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Ginger Oat and Raisin Slice

Kath September 28, 2023

This recipe is loosely based on the Ma Lyn’s Fruit Slice in Amy Minichello’s cookbook Recipes in the Mail (p.71), which in turn comes from Christine O’Neill (and Ma Lyn of course!). 

When I was making the slice for the afternoon tea Amy and I hosted in August, the recipe really reminded me of how ANZAC Biscuits are made. The recipe refers to the slice base as a cake, but it really reminded me more of a biscuit. 

I enjoyed the slice so much, that the following weekend I made it again, and used Singing Magpie Produce’s Quince Syrup in place of the golden syrup, which added a lovely flavour and gave the slice a slighter deeper golden colour. When I was making the slice, the thought suddenly occurred to me, what would this slice be like if I added oats and ginger?

Something about the recipe’s similarities to ANZAC Biscuits, and me having not long used crystallised ginger in another recipe (I made these biscuits here but with crystallised ginger not stem), had my brain thinking up adaptations to Ma Lyn’s Fruit Slice and creating something new. 

I admit I sometimes do find it hard not to think about changes I can make to a recipe, or how a recipe could influence the creation of a new one. It’s not that the original recipe actually needs any changes, it is really really good as it is. However, recipe development and adapting recipes to work out how they could accommodate different flavours and ingredients just comes naturally to me. Recipe ideas come always come from somewhere, and sometimes one perfect recipe can bring many others to life. 

I took some of this slice to my work and one colleague said it reminded them of something their mum used to make, which was lovely to hear that a newly created recipe had some nostalgic value to someone else. Which ties back nicely to Amy’s cookbook and the nostalgia that I believe is what keeps all of us making and enjoying family recipes like those shared with Amy, that have in turn been shared in her book Recipes in the Mail. 

Oat Raisin and Ginger Slice

Ingredients: 

50g rolled oats (not instant oats)

80g golden raisins, chopped 

45g desiccated coconut

155g self raising flour

105g caster sugar

80g crystallised ginger, chopped

1 tsp ground ginger

125g unsalted butter

2 tbsp golden syrup

1 tsp vanilla extract

Method: 

Preheat oven to 160 degrees Celsius, and line a 30 x 20cm slice tin with baking paper, ensuring some hangs over the sides so you can easily get the slice out of the tin later.

In a large bowl, mix the oats, golden raisins, coconut, self-raising flour, sugar, crystallised ginger and ground ginger with a wooden spoon. 

In a small saucepan melt the butter and the golden syrup over low/medium heat until the butter has just melted. 

Add the butter mixture, and the vanilla extract to the dry ingredients and mix together until combined with the wooden spoon you used earlier. 

Tip the mixture into the prepared tin, and press it out so it reaches the edges of the tin and has a relatively smooth top. You can use your wooden spoon for this or a spatula.

Bake for 25-30 minutes, or until the slice is nicely golden brown. 

Allow the slice to cool in the tin for about 15-20 minutes, then using the overhanging baking paper, gently transfer the slice to a cooling rack to cool completely. 

Once the slice has cooled completely, you can cut it into however many portions you would like, or you could just cut of bits as you want to eat it.

Makes about 12-15 portions, store in a airtight container. Will keep for 4-6 days. 

In Cakes & Slices Tags Slices, Ginger, Mixer Free Recipes, Easy Baking, Recipes in the Mail, Amy Minichiello
2 Comments
Ginger Molasses Cookies

Ginger Molasses White Chocolate Cookies

Kath February 15, 2023

I have had this recipe on my mind since before last Christmas. I bought some cookie dough via Pepe Saya, that was a collab between them and Butterboy. Both are business that I really like, and this festive cookie dough sounded perfect for me - brown butter ginger bread. Filled with white chocolate, spices and rolled in sugar this cookie dough added a nice festive cookie hit that lasted well into January as I had frozen the dough and just baked some as I wanted it. 

This cookie dough got me thinking about creating my own version of this cookie. I needed my version to be heavier on the spices and more flavoursome in that respect, and the Pepe Saya x Butterboy cookies were lacking the ginger flavour for me. I have added 2 tsp of ground ginger to my cookies (you can add just 1 tsp if you want a milder flavour), and I also added some chopped stem ginger to add another layer of that ginger flavour. Crystallised ginger would also work well, but this element can also be left out completely if you wish. 

I also made my cookies a smaller size than the Pepe Saya x Butterboy cookies end up being. Butterboy is known for massive cookies, but when I bake my own I like smaller sized cookies so that one cookie doesn’t end up being almost a full meal (and more than one could comfortably be consumed in one sitting). You can play around with what size you’d like to make your cookies, just keep in mind it may alter the cooking time, you will need to leave more space between each on the trays if making them bigger (which may mean cooking in batches) and your yield for the recipe will also differ from what I have specified below.

This recipe will probably be added to my Christmas baking list when the time comes, but I think they are too good not to bake and eat all year round.

Ginger Molasses Cookies
Ginger Molasses Cookies

Ginger Molasses White Chocolate Cookies

Ingredients:

125g unsalted butter, melted

125g caster sugar

100g dark brown sugar 

2 tbsp molasses

1 egg

280g plain flour

1/2 tsp bicarb soda

2 tsp ground ginger

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1/2 tsp ground nutmeg

1/2 tsp all spice 

200g white chocolate chips

2 tbsp chopped stem ginger (drained of syrup) or crystallised ginger, optional 


Method:

Preheat oven to 170 degrees Celsius and line three large baking trays with baking paper.

In a large bowl whisk together the melted butter, sugars, molasses and egg.

Then add the flour, then sift in the bicarb soda and add the spices. Add the chocolate chips and chopped stem ginger (if using), and mix to combine with a wooden spoon.

Place the dough in the fridge for about 20 mins, to allow it to firm up a bit.

Once chilled, roll heaped teaspoonfuls of the dough into balls and place on the trays. The cookies will spread as they bake so leave enough room in between. 

Bake for 12-14 minutes or until the cookies have spread a bit and are golden brown. Rotate the trays in the oven about halfway through to ensure the cookies cook evenly.  

Allow to cool on their trays, then store in an airtight container. 

Makes about 30 cookies.

Ginger Molasses Cookies
Ginger Molasses Cookies
In Biscuits/Cookies Tags Ginger, White Chocolate, Cookies, Pepe Saya, Butter Boy Bake, Biscuits/Cookies, Mixer Free Recipes, Easy Baking
4 Comments
Ginger Date & Rose Cupcake - recipe from my eBook ‘Baking with Rose’

Ginger Date & Rose Cupcake - recipe from my eBook ‘Baking with Rose’

Ginger Date & Rose Cupcakes + Baking with Rose eBook is Here!

Kath May 1, 2019

My new eBook, ‘Baking with Rose’ is here! And to celebrate I am sharing one of my favourite recipes from the book, these Ginger Date and Rose Cupcakes.

It wasn’t until recently I discovered rose and ginger go really well together. While I like both flavours a lot, I had never thought to put them together. That changed when I saw this recipe for Gingersnaps with Rose icing. I made them, and loved them! I then began to think of all the other ways I could use ginger and rose together and these cupcakes are one of the ideas I came up with.

I love the flavour combination of these cupcakes, and the rose is fairly subtle as it’s only in the icing. The date molasses and panela sugar add a gentle sweet flavour, however regular molasses or brown sugar would be good substitutes if you don’t have date molasses or panela.

For more rose recipes like this, check out my new eBook ‘Baking with Rose’!

View fullsize Ginger Date and Rose Cupcakes
View fullsize Baking with Rose eBook
purchase ebook!
Fresh Edible Rose Petals

Fresh Edible Rose Petals

Ginger Date and Rose Cupcakes

Ingredients: 

250g softened unsalted butter

200g panela sugar 

2 eggs

310g date molasses

230ml water

410g plain flour 

1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon 

1 tsp baking powder

1 tsp bicarb soda

1 tsp ground ginger

1 tsp ground nutmeg

1/2 tsp ground all spice 

1/2 tsp ground cardamom 

2cm piece of fresh ginger, finely grated

Ingredients for Icing: 

170g icing sugar

1.5-2tbsp rosewater

fresh edible rose petals to decorate, optional

Method: 

Line two 12 capacity cupcake trays with cupcake cases and pre heat oven to 160 degrees Celsius. 

In a large bowl, cream butter and panela sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs. Then beat in the water and date molasses. 

Sift flour, baking powder, bicarb and the spices and add to the mixture. Add the fresh ginger. Beat on a low speed until the flour begins to combine, then beat on a medium speed for 2 minutes or until mixed well. 

Pour the batter into the prepared cupcake tins and bake for 20-30 minutes or until cupcakes are cooked through and are springy to the touch. Remove from the oven, and remove cakes from the tins and allow to cool on a cooling rack. 

To make the icing, mix together the icing sugar and 1 tbsp of the rosewater in a medium bowl, to form a paste. If the icing is too thick gradually add a little more rosewater. Spread icing over each cake, allow to dry a little before decorating with the rose petals. 

Makes 24.

Ginger Date and Rose Cupcakes
Fresh Edible Rose Petals

Fresh Edible Rose Petals

Recipe is an extract from ‘Baking with Rose - Recipes Showcasing the Best of Rose in Baking and Confectionary’ by Kath Vincent (kulinaryadventuresofkath.com, 2019), p.7.

purchase ebook!
In Cakes & Slices Tags Rose, Dates, Ginger, Cupcakes, E-Book
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Ginger Snap Iced Tea

Ginger Snap Iced Tea

Ginger Snap Iced Tea

Kath December 30, 2018

This iced tea is based on one served at the Sydney baking institution, Flour & Stone. Earlier in the year a friend and I spent the day in the city, wandering around the shops and stopping in at Flour & Stone for lunch. Lunch was delicious and we also ordered a carafe of their Ginger Snap Iced Tea to share. It was so nice, it immediately had me wondering how I could recreate it at home. 

The ginger snap element comes from Rabbit Hole Tea’s Ginger Snap tea which is  caffeine free. The Rabbit Hole Tea bar in Barangaroo also serves a great iced version of this tea - the Ginger Snap Iced Latte. This is my go to when I visit Rabbit Hole, and if you make extra concentrate of the tea you can keep it in the fridge and pour over milk and ice to make one at home. 

Iced teas like this one are extremely welcome at this time of year, especially with this heat wave we are experiencing here in Sydney at the moment. I also think it would make a nice caffeine free and alcohol free drink for New Years celebrations and Summer get togethers too. I often like to have a jug of this in the fridge and take some to work in one of those metal tea flasks that keep drinks hot or cold for hours, so I can enjoy a nice cold yet tasty drink while I’m at my desk.

Ginger Snap Tea by The Rabbit Hole Organic Tea Bar

Ginger Snap Tea by The Rabbit Hole Organic Tea Bar

View fullsize Ginger Snap Iced Tea at Flour & Stone
View fullsize Ginger Snap Iced Tea at Flour & Stone
Homemade Ginger Iced Tea
Flour & Stone Ginger Snap Iced Tea

Ginger Snap Iced Tea

Ingredients: 

1L cloudy apple juice

5 tsp ginger tea (I used Ginger Snap from Rabbit Hole Tea)

pulp of two passionfruit 

a few springs of fresh mint 

Method: 

In a large jug (at least 2 L capacity), brew the tea in about 500ml of warm water. Leave for at least an hour (or longer if you want a stronger taste). Strain the leaves from the tea and allow to cool.

Once cooled, mix in the cloudy apple juice, passionfruit pulp and most of the mint leaves. Top up with chilled water and ice. 

Serve each glass with extra ice and an extra mint leaf or two. 

It will keep in the fridge for a few days, and the flavour develops amazingly over the first day, so if you have time make it the day before you wish to serve it. 

Rabbit Hole Ginger Snap Iced Tea
Ginger Snap Iced Tea
Homemade Ginger Iced Tea
In Drinks Tags Iced Tea, Ginger, Rabbit Hole Tea, Flour & Stone
2 Comments
Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

How to Bake with Quinces - Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Kath August 17, 2017

I seem to have a thing with ginger lately. Maybe it’s just that the warming nature of such spices go so well with Winter, or maybe I’m just a creature of habit. I haven’t always been this on board with ginger, I actually used to hate it. As a child the heat of it was too overpowering for me, and only very mild gingerbread biscuits would do. I remember the one time we all went overseas to the UK as a family, I was about 8 years old, and I become enamoured by Harrods - the lovely building, their constant use of teddy bears, all the food, and the fact they had a shop at the airport. When we were at Heathrow on our way home, I convinced Mum to buy a packet of Harrods Gingerbread as a snack for the plane. 

No doubt the packaging grabbed me, I’m sure it was cute enough to grab a child’s attention. Eating them on the plane, my mouth was on fire. They were so gingery, more than my underdeveloped taste buds could handle. I probably annoyed the air hostesses by asking for so many glasses of water, as I continued to eat the spicy gingerbread men despite the heat - probably as Mum had drilled into me how expensive they were (back then the Pound to Australian Dollar conversion was even worse than it is now), and to be honest as a picky eater I probably preferred them to the airplane food. 

Many years later, after making many a gingerbread man myself, I suddenly realised any aversion to ginger was long gone. I was walking back to the station from my internship, which conveniently meant walking past Bourke Street Bakery. I didn’t stop in very many times over the course of my internship, but the first time I did I decided to get one of their famous Ginger Brûlée Tarts. As I was close to finishing the tart, I realised I really couldn’t taste any ginger. The tart was nice, but thinking I still wasn’t a big ginger fan, I expected the flavour to hit me in the face. It was then I realised I must like ginger much more than I realised, and just kept thinking I didn’t as I hadn’t when I was younger. In fact, I liked it a lot, along with a few other things I hated as a child. 

So now I jump at any opportunity to cook with ground ginger in particular, and this cake is no exception. This cake paired with the quince ice cream is a seriously good way of celebrating the colder seasons (even though it seems to be warming up a little now!) and a good way of using up some poached quince if you have any (or have the inclination to make some). I can vouch for the fact that the ice cream is amazing on its own, so I would highly recommend making it even if you don’t need it as an accompaniment to a cake. 

What ingredients or foods did you hate as a child but like now? Let me know in the comments!

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Quince Ice Cream

Ingredients: 

150g poached quince

50g poaching liquid

2 egg whites 

100g caster sugar 

1 tsp golden syrup 

salt

150g whipping cream 

1 tbsp Greek yoghurt 

 

Method: 

In a blender, puree poached quince with half the poaching liquid until it is smooth. Add the remaining poaching liquid and blend to combine. Set aside. 

Place a pot of water on the stove and heat until it is boiling. In a heatproof bowl, that is able to comfortably sit over the boiling pot of water, add the egg whites, sugar, golden syrup and a pinch of salt. Place the bowl over the boiling water and whisk continuously until the sugar dissolves and the mixture becomes frothy and opaque, or when the mixture reaches 75 degrees Celsius on a candy thermometer. Remove from the heat and transfer to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment. Whisk the warmed egg white mixture until it forms stiff peaks of meringue. 

In a separate bowl, whip the cream with the yoghurt until it forms soft peaks. Gently fold in the meringue, then the pureed quince. Pour into an ice cream machine and churn according to the manufacturers instructions. When ready, the ice cream should be softly frozen, thickened and clinging to the paddle of the machine. Transfer to a freezer safe container to freeze until ready to serve. 

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake

Ingredients: 

250g self raising flour 

1 tsp ginger

1 tsp mixed spice

1/2 tsp cinnamon 

1 tsp baking powder

120g golden syrup

80g maple syrup 

2 tbsp poaching liquid from quinces

125 flavourless margarine or unsalted butter 

100g poached quince, diced (plus extra for serving, optional)

125 brown sugar 

2 eggs 

240ml milk 

 

Method: 

Pre-heat your oven to 180 degrees Celsius, then grease and line the base and sides of a 22cm (approx.) square cake tin. 

Sift the dry ingredients together into a large bowl.

In a small saucepan, add the quince, golden and maple syrups and the margarine/butter and warm over low heat so everything melts together. Add the quince and brown sugar and allow the mixture to simmer for a couple of minutes, stirring occasionally so it doesn’t stick to the bottom of the pan. 

In a small bowl, briefly mix the eggs and the milk together. Pour the syrup and butter mixture in to the dry ingredients, and mix well, ensuring there are no lumps of flour. Add the eggs and milk and mix to combine. 

Pour the batter into the prepared tin and bake for 30-35 minutes, or until a skewer comes out clean when inserted into the middle of the cake. Cool the cake in the tin for a few minutes before transferring to a cooling rack lined with baking paper (the cake will stick otherwise). 

Cut the cake into squares and serve warm or at room temperature with a scoop of quince ice cream and some extra poached quince. 

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

References: ‘The Violet Bakery Cookbook’ by Claire Ptak (Ten Speed Press, 2015), pp. 184-5; ‘Annie’s Farmhouse Kitchen’ by Annie Smithers (Hardie Grant Books, 2017), pp.52-3.

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

Ginger & Quince Cake with Quince Ice Cream

In Cakes & Slices, Other Desserts, Ice Cream Tags Quince, Ice Cream, Ginger, cake, Dessert
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recipes

  • Biscuits/Cookies 39
  • Breads Etc. 9
  • Breakfast 7
  • Cakes & Slices 67
  • Confectionary 5
  • Drinks 6
  • Events 14
  • Food Photography Tips 3
  • From The Mailing List 24
  • Heirloom Recipes 12
  • Holidays 44
  • Ice Cream 9
  • Jams Preserves & Spreads 9
  • Muffins 4
  • Off the Shelf 47
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  • Tarts & Pastry 9
  • Travel 13

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