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Recipes and Food Photography by Kath Vincent.

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An Aussie Pav for Christmas

Kath December 20, 2021

I have posted a handful of Pavlova recipes on my blog over the years. I love a Pavlova, it was my favourite dessert that my Grandma would make and it has been quite a permanent feature in my life.

Christmas in Australia is an excellent time for a Pavlova (or ‘Pav’ as we Aussies like to shorten it to!). The pavlova itself can be made in advance, and it is a nice light dessert after a filling Christmas lunch or dinner.

This recipe for pav is the more traditional Australian take on the dessert, compared to the previous recipes I’ve shared. It is based on my Grandma’s recipe which is always the recipe I turn to when I want to make a pav. I shared her original recipe here a few years ago. That one makes a slightly smaller pav and doesn’t have any toppings as that’s how I liked to eat it as a child. Times have very clearly changed since then!

Topped with cream, berries and cherries its delicious and makes the most if the excellent in season fruit we have here at this time of year. You could also top your pav with mix other types of fruit, like mango, kiwi fruit, strawberries, stone fruit etc. It’s really up to you and what you most like to eat.

I haven’t given quantities for the fruit as you can put as little or as much as you like, just go with what looks good. I tend to put a whole punnet of blueberries and raspberries and add in a few cherries, maybe some cut up strawberries and a few edible flowers if I can get any.

If you have any leftovers you can cover the pav and store in the fridge for about 2 days.

An Aussie Pav for Christmas

Ingredients:

6 egg whites

375g caster sugar

1.5 tsp white vinegar

1.5 tsp vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract

30g cornflour

For the Topping:

300ml pouring cream

1/2 tsp vanilla bean paste

mixture of berries, such as blueberries and raspberries

handful of cherries

edible flowers, optional

Method:

Preheat oven to 200 degrees Celsius. Line a large baking tray with baking paper. Trace a circle on to the baking paper, using a plate or cake stand that is about 26-28cm in diameter (you can use whatever plate you will serve it on later).

Add the egg whites to the bowl of a stand mixer, and beat using the whisk attachment for 5-6 minutes. Gradually add the sugar during this time, a tablespoon or so at a time.

Add the vinegar and vanilla and continue to beat until the mixture is glossy and holding its peak.

Sift the cornflour over the mixture and gently fold into the meringue using a spatula until just combined.

Using your finger, place a tiny amount of the meringue mixture under two corners of the baking paper on the prepared tray. This will keep your baking paper in place whilst you shape the pavlova.

Place the meringue onto the prepared tray, keeping within the traced circle. Spread it out using a spatula, keeping the sides of the pavlova high and the middle a little lower (so it can hold the cream and fruit later!). I like to leave a little gap between my pav and the traced circle, rather than pushing the meringue right to the edges. The pav will expand a bit as it cooks, and if you’ve traced around the serving plate you will use later on, this way the pav will still fit on the plate rather than expanding past the traced circle, and therefore becoming bigger than your serving plate or cake stand!

Turn the oven down to 125 degrees Celsius and cook the pav undisturbed (don’t open the oven!), for 1.5 hours. After 1.5 hours, turn the oven off and leave the pav to cool completely in the oven (leaving it overnight to cool is best if you can).

Just before you are reading to serve your pav, whip the cream and the vanilla until the cream has thickened and forms soft peaks.

Spread the cream over centre of the pav, and decorate with the berries (or your fruit of choice), and some edible flowers if you wish.

Serves at least 10 (depends on how generous your slices are!).

Pink Peonies
In Holidays, Other Desserts, Heirloom Recipes Tags Christmas, Pavlova, Grandma, Dessert
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Christmas Shortbread Biscuits

Kath December 20, 2021

This recipe for shortbread is exactly how my Grandma made them. Cut into shapes (using the cutters pictured), topped with half a glacé cherry.

I have always loved this recipe, and even though it’s not strictly a festive recipe, I find Christmas is when I most often think of it and want to make it.

Along with Pavlova (you can find my Grandma’s recipe for that here), these shortbread were my favourite thing Grandma made. I recall making them with her as a child, and eating the glacé cherries before they even made it on to the biscuits!

I even remember the last time she ever made them for me. I had an afternoon tea for my 21st birthday and Grandma asked what she could bring. I initially said she didn’t need to bring anything, but I could tell she was a little disappointed at that response.

I then thought of these biscuits and called her back and asked her to make them for my birthday. I’m so glad I did, as even though that was a few years before she died, I don’t recall enjoying her shortbread again.

Now I make them, often at this time of year. I use the cutters she used, and the taste and smell of them reminds me of her. They are simple to make, yet super delicious. Even if you don’t have much time to bake over the holidays, give these a go as the few ingredients and little time needed culminate in the most comforting cheery biscuit.

If you like you can add the seeds of one vanilla bean or 1 tsp of vanilla extract or paste to the biscuit dough when you are mixing the butter and sugar together. I love using vanilla, but since my Grandma didn’t include it in her recipe I have left it out this time.

Christmas Shortbread Biscuits

Ingredients: 

160g unsalted butter, softened (at room temp)

60g caster sugar 

250g plain flour 

14 red glacé cherries, approx.

 

Method: 

Preheat oven to 150 degrees Celsius, and line two large baking trays with baking paper. 

Place the butter and sugar in the bowl of the stand mixer and beat with the paddle attachment until well combined. 

Add the flour and mix on low until a dough starts to form.

Lightly flour your work surface, and tip the dough out. Bring together with your hands then roll out with a rolling pin until it is about 2mm thick. Dust the top of the dough and the rolling pin with a little flour if the dough sticks to your rolling pin.

Cut out biscuits with a 6cm (approx.) biscuit cutter, and transfer to the prepared trays using a palette knife. Bring the scraps of dough together with your hands, roll out again and cut out more biscuits, repeat until the dough is all used up.

Cut the glacé cherries in half, and gently push half into the centre of each biscuit.

Bake for 15-20 minutes, turning the trays around halfway through to ensure even cooking. 

The shortbread shouldn’t go very golden in the oven, they will be ready when the edges start to colour and if you gently check the underneath of one you can see it has cooked and is a little golden in colour.

Allow to cool on the trays or transfer to a wire rack. 

Makes about 28 biscuits with a 6cm biscuit cutter, however it will depend on the size of the cutter you use.

In Biscuits/Cookies, Holidays Tags Christmas, Shortbread, Grandma, glacé fruit
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Gingernut Cookies

Gingernut Cookies

Kath April 5, 2020

Similar to the Oatmeal Cookies I posted the other day, these Gingernuts are a recipe from my Grandma, and they use self-raising flour which is a massive win at the moment! 

I don’t recall Grandma ever making these, but as soon as I gave one of these biscuits to my Mum, she said ‘Oh yes I remember these, this is Grandma’s recipe isn’t it?’. I found the recipe in a folder of loose handwritten and typed up recipes I collected from my grandparent’s place after Grandma died. There was a drawer in the kitchen that housed all her old cookbooks, notebooks and loose recipes and I carefully went through and filed them in a folder for safekeeping. 

Some of the recipes in the folder are things I will probably never make (like the recipe for Curried Seafood Salad!), but having them and seeing her handwriting is always comforting. Then there are gems like this recipe that I think I will be making many times over, not only at the moment whilst we are in self isolation and need to be reasonable about our plain flour use, but after this madness is over too. 

This recipe is really simple, and there is no need for a stand or hand held mixer. I also found that the dough was really easy to roll into balls, and the cookies baked into very consistent looking circles which was very satisfying. 

My Grandma’s original recipe (as shown below) was mostly in cup measurements, but I have converted it into grams as I find it is easiest to bake that way. I also found I did not get the 48 biscuits as per the original recipe, I got more like 30 biscuits in total. I may have made them a little bigger than Grandma did, but I guess I will never know! 

Gingernuts
My Grandma’s Gingernut Biscuit Recipe

My Grandma’s Gingernut Biscuit Recipe

Gingernut Cookies

Ingredients:

115g unsalted butter

225g caster sugar

2 tbsp golden syrup

1 egg, beaten

290g self raising flour

3 tsp ground ginger

pinch salt

Method:

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

In a small saucepan, melt the butter over low to medium heat. Once melted remove from the heat and add the sugar, golden syrup and the egg and mix well.

In a large bowl whisk together the flour, ground ginger and salt. Add the butter mixture to the flour and mix until combined. If the mixture is warm from the melted butter, allow it to cool a little, otherwise continue on.

Roll teaspoonfuls of the dough into balls and place on the trays. The biscuits will spread as they bake so leave enough room in between each. 

Bake for 12-15 minutes or until golden brown. I like the rotate the trays in the oven about halfway through to ensure the biscuits cook evenly. 

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

Makes about 30 biscuits/cookies.

Gingernut Cookies
In Biscuits/Cookies, Heirloom Recipes Tags Gingernuts, Social Isolation, Isolation Baking, Cookies, Biscuits, Grandma, Coronavirus, COVID-19, 2020, Easy Baking, Mixer Free Recipes, Biscuits/Cookies
4 Comments
Oatmeal Cookies

Oatmeal Cookies and Thoughts on Social Isolation

Kath April 3, 2020

I shared this recipe over on Instagram a week or so ago, and quite a few people came back and told me they made them, which was wonderful. So I thought I should post the recipe here on the blog too. 

This recipe is one I remember my Grandma making often, and since it is such a simple recipe I can see why. I don’t know how she came to find the recipe, but in my family these are known as Grandma’s Oatmeal Biscuits. 

I found a handwritten copy of my Grandma’s of this recipe, and she has added cinnamon to it. No doubt when I copied out some of her recipes for myself around the age of 11 or 12, I decided I didn’t like cinnamon (despite having eaten many of these biscuits) as I left it out of my copy of the recipe, and sans cinnamon is how I have made them ever since. 

My Grandma’s Oatmeal Cookie Recipe

My Grandma’s Oatmeal Cookie Recipe

Beyond being very simple to make, another bonus to this recipe is that it uses self-raising flour! In right now, during the COVID-19 pandemic where all sorts of supermarket essentials are sold out, this is a massive win. Plain flour (and bread flour) all seem to be bought up by those who either had more foresight than the rest of us, or are genuinely stockpiling it. I often wonder about those who have stockpiled food, especially things found in the baking isle. Will they ever really use these items? 

Having the idea to bake your own bread and the like is one thing, but if you aren’t a confident bread baker, having it actually turn out well is another thing entirely. Not to mention to amount of time and effort that goes into baking such things. I would hazard a guess that after one attempt those who aren’t keen bakers (and who don’t actually really have said ‘time’ on their hands), wouldn’t attempt it again. There is also the fact that bakeries are still open (as I write this anyway), and bread can still be bought from supermarkets etc, so baking your own bread isn’t really essential. 

Hopefully being forced to stay home will encourage some to get into cooking and baking and it will be something they find they enjoy. I just hope the stockpiles of things that some have bought don’t end up going to waste.

How are you doing with everything that is going on right now? 

I am finding the constant push for us all to be productive and make the most of this ‘opportunity’ is just adding to the stress of the whole thing. This isn’t an opportunity, it’s a crisis. While some may find unintended uses for all the time we are spending at home, I don’t think we need to get to the end of this time (whenever that may be), and be able to show what we’ve achieved in it. I think the only real achievement will just be getting through it. 

Some days I feel ok, like I can tackle whatever I need to do. Others I feel at a loss as to what I should be doing. I am definitely someone who likes spending time at home, but even I am feeling a bit closed in not having the same opportunities to leave the house as I did. 

I am finding, as I usually do, that baking is what gets me through the bad days and helps me enjoy the good ones more. Obviously taking into account, not being frivolous with ingredients, I am baking every couple of days or so and these Oatmeal Cookies will be made a few times over I think by the time this whole thing has come to an end. 

I am also finding FaceTiming with friends immensely helpful, and just generally trying to be kind and understanding to myself about how I am feeling. I know there will be days were things seem really hard, but I also know that those days will pass. And that there will probably be a slice of cake or a cookie to enjoy regardless. 

Other Things I Have Found Helpful

Reading and Audiobooks
Reading and Audiobooks
New Cookbooks & Cookbooks in General
New Cookbooks & Cookbooks in General
Having Access to A Variety of Hand Creams and Moisturisers + Hand Sanitiser

Having Access to A Variety of Hand Creams and Moisturisers + Hand Sanitiser

Oatmeal Cookies

Oatmeal Biscuits/Cookies

Ingredients: 

125g softened unsalted butter, or margarine

180g brown sugar

1 egg

120g self raising flour

130g rolled oats (not instant oats)

Method:

Preheat oven to 160 degrees Celsius, and line three large baking trays with baking paper.

In a large bowl cream the butter/margarine and brown sugar with a wooden spoon until combined. 

Add the egg and mix well. 

Fold in the self raising flour and the oats. 

Using a teaspoon, drop rough balls of the mixture on the the trays, keeping in mind the biscuits will spread when as they bake. 

Bake for 16-18 minutes or until golden brown. 

Allow to cook on the trays, and store in an airtight container once cooled. 

Makes approx. 36 biscuits. 

In Biscuits/Cookies, Heirloom Recipes Tags Oatmeal Cookies, Oatmeal Biscuits, Coronavirus, COVID-19, Social Isolation, 2020, Grandma, Easy Baking, Biscuits/Cookies, Mixer Free Recipes
2 Comments
Mixed Berry Shortcake

Mixed Berry Shortcake

Mixed Berry Shortcake

Kath November 28, 2016

This is another recipe I have found in my Grandma’s collection. I never remember her making it, I think by the time grandchildren came along her baking repertoire had been much refined to her favourites and she didn’t seem to sway from them very often. Not that any of us complained. There was comfort knowing your favourite would be served to you when you visited or brought with her to share when she came over to us. Even if the baked good du jour wasn’t your favourite, it was still one of her well known staples. 

Looking back, it probably would have been slightly shocking if Grandma turned up with some new baked creation - I mean, no one likes change, do they?! Particularly where nostalgic baking is concerned. I remember one time Grandma was inspired by a pavlova made at a cake shop I was working at at the time, which was quite different to hers. When we next had dinner she made a pavlova, but had lightly crushed some toasted hazelnuts and mixed them through the meringue before cooking. I was silently horrified that my beloved pavlova had been altered and didn’t have the heart to tell her that hazelnuts were not the ‘secret ingredient’ of the pavlova she was trying to re-create. In hindsight, I probably should have encouraged my Grandma’s baking creativity a little more. Maybe then more family favourites would have been found and more baking discussions would have been had. But I guess now, I will have to be happy with the cookbooks and handwritten recipes I have from her, and the memories we did create in the kitchen. 

This shortcake, is kind of a slice/cake combination and is very simple to make, and very easy to eat! Many jams would work here, but I can rarely pass up a good berry jam. 

Mixed Berry Shortcake

Ingredients: 

340g margarine (flavourless) or unsalted butter

240g caster sugar 

1 tsp vanilla extract

2 eggs 

250 g self-raising flour 

210g mixed berry jam (I used this homemade jam) 

55g coconut chips or shredded coconut

 

Method: 

Pre-heat oven to 160 degrees Celsius, and line a 30 x 20 cm (approx.) lamington tin (I use this one). 

Cream together the margarine, 120 g of the sugar and the vanilla until it becomes light and fluffy. Then add 1 egg and mix well to incorporate. Add the flour and mix to combine. 

Evenly spread the mixture into the lamington tin, ensure you push it into the corners. Gently spread over the jam. 

Then in a bowl, gently whisk the remaining egg with a fork, then add the coconut and remaining sugar. Mix well to ensure the ingredients are well incorporated. Gently spread the coconut mixture over the jam. The coconut mixture will only end up being a thin layer over the jam - it may look like there isn’t enough but don’t worry, it will work! 

Bake for about 40 minutes, or until the top has turned golden brown and the cake underneath is cooked through (use a skewer to check). Remove from the oven and leave in the tin for about 5 minutes to start cooling, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. 

Cut into squares and serve with tea, and maybe some cream! 

The shortcake will keep in an airtight container for a few days.

In Cakes & Slices, Heirloom Recipes Tags heirloom baking, Berry Jam, Slices, shortcake, Grandma
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Quince & Apple Crumble

Quince & Apple Crumble

Quince & Apple Crumble + How to Make Homemade Vanilla Ice Cream (Egg Free)

Kath September 25, 2016

This recipe is highly inspired by my Grandma’s cooking. Although I don’t think she ever poached quince or made her own ice cream, crumbles were definitely a staple dessert in her house. Rhubarb was the filling I remember most and as I have alluded to before, I would not try the Rhubarb Crumble’s my Grandma made. This was in protest of the fact that the dessert wasn’t Pavlova, which was, to me the only obvious choice for dessert at any time of year. 

My Grandma’s Pavlova was my absolute favourite (still evidenced by how many times it has appeared in some form on this blog!), and I remember feeling such bitter disappointment when I noticed it had not been my Grandma’s chosen dessert that evening. While the pink hue of the rhubarb should have drawn my interest as a child, I was firmly opposed to the idea of eating a vegetable in a dessert, even if it was served with ice cream. I would then moodily sit eating my plain vanilla ice cream, hoping our next visit would include my favourite Pavlova. 

Now being older and having made much more of an effort to try new foods, I have come around the to humble crumble. I could not however find amongst my Grandma’s hand written recipes, a recipe for any type of crumble. It is likely it was something she started making later in life, maybe seeing it made on one of the cooking shows on TV she liked watching, or amongst the recipes found in the newspaper. I did however stumble across a little section in her copy of ‘Delia Smith’s Complete Cookery Course’ on crumbles and I guess it is also possible the recipe she used or was inspired by came from there. The book is ‘a new edition for the 1990s’, which would fit in well with my thought that she made many more crumbles later in life. It also fits in rather perfectly with my childhood memory of boycotting her rhubarb crumble. 

My Grandma’s copy of Delia’s book, looks somewhat used, maybe just a little less so than her handwritten notebooks and recipe books from the 1950s. A few pages are marked with scraps of paper with handwritten recipes on them (including a lemon sponge and oatmeal cookies), and a couple of cut outs from the food section of a newspaper (one recipe and one reader cooking tip). There is also a bookmark from the Stroke Foundation holding the place between Spanish Pork with Olives and Ossobuco in the ‘Meat: Casseroles and Braised Dishes’ section. Such a find is slightly bittersweet considering how my Grandma’s life came to an end, but also a reminder of her understanding of her vulnerabilities and attention to preventing them.

Finding little notes, recipes and newspaper cut outs in my Grandma’s cookbooks give me little snapshots and reminders of her every time, and maybe one day in another book I’ll find a scrap of paper with a recipe for her crumble. 

For my crumble recipe I have used a combination of fruit which is slightly more Winter-y, however I thought equally as delicious and satisfying during any season. If you have some poached quinces definitely use them, they work so well with the crumble topping. If you wish to substitute the quinces for something else, I would suggest rhubarb (of course!), either sliced finely with a mandolin or lightly softened on the stove first - just keep the quantity of rhubarb about the same as the quinces or so it fits nicely into the dish you are using. If making, the ice cream should be made earlier in the day or the night before so it has ample time to freeze. It is quite a simple ice cream recipe, requiring no eggs just some sugar, milk, cream and vanilla. I would suggest doubling the ice cream recipe if you wish to feed more than 5 or so people. 

Homemade (Easy) Vanilla Ice Cream

Homemade (Easy) Vanilla Ice Cream

Homemade Vanilla Ice Cream (Egg Free)

Ingredients: 

165ml full cream milk 

6 tbsp white sugar

250ml pouring cream 

1 tsp vanilla extract 

2 tbsp vanilla bean paste 

 

Method: 

Whisk the milk and sugar together until the sugar has dissolved and the milk has become frothy. Then add the cream and both vanillas and whisk until combined. 

Transfer mixture into the bowl of an ice cream machine, and process according to machine instructions. I found the churning process took about 10-15 minutes. Once ready, transfer ice cream into a freezer safe container and freeze for at least 2 or 3 hours. 

Quince and Apple Crumble

Ingredients: 

6 poached quince, approx. 930g 

2 Pink Lady Apples, approx. 250g

2 very small pears, approx. 140g 

2 tbsp quince poaching liquid

2 tsp vanilla bean paste

75g unsalted butter, softened and cubed

110g plain flour 

110g oats (not instant) 

110g brown sugar 

1/2 tsp ground cinnamon 

 

Method: 

Pre-heat oven to 180 degrees Celsius. 

Remove the poached quinces from their poaching liquid, reserving the liquid. Roughly chop the quinces and place into a large mixing bowl. 

Very finely slice the apples and pears (I used a mandolin), discarding the cores. Place in the bowl with the quince and gently mix together. Add the vanilla bean paste and the quince poaching liquid and mix again. Then tip the mixture into a 2-2.5L capacity pie/gratin/baking dish. Spread the mixture out so it sits in the dish evenly. 

To make the crumble topping place the flour, oats and cinnamon into a mixing bowl then add the butter. Rub the butter into the flour and oats until the mixture starts to look crumbly. Add the sugar and mix well. 

Spoon the crumble mixture over the fruit ensuring it is evenly dispersed. The thickness of your crumble topping will depend on the size and depth of your dish. I used a fairly deep dish so I ended up with a nice thick crumble topping. 

Cook crumble for 30-40 minutes, or until the top has turned lightly golden brown. 

Serve warm with the vanilla ice cream. 

References: ‘Lomelino’s Ice Cream’ by Linda Lomelino (Roost Books, 2015), p.13: ‘Delia Smith’s Complete Cookery Course’ by Delia Smith (BBC Books, 1998), pp. 594-5.

In Other Desserts, Heirloom Recipes, Ice Cream Tags Crumble, Quince, Apple, Grandma, Ice Cream, Vanilla, Delia Smith, heirloom baking, Dessert
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