Caramel Muffins
Muffins, of the American sort, are exquisitely suitable to adaptation. This recipe is one of the very best and the simplest.
Muffins, of the American sort, are exquisitely suitable to adaptation. This recipe is one of the very best and the simplest.
This Christmas cake will be just as good as any Christmas cake that’s been maturing for months & months.
A simple, stress-free recipe for delicious turnovers – suitable even for beginners.
If you are in need of any comfort during the cold winter nights, these viscous eruptions of flowing chocolate will provide it.
This is a technically exquisite cake – it’s moist, it’s light, it’s not too rich despite the heavy chocolate use. And it makes an extravagant, if rustic, centrepiece.
The flavour of the gin works so well, cutting straight through the richness of the sponge.
This is a personal favourite of mine; perfect as we come into spring and the first of the rhubarb thrives. But if you still can’t find fresh, don’t worry. This one works with tinned, too.
Somewhere in the vast palace of the internet lurks my original recipe for this tart, but it takes about 5 hours to prepare. This recipe is a tart of equal greatness to the original, but with a fraction of the effort.
These are both very tasty in each of their own rights, but combine them and they seem to become something a whole lot more impressive.
Mille Feuille is the pretentious, French title for what had a perfectly brilliant name in English already: the custard slice. Literally, the French words mean ‘1000 leaves’, referring to the countless crumbly layers of the puff pastry used in this recipe.
Who says a sandwich needs to be made with bread? Biscuits work far better!
Whenever I’ve done demonstrations that involve getting the audience up on stage to bake something from scratch, I’ve used madeleines. There’s a reason for this: they’re easy and they’re fast. Real fast!