Gone but not forgotten
Just a quick note to say that I've had a lovely break from blogging, but am planning on blogging again before Christmas. Lots of new recipes on the way!
How to Turn Failed Tart into Cookies
I heard once that you can't consider yourself a proper baker until you've failed. As so much of my baking is experimental, failures happen more often then I would like. Most of the time everything is ok, still edible - just needed a dash more of this and a bit less of that - I'll know for next time, and always tweak recipes before I post them.
However, sometime things go bad, they just fail - no way to recover and they are not enjoyable to eat. This was the case when I found myself with a large chocolate mousse tart (that I had made so many times before without fail!) The eggs weren't large enough and the chocolate had a different composition to what I usually use. The result was a very dense (solid) chocolate tart. A tiny slice was eaten, and was far too heavy. I have had failures before, and discreetly crushed the pie up in a bowl added a bit of this and that and voila - cookies!
I thought as I may not be the only one with failed pies, and other baking; It might be nice to show how to turn failed, or mediocre baking into fabulous cookies!
Now as the size and texture of the failed baking will vary you will need to use a bit of interpretation with the quantities below
Ingredients
1 x Failed Baking, crushed/broken up/blended
~100g Butter, melted (depends on how much butter is in the failed baking)
~1C Raw Sugar (depending how sweet failed baking is)
~2x Eggs (more of less depending on quantity of failed baking)
~2x Eggs (more of less depending on quantity of failed baking)
~3C Oats (more of less depending on quantity and consistency of failed baking)
~1C Flour (essential for failed baking without much flour, chocolate tart etc)
Optional
Dried fruit
Nuts
Seeds
Coconut
Chocolate
Citrus Zest
Cinnamon - other spices
Cream butter and sugar, then add eggs - add to failed baking. Then add the oats and flour, one at a time, you want to keep an eye on the consistency and texture of the mix; You want to end up with a texture that will clump together.
Once mix forms clumps add optional ingredients.
Shape into balls and place on a tray.
Bake for ~20min at 180C
Enjoy with a glint in your eye in the knowledge that you have made something lovely out of something not so lovely!

Labels:
Sweet
Easter Bunny Pie
It was a very lovely weekend, doing just what was needed and nothing more. The weather was quite mild for Australia, beautifully Autumn with browned leaves being blown about; waking up to rain pouring outside the bedroom window. I look forward to Easter for many reasons, but one of the most delicious is Easter Bunny pie...
Labels:
Easter,
Photography,
Savoury
Baked Banana Tart
The freezer seems to always have ripe banana's in these days. Just between you and I - I'm beginning to think someone in the house buys them just so they'll get too ripe to eat and I'll bake them into something! I usually make a loaf of healthy banana bread, no sugar, eggs, white flour or butter. When I pulled out all of the banana's from the freezer on Sunday, it was clear there were simply too many for banana bread.
I remembered a recipe I'd seen for baked banana pie, so went through my recipe collection and found it. This pie was a very nice way to use up bananas, the original recipe calls for you to slice banana's and lay them on the pie base before pouring the mix over, as frozen ripe bananas don't slice well I mashed them and added them to the mix.
Ingredients
1 x Pie Shell, pre-baked
Dark Chocolate
100g Coconut, shredded and toasted
60g Raw Sugar
50g Butter, melted
40g Flour
4 x Eggs
200ml Milk
3 x Bananas, mashed
Melt enough chocolate to brush over pie base.
Mix coconut, sugar, butter, flour, eggs, milk and bananas.
Pour banana filling in pie shell.
Bake at 160C for 55min.
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