Categories
cherries chocolate jam

black forest doughnuts

Dark chocolate and cherry might be my favourite combination. That dark bitterness and the punch of sweet-sour cherry is just magic. So why not stick it in a doughnut?!

One of the things that gets overlooked when working with chocolate is the importance of seasoning it. A little salt with chocolate improves it immensely, spiking the flavour and lifting it. Salt cuts the sweetness, providing contrast to the sweetness that’s irresistible.

Maldon Salt sent me some of their new salt mills, and this seemed like the perfect excuse to use them. I use Maldon Salt in everything, it’s always been my favourite salt. I grin when I see it on TV shows from all over the world.

Available from Morrisons stores nationwide as well as Tesco, Ocado and other retailers. RRP from £3.50 / 55g.

But on with the recipe. I used a jam / pastry syringe for this recipe, which is inexpensive but a bit of a single-use gadget, so you can always poke jam in with a spoon though it’s a little tricky.

Here’s my black forest trifle if you fancy something a little quicker.

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black forest doughnuts

Course Dessert
Servings 24 doughnuts
Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 10 g yeast
  • 300 g strong flour
  • 30 g sugar plus a couple of tablespoons for sprinkling
  • 5 g Maldon sea salt plus more for sprinkling
  • 40 g butter softened
  • 75 g milk at room temperature
  • 2 eggs
  • 200 g black cherry jam
  • 150 g dark chocolate

Instructions

  • For best results use a stand mixer. It's perfectly possible to do by hand but things are easier and fluffier with a machine. Combine the yeast, flour, sugar and salt, then stir in the milk. When combined, work in the butter a chunk at a time. Knead thoroughly or beat for a further 3 - 5 minutes.
  • Leave the dough to rise, covered, for an hour.
  • Get a large baking tray out to hold the dough balls. Dust it with a thin layer of flour. Portion the dough into even golf-ball sized pieces. For best results, use a very sharp, thin knife and weigh the dough balls. It should make around 24. When you have your balls ready cover loosely and leave to prove for a further hour.
  • Heat oil for frying to 175C. When ready, gently lower the dough balls into the hot oil and cook for about 2 minutes on each side, or until golden brown. Only cook about 3-4 at a time to avoid overcrowding the pan. Transfer to kitchen paper to drain while you finish the batch. Roll on a plate of sugar to coat.
  • For the filling, heat the jam gently in a saucepan and add a tablespoon of water to loosen it. Use a jam syringe to inject jam into the centre of the dough balls.
  • Put a pan of water on the hob on a gentle simmer and place a bowl on top. Break the chocolate into it and sprinkle salt into it. When melted, turn off the heat. Dip the doughnuts one by one into the chocolate to give them a little chocolate hat. Best eaten same day.
Categories
cherries chocolate cream food jam

black forest trifle

When making this, I had to search my blog in case I’d made something like this before. I have a severe weakness for ‘black forest’-flavoured things and I appear to have 4 separate choc-cherry desserts in my collection!

This one has been back and forth with In Search of Heston and me, we’ve noticed how obsessed Heston Blumenthal is with both Black Forest things. and trifle. There was one made for Waitrose but to be honest it sounded weird (lime?). This version is not likely one that Heston would make – not quite enough genius touches – but a tribute nonetheless. A Heston version would no doubt spherify intense cherry compote into cherry shapes and impale them with a stick of dark chocolate for the stem. This version is dead easy to do, kid-friendly (if you skip the Kirsch) and great fun to assemble.

I also hadn’t planned on sticking a biscuit in the top, but a friend had brought these smashing things from Border and they were tremendous. I could’ve skipped making this and just eaten the biscuits instead, they were that good.

Black forest trifle (serves 4):

1 chocolate swiss roll

1 jar black cherry jam

12 cherries

Kirsch (a couple of tablespoons I guess)

500g chocolate custard

1 meringue nest

Squirty cream

Dark chocolate (for grating)

  1. Put swiss roll slices at the bottom of your trifle bowl or individual serving dishes. Douse with Kirsch. Slather the swiss roll with jam.
  2. Halve nine of the cherries and stone them. Bury the cherries in the jam. Steep the remaining 4 cherries in a little Kirsch until time to serve.
  3. Top the jammy cherries with chocolate custard and refrigerate until serving. Top with crumbled meringue nest, squirty cream, a grating of chocolate and a final boozy whole cherry.
Categories
bread cream food jam

devonshire splits

Apparently these are traditional – can’t say I’d ever heard of them. I made them to take round a friend’s house for tea and they certainly didn’t last like. Like a scone, but more like bread.

Based on a Waitrose recipe.

Devonshire splits (makes 12):

500g rice flour

½ teaspoon salt

25g caster sugar

1 x 7g sachet yeast

25g unsalted butter, melted

300ml milk

Clotted cream, jam and icing sugar to serve

  1. Stir the dry ingredients together and add the milk and butter. Bring it together and then knead for about ten minutes into a smooth, elastic dough. Cover and leave for an hour or so until doubled in size.
  2. Punch the dough down and cut into 12 pieces. Roll into balls and place on a greased baking tray. Preheat the oven to 200°C and leave the balls to prove for 20 mins.
  3. Bake for 10 – 15 minutes until risen and golden. Allow to cool, dust with icing sugar, slice and stuff with jam and cream.
Categories
food ice cream jam sponge

arctic roll

This one is straight from the pages of Jamie’s Great Britain. I don’t have particularly as strong memories of arctic roll as other people seem to – but what’s not to love here? Ice cream, jam, sponge…

And it is good – but it’s extremely similar to his pudding bombe masterpiece (which I’m making for about the sixth time this week, do try it now pannetone is in the shops). Given the choice I’d have the bombe every time.

Arctic Roll (serves about, ooh 6 – 12?):

For the sponge:

3 eggs

100g caster sugar

75g plain flour

1 heaped teaspoon cocoa powder

For the filling:

500ml vanilla ice cream

500ml chocolate ice cream

300g raspberry jam

1 Crunchie

  1. Preheat the oven to 180°C. Leave the ice cream on the side while you do everything else so it softens.
  2. Whisk the eggs with the sugar until pale and fluffy. Fold in the flour.
  3. Grease a baking tray and line with greaseproof paper. Spoon half the mixture on to the tray, fold the cocoa into the remaining mixture, then swirl that through the stuff on the tray. Place in the oven for 15 minutes, or until cooked through (it’s only thin so watch out!).
  4. Get another piece of greaseproof paper and scatter with sugar. Get the sponge out of the oven and flip it on to the sugar, and peel off the ‘cooked’ bit of paper. Carefully roll up the sponge in the paper and leave to cool curled up.
  5. Once cooled spread unroll the sponge and spread over the jam. Blob it with ice cream, alternating to make sure there’s a good mix of flavours. Bash the daylights out of the Crunchie and scatter over the ice cream, then roll it back up again. Leave in the freezer until you want to serve it.
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