Category: <span>Cooking</span>

tiramisu

For Geoff’s birthday I made a Tiramisu Cake – the recipe (and idea) was courtesy of our friend Mandy after her own mind bogglingly huge and delicious cake around Christmas time.

For this you’ll need:

  • 3 packets of chocolate cake mix (or you can make your own but really it is much easier and less time consuming if you do just go the packet). I used White Wings brand – usually pretty decent.
  • 300mL-400mL Tia Maria
  • Chocolate for grating (or cocoa, choc-coated coffee beans etc)

Filling:

  • 2 eggs
  • 1/3 cup (75g caster sugar)
  • 500g mascarpone
  • 1 cup thick cream
  • 1/2 cup  Tia Maria
  1. Wrap the outside of a 23cm springform cake tin with plastic wrap of foil to avoid leaks from the base.
  2. Slice the chocolate cake thinly and pour some of the 300mL (or more if needed) of Tia Maria in a shallow dish, ready for soaking the cake slices as you need them.
  3. Filling: Before you start to layer the cakes, whisk the eggs and sugar until pale and then gently beat in the mascarpone and thick cream; Use an electric whisk for this. Gradually add the 125mL Tia Maria to make a creamy spreadable layer for the cake.
  4. Using approx 1 cake per layer, dunk the slices in Tia Maria before lining the tin with them (Don’t undersoak, and make sure you only put some of the Tia Maria in the dish at a time as the bottom layer will have all the TM in it otherwise and you will either run out, or end up having to use more than the recipe amount (which may not be bad)). Squash them down, pressing confidently as you go; each layer should not be too thick, but juicily compact and solid. (add on from Mandy – Don’t be scared to really squish them as you will have trouble with fitting the last layer if you don’t.)
  5. Spread a third of the cream mixture over the soaked cake slices.
  6. Repeat with another layer of soaked choc cake slices, then cream again.
  7. Finish with a layer of choc cake slices – not as soaked as the first 2 layers – reserving the last third of the cream mixture for later in a covered bowl. (I just put a whole cake on the last layer, because I was lazy)
  8. Press down the cake layer to make it as smooth as possible, then cover it with plastic wrap and put the cake in the fridge overnight (or for up to 4 days).
  9. When you’re ready to serve, take the cake out of the fridge, unmould, sit it on a plate or cake stand, then spread with the remaining final third of cream mixture, before dusting with cocoa and serving. The cake should be too damp to lift it off the tin’s base, but ppl really won’t care once they eat it.
  10. You can also freeze after finishing with remaining cream. Freeze until solid then double wrap with plastic. Can be kept up to 3 mths. To use simply unwrap, place on serving plate and thaw overnight in the fridge.

Cooking

It is entirely up to me to eventually work out which are feasible, but it is now 2009 and there are, however ridiculous: resolutions or I could term them idealutions, at least that way there is leeway in sidestepping the mark.

2009 came in moderation, not with a bang. There were no fireworks, but we had sparklers, music, champagne, a marquee and a few friends. I most enjoyed the early morning introduction to ’09. First up after a less than perfect sleep in a tent on less than flat ground, but there was an eggshell sky and sun, a silent field and moment of the same before it went to the crapper and the clouds and we got some rain.

The news continues to talk about 2008 as a non-highlight and begs hope out of the new year. I am inclined to disagree with the former statement however the word hope is a sweet one that should live on.

In a moment of introspection (aka. now) here are my highlights of the past and hopes for the present (with a few true aspirations and undoubtedly top shelf items that I won’t really reach, being short and all).

Highlights

  • January 5th I married my best friend. And consequently spent the rest of the year married to him (to be continued…). It’s been interesting and fun! Needless to say, I really love being married and I really love Geoff! It’s certainly been a wildly contrasting year in regard to all previous years.
  • Uni, second semester proved full of inspiring people especially in regards to tutors. I finally felt like I was pulling my weight effectively and got to try things like branding and animation. I have come to the realisation that I mightn’t fit the typical traditional stereotype of ‘graphic designer’ but can work from my interests and strengths and hopefully can levy more out of the web stuff and marry it with my ‘designish eye’.
  • Frustration. It seems a weird choice to include it here, but God has increased my frustration with how I live as a Christian and how church can/could operate. It hasn’t gotten too far but there is room for movement and there needs to be room for movement. Some of this is tied up with finishing up with leading youth and being dumped in the deepend of doing nothing.
  • And there are the miscellaneous things like: growing friendships with people like Beth and Bri, marvelous restaurants, some great movies  and books and some less than typical experiences – like seeing Wicked.

Un-Highlights

  • A bodgy start to the uni year with some super low motivation levels in regard to particular subjects.
  • Less investment in certain friendships and not because of want, but because I am a lazy and…
  • Feeling so busy and unorganised

Idealutions, resolutions and hopeings

  • A slower year, where priorities become priorities and the trivial things are thrown out with the bathwater
  • Invested time and head space to enjoy and get the most out of uni
  • To be more organised at home
  • Eat better, cook nicer food – to be bothered
  • Get more fit
  • To continue to investigate, read more about, and live out some of the results of the aforementioned frustration
  • More time for God…. listen more, write more
  • Be less critical of things like traditional church and learn to love what is good and do differently instead of simply getting annoyed.
  • Be a part of something that explores doing Church differently, try some things!
  • To freelance for a while and to do well at it in terms of being self-disciplined and gain useful experience
  • Put together a portfolio, get a design job
  • More head in the blog. More faithful writing, less crap. Perhaps make something more of it.
  • Release a WordPress Theme (and yes it is in production!)
  • Learn to use the Wacom properly and work on practicing drawing/illustration etc.
  • Learn more about Flash
  • Learn more about Illustrator
  • Learn some of the little extra things about webdesign and standards that I might otherwise ignore.
  • Get my head around Javascript/PHP etc..
  • Continue to work on building a really good marriage and be better at loving Geoff
  • Be better at maintaining and developing friendships
  • Invest in things like Soul Survivor etc.
  • Keep track of the money I spend
  • Spend less money
  • Own less, give more
  • Greater confidence and willingness to try things (especially re. design)
  • Days of doing different things, like taking my camera out somewhere foreign or less than usual
  • Finish uni, and do well in my final year
  • Righteousness and peace… Isaiah 32, Romans 14

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pumpkinpieI totally just made this pumpkin pie.

It smells heavenly. I really wonder sometimes why I don’t do this more often.

Same recipe as last time.

Cooking

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pumpkin_paintingAs the end of the year draws near I am beginning to lament the disappearance of Starbucks in my semi-local shopping centre. I’ll take real coffee over the Star anyday, but I was truly looking forward to Christmas gingerbread lattes… however I am now hearing about an offering that I haven’t yet seen in Australia. The pumpkin latte.

And so I will, when I have time, make my own. Because the concept of the pumpkin latte is entirely and I mean ENTIRELY convincing.

image source

*An update on the above, I made a rushed version yesterday. It really wasn’t all that good. Over sweet for one, and in that way quite a good Starbucks rip off, and it was very stringy although did improve after I strained it. I think a Jap pumpkin is in order rather than a Kent pumpkin and less sweetness. Also probably didn’t help that all my stomach really wanted just then was food rather than yet another hot drink… it’s a pitty that hot drinks aren’t more nutrious really, because I could probably resemble super woman about now.

Cooking Life