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passover week- passover panforte

31 Mar 2015

Hi Every-one,

Welcome to Day 2 of Passover week. When I made this Panforte at Christmas, I realised it would be the perfect treat for Passover with just a few minor adjustments. Panforte doesn't contain any butter so it’s pareve and you can use any combination of fruit and nuts depending on what’s available. I used candied lemon rind in my version and if you'd like to do the same I've included a recipe for you to use or you could also use the candied lemon slices from this recipe. 



Candied Lemon Peel
Here’s what you’ll need. After juicing a lemon keep the 2 halves to make into candied rind. Slice each lemon half into 3 or 4 pieces then place the lemon pieces into a small saucepan of water then bring to the boil. Drain the water and repeat this boiling and draining process 2 more times to reduce the bitterness.

Weigh the lemon slices and measure out the same weight of sugar. Place the sugar and 1 or 2 tablespoons of water in the rinsed out pan and stir over medium heat until the sugar dissolves. Place the lemon slices back into the syrup and simmer for 45 minutes or until the skin turns translucent. Remove the slices from the syrup and place on a rack to drain overnight. The following day turn the slices over and do the same before storing in an airtight container in the fridge. This will make a little more rind than you need for this recipe. You could also use candied lemon slices from this recipe.



I've made panforte twice since Christmas and I've tweaked the recipe a little. I ran short of almonds one time so used macadamias and liked the result so much, I've added them to this recipe. The candied lemon gives the panforte a little zing and I've also reduced the flour content so dry panforte is a thing of the past.




Here's the recipe for you which makes an 8 in/20 cm panforte. For all my recipes, I use a 250 ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon. All eggs are 60 grams and my oven is a conventional oven not fan forced, so you may need to reduce your oven temperature by 20°C.



Passover Panforte (recipe adapted from here)

50 g (1¾ oz) blanched almonds
50 g (1¾ oz) macadamia nuts
100 g (3½ oz) roasted hazelnuts
90 g (3 oz) dried figs, coarsely chopped
60 g (2 oz) dried apricots, coarsely chopped (not Turkish)
50 g (1¾ oz) candied lemon peel
½ cup Passover baking mix (equal quantities potato flour and superfine matzo meal)
2 tablespoons cocoa
1 teaspoon cinnamon
¼ tsp ground black pepper

Chocolate Syrup
60g (2oz) dark chocolate, chopped 
¼ cup sugar 
½ cup honey

To serve

Cocoa powder

METHOD
Spread almonds and macadamia nuts on an oven tray, put into moderate oven (180°C/350°F) for 5 to 7 minutes, until lightly golden. 

Sift the Passover baking mix with the cocoa, the cinnamon and the black pepper. Combine the nuts in the bowl with the chopped figs, the dried apricots, the chopped candied lemon peel and the sifted baking mix.

Grease and line the base and sides of an 8 inch (20 cm) round cake tin with baking paper.

Put the chopped chocolate, the sugar and honey in a saucepan, stir over low heat until sugar has dissolved, brushing down sides of saucepan with brush dipped in hot water to dissolve any sugar crystals. Bring to boil, reduce heat, simmer uncovered until syrup forms a soft ball when a few drops are dropped into a glass of cold water or reaches 116°C/240
°F

Add the chocolate syrup to fruit and nut mixture, mix well. Spread mixture quickly and evenly into prepared tin. 

Bake in a moderate oven (180°C/350°F) for 35 minutes or until just firm, remove from oven and cool in tin. 

Turn out; remove paper before wrapping in aluminium foil. Leave at least one day before cutting, though I think it needs at least a week to mature. 

Before serving, sift cocoa powder over the top of the panforte then cut into wedges.



I hope you get the chance to make this. 
It's not very sweet and has lots of dark complex flavours which I find highly addictive, so you've been warned. I made 2 and have already eaten the first one and it's not even Passover yet!

See you all again tomorrow with another sweet treat for Passover.

Jillian

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pumpkin pie

26 Nov 2012

This is my delayed Thanksgiving tribute - pumpkin pie. As we don't celebrate Thanksgiving Day here, pumpkin pie is rarely seen in Australia. I don't think I've ever seen it in a bakery or on the menu in a cafe.



For some reason I decided to make pumpkin pie when I was in my teens. My parents had a few American cookbooks so there was no shortage of recipes from which to choose. Those books are in Brisbane but I found this recipe in Good Taste magazine earlier this year and it looked nice, so I bookmarked it especially for Thanksgiving.



You know me, I love to change recipes but this one I barely altered. The only change I made was to roast the pumpkin in the oven whilst I was baking something else. I cut the pumpkin into 2 large chunks, removed the seeds then wrapped the chunks in foil and baked them until the pumpkin was soft. When it was cool I just scraped the cooked pumpkin away from the skin. It couldn't have been easier!



I bought some autumn pie cutters when I was in New York so I decided to make a decorative edge for the pie from the leftover pastry. The leaves are fixed with beaten egg to the prebaked shell and I sprinkled them with some maple sugar flakes. I also made a few extra to serve with the pie. They took about 7 minutes to bake whilst the pie was in the oven.



I took the pie in to work today and served the pie with some nice thick cream. As pumpkin pie isn't so common here I wasn't sure how the test audience would react. I came back after lunch to find an empty pie plate and a thumbs up from Amy, my American workmate, so I guess it went down okay.

See you all again on Wednesday with a NYC shopshoot.

Bye for now,

Jillian
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Rhubarb Yoghurt Cake

1 Jul 2009

As you know, I have a thing about rhubarb and especially oven baked rhubarb. When I found this recipe for Rhubarb Yoghurt Cake I knew I had to give it a go.



The recipe was easy to follow and the finished cake looked just as it was supposed to.




I took the cake into work and it disappeared in a flash, which is always a great sign. My workmates gave it the thumbs up, so I think they're all rhubarb fans as well. As I hadn't made this recipe before I tried a small piece of cake. I'd used low fat Greek yoghurt in the recipe so the cake was very tart and needed a little bit more sugar. Next time I try the recipe I might use buttermilk instead of yoghurt and increase the sugar, just a little.



If you try the recipe, let me know how it turns out.

P.S. Happy Canada Day!

Jillian
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