The Great British Bake-Off Episode 5!

I’m not overly keen on pies (and I’m especially not keen on pork pies!) I have to admit, so Iwasn’t SUPER excited about the pie episode of the bake-off. I did perk up a bit when I saw a lime-green grasshopper pie though!

This week, Holly did amazing, the brunette dippy one made some silly errors and the blond gravelly voiced grandma went on about how normal she is and how she does family cooking, none of this fancy schmancy cooking.

So pretty much exactly like every other week!

Oh, and Jason can’t boil an egg. Am I alone in thinking that they shouldn’t be on the bake-off if they can’t boil a bloody egg?!

Onto sweet pies! Things got very hot in the kitchen and some of the bakers had a lot of trouble prising their pastry from the pie tins. Mary-Ann did a cool standing up rhubarb thingy and Rob had trouble with his timings yet again!

In the end, Mary-Ann was a deserved star baker and Jason and Rob went home (“It’s a GUTTER!” – bless Sue!).

Next week – an all lady quarter final………. YAY!

What did you think of Jason and Rob going home? Who do you think will win? I still think only a snowballs chance in hell anyone but Holly is going to win, but we’ll see!

If you’d like to try your hand at making your own pies, take a look at all the recipes from last nights bake-off here!


Focaccia bread recipe from The Great British Bake Off

Yes, this is it! That troublesome focaccia from The Great British Bake Off that caused so many problems for some of the bakers. I’m happy to report, with slightly more than a smidgen of smugness, that my focaccia turned out perfectly! However I definitely had an edge thanks to having watched the contestants struggling with it first – I followed Paul’s recipe to a T and made sure to add ALL of the water!

Here’s what you need to make the bread – good news – its probably all stuff you already have in your cupboard/garden! Just a note on the quantities – I halved Paul’s original recipe as it made two loaves – the resulting focaccia was exactly perfect for two people for dinner. If you want to feed more

  • 250g strong white flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 sachet dried easy blend yeast
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 200ml cold water
  • olive oil, for drizzling
  • fine sea salt
  • 2 tablespoons chopped rosemary (about one sprig – if you don’t have a rosemary plant you can buy it in the supermarket)

First, measure out the flour, olive oil, salt and yeast into a large bowl. Put the yeast and salt on opposite sides of the bowl as the salt will kill the yeast if it gets a chance.

Now, add 150ml of the water, leaving roughly 50ml to be added. Stir the mix into a dough with a wooden spoon. Gradually add the remaining water.

Important – at this point, all your bread making instincts will be telling you that the dough is too watery. But FIGHT the urge to add more flour (like that poor bloke on the bake off!).

Coat your hands with olive oil and start kneading the dough in the bowl for around 5 minutes. It will be annoyingly sticky, but the focaccia will taste amazing. PERSEVERE! Be prepared to add more olive oil and wash your hands often!

After kneading it in the bowl for 5 minutes, I turned it out onto an oiled chopping board and kneaded for another 5 or so minutes. Suffice to say there are no pictures of this because my hands were both completely covered in white goo.

I have to say, it was a very strange experience compared with the type of breads that I more typically make, and I can completely see why the bake-off contestants went awry. You have to just accept that the dough will completely stick to your hands and get on with it the best you can.

Once you think you’ve kneaded it enough, put the dough into an oiled bowl to prove. The first proving should be for around an hour, or until its doubled in size. I couldn’t detect a massive size difference in my dough post-proving and thought that the recipe had gone disastrously wrong at this stage. But I carried on regardless, and after about an hour I transferred the dough into a rectangular tin lined with parchment paper. Push the dough to the corners of the tin, and push your fingers into the dough to give it the dimpled focaccia appearance.

Leave to prove in its tin for another hour, covered in a tea towel. Near the end of the second proving time, preheat your oven to gas mark 7. Just before you’re ready to pop it in the oven, sprinkle the focaccia generously with sea salt (I use Saxa), chopped rosemary and a couple of tablespoons of olive oil.

Once its out of the oven, I garnished with more fresh rosemary.

This focaccia bread knocked my socks off when, after the seeming failure of it to rise or behave, it produced amazing bread which Lee declared the best ever! Hurrah!

Look – my focaccia has the dimpled air holes that Paul said was the trademark of successful focaccia! YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!!!!

I think we can all agree that the lesson here is never question Paul Hollywood! (And never question Mary Berry going without saying!).

Yum – make this soon – its amazing! What’s your favourite kind of bread? Focaccia is definitely up there for me – I love the rosemary/salt/olive oil combo!


Everything you ever wanted to know about cupcakes (and more!)

Close-up of cupcake with pink frosting and spr...

Image via Wikipedia

Ah cupcakes. They’ve been pretty much on top of the world for about 20 years now, fueling the opening of more cupcake bakeries, recipe books and specialist equipment than you can shake a stick at! They’re entirely different to their less popular English cousin the fairy cake. Fairy cakes are dainty and delicate and feminine whereas cupcakes are (often) pretty massive by comparison!

There are two theories about how the cupcake got their name, the first one is that they were baked in teacups back in the 1800s (which you’ll remember if you’ve been watching the Great British Bake-Off this year). The second theory is that the recipe to make cupcakes uses a cup of flour, a cup of sugar and so on and that this measurement gave the cakes their name!

It’s thought that the small size of cupcakes made them perfect for cooking over the hearth (before modern ovens) since larger cakes were a lot trickier to cook through in the heart since they would burn on the outside before being cooked on the outside.

Cupcakes started to be made on a large scale in the last century when American company Hostess started mass producing them. Hostess also make twinkies – which I personally think taste terrible! If you’re curious about trying twinkies, hersheys chocolate or other American goodies, check out Cybercandy – they have shops in London, Birmingham and Brighton and you can buy online too and the delivery isn’t too expensive.

True story – in my first year at uni I ate my way through a case (36 bars!) of these. Since everyone in the UK thinks that Hersheys chocolate tastes like sick, I didn’t even have to share! It was great!

In this country (and certainly for me!) fairy cakes rather than cupcakes are what I associate strongly with childhood and birthday parties. It was probably during the 90s (and Sex and the City helped!) when cupcakes started to become very trendy. Although I do love cupcakes, the amount of frosting on ones that you get from bakeries and shops can sometimes be far too much (even for me!) and fairy cakes are definitely much better in that way. But I also love all the creative and amazing flavour combinations that you can try with cupcakes, such as my recent chocolate chip cookie dough cupcakes, and the tiramisu cupcakes that I made for my birthday barbeque this year that were very popular!

Which do you prefer, cupcakes or fairy cakes – or neither? Let me know below!

Related articles


Brandy Snaps and The Great British Bake Off (via Sid’s Food Fascination)

Check out Sid’s easy-peasy brandy snaps tutorial and hilarious take on the bake-off last night!

Brandy Snaps and The Great British Bake Off Last night, the contestants on The Great British Bake Off, or GBBO for short,  were once again toiling over some fiendish recipe test. If you're not familiar with the programme, then each week a blind test is set by the Hitler and Stalin of the baking world, Paul Hollywood and Mary Berry. As you would imagine of a task forged in the malevolent minds of Berry and Hollywood, its wicked nature and inhuman time limits render any attempts almost point … Read More

via Sid's Food Fascination


The Great British Bake Off Episode 4!

Warning – biscuits spoilers ahead (Emma!)!

Oooh lovely, biscuits! Or biscuit-geddon as Mel and Sue put it but I don’t personally believe that biscuits could ever be associated with anything bad!

Most of the biscuits looked amazing – I’d especially liked to have been there to try the marzipan biscuits – that sounds like a delicious and unusual combination!

The macaroons especially looked really good and it made me want to have a go at making them myself. Holly from the show recently posted this step by step tutorial on how to make them.

I’m quite glad that Ben went home this week – he seemed a bit overly cocky and hostile to feedback, although I do think other people have done far worse in previous weeks and stuck around!

If you’re feeling inspired by all the biscuit baking going on, check out my recipe for oatmeal chocolate chunk cookies – they’re extremely easy to make at home – and they’re SO DELICIOUS!

You can also see more of the biscuit recipes that the contenstants made during this episode here.

Getting nearer to the end of the bake off now! What do you guys think – who’s your favourite so far? Do you think Holly will ever make a misstep? Who do you think will win?


The Great British Bake Off episode 2

The Great British Bake Off Scone Palace Scotland

Image by Tour Scotland Photographs via Flickr

What did you think of The Great British Bake Off last night? I really enjoyed it but it wasn’t my favourite as I’m not really pastry’s number one fan (thats not to say I wouldn’t eat a slice of homemade tarte au citron if it were offered but its just not my favourite thing). I was quite surprised that ‘the handsome one’ stayed in despite his pastry disaster, but at the same time I’m sure cooking under those conditions is incredibly stressful and even the best of us would probably mess up our most tried and tested recipe!

I am very excited about next weeks episode though – I love bread! Especially foccacia bread – in fact I’ve been meaning to make some for a while, so I think I’ll make some using the same recipe the contestants use and see how it turns out.

Fun bake off fact – Mary Berry is 76 years old – I hope I look that good in 50 years time!

Some Bake-off links for you!

The recipes from the series so far! They also have some great videos on how to ice cupcakes too!

The Great British Bake-off recipe book (which I’m hearing great things about) – is just £10 on amazon.

Maison cupcake did a great post on the contestants for this year so now you can follow them on twitter and read their blogs!

Holly’s blog Recipes from a normal mum

Edd’s (last years winner) blog The Boy who Bakes. He also has a cookbook coming out in a couple of weeks

Ruth’s (last years runner up) blog The Pink Whisk - I’ve been reading this for a while – its a great blog


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