Tag: toffee

Witty title here

Burning the midnight oil to bring you this week’s British favourite. The reason being is that my rather lovely friend took me along to a screen printing workshop for a little birthday treat tonight. If you want to have a cheeky stalk there’s a *few* pictures on Instagram.

Back to this week though, and the question of a another cupcake and a few bananas. Of course, it’s about time the classic banoffee pie made an appearance in this little series. There’re few things that pair better than banana and caramel in my opinion, so it took quite a lot of focus not to just make the toffee filling and skip off to the garden with a bowl of banana to suffocate in sauce. I mean, if you’re going to eat fruit, do it right.

So, without further ado, here go the banoffee pie cupcakes.

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-01

You will need

For the cakes:

140g/5 oz self raising flour

140g/5 oz caster sugar

140g/5 oz unsalted butter/margarine

2 eggs

2 ripe-over ripe bananas

1 tsp baking powder

For the filling:

200g/7 oz sweetened condensed milk (half a tin)

100g/3.5 oz soft brown sugar

100g/3.5 oz unsalted butter (used salted if you prefer salted caramel to a more dulce de leche/toffee flavour)

50ml/1.75 fl oz double cream

For the frosting/icing

350g/12.5 oz icing sugar

250g/9 oz unsalted butter (room temperature)

150ml/5 fl oz double cream

Vanilla essence/paste/pod

(makes 12)

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-02

Step one

Using an electric whisk if you have one, a wooden spoon if not, beat together the butter/margarine and caster sugar until light and fluffy. I use Stork margarine for sponge as it’s pretty cheap and does the trick well.

Step two

Chop up the banana. You can mash it if you want but the whisk kinda does the work for you so why bother? The riper the bananas the more intense the flavour.

Add the eggs and banana to the mix and whisk until combined.

Step three

Whisk in the flour and baking powder, stir it in a little first with the beaters to prevent a mushroom cloud of flour hitting you in the face.

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-04

Step four

Distribute the mixture evenly between 12 cupcake/muffin cases. Usually about two rounded dessert spoons in each is a nice amount.

Step five

Bake on gas mark 4/350F/180C for 20-25 minutes until golden brown and springy to the touch.

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-06

Step six

While the cakes are in the oven, make the filling by combining all the ingredients in a small/medium saucepan.

Gently melt the mixture on a low heat and then turn it up to medium. Boil slowly for 7-10 minutes stirring the whole time. See those flecks in my mix? Took my eyes off the prize.

Allow to cool completely before use.

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-03

Step seven

Combine the icing ingredients by gently stirring the icing sugar and butter together before putting the whisk on the lowest setting. Add the cream and the vanilla once they’ve started to combine. The double cream will thicken it nicely and add a lightness to the texture.

It’s really yummy but probably not the best for piping consistency, so I wouldn’t dream up fancy decoration with this one. That’s pretty consistent with a banoffee pie anyway, when was the last time you saw a pretty one of those? Yeah. Exactly.

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-gif

Step eight

If you’ve been following this series so far then you know the drill by now. Cut a hole in the cupcake with a small sharp knife and discard the middle bit, keeping only the lid. Fill with the toffee sauce and replace the cake lid. Spread the icing on top and grate over a little chocolate for an authentic look.

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-05

 

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-08

 

banoffee-pie-cupcake-recipe-07

Bon(offee) apetit!

 

Katie’s home cinema

Another little post about our half term day of fun. I hope you will forgive the lack of photos given I was supervising two little humans at the time.

I had promised my little friends that we would take a trip to the cinema during our visit, but it turned out there was nothing worth going to the cinema for.

Ever the crafter I decided we would recreate our own home cinema experience. I conjured up a recipe for toffee popcorn and made some popcorn boxes and tickets.

You can download the templates for the tickets and the popcorn if you’re in a similar fix, or if you’re just looking for a cheap school holiday activity.

You will need

1/2 cup Popcorn kernels (or a bag of sweet microwaveable popcorn)

125g/4.5 oz Unsalted butter

170g/6 oz Soft light brown sugar

2 tbsp Golden syrup

The templates

Step one

Pop the popcorn. If you’re using kernels and it’s the first time you’ve done it then you need to add some butter or unflavoured oil to a large saucepan and one or two kernels. Once they’ve popped you can add the rest.

When the majority of the corn is popped (the pan will be full), remove the pan from the heat and place the corn in a bowl. Get rid of any unpopped kernels.

Step two

Heat the butter, syrup and sugar in a pan until bubbling. Turn down to a simmer cook for 5 minutes, keep stirring so that it doesn’t catch.

toffee-popcorn-recipe-home-cinema

Step three

Stir the toffee into the popcorn.

toffee-popcorn-recipe-home-cinema-1

Step four

Spread out on a large baking tray. You only really want one layer of corn to stop too much of it sticking together.

toffee-popcorn-recipe-home-cinema-2

Step five

Bake until golden (about 25 mins) on 180 degrees C/gas mark 4/350 F.

Leave to cool so that it crisps up.

toffee-popcorn-recipe-home-cinema-3

Step six

While the popcorn is cooling, assemble the boxes and cut out the tickets. The kiddies can help with this, or you could do it in advance.

Step seven

Put your feet up and enjoy the film. Or do what I did and placate the children with sweets and clean up feverishly in the background.