Martha Stewart’s Baking at home


Martha Stewart’s Dinner at Home

Martha Stewart. Clarkson Potter 2009, Hardcover, 272 pages, $9.64

4.0

As usual Martha Stewart’s impeccable taste and style win through with a very useful book for dinner parties. The recipes are broken into menus – each with a starter, sides + dessert. We (the family + but mainly me) love the preparation schedule at the beginning of each menu – what you can make in advance – what order to make it all it – how long it will take.

I haven’t made anything from this book yet – it is too perfect and I just am not quite sure where to start – I am content at the moment just to look and wait for the perfect combination of ingredients and inspiration to hit me.

The recipes all seem very achievable – lots of hearty home style cooking – nothing seems too fancy or overdone – the book is dedicated to hardworking families. With a seasonal chapter breakdown you can prepare your menus according to what is in season and the weather. Right now I am thinking spring/summer — baby lamb chops + asparagus with aioli + Quinoa, pea and mint salad + vanilla poached rhubarb – but all of you going into fall/winter how does this sound — Roast pumpkin soup + cheese flautas (deep fried wrap) with cilantro pesto + black eyed pea salad with baby green beans + apple cranberry crumble.

Manna from heaven

manna from heaven book cover

Manna from heaven: cooking for the people you love
by Rachel Grisewood. Published by Allen and Unwin, Australia November 2009.

Loving how earthy and friendly this book is. The photographs are on the rustic side of styled with some sweet ‘crayon’ drawn illos to add to that family flavour of this book.

Rachel Griselwood is a london born london trained chef who moved to Australia – working and traveling – living the good life that Australia has to offer before setting down with her ‘Manna from Heaven’ bakery and treat shop in Sydney. However this book is all about cooking for family – her first love – the great feeling you get from nurturing and tending to your loved ones – we all know about that don’t we.

This gloriously big book, is full of satisfying family friendly fare – Each chapter takes you on a different journey in Rachels life – she takes us on a discovery tour with her first mouth watering treats that she baked out of her home kitchen to the lovely tartlettes [pdf download to recipe for tomato tart] she developed for trendy sydney delis to her big batches of Indian chutneys she made to sell.

There is a journey through her kitchen – with a story behind her favourite baking trays and tins – her favourite egg recipe to cook in her favourite red frying pan. The dinner party journey – the perfect fare for dinner with friends, dinner with family, her daughters favourite flat bread recipe, her best friends love of prawns, foods that trigger memories of her lost loved ones. A sentimental cook book – with a story behind each and every dish. But you don’t have to read it all – flicking back and forth through the book lands you on pages filled with lemon polenta cup cakes [pdf recipe download], a leaning tower of pisa sponge cake filled with cream and chocolate and raspberries.

There is a recipe in here that reminds me of my childhood – memories of farmers wives kitchens with soft creamy butterfly cakes – oh heaven …

butterfly cakes

Lemon Butterfly Cakes
recipe:
125g butter (room temperature – slightly softened)
180g caster sugar
185g plain flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 cup milk
2 eggs
grated lemon zest (1 lemons worth)

filling
100g butter
100g icing sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla paste
icing sugar for dusting

Warm oven to 160 degrees C (315F) – line a 12 hole muffin tray with with paper cases.

To make the cakes – add all the ingredients in a mixing bowl and mix with an electric mixer until combined (how easy is that) beat for 2 mins until pale in colour.
Spoon mixture into the cases and bake for 20-30 mins until golden brown. Cool on a wire rack.

Make the topping – cream butter + sugar + vanilla in a bowl until pale and light.

Slice the rounded top of each of the cakes – making a slight indentation in the cake – and cut this top in half to make the wings. Dollop a little of the mock cream [or as I have done - use real whipped cream] place the little wings on top and dust with powdered sugar.

These are so light and tempting and delicious – too too yummy

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