Rum Balls

It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas… well, the only Christmas-y thing we have done is make Rum Balls. Christmas day this year will be spent in Mozambique with my dad camping. So we are forgoing the tree, decorations & presents, and instead going exploring and camping. Just like we did when I was a kid. We are going to go snorkelling and eat seafood on the beach until we are so full we have to roll back to our campsite. I’m finally going to learn to scuba dive too.

But there is one tradition in our family that we couldn’t pass up. The making of and gorging on rum balls is a staple part of my families diet all through December. For as long as I can remember rum balls were made in quantities large enough to feed several neighbourhoods. Wrapped in cellophane and spread out to teachers, co-workers, friends and family as gifts, they were our family contribution to Christmas spirit.

So arriving in Johannesburg with a bottle of original Bundy Rum (my sisters Christmas present to my dad) and a bottle of limited edition Dark Oak Bundy Rum (my Christmas present to my dad), the first thing my dad said was “now we can make some rum balls”. And either my sister and I should have communicated better on our choices of gifts not to double up, or we know our dad so well that the only acceptable gift was as much Bundy Rum as I could carry into the country. I am going with the later, as there is nothing worse than living in another country and not having access to your favourite foods or drinks from home. Plus, through mine and my sister’s sensational ability to know just what dad would want, we were now able to make rum balls.

And our family Christmas tradition can live on, even if it is in another country.

Ingredients

Ingredients

Rum Balls

250g Weetbix

1 can of condensed milk

1 cup of cocoa

1 cup of shredded coconut

1 1/2 tablespoons of rum (although this is really flexible, so add what you want to suit your own taste)

extra coconut for rolling.

Method

Crush Weetbix in a mixing bowl. Stir in cocoa and coconut. Add condensed milk and rum. Using your hands combine mixture, then roll into small bite size balls. Roll in extra coconut. Place in fridge to cool. Then eat!!

Rum balls... & the benefits of being the one making them

Rum balls… & the benefits of being the one making them

 

Banana Bread

It is Banana Bread day somewhere in the world.  To celebrate I’ll be baking banana bread later today.  Banana bread is a gorgeous snack, especially served warm with a dollop of mascarpone cream.  This recipe uses normal flour, but I substitute gluten free flours and just have to play around a little with the amounts of flour to liquid quantities to get the consistency right (sorry there is no exact measure as it seems to change every time – mostly because I forget to write down the amount that worked the last time!!)

This recipe is from Taste.com.au

Ingredients

Melted low fat dairy spread to grease

1 3/4 cups self-raising flour

1/4 cup plain flour

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

2/3 cup firmly packed brown sugar

1/2 cup skim milk

2 eggs lightly whisked

50g butter, melted, cooled

2 over ripe medium bananas

Method

1. Preheat oven to 180 C.  Brush an 11 x 21 cm loaf pan with melted dairy spread and line with non-stick baking paper.

2. Sift combined flours and cinnamon into a large bowl.  Stir in sugar and make a well in the centre. Place milk, eggs, melted butter and bananas in a medium bowl, stir until combined.  Add banana mixture to flour mixture and stir until just combined.  Spoon mixture into prepared pan and smooth surface.

3. Bake in preheated oven for 45-50 minutes or until skewer inserted comes out clean.  Remove from oven and set aside in the pan for 5 minutes.  Turn onto wire rack to cool completely.  Cut into slices to serve.

Carrot Cake

After reading February Foodie Holidays on Jereme’s Kitchen’s blog, I realised I have yet again missed cooking one of my favourite cakes on it’s dedicated day.  Oh well, better late than never and it will still taste YUM!!  No more words are needed to describe carrot cake…

Ingredients

3/4 cup canola oil

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 1/2 cups grated carrot (or a little bit more)

1/2 cup chopped walnuts (or a little bit more)

1 1/2 teaspoons gluten free baking powder

3/4 cup sugar

1 cup of gluten free self-raising flour

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

Icing

2 tablespoons reduced fat cream cheese

1/2 teaspoon vanilla

2 teaspoons margarine

3/4 cup pure gluten free icing sugar

Method

1. Place oil, sugar and vanilla into a bowl.  Beat with an electric mixer until well combined.

2. Add eggs and continue to beat until light and creamy

3. Stir through carrot and walnuts.

4. Sift in flour, baking powder and cinnamon and mix well.

5. Pour into a lightly greased 21 cm ring tin.  Bake in a moderate oven for 50-55 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.

6. Stand for 5 minutes before turning onto a wire rack to cool.

Icing

Beat cream cheese, vanilla and margarine together.  Add icing sugar and mix well.  Spread over cake.

Note: I first found this recipe at the Best Recipes Website I’m not a fan of sultanas though, so I’ve taken these out and instead add a bit of extra grated carrot and chopped walnuts.

 

Chocolate Cake

With the rain set in and day I don’t even know how many anymore, of doing the same thing at home, its time to mix things up a little bit today.  Its time to getting baking!!

Gluten Free Chocolate Loaf

(I think this is from an old super food ideas magazine, but I can’t be sure cause my recipe is hand written and I didn’t write where I’d copied it from – it was just in amongst a few others I’d named and dated from this magazine)

180g butter, softened

3/4 cup caster sugar

4 eggs separated

100g 85% cocoa-dark chocolate grated

1/2 cup almond meal

2/3 cup milk

1/4 cup cocoa powder

1 cup gluten-free self -raising flour

Chocolate Frosting

100g butter, softened

1 1/2 cups pure icing sugar, sifted

60g 85% cocoa dark chocolate, melted

1. Preheat oven to 180C.  Line base and sides of 10.5cm x 20.5cm loaf pan with baking paper.

2. Using electric beaters, cream butter and sugar for 5 minutes or until pale and creamy.  Add egg yolks, 1 at a time, beating well after each addition.

3. Using a large metal spoon, fold in grated chocolate, almond meal and milk.  Sift cocoa and flour together over chocolate mixture.  Gently fold to combine.

4. Using electric beater, beat egg whites in a bowl until soft peaks form.  Stir in one-quarter of egg whites into batter.  Gently fold in remaining egg whites.  Spoon into prepared pan.  Bake for 50 to 55 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.  Cool loaf in pan for 10 minutes.  Lift onto a wire rack to cool completely.

5. Making chocolate frosting Using electric beaters, beat butter and half the icing sugar until thick and creamy.  Add chocolate and beat until smooth.  Add remaining icing sugar and stir until well combined.  Spread loaf with frosting.

6. Eat!!

Rebelling and not following the recipe...

Nem eum

I was lucky enough to meet a local girl, Thuy, while travelling in Hue, Vietnam.  She invited me to her aunty & uncles house for a cooking lesson and dinner, my last afternoon in Hue.  It was a fantastic experience to pick up some local culinary skills as well as get an insight into  the family lifestyle of the Vietnamese.

Thuy, her aunty, cousin and I convened in the small kitchen space at the back of the house.  Fresh rice paper squares where piled on a damp cloth and vermicelli noodles tipped into a bowl of water to soak.  Then I was set to work.  Thuy and her cousin washed and prepared vegetables for the salad, while Thuy’s aunty showed me how to prepare each ingredient for the spring rolls, before leaving me to slice, dice and mix the aromatic flavours together.  This recipe for spring rolls came from Hanoi and was a local recipe.  It was where Thuy’s aunty had grown up and it was one of her favourite recipes to cook.  With all of us girls in the kitchen, the cooking lesson dissolved in waves of giggles on more than one occasion, as my questions were lost in translation or as their questions about my lack of a boyfriend or husband became increasingly personal.

Once the preparation was finished, we began assembling spring rolls and cooking them.  Getting the amount of filling right and then folding them correctly took a few tries, but once I’d worked out the tricks to getting the edges folded on them, I was off and rolling.  Once cooked our delicious smelling spring rolls were plated up on a bed of lettuce and placed on the straw floor mat in the living room.  Along with a big pot of rice, salad and a pork and potato dish the girls had cooked up as well.  Sharing a meal on the floor of their home was great fun.  Thuy’s uncle spent the evening trying to jokingly marry me off to his ten year old son and the girls giggled their way through reliving the adventures of my cooking class that afternoon with the rest of the family.

As with most meals shared with friends, there was enough food to feed an army, but they insisted I keep eating.  Not wanting to be rude to their hospitality, I obliged, eating until I couldn’t move.  I’d had a wonderful time with my new friends and was genuinely sad when the evening came to an end.  Photos were taken, hugs given, before hopping on my bicycle and rolling all the way back to my hostel.

Nem eum - Hanoi Spring Rolls

Ingredients:

Vermicelli noodles                             Spices

Pork mince                                           Fish Sauce

Shitaki mushrooms                           Sprouts

Shallots                                                2 Eggs

Half a carrot diced                            Lemon/lime

Rice paper squares                           Sugar

Method:

Soak noodles.  Drain.  Cut into small pieces.  Fry mushrooms and spices then take off the heat.  Stir into noodles.  Stir in pork mince, carrots, sprouts, shallots, eggs, fish sauce, lime juice and teaspoon of sugar.  Place heaped tablespoon of mixture on rice paper and roll.  Fry in pan on medium heat.

Dipping Sauce:

Crush garlic and chilli.  Stir in sugar, lemon juice and fish sauce.  Add water and stir together.

Chigumu

Chigumu – African Cake

During my time at Home of Hope I had many cooking lessons from the house mothers and children at the orphanage.  My favourite out of them all was Chigumu… mostly because I loved saying the word, but also because it was really tasty.  Chigumu is normally cooked in the hot coals of maize cob fire, but can be cooked in an oven.  This is a real village recipe, there are no exact measurements.

Ingredients

8-9 Bananas

Maize flour

Salt (pinch)

Bicarb soda

Little bit of water

Method

Mash bananas.  Add flour a bit at a time.  Add salt and soda stirring/mashing all ingredients together.  Add water and mix to a thick consistency.  Pour mixture into a pot over hot coals.  Cover and put hot coals on top of lid (if in an oven cake does not need to be covered).  Cook until brown.

Enjoy!!

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