Happy New Year one and all! Firstly, I must apologise for my lack of blogging over the past month, it really has been a crazy end to the year culminating, in fact, on Hogmanay (New Years Eve) with my lovely father-in-law having a heart attack! Thankfully, he is on the mend, but it was a scary few days!
I did have an amazing Christmas though, the children had a fabulous time and I got to live out my long-held ambition to host Christmas Dinner at my house – with 13 (including baby Cameron) for lunch from ages 6 months to 91! It was great. Mum did the starter and my Turkey (a very local bird ordered through the brilliant Devenick Dairy), was delicious. The best part of all though was the AMAZING brown sugar meringues with whipped cream and lemon curd – the recipes for which came from a cooking demonstration I went to a couple of months ago by Lady Claire MacDonald of Kinloch Lodge on the Isle of Skye. I will post the recipes shortly as they are too good not to share!
Back to this entry though, and it is recipe swap time again! Continuing the theme of puddings, the swap recipe this month is for Zabaglione, a traditional Italian dessert. As she does every month, Christianna over at www.burwellgeneralstore.com chooses a recipe from our current vintage cookbook “The Second Ford Treasury of Favourite Recipes From Famous Eating Places” and we (20+) swappers post our take on the original recipe. Here is mine.
At Devenick Dairy getting our Turkey |
Once again, I thought I’d add a little Scottish twist to the swap and merge the cuisines of two of my favourite countries; something I starting doing when we lived in Florence (where for dinner at Hogmanay I made Haggis Lasagne for our guests - an unexpected success).
Cranachan is a traditional Scottish dessert for which there are many variations. It is made from cream, crowdie cheese, whisky, honey and oats. I tried a few versions for the swap, as well as a few different whiskies from my husband’s collection and also a whisky liqueur, however the latter was far too sweet. On Col’s advice, I settled on The Balvenie Doublewood (12yr), a whisky from the Speyside Region which he tells me has hints of fruits, honey and vanilla! My resident whisky expert has also advised that it would be best to avoid the smokier, peatier malts of Islay for a dessert like this.
Anyway, I hope you like this fusion of two traditional puddings. I am very happy with the result and think I will serve this on Burns Night later this month.
Ingredients
4 large egg yolks
50g Caster Sugar
50ml Whisky
30g Porridge Oats
30g Soft Light Brown Sugar
100-150g Raspberries
Method
Heat up your grill. Line a baking tray with foil and spread out the oats and brown sugar. Toast under the grill until golden brown – remembering to keep your eye on them and move them about frequently or they will very quickly burn! Set aside and keep for later.
Fill a pan half full with water and bring to the boil and then reduce heat to a simmer.
Put the yolks, caster sugar and whisky in a glass bowl (big enough to sit atop the boiling water without touching) and whisk all together with a hand-held mixer. Set the bowl in the pan of boiling water and whisk constantly until the mixture becomes thick, frothy, pale and creamy. Be careful not to scramble the eggs!
Allow to cool slightly before adding two or three handfuls of the toasted oats to the mixture and gently and loosely mix in. Then lightly squash a couple of handfuls of the raspberries in your hand before adding them in and mixing them in too. (Keep a little of each to decorate).
Spoon the mixture into serving bowls or glasses and refrigerate for around three hours before serving. Prior to serving, decorate with the remaining berries and sprinkle with some of the toasted oats.
(Serves 2)