Sunday 23 November 2014

Marshmallows (with no sugar thermometer)




So I'm writing this while waiting to run up and down a hill. It's The Thew's fault as he signed up for a race up and down three hills (hilariously called The 3 Molehills) and of course his family followed suit. My sister-in-law asked if I'd do one of the stages, so she could do only two, and for some reason I said yes.

Outside its pouring with rain and fairly cold. I'm surrounded by people waiting for their stage who seem genuinely excited about running and it's not helping my mood. I don't enjoy running and somehow I seem to do so much of it. I suppose it keeps me fit and gives me a focus for the monotony of the gym but it's annoying I don't enjoy it. Seriously it would make my life easier if I was super thrilled to run around all day, get muddy and sweat in public.

However the place where I'm waiting has a little Christmas shop so it's better than a tent in a field. It's getting all festive and before Christmas hits we have Thanksgiving to do first. If you know Americans, or anyone who has lived there for a while, try and celebrate it with them. There is all the good food and marshmallows play a large part. I mean they put them on top of sweet potatoes!!!! However, these ones are destined to be put on top of a chocolate pie. I thought I should try making them and sugar thermometer be damned. These are sufficiently good and I did it based on time rather than temperature. You can flavour and colour them however you like but I kept these white and vanilla to complement the dark richness of chocolate.

Ingredients
175ml water
300g granulated sugar
100ml golden syrup
5 sheets (about 9g) gelatine sheets
1/2tsp vanilla extract
Optional food colouring
Icing sugar
Oil
Cornflour
  1. Put the water, sugar and syrup in a pan. Dissolve everything together on a medium heat and them put on medium/high. Once boiling set your timer for 9 minutes.
  2. Put the gelatine sheets in a bowl of cold water. Once soft transfer to a large bowl and add the vanilla.
  3. Get a loaf tin and lightly grease with vegetable oil. Then coat with cornflour. This is going to help you get the marshmallow out. It will be a pain still but at least you're ahead of the game.
  4. Once the timer goes off slowly pour the sugar syrup into the bowl while whisking. I did it with hand held but a free standing with balloon whisk would be easier. Once all the syrup is in mix for 10 minutes. Yep - 10 minutes. This will transform the golden liquid into white fluffy sticky mallow.
  5. Pour into tin and let set for a few hours.
  6. To get it out I recommend having a pile of icing sugar on hand. Cover your fingers in it and gently prise one end away from the shortest side with the tin as upside down as you can. Then keep re-covering your fingers in icing sugar and slowly ease it from the tin onto a surface covered in icing sugar.
  7. Cut with a sharp knife dipped in icing sugar and seal any sticky edges with some. There done!



Tuesday 4 November 2014

Honeycomb (or Cinder Toffee)

 


I’m incredibly busy at the moment with various birthdays, events, baking requirements, not to mention work, so this is a brilliant and superfast way of making something that looks fairly epic. It’s also tons of fun – well for the few seconds where it foams up with the addition of bicarb. 

Ideally you’d make this with a sugar thermometer but I don’t have one so this method assumes that you don’t. It’s not that hard and there is a degree of error that the final product allows so that’s ok.  

Ingredients
165g caster sugar
165g Demerara sugar
60g golden syrup
15g butter (plus extra for greasing)
60ml (4 tbsp) water
Pinch of salt
1 tbsp bicarb of soda (have close by with a spoon in it ready to go) 

1.   Put everything, apart from the bicarb, in a saucepan and gently heat until everything is melted together.
2.   Then turn the heat up to keep it on a boil. It shouldn’t be escaping the pan but all you should see are bubbles. Put a timer on for 10 minutes.
3.   While that is going on grease the living hell out of a tray (20 x 20 square is a good size but it can be bigger – just not too big as the honeycomb will get too thin) with a decent side on it. When I say grease the hell I mean it. You want to see some actual butter left on the tray and not a thin film of grease. (Or use a silicon tray and ignore having to grease it).
4.   Once the 10 minutes are up put a teaspoon in the mixture, let excess drip off and put it in a cup of cold water. Leave for about 20-30 seconds. If, when you take the spoon out, the sugar mixture is hard to touch then it’s done. If it has some give then it needs a bit more time. It shouldn’t need more than 15 minutes so check every minute or so. (Who needs a sugar thermometer?)
5.   When the sugar is hard on the spoon put the bicarb in and mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon. At this stage the mixture with bubble up and looks fairly brilliant. Don’t mix too long and then pour it all into the tray.
6.   It will bubble away for a few minutes and after about 20-30 minutes will be cool enough to turn out and smash up.

N.B. Store somewhere dry. Damp kills it. Also don’t worry about it sticking together in a massive mass when you put it in a tin. It will be ok.
 
So much fun to smash up!