Showing posts with label Breakfast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breakfast. Show all posts

11.6.16

Banana Bread Pudding


Do you have a Sunday breakfast tradition? You know something like a Pancake-Sunday or a Waffle-Sunday ? At my parents house they've had one ever since I was a kid... There, luchi and aloo dam(potato curry) is served for breakfast every Sunday. Its lavish and delicious and every individual who has ever visited us have always looked forward it to. After our marriage I had thought I would continue with the tradition in my new home ... but a few weekends into it and I realized how much work it involves. So I began exploring other options. For a while we tried Pancake and Waffle Sunday... then South-Indian Sundays...Noodle-Sundays so on and so forth... until the idea of Casserole-Sundays struck me...

Believe me Casserole Sundays are the easiest to handle. These days I simply throw in stuff  into the iron skillet and while things bake I laze out in the balcony sipping my chai and catching up on  the Sunday supplement of the newspaper or the blog posts that I have missed during the week. And when the oven buzzes done, I pull out the skillet and serve...... Bliss.... Really... Sunday-breakfast never felt easier than this..


So the other Sunday I made Banana Bread Pudding the old-fashioned way and was delighted to see how the little one also enjoyed this classic breakfast... Truly some recipes are timeless and breading puddings definitely rank high in that list.

The  recipe I followed was inspired by one from the net. It was more or less similar to my mother's recipe except that the milk did not have to be thickened. Of course if you like your puddings to be richer, start off with twice the amount of the milk, boil it down to half its volume before soaking your bread in it. That is the way my mother always makes it but I being her unfitting-ly lazy daughter decided to skip the ordeal and took the easier and quicker route. As a compensation I topped the pudding with custard and that made a delicious breakfast. Its the kind of thing that you would want to serve your friends and house guests... and may be even your papa for a sumptuous Father's Day breakfast.


Banana Bread Pudding

Recipe by Adapted from Taste of Home
Prep time: 10 minutes                                                                                          Cook time: 40-45 minutes
Total time: 1 hour                                                                                                 Yield: 4 servings



Ingredients
  • 2 cups or 4-6 slices of old bread (I used multigrain bread)
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 2 medium sized eggs
  • 1 cup milk
  • 3 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 tablespoon of good quality Jam (I used strawberry jam)
  • ½ teaspoon cinnamon powder
  • ¼ teaspoon nutmeg powder
  • pinch of salt
  • 2 overripe bananas (about half cup)
  • 1½ tablespoon of cashews and raisins, chopped
  • 1 cup custard of your choice for serving on top
Cooking Directions
  1. In a saucepan heat the milk long with the sugar and butter until the sugar dissolves and the butter melts. Switching off the heat add the cinnamon, nutmeg, salt and the jam to the milk. Mix well and keep aside for the milk to cool down a bit.
  2. Meanwhile roughly cube the slices of bread and place them in a 8 inch iron skillet.
  3. Preheat the oven to 350 ° F.
  4. Once the milk has cooled down a bit, beat in the eggs into the mixture and pour the milk-egg batter over the skillet of bread cubes and press the bread cubes into it to help them soak up the liquid. (If you have the time, cover the skillet and allow the mixture to stand as it is for 30 minutes or so before putting it in the oven.)
  5. Finally scoop out lumps of the overripe banana and place it all over the surface, garnish with the chopped dry fruits and bake uncovered in the preheat over for 30 minutes. Then increasing the temperature to 375 ° F bake another 10-15 minutes till the surface is nicely browned and a knife inserted comes out clean.
  6. While the pudding is getting baked prepare a custard of your choice. While my to-go custard recipe is the one using custard powder, when serving bread pudding as a dessert I occasionally top it with a variant of Zabaglione wherein I skip the alcohol and just add vanilla essence to the custard.

Now doesn't that look more delicious than a breakfast of bread, butter, jam...  milk eggs and banana ??? 

25.6.14

Breakfast Strawberry Cobbler



Over the Father's day weekend we had gone strawberry picking with my uncle and aunt. I had been planning to go berry picking for a long time and we really went  overboard with the whole picking thing-y. Plucking fruits from the plants can be so additive. You see fresh succulent berries and think... "just one more" and by the time you are done, you have a overflowing basket of juicy red berries and somewhat reddish finger-tips. It is all so exciting that you find it difficult to stop even when you know you should and if a toddler accompanies then every pick becomes even more fun....

10.4.14

Whole Wheat Coconut Muffin Buns


I am not sure if in some other world these whole wheat coconut muffin buns are standard. They ought to be.. They are cute, tasty and delicious. They are everything  you would want to wake up to on a Sunday morning or for that matter any other day of the week. I have a feeling that with a glaze of coconut syrup they might make the ultimate breakfast muffin buns... but I am yet to verify the latter..


As many of you might have recognized, these buns were inspired by the famous Dilkhush Buns. Literally translated, Dilkhush means "makes you happy" and the traditional Dilkhush buns do just that... make you happy with their pillowy soft milk bread casing and coconut-dry fruit-and-tuttti frutti stuffing.  

My muffin buns do the same... though they have a whole wheat potato bread casing rather than a white milk bread. 

25.3.14

Tasty Tuesday #54
featuring delectable breakfast, dinner and dessert recipes...

Hi  everyone !! 
 Each week, our team of 10 amazing bloggers hosts this fabulous party! We're so glad that you've stopped by to party with us!
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Without you, we wouldn't have a party at all. So we think you're pretty special and deserve to benefit from linking up with us each week. Here's how:

4.3.14

Puffed Pancake # Tasty Tuesday 51~ the Breakfast edition


Happy Tuesday Everyone !  It is Fat Tuesday and also Pancake day.. hence the perfect excuse for me to share with you my favorite pancake... the Puffed Pancake.
 

They are easy to make and are a delight to serve for breakfast on a weekday or on Sundays..
Puffed Pancake

Recipe by Love Taza
Prep time: 5 minutes                                Cook time: 25 minutes                    Total time: 30 minutes
Yield: 1 9inch puffed pancake


Ingredients
  • 2 large eggs
  • ½ cup milk
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour
  • dash of salt
  • dash of ground cinnamon
  • 1 tbsp butter
Cooking Directions
  1. Preheat oven to 425 ° F.
  2. Whisk all the ingredients in a bowl until a smooth lump free batter is formed.
  3. Melt the butter in a 9 inch pie pan or cake pan.
  4. Pour the batter over the hot melted butter and bake in preheated oven for 20-25 minutes, until the pancake is firm and has puffed around the edges.
  5. Serve right away with a helping of fruits and honey or slather with nutella, top with strawberries and enjoy.

 Each week, our team of 10 amazing bloggers hosts this fabulous party! We're so glad that you've stopped by to party with us!


Without you, we wouldn't have a party at all. So we think you're pretty special and deserve to benefit from linking up with us each week. Here's how:

22.2.14

Butter and Rum Crepes # French Fridays with Dorie

This week the Doristas were assigned to cook  Butter & Rum Crepes for French Fridays with Dorie.


I have cooked and eaten crepes before. However these ones were special. The crepe batter had sugar rubbed with orange and lemon zest and a bit of rum in it, both of which added to their flavor. Following Dorie's recipe I served them with a filling of lemon curd and poured a citrusy-buttery sauce over it.. only to realize later that the crepes would have been perfect even without all that extra fat and sugar. A sprinkle of sugar was enough to pep them up.

As per the instructions, I mixed the batter the night before and made the crepes for lunch the next day. I cooked them in my usual non-stick frying pan. They did not stick and came off easily. However they were thin and delicate and it took me a couple of crepes before I could flip them with ease and confidence. Both husband and I loved our French crepes very much but considering my inexperience and inexpertise with flipping crepes, I guess we will only be making them on special occasions.
  


Visit French Fridays with Dorie to know what the other members thought about these crepes. You can find the recipe here. For more such delicious recipes order your copies of Around my French Table and join the Doristas in this tasty adventure.

11.2.14

Tasty Tuesday #48 Hearty Meal Edition

Hi  everyone !! 
 Each week, our team of 10 amazing bloggers hosts this fabulous party! We're so glad that you've stopped by to party with us!


Without you, we wouldn't have a party at all. So we think you're pretty special and deserve to benefit from linking up with us each week. Here's how:

18.1.14

Koffiebroodjes (Dutch Sweet Rolls) # Baking Partner's Challenge

This month Kaveri of Palakkad Chamayal challenged the Baking Partners with two lovely Dutch recipes from The Dutch Table... a Dutch Apple Pie and these Dutch Sweet Rolls called Koffiebroodjes. While the spices of the Apple Pie were enticing, the sound of "Koffiebroodjes" was too sweet to pass up. So I decided on baking the later and glazing it with a jam that contained the flavors of the Dutch Apple Pie or Appletart.. The result was a delight and we really enjoyed them with our latte...


Translated literally, Koffiebroodjes means Coffee Buns. Apparently these old-fashioned glazed sweet rolls are available at local bakeries and supermarkets in Netherlands. They are usually eaten around 11:00 am during the coffee break or shared over a cup of coffee with the neighbours. Though the recipe here uses a jam glaze, these buns are also made with a sugar based sweet glaze. In some respect they are very similar to the classic cinnamon buns. They too are sticky from the glaze and have raisins in their folds. However these are not pull-apart buns and there is no brown sugar or cinnamon. These are baked as single units and a vanilla pudding replaces the cinnamon-brown sugar mixture in them, thereby making them quite different from their Siamese twins... the cinnamon rolls.

22.12.13

Whole Grain Applesauce & Sour Cream Pancakes
with Warm Maple Syrup

Lately I have been working on my archive of recipes. No it is not ready to be published yet... but hopefully it will be up by 12.1.2014.  Anyway.. while creating the archive I noticed that I haven't yet shared this family favorites with you... 


... my Whole Grain Applesauce and Sour Cream Pancakes with Warm Maple Syrup. 

Hubby likes them, I like them and now even the toddler likes them. They are soft and fluffy and taste wonderful with that warm maple syrup. I make them every other week and I always feel satisfied when I serve these for breakfast.. Firstly because the toddler has it without any fuss and secondly they are so nutritious. Besides the applesauce and (fatfree) sour cream, these are filled with the goodness of teff. As I have mentioned earlier, teff is a nutrition packed flour with higher protein content than wheat. It has twice as much iron as wheat and barley and a high concentration of a variety of nutrients including calcium and thiamin. Also, because of its high fiber content, is believed to help in dealing with diabetes and assisting with blood sugar control. 

14.11.13

Maple Glazed Pear Jam Doughnut Muffins
# Behind the Curtain Dessert Challenge

Its time for another round of Behind the Curtain Dessert Challenge. This month Sheryl challenged us to prepare a dessert with pear and maple. With my spiced pear jam in hand I knew exactly what I wanted to prepare...Maple Glazed Doughnut Muffins with Pear Jam filling...


I had booked this recipe by Nigella a while ago. The muffins looked cute and attractive and I was certain that my son and husband would like it ... Well. I was partially right about that. Husband loved it. So did I. But our son refused to taste... which meant more fluffy yummy muffins for us :D...  We enjoyed them with our evening tea, then at midnight with some hot milk and again for breakfast the following day. Thankfully I had made a small batch or else we would still be feasting on them and then felt guilty about eating so many muffins at a go.....

17.9.13

Warm Applesauce Spice Bars # GYCO Applesauce Challenge

Its already been 2 months since GYCO Blackberry challenge. Hence time for yet another Get your Chef On ! This month Julie from White Lights of Wednesday and Jen from Four Mars and One Venus challenged us to make/bake something special with Applesauce. Since applesauce happens to be one of my favorite substitutes for butter and eggs I immediately signed up for it... howver a recipe in which the star ingredient is merely used as a substitute isn't really the recipe for GYCO.... right ? so i raked up the internet looking for a recipe which wasn't too complicated and yet felt special enough for a challenge. and yesterday afternoon I finally bumped upon The One.... "Dorie's Applesauce Spice Bars." While the recipe looked wonderful by itself I thought a little tweaking would be nice. So i modified the ingredient list a bit and traded the original brown sugar glaze for a warm honey glaze... the result was fabulous.. we loved the spiced up soft moist Warm Applesauce Spice Bars.... 


and I am sure you will too when you try it......



now the recipe... I adapted the recipe of the cake from Something Sweet By Karen and the idea of glaze from Alex Guarnaschelli's Warm Grape Cake . The original cake recipe is from Dorie Greenspan's Baking : From my home to yours. Thanks to Karen for publishing this recipe as part of Tuesdays with Dorie. It certainly rocks !

Warm Applesauce Spice Bars 
Adapted from Dorie Greenspan's Baking: From My Home to Yours
 ingredients
  • for the cake
    • 1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
    • 1 tsp baking powder
    • 1/4 tsp baking soda
    • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
    • 1/4 tsp ground allspice
    • 1/4 tsp salt
    • 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter
    • 1 cup light brown sugar
    • 2 large eggs
    • 1/2 cup unsweetened applesauce
    • 1 tsp vanilla extract
    • 1 Bartlett pear, peeled, cored and finely chopped
    • 1/2 oven dried red grapes or plum raisins (I used a 3:1 ratio of the two)
    • 1/2 cup chopped walnuts 
  • for the glaze
    • 1/4 cup honey
    • 3/4 inch knob of ginger, peeled and freshly grated
    • 1/4-1/3 cup golden raisins
-
 the method
  • center a rack in the oven and preheat it to 350 degree F. butter a 9x13 inch baking pan, line the bottom with a parchment paper. butter the paper, dust the floor and sides of the pan with flour and tap off the excess. (in case you are like me and do not have a 9 x 13 inch pan, prepare your small cookie pan. it works. that is what i used.) 
  • whisk the flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, allspice and salt, sift the mixture and keep it aside.
  • in a medium heavy bottomed saucepan melt the butter over low heat. add the light brown sugar and  whisk the mixture until the sugar melts and a smooth batter is formed.
  • remove the saucepan from the heat and whisking continuously, add the eggs one at a time. whisk until the eggs are well incorporated into the batter, then add the applesauce and vanilla extract and whisk until a smooth uniform batter is formed. 
  • once all the wet ingredients are well-incorporated, using a rubber spatula or wooden spoon, gently fold in the flour mixture, mixing only until they disappear. then mix in the pears, the raisins and nuts.
  • now scraping the batter into the prepared pan, smooth the surface with a rubber spatula and bake for 23-25 minutes until the cake begins to pull away from the sides of the pan and a knife inserted in the center of the cake comes out clean. (for me this happened exactly after 23 minutes.)
  • transferring the baking pan to a rack, let the cake cool completely. once the cake has cooled completely, after about 30-45 minutes, slice the cake into 2-1/4 x 1-1/2 inch bars and go ahead and prepare the glaze.
  • for the glaze, add the honey to a small saute pan and holding the pan over low heat, bring it to a light simmer. once the honey bubbles and turns light brown, add the freshly grated ginger and golden raisins to the pan. saute for another 20-30  seconds and then drizzle the honey glaze over the sliced bars and serve and enjoy with milk, tea or a scoop of ice-cream !

So that was my awesome Warm Applesauce Spice Bar for GYCO Applesauce...
Hope you enjoyed the recipe and will try it while apples and pears are still flooding your local grocery store. So much for today. Have a great week !


I shall be sharing this with the following food events...

12.9.13

Apple Popover # Behind the Curtain Dessert Challenge

With the apple season upon us, this month Sheryl, the Lady Behind the Curtain, chose Apple and Cinnamon as the star ingredients for Behind the Curtain Dessert Challenge. As always, I picked out and pinned a number of desserts that paired the two and then decided on the easiest one... Apple Popover... Being mildly sweet they make a lovely dessert when served with whipped cream or a dollop of ice-cream. they are also wonderful for breakfast with a helping of yogurt or cajeta if you feel so indulgent...


Making Popovers is a child's play... on any given day you can easily bake some up for breakfast... just as I did this morning or set it to bake while you sit for dinner and enjoy it for dessert with some ice-cream or whipped cream as we did last night.... and as you can tell it does not feel too heavy so you really do not mind having it two times in a row..

Though Popovers were traditionally made in Popover Pans, muffins pans and ramekins can be used with equal ease to make them. I always bake them in ramekins and have never had an issue with it. so far the unassuming batter has never failed me and always delivered itself... it always pops up to a beautiful golden irregular tower that tastes nice and crisp on the outside while still hot... the only thing about this popover that is different from the traditional popovers is that its exterior is a little soft and gets softer when topped with cream.. they however are delightful when you have it fresh out of the oven..


now the recipe... I adapted the Popover recipe from Vintage Kitchen Notes and used Joy of Baking as a reference. The original recipe is from Dorie Greenspan's Baking with Julia+Paula Montenegro published it as part of Tuesdays with Dorie. from different online sources I gathered that the batter can be prepared upto 24 hours in advance.. and as +Paula mentions the popovers taste better and less eggy when made with well rested batter.


Apple Popover

Recipe  Adapted from Vintage Kitchen Notes
Prep time: 5 minutes                                                                               Cook time: 40 minutes
Total time: 45-50 minutes                                                                       Yield: 3
Ingredients

  • For the popover batter
    • 1/3 cup milk
    • 1/3 cup all purpose flour
    • 1 large egg
    • 2/3 tbsp butter, at room temperature
    • 2 tsp sugar
    • 1/4 tsp cinnamon
    • 1/8 tsp nutmeg
    • 1/8 tsp salt
  • For the apple
    • 1 delicious red apple, cored, deskinned and cut into small pieces 
    • 1/2 tbsp butter
    • 1 tbsp brown sugar
    • 1/4 tsp cinnamon
    • zest and juice of half a lemon 
    • a handful of raisins (I used oven dried red grapes)
  • melted butter for greasing the popover cups/ramekins/muffin cups
  • Whipped Cream or Ice-cream to serve (I used store bought whipped cream from Cool Whip) 
Cooking Directions
  1. Put the ingredients for the batter into the container of a blender and whirl until smooth. You can whip this by hand too as I always do and let the batter rest in the fridge overnight.
  2. When ready to make the popovers, preheat the oven to 425 degrees F and grease 3 ramekins of 1/2 cup to 3/4 cup capacity.
  3. Melt the butter in a non-stick skillet.
  4. Add the sliced apple, sugar, cinnamon, zest and juice of lemon to it and saute the apple pieces till they become tender.
  5. Switching of the heat, distribute half of the cooked apple into the prepared ramekins. then pouring 1/4 cup of batter into each of them, bake the popovers in the preheated oven for 25 minutes. Do not open the oven door while the popovers are baking. 
  6. Turning the heat down to 350 degrees F, bake for another 15 minutes.
  7. Now that the popovers are ready, top them with some whipped cream and the remaining half of cooked apples and serve. 
Hope you enjoyed the popovers as much as we did...and before i hop over to see what the other have prepared for the Apple-Cinnamon round of the Behind the Curtain Dessert Challenge...here is a pic of the cross-section of the popover...


Now isn't that a drool-worthy rendition of the traditional Popover ! 
So much for today. See you soon. Have a good day !






I shall be sharing this with the following food events...

13.8.13

Classic Cinnamon Rolls

I have had Cinnamon Rolls in my to-do list f-o-r-e-v-e-r and know what i made them last Sunday so that I would be prepared with my post on Wednesday for Bake Along. but life happened and couldn't quite squeeze out the time to write the post. so here it is for you today... the Classic Cinnamon Rolls that I Baked Along with Joyce from Kitchen Flavours, Lena from Frozen Wings and me, Zoe from Bake for Happy Kids.



Initially I had intended to follow the suggested recipe to the T... but half way through I changed my mind and made the few modifications. first of all I replaced 11/2 cups of all-purpose flour with whole wheat flour, added a pinch of ginger powder and an extra tablespoon of butter  to the dough and kneaded it in the bread machine. secondly I used only half of the dough to make the cinnamon rolls. I baked a savory pull apart bread with the second half and that was delicious. more on the other bread tomorrow .. for now let talk about the cinnamon rolls...

well these were delicious. really..GOOD.. my husband couldn't stop praising them and reaching out for the next. neither could I. this recipe is certainly a keeper. will definitely be making them again when family or friends are visiting. it sure to please everyone.. 

Classic Cinnamon Rolls
Recipe Source : Willams Sonama, Baking Book
 ingredients

  • for the dough
    • 1/4 cup (60 ml) warm water
    • 1/2 cup plus 1 tsp granulated sugar
    • 2 1/2 tsp active dry yeast
    • 2 tbsp unsalted butter, at room temperature
    • 2 cups all­-purpose flour
    • 1 1/2 cups whole wheat flour
    • pinch of ginger powder
    • 1/2 tsp sea salt
    • 2 large egg yolks
    • 1 cup (250 ml) warm whole milk
  • for the filling (I reduced the quantities from the original recipe to half )
    • 3/4 cups firmly packed light brown sugar
    • 3 tbsp unsalted butter, melted
    • 1/4 cup light corn syrup
    • 1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
    • 1/4 cup raisins, soaked in warm water for 15 minutes, drained, and squeezed dry
-
  what i did
  • in a bowl, i combined the warm water and 1 tsp granulated sugar. sprinkled it with the yeast and let stand for 2 mins. then i swirled the yeast-solution and let it stand until foamy, about 5 mins. 
  • in another large bowl, i combined the flours, the granulated sugar, the salt and powdered ginger. Poured in the yeast mixture, egg yolks, and warm milk in the flour and tried to knead the dough into a ball. but at this point things were getting difficult so i placed all the ingredients into the bread machine pan, added 1 tbsp butter to it and set the machine on dough-cycle. after about 10 minutes i added another tbsp of butter and let the cycle continue to completion.
  • while the machine ran i mixed the 3/8 cup of the brown sugar with 2 tbsps of melted butter and the corn syrup to a smooth paste and spread the mixture over the bottom of a 9-inch pan. then in another small bowl i mixed the remaining brown sugar and cinnamon and kept it aside.
  • once the dough cycle completed i punched it down, divided it into 2 equal portions, covered one with a plastic cling wrap while i worked on the other half.
  • i rolled the other half into a 9 inch by 13 inch rectangle, brushed it with a tablespoon of melted butter, scattered the rolled dough with raisins, pressing them lightly in. i then sprinkled the cinnamon-sugar mixture on top and staring at one long edge rolled the dough into a cylinder.
  • cutting the cylinder crosswise into 14 rounds, i arranged the dough rounds on the prepared 9-inch pan, covered it with a plastic wrap and let the dough rise until doubled, about 45-60 minutes.
  • meanwhile i preheated the oven to 350 degrees F and once the dough rounds were ready i baked them in the preheated oven for 22 minutes, until they looked golden brown.
  • i then let them cool down completely before serving. (according to the recipe i was suppose to invert the rolls over a wire rack and then pull off the rolls apart. but i didn't bother. it was just us and we happily skipped that step. )

It was fun to bake these along with the others...

check out their cinnamon rolls too and check back tomorrow for the savory pull-apart bread that i baked with the other half of the dough...




8.20.2013. update: in case you are interested, here is what i did with the other half of the dough.

These Rolls are being Yeastspotted.

Sharing these at the following parties...

Monday Food : Made with Love Mondays, Marvelous Mondays @ This Gal CooksMeatless Monday @Veggie Mama's Meatless Monday My Sweet and SavoryJust Another Meatless Monday @ Hey What's for Dinner Mom, Melt in your Mouth Mondays, Mop It Up Monday, Mealtime Monday, Recipe Sharing Monday, Inspire Me Monday, Clever Chicks Blog Hop, Maniac Monday Linky Party

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