes in preparation, why not bake up some of these delightful & summery Orange cocktail-in-a-cupcake or “Cup-tails”.
These cuties have got to be my favourite summer treats. Why? Because
1) What is better than cocktails and cupcakes ? cocktails in a cupcake :)
2) Because which fruit reminds you more of the blazing summer sun than the orange? I for one can’t think of any. I live next door to an orange orchard and love to walk by and see the trees full of fruit every February, signalling the end of winter and the promise of sunny days ahead. “Spring is almost here, Summer will soon follow!” each plump orange seems to say.
The fresh citrusy taste of this juicy fruit is totally captured in this vegan orange cupcake made mostly from orange juice and zest.
No eggs, no milk, nothing to weaken the bold, orangey awesomeness. So it’s tasty and healthy and cruelty-free too. I'm not a vegan but have amazing respect for those who are, especially the wonderful vegan food bloggers who have helped me see that vegan baked goods are yummalicious, often easier to make and call for less ingredients. Vegan baking is also great for those with allergies to dairy and eggs.
I like these orange cupcakes best after chilling a while in the fridge, so that it’s like biting into a tall glass of orange juice, especially after a hot, lazy day at the beach or swim in the pool.
Add some orange liqueur, vodka or grand mariner, some orange butter-cream frosting if you want, and there you have it, the Orange Cup-tail!
This recipe is from the brilliant Vaishali of earthvegan and I only made a few changes to it because it was already so good.
I didn't have orange liqueur so I used Grand Mariner instead and it was awesome, although it would be awesomer with the orange liqueur or maybe even some orange extract. Want to try it with vodka soon since vodka-orange is my favourite cocktail combination!
Orange Cuptail Cupcakes
Recipe Source: Vaishali of earthvegan from here
Dry Ingredients:
  • 1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • finely grated zest from one orange ( Organic oranges would be best. You could omit this although I like it better with the zest. It tastes well, zestier :)
Sift all the dry ingredients into a bowl and mix in the zest.
In another bowl, beat together until well-mixed:
  • 1 cup orange juice ( I used store bought minute maid but fresh would be best)
  • 2 tbsp orange liqueur like Cointreau or Triple Sec (I used grand mariner)
  • 1/3 cup canola oil
  • 2/3 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla
Method
  • Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and mix with a whisk just until you have a smooth batter. Do not overmix or overbeat.
  • Pour the batter into greased silicone cupcake molds or muffin tins. Or you could use an ice cream scoop to pour out the batter with less fuss
  • Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven about 30-32 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
Orange-flavored Buttercream Frosting
Ingredients:
  • 8 tbsp (1 stick) vegan butter like Earth Balance
  • 4 tbsp vegetable shortening
  • 1/4 cup orange juice
  • 1 tbsp orange liqueur
  • 1 tbsp orange zest (optional)
  • 2 to 3 cups confectioners' sugar (use more or less depending on how thick you want your frosting, and how sweet).
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
Cream together the butter and shortening until they are fluffy, about 1 minute.
Now add the orange juice, zest, liqueur and vanilla and half the sugar. Beat until mixed, then add the remaining sugar and beat until mixed for about 2 mins.
Frost the cupcakes after they've cooled completely otherwise the frosting may melt and get runny.
Verdict
To tell the truth, I
wasn't expecting too much from a cupcake made mostly out of orange juice and not much else. But the cupcakes have turned out soft and fluffy and absolutely lovely!
Warning: I also tried to bake a cake using lemon juice instead of orange, but didn't like it as much. Might want to use another recipe for vegan lemon cakes (will post one soon)
I also love my silicone cupcake molds which are so easy to unmold and they are so cute I don't even need separate cupcake liners, I can simply bake, and serve in them! Have put a link below if you want to check them out. I think they would make great gifts for the bakers in your family. Just be a little careful while peeling them off though. I was very rash and tore one :(
Oh and if you like this recipe you should totally check out Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World
, which has 75 different cupcake recipes including a margarita cupcake! And they are all dairy and egg-free and most recipes use ingredients you probably already have lying around in your kitchen. This is an awesome cook book and even non vegans (like me) will agree!
I am sending these cup-tails off to What's for lunch honey?'s monthly mingle "Special Sweet Treats" hosted at theapartmentkitchen.net