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apricot slice and a kitchen mystery

13 Apr 2026


I've been away for the past week, staying at Farmer Andrew's house in Dungog. As I was in the country, I thought it only fitting to bake something deliciously old fashioned like this Apricot Slice. At it's heart is a simple butter cake, flavoured with vanilla then topped with apricot halves and a dusting of sugar. 
The original recipe comes from Bill's Open Kitchen by the one and only Bill Granger, who sadly passed away a few years ago. There are some lovely recipes in the book and its probably time to revisit some more of them.


Apricot season has come and gone in Sydney so I used bottled apricot halves and  added some finely grated lemon rind to the batter to replace some of the lost zing. The original recipe was a mix it all in batter but as I didn't have a stand mixer, I went the old fashioned route of creaming the butter and sugar before adding the eggs and flour. The baking powder had expired so instead of all plain flour I used a combination of self raising and plain flour instead. I'd not used Farmer Andrew's new oven before and as he was away and I couldn't locate the manual, I just twiddled the dials and hoped for the best.


Here's the recipe for you which was adapted from a recipe from 
Bill's Open Kitchen. For all my recipes I use a 250ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon, unsalted butter and 60g eggs. My oven is a conventional gas oven so if your oven is fan forced, you may need to reduce the oven temperature by 20°C.





Apricot slice – makes 9 slices
Ingredients
150g unsalted butter, softened
125g caster sugar
1½ tsp vanilla extract
finely grated rind 1 lemon
2 eggs
¾ cup (110g) SR flour
¼ cup (40g) plain flour 
a pinch of salt
60 ml (¼ cup) milk
8-10 apricots, pitted and halved (this may vary depending on the size of the apricots). If fresh apricots are out of season you can use tinned or bottled apricots
3 tsp caster sugar, extra

Method
Preheat the oven to 160°C, conventional. Grease and line a 7 x 11 inch slice tin with baking paper.


Cream the butter, sugar, vanilla extract and lemon rind in a medium bowl until light and fluffy. Add in the room temperature eggs one at a time until combined. Sift the flour and salt and add the flour to the batter in 2 batches alternating with the milk to form a smooth batter. Spread the mixture evenly into the slice tin.


Push the apricot halves, cut side up, evenly into the cake mixture into 5 or 6 rows of 3. Place in the oven and bake for 20 minutes, sprinkle over extra sugar and cook for another 20 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. 


When cool, cut into fingers to make 9 slices.


I cut and photographed the slice and when I returned to put the cooled cake into the cake tin, the cut slice you see here had disappeared.


I'd not eaten the slice and as only the dog and I were in the house at the time, I asked Mavis if she knew what had happened. Mavis assured me that she'd not eaten it, and as she's a pretty honest girl, (and she was quietly snoring on my bed when the slice was snaffled) I believed her. I cut myself a piece of the slice and it was so delicious I can't really blame the cake thief.


See you all again next week with some more baking from my kitchen.

Bye for now,

Jillian



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upside down fig and mascarpone cake

6 Apr 2026

Sometimes my fridge is filled with bits and pieces that need to be used in a hurry. I had some mascarpone that was close to it's expiry date and in the freezer were the leftover figs from the fig galette I made a few weeks ago. I hunted through my recipe books for a recipe that used both ingredients.


I found a lovely recipe for a fig and mascarpone cake in Skye McAlpine's book, A Table in Venice. I was going to top the cake with fig slices until I found a few other recipes online that topped the cake with figs flavoured with Marsala. That sounded like a good idea to me so I decided to combine the two recipes and came up with this upside down fig cake.

Here's the recipe for you that makes a 17 cm cake. For all my recipes I use a 250ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon, unsalted butter and 60g eggs. My oven is a conventional gas oven so if your oven is fan forced, you may need to reduce the oven temperature by 20°C.


Upside down fig and mascarpone cake – adapted from a recipe from A Table in Venice by Skye McAlpine and a recipe from Olive magazine.

Marsala figs
6 figs halved lengthways or quartered depending on the size of the figs.
2 tbs caster sugar
45 mls Marsala

Cake
125g room temperature mascarpone
100g caster sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 room temperature eggs
125g self-raising flour
½ tsp baking powder
a good pinch of sea salt
4-6 fresh figs, stems removed, chopped into chunks

Method
Heat the oven to 180°C, conventional. Grease and line a 17-cm cake tin with baking paper. If using a springform tin, wrap the base with foil to prevent any leaks.

Put the halved figs into a bowl with 1 tbs of the caster sugar and the Marsala, and toss well. Set aside for 15 minutes.



In a large bowl, beat the mascarpone, sugar and vanilla together until creamy then add the eggs and mix until well combined. Sift in the flour, baking powder and salt and stir until well combined. Gently stir in the fig pieces.


Scatter the bottom of the tin with the remaining caster sugar and then arrange the fig halves, cut-side down. Carefully spoon the batter into the prepared tin and place the tin on a baking tray on the middle shelf of the oven, to catch any drips. 


Bake for 1 hour or until golden, risen and a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean. The cake is quite delicate, so cool the cake in the tin for 10-15 minutes, before turning out onto a wire rack. 


Pour over any remaining marsala syrup and leave to cool before cutting into slices. I served my slice with a dollop of double cream.


The marsala figs are genius but I wasn't sold on the texture of the cake. I think I'll revisit the recipe using a tried and true butter cake batter for the base, so watch this space.

See you all again next week with some more baking from my kitchen.

Bye for now,

Jillian
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chocolate hot cross buns

30 Mar 2026


I am a traditionalist when it comes to hot cross buns. I only eat them at Easter time and I'm definitely a dried fruit hot cross bun girl. However my next door neighbour does not eat fruit in any form so I decided to step outside my comfort zone to bake some chocolate hot cross buns.

Who else to turn to for my recipe other than the baking goddess herself, Natalie Paull. Last year when her chocolate hot cross buns recipe appeared in Delicious magazine I made a batch which were declared delicious, so this year I made another batch.


You'll need to begin the recipe a day ahead and you’ll need a piping bag or a small zip-lock bag for the cross. Although these are best eaten the day they're baked, the buns are still good the next day.


Here's the recipe for you which makes 8 buns, adapted from here. For all my recipes I use a 250ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon, unsalted butter and 60g eggs. My oven is a conventional gas oven so if your oven is fan forced you may need to reduce the oven temperature by 20°C.


Natalie Paul Chocolate hot cross buns - makes 8
Ingredients
1½ tbs dark cocoa powder
1¼ tbs milk, boiled
1 small orange
100ml water, tepid
1 tsp instant dried yeast
35g light brown sugar
300g strong (baker’s) flour
3 tsp mixed spice powder
45g unsalted butter, chilled, chopped
Cooking oil spray, to grease
160g dark (70%) chocolate, chopped (I used 125g)

Glaze
50g caster sugar
2 tsp golden syrup
½ vanilla bean, split, seeds scraped (substitute 1 tsp vanilla-bean paste)
Finely grated zest of 1 orange

Cross
¼ cup (35g) plain flour
¼ cup (25g) dark cocoa powder
1 tsp icing sugar mixture
2 tsp vegetable oil

Method
Mix cocoa powder and boiled milk in a small bowl until a thick rough paste forms. Trim and discard the stem ends of the orange, then roughly chop the trimmed orange and puree in a food processor until almost smooth. Set aside 100g of orange puree.

Pour tepid water into the bowl of a stand mixer. Add yeast, 10g brown sugar and 100g flour.  Whisk by hand until a smooth paste. Place remaining flour and brown sugar on top, then add orange puree, spices, 1 tsp fine salt, chilled butter and the cocoa paste. Stand for 30 minutes.


Attach dough hook to mixer and knead on low for 15 minutes. Add chocolate and knead for a further 5 minutes. It should be soft, smooth and not wet – add 1-2 tbs more flour if it is. Scrape into a plastic tub or large bowl lightly sprayed with cooking oil spray. Rest at room temperature for 40 minutes, or until puffed. Lift dough up by one side and shake to lengthen. Fold dough over on itself and place back in the tub. Turn dough 90⁰ and repeat the shake and fold – this activates the gluten in the dough. Press plastic wrap on top, cover and chill overnight.

The next morning, place the chilled dough onto a lightly floured surface. Portion into 8 x 100g portions. Roll each into a tight ball and place in a 2 x 3 formation, with the extra two on the side, on a shallow baking tray lined with baking paper. Cover lightly with plastic wrap and leave to prove in a warm place for 1 hour, or until puffed, almost touching and bounces back lazily when poked lightly.


Meanwhile, for the glaze, place all ingredients with 1½ tbs water in a small saucepan and place over high heat. Bring to the boil, reduce heat to low and simmer, stirring occasionally, for 2-3 minutes, until slightly thickened and syrupy. Set aside to cool.

For the cross, place all ingredients in a medium bowl with ¼ cup (60ml) water and ¼ tsp fine salt. Whisk until combined and smooth, adding more water if the paste is too thick to pipe. Transfer cross paste to a piping bag and set aside.


Preheat the oven to 210°C/190°C fan-forced. Cut a 5mm tip off the piping bag and pipe crosses over the top of buns. Bake for 10 minutes, then reduce the temperature to 190°C and bake for another 10 minutes or until firm and bouncy when pressed. Remove the buns from the oven and brush with glaze. Cool on a wire rack for 20 minutes before serving.


Recipe Notes: adjust the cross mixture with 1-2 tsp extra water if it’s too thick or stiff to pipe. You’ll have more paste than you need, but the exact amount would be hard to pipe easily. Another way of checking buns are cooked is using a kitchen thermometer. The internal temperature will be 90⁰C.


Although these are best eaten the day they're baked, the buns are still good the next day and the butter is not negotiable.

See you all again next week with some more baking from my kitchen.

Bye for now,

Jillian
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passover week 2026 - strawberry and cream sponge cake

27 Mar 2026


Just because it's Passover doesn't mean we can't enjoy a strawberry and cream sponge cake. Whilst I couldn't replicate Nadine Ingram's
Little Queenie cake that I 
recently made, I managed to make something similar.

As I don't use raising agents during Passover I used the brown butter sponge cake recipe I developed last year from a Natalie Paull recipe. I knew I wouldn't be able to get my hands on Passover versions of the dairy products needed for the filling so I used lightly sweetened whipped cream instead.


Cardamom isn't kosher for Passover but all the other spices in the compote are, so I just removed the cardamom pods you can see here from the roasted strawberry compote. 

Here's the recipe for you which makes a 20-cm layer cake. For all my recipes I use a 250ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon, unsalted butter and 60g eggs. My oven is a conventional gas oven so if your oven is fan forced you may need to reduce the oven temperature by 20°C.


Passover strawberry and cream sponge cake 
To decorate
1 fresh egg white 
8 mint sprigs, picked
50g caster sugar
125g strawberries, hulled
1 tsp pink peppercorns, cracked
6 dried hibiscus petals
 
Sponge cake 
30g superfine matzo meal 
70g potato starch 
pinch salt
135g caster sugar
4 eggs
80g unsalted butter
1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped
 
Strawberry compote
1 tbs dried mint 
½ tsp pink peppercorns, crushed
100g caster sugar
1 lemons, zested
4 dried hibiscus petals
1 vanilla bean, split and seeds scraped
400g ripe strawberries, hulled

Filling
500g pure cream
60g caster sugar
1 tsp Passover vanilla extract

To decorate

Preheat the oven to 50°C. Line a baking tray with baking paper. Alternatively, if you have a dehydrator, the fruit can be dried easier and it will retain its colour better. You can also substitute whole freeze-dried strawberries, which you can slice thinly with a paring knife, but these can be costly and hard to find.


Lightly whisk the egg white, then brush the mint sprigs with a little egg white on both sides. Toss the leaves in the caster sugar, then place onto the prepared tray or dehydrator shelf. 

Slice the strawberries into 2 mm-thick slices and place them on the tray with the  mint, then sprinkle on both sides with cracked pink peppercorns. Place the tray in the oven for 4-6 hours or in the dehydrator on 60°C for 10 hours. If having the oven on for that long isn't practical for you, the mint will dry on its own overnight in the open air. The strawberries can't really be dried any other way, so you will need to omit them from the recipe.

Cake
Pre-heat the oven to 180°C, grease and line two 20-cm tins with baking paper then dust with potato starch. 

Combine the matzo meal, potato starch and salt together, then sift onto a piece of greaseproof paper.

Over a pot of barely simmering water, heat the sugar and the eggs in the mixer bowl until they are hot to the touch. Pop the mixer bowl onto a stand mixer or use an electric hand whisk and whisk for 8 minutes on a medium/high speed until the egg mix is pale, fluffy and can hold a peak. While this is whisking, brown the butter. Heat the butter in a saucepan over a low heat until the butter starts to turn a toasty brown. Remove from heat, add vanilla seeds and set aside.


Gently scrape the egg mix into a wide, large-ish mixing bowl. Sift over half the Passover baking mix/salt mix and gently fold in with a whisk, turning the mix over while spinning the bowl slowly. Fold in the remaining sifted Passover baking mix until it has been fully incorporated. Slowly pour in the warm melted butter mix and fold in. Scrape the mix into the prepared tins and smooth the tops a little.

Pop the tins into the oven and bake until lightly bouncy in the centre and golden brown, about 20-25 minutes. I usually rotate the tins midway through the baking process. Immediately turn the cakes out onto a tea towel covered rack, remove the baking paper then invert. Let cool completely. 

Strawberry compote
Locate a deep baking tray in preparation for roasting the strawberries. While the sponges are cooling, combine the mint and peppercorns together in a bowl. I find the most effective way to do this is in a spice grinder, but you could also use a pestle and mortar. Add this to the sugar along with the lemon zest, hibiscus petals and the seeds from the vanilla bean. Toss the strawberries in a large bowl with the sugar mixture and spread evenly over the base of the baking tray. Add the scraped vanilla bean and roast in the oven for 20 minutes, giving the tray a little shake halfway through to distribute the syrup. Remove the strawberries from the oven and allow to cool in the tray.

Filling
Place all the ingredients into a large bowl. Use an electric hand beater and mix everything together to combine. Whip until the cream is thick and fluffy. Set to one side.


To assemble
Place one sponge onto your chosen serving platter, drizzle with some of the reserved strawberry syrup then spread half the filling evenly over the top of the sponge all the way to the edges, or use a piping bag fitted with a #11 plain nozzle. 


Press half the strawberries from the compote into the surface of the filling bearing in mind that when you put the other sponge on top, the strawberries shouldn't protrude too high and prevent the sponge from sitting flat. Spoon some of the roasting syrup over the strawberries and trickle a little over the sides. Place the second sponge on top, then spread the sponge with the remaining filling and remaining strawberries. Add the dried strawberries, hibiscus petals and mint, then finish with a few twists of cracked pink peppercorns, if you haven't dried your own strawberries.


I took the cake with me to share with friends, hence no cut slice photo, and it was a big hit. It was absolutely delicious and every-one went back for seconds including the 6 year old twinnies. Success!


That was my lost post for Passover Week 2026 and I hope you enjoyed my bakes.

See you all again next week.

Bye for now,

Jillian


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passover week 2026 - torta di pere da pietro

26 Mar 2026



Well I do like to test myself at Passover week and this year I chose to 'renovate' an old recipe for torta di pere da pietro. The original tart is a lovely thing - a custard filled pastry shell topped with pear slices and an almond filling - but could I make it passover friendly. I probably last made this tart 20 years ago and I was up for the challenge.


I used my regular passover shortcrust pastry and followed the original pastry cream and filling recipes but used potato and/or tapioca starch instead of the original plain flour/cornflour. 

The tart is not exactly the same as the original. The pastry is a temperamental thing. It is crisp the day of baking but softens overnight, so ideally bake and serve the tart on the same day. If you must serve it the following day, keep it refrigerated so you can cut the tart without the pastry shattering into pieces. Look at that cross-section!


Here's the recipe for you which makes a 35 x 10 cm oblong tart. You will have some leftover pastry and almond filling but I think its better to have too much than too little. For all my recipes I use a 250ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon, unsalted butter and 60g eggs. My oven is a conventional gas oven so if your oven is fan forced you may need to reduce the oven temperature by 20°C.


Passover torta di pere da pietro 
Pastry 
125g superfine matzo meal
¼ cup (25g) almond meal
2 tbs (35g) tapioca or potato starch
3 tsp caster sugar
pinch sea salt
110g unsalted butter, cut into 1-cm pieces
1 egg yolk 
2- 4 tbs iced water

Pastry Cream
110g caster sugar
3 egg yolks
pinch sea salt flakes
¼ cup potato or tapioca starch or superfine matzo meal
1 tsp Passover vanilla extract or the seeds of ½ vanilla pod, scraped 
450mls full cream milk

Almond Filling
75g unsalted butter
55g (1/4 cup) caster sugar
85g almond meal
a pinch of salt
1 egg 
½ cup reserved pastry cream 
¼ cup potato or tapioca starch
 
To assemble
2 small ripe pears

To serve
icing sugar

Pastry
Combine the first 5 ingredients in the food processor and pulse to aerate. Add the diced butter and pulse ten times until butter is the size of peas. Whisk together the egg yolk and 2 tablespoons of ice water. Add it to the dough and pulse until it comes together. Add more ice water if needed. Knead the dough a couple of times and wrap it in plastic wrap forming a flat rectangle. Refrigerate for 1 hour.


Pastry cream
In a medium size bowl, mix together the sugar, the egg yolks, vanilla and salt until well combined. Mix in the potato starch or tapioca starch to form a smooth paste. Stir  the milk into the mixture then pour through a sieve into a saucepan. Cook over a low heat until the mixture boils and thickens. It will start to look lumpy during the cooking process but just keep stirring vigorously until the lumps disappear. Scrape into a container, cover the surface of the custard with plastic wrap to prevent a skin forming on the pastry cream and set aside to cool.


Almond filling
Measure out ½ cup of the cooled pastry cream. In a small bowl, cream the butter with the sugar, the almond meal and the salt. Add the egg and beat until light. Fold in the pastry cream and the potato or tapioca starch. Taste for sweetness and adjust as needed. Set to one side.


Assembly
The pastry makes a generous amount, so you won’t need all of it. Roll out the pastry to about a 4-mm thickness between the two sheets of paper and line a lightly greased oblong tin with the pastry. The pastry is inclined to break apart so just gently press it together and patch any holes. Trim the edges then place the pastry shell in the freezer to rest for 30 minutes or until frozen. 

While the tart shell is chilling, preheat the oven to 170°C, conventional and place a baking tray on the centre rack.

Remove the tart shell from the freezer. Spread the remaining pastry cream over the pastry base to a depth of approximately 1 cm. Peel, core and slice the pears and arrange the slices over the pastry cream. Gently spoon the almond filling over the pears and smooth the top. 


Place the tart on the preheated tray and bake at 170°C, conventional for about 1 hour or until golden. Reduce temperature to 150°C and bake for another 20 minutes or until the tart is cooked through. Place on a cooling rack and let the tart cool completely in the pan before unmoulding. 


Chill and dust with icing sugar before serving.



The tart was very well received. I did miss the crisp tart pastry shell but the superfine matzo meal added an earthiness to the pastry that was not unpleasnat at all. It was still a lovely tart.

See you again tomorrow with my last bake for Passover Week 2026.

Bye for now,

Jillian 


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passover week 2026 - lemon and passionfruit angel pies

25 Mar 2026

I bookmark passover friendly recipes, or recipes I think I can adapt, all the time. This recipe for passionfruit angel pies was earmarked for Passover Week 2025 but I ran out of time. 

What is an angel pie you might ask. Until I found this recipe by Rodney Dunn in an old issue of Delicious MagazineActually I didn't know either. Apparently an angel pie, is a small meringue topped shortbread dolloped with creme fraiche and curd.


I needed to make some changes. First I eliminated the flour 
from the recipe and swapped it for some superfine matzo meal and potato starch. Instead of creme fraiche, I used double cream. Passionfruit are quite expensive at the moment so I made a batch of lemon curd and just before serving I folded through some fresh passionfruit pulp.

Here's the recipe for you which makes 6 angel pies. For all my recipes I use a 250ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon, unsalted butter and 60g eggs. My oven is a conventional gas oven so if your oven is fan forced, you may need to reduce the oven temperature by 20°C.

Passover lemon and passionfruit angel pies
Lemon curd
1 egg, at room temperature
2 egg yolks, at room temperature
75 ml strained lemon juice 
2 tsp grated lemon rind
¼ cup (55g) caster sugar
40g chilled unsalted butter, chopped
the pulp of 1-2 passionfruit

Shortbread pastry
150g Passover baking mix (equal quantities of 
superfine matzo meal and potato starch
90g chilled unsalted butter, chopped
20g (1 tbs) caster sugar 
2 tsp grated lemon rind
1-2 tsp iced water

Meringue
65g caster sugar
30g brown sugar
65g egg whites, (from 2 eggs at room temperature)

To serve
300 mls double cream

Curd
To make the curd, lightly whisk the egg, yolks, juice and sugar in a medium non-stick saucepan (off the heat) until very well combined. Transfer pan to a medium-low heat and cook, whisking continuously, for 8-10 minutes or until mixture very thickly coats the back of a wooden spoon. Remove pan from heat and add butter, piece-by-piece, whisking until smooth. Strain into a medium bowl and cover the surface directly with plastic wrap. Chill overnight or for up to 3 days.

Shortbread pastry
Place Passover baking mix, butter, sugar and a pinch of salt flakes in a large bowl. Using fingertips, rub in butter until mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs (you could also process in a food processor). Add 1 tsp iced water and gently knead until the mixture just comes together. Form pastry into a flat disc, enclose in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour or until chilled.

Line a large oven tray with baking paper. Remove pastry from fridge and set aside to soften slightly. On a lightly floured bench, roll dough out to a 5mm thickness. Using a 7-cm cutter, cut out rounds, re-rolling pastry as needed to create 6 rounds. Transfer to the prepared tray. Chill for 1 hour.  


Preheat the oven to 180°C, conventional. Place the shortbreads on the centre rack and bake for 20-25 minutes or until pale golden and set. Carefully remove from the oven as the biscuits are fragile and place on a cooling rack.

Meanwhile, to make the meringue, reduce oven temperature to 130°C/110°C fan-forced. Line a large baking tray with baking paper. Mark six 6-cm rounds onto the paper and turn upside down.



Whisk both sugars and 1/4-tsp fine salt in a medium bowl until there are no lumps. Place egg whites in a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment and whisk on medium-high speed to soft peaks. Add sugar mixture, a spoonful at a time, and whisk for 3 minutes on medium-high, or until all sugar is added and mixture is smooth when rubbed between fingers. 




Using 2 large dessert spoons, drop large quenelles of mixture onto the marked rounds, then using the back of a spoon, create a depression for the curd. Bake for 1-2 hours or until the meringue can be lifted cleanly from baking paper. Turn the oven off and leave meringues in the oven to cool completely with the door ajar (overnight is best).


To serve

Just before serving, stir some passionfruit pulp through the lemon curd. Place a shortbread biscuit onto each plate, top with a dab of cream followed by a meringue then spoon in some double cream and finish with a dollop of curd. 


Wowzer, these were good. The shortbread base is meltingly tender, the meringue crisp on the outside yet soft in the centre and you can never go wrong with lemon curd and cream.

See you all again tomorrow with another bake for Passover Week 2026.

Bye for now,

Jillian


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