Savoury Dill Cheddar Buckwheat Sables … a spicy #baketogether

“As for butter versus margarine, I trust cows more than chemists.”
Joan Gussow

Savoury Dill Cheddar Buckwheat Sables

These cookies surprised me. When I made the dough I thought  I had it’ all wrong. Ambitiously adding ingredients with not enough deep thought,  I wrote them off even before I baked them. But sometimes substitution can be a pleasant surprise. These Savoury Dill Cheddar Buckwheat Sables were a happy ending to one such culinary adventure! I hardly ever bake sables. Please don’t get me wrong. I love the cookies to bits but somewhere in my head I associate them to be loaded with butter. Chocolate sables = guilty pleasure, a pleasure I can ill afford these days as baking and food seems to rule my existence! Got to keep the butter down; not out, but down!

I missed the last  couple of months of #baketogether, Abby Dodges absolutely charming bake up party. The talented Abby inspires a group of avid bakers month after month with a #baketogether recipe that you are encouraged to play around with. Just my cup of tea coffee! I’ve had some wonderful past entries with Double Chocolate Mousse Cookies, Classic Spice Apple Walnut Buttermilk Cake, and Plum Almond Ginger Summer Fruit Cake. This month she called for savoury cookies from her recipe for Spicy Parmesan Sables. Though still short on time, and breathless in life, I couldn’t keep away from them. I LOVE SAVOURY BAKING. Besides, the  ‘not so terrible anymore’  teen is constantly craving for either double chocolate double almond biscotti {recipe on its way}, or ‘something chili’ please!

I decided to experiment because halfway through I ran out of plain flour! I made up the weight with buckwheat, and used fresh dill to flavour the cookies. Dill and cheddar make for good pairing, and I have had a huge patch of dill growing in my garden. After an overnight rest, the cookies were baking soon.

Dill is a beautiful herb, delicate with a wonderful aromatic flavour that comes to life when the leaves are chopped. In India, there is a more robust variety of dill, locally called soya, which is widely used in the winter months in North India. One bite into the warm cookie and I was so relieved. These were so good. Thankfully the dill wasn’t overpowering, and the buckwheat gave the cookie good texture, other than scoring on the whole grain front too! However whole grains like buckwheat are an acquired taste, and unfortunately the ‘not so terrible anymore’  teen didn’t love it to bits. I was a little disheartened and hesitatingly ran it past the ‘now threatening to be quite terrible’ pre-teen. He said, “YUM! Can I have the whole box?“. You win some, you lose some. These are a nice cheese tray cookie and would pair well with mature cheddar and fruit! As Abby says, “Made with butter, cheese, flour and cayenne for a kick, they make for a lovely hors d’oeuvre to serve with wine or cocktails and the possible twists are endless”

Thank you Abby for yet another winning recipe, and also yet another chance to push my boundaries. You are an inspiration!

[print_this]Recipe: Savoury Dill Cheddar Buckwheat Sables

Summary: A savoury cookie that packs big-time flavor with a flaky, melt-in-your-mouth texture. Made with butter, cheese, flour and cayenne for a kick, these cheese crackers make for a lovely hors d’oeuvre to serve with wine or cocktails. Makes 29-30 sables.

Prep Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes {plus chilling time}
Ingredients:

  • 110gm all purpose flour
  • 50gm buckwheat flour {or use all plain flour}
  • 50gm cheddar, grated
  • 1 teaspoon table salt
  • 1 tsp chopped fresh dill
  • 1/4 teaspoon {adjust to taste} red chili pepper {or cayenne pepper}
  • 100gm unsalted butter, cut into cubes, well chilled
  • 2 tablespoons very cold water
  • Sea salt & fresh dill for sprinkling

Method:

  1. To make the dough:
  2. Put the flour, buckwheat flour, cheese, salt and chili powder in a food processor and pulse briefly to combine. Add the butter and pulse until the butter pieces are slightly larger than pea size, about 10 to 12 pulses depending on your machine. Drizzle the water evenly over the flour mixture. Pulse until the dough begins to form moist crumbs that are just beginning to clump together, about 8 or 9 more pulses depending on your machine.
  3. Dump the moist crumbs onto the unfloured counter and gather into a pile. With the heel of you hand, push and gently smear the crumbs away from you until they start to come together in a cohesive dough. Two or three ‘smears’ should do the trick. Using a bench scraper, gather the dough together and turn it about 45 degrees and give it one or two more smears. {see visuals here}
  4. Gather the dough together and shape the dough into a 7 1/4-inch long and 2 1/4 -inch wide rectangle using the bench scraper to make the sides nice and straight. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and refrigerate until very firm, about 3 hours, or up to 2 days.
  5. Position a rack in the center of the oven and heat the oven to 190°c. Line two large baking sheets with parchment. { I used just one cookie sheet}
  6. Using a thin, sharp knife, cut the logs into 1/4-inch slices and arrange about 1 inch apart {they don’t spread much at all} on the prepared sheets. If you like, sprinkle the crackers with a little sea salt and fresh dill before baking.
  7. Bake, one sheet at a time, until nutty brown around the edges, 16 to 18 minutes.  Serve slightly warm or room temperature. {If they aren’t crisp as you like, you can bake them at a lower temperature for 10-15 minutes longer. Keep an eye so they don’t get burnt}.
  8. Note: The dough can be shaped and frozen for up to a month and then thawed for about an hour on the counter or in the refrigerator overnight. Likewise, tuck the baked and cooled sables in a heavy duty zip top bag and stash them in the freezer. Thaw at room temperature and warm them for a few minutes at 160°C to refresh the flavors.

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No-bake Strawberry Chocolate Cheesecake … Happy International Womens Day!

“The history of all times, and of today especially, teaches that … women will be forgotten if they forget to think about themselves.”
Louise Otto

Another day passed, more guests and I had a delicious layered almond sponge in mind. This time the power failed me about halfway through my baking, the cake sank and with it my heart. I picked up the pieces in a hurry and did a quick recalculation! For times like these, a simple No-bake Strawberry Chocolate Cheesecake turned out to be just the thing!My sis and her family are here from Houston, adding to the merriment of having friends over from Down Under at the same time too. The only problem … the teen has her Grade 10 state exams throughout the month and life is a fine balancing act. In the middle of all this, power cuts don’t help!As a cake baked in the oven, I had visions of a light as feather almond sponge with a strawberry and cream filling. Sadly, the light as a feather picture didn’t survive. Ten minutes of a nicely rising cake in a beautiful hot oven, we had a power cut! Misery was my middle name. This is a sign that summer is almost here, the weather warming up alarmingly, which simply means load shedding galore!!By the time electricity was back, I was in no mood to take another chance on the cake, so my plans changed rapidly. A few almonds and digestives later, I had a cheesecake base in the oven … 15 minutes was all I needed! The rest was no bake stuff; just needed time to set! Some hung yogurt in the fridge awaiting its fate in a dip landed up in my cheesecake as did the strawberries … a happily delicious end!I used milk chocolate this time, from a smooth Cadbury baking block the hub got from HKG. A few days ago, he called me from HKG at some absurd hour asking if I needed baking chocolate he saw on the aisle in some shop. Needed? Did he expect me to say anything but yes? My choice for cheesecakes and tarts in chocolate terms is always the dark variety, but this time my nieces were here, and I knew they would enjoy a sweeter bite. They did…… and we did too! Thankfully the cheesecake was just about set by the night {about 6 hours later}, yet it was perfect the next day. I would recommend a slow overnight setting in the fridge. The strawberry sauce which I used in these Berry & Buttermilk Puddings can be made ahead and stored in the fridge for a few days.On this sweet and rather pink note, happy International Womens Day you wonderful women! Make sure you spoil yourselves today!!

 [print_this]Recipe: No-bake Strawberry Chocolate Cheesecake

Summary:  A nice make ahead dessert with strawberries and chocolate, light and full of flavour.

Prep Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes
Ingredients:

  • Biscuit Base
  • 200gm digestive cookies
  • 50gm whole almonds
  • 80gm unsalted butter, melted
  • Chocolate layer
  • 200gm milk chocolate, chopped fine
  • 50gm dark chocolate, chopped fine
  • 200ml low fat cream
  • 40gm unsalted butter
  • Strawberry Layer
  • 200gm hung yogurt {thick}
  • 200ml low fat cream, chilled
  • 1/2 cup strawberry sauce {1/2 recipe from here}
  • 1tbsp gelatin
  • 1/4 cup cold milk
  • Fresh strawberries to garnish

Method:

  1. Biscuit Base
  2. Run the biscuits and whole almonds in a processor until fine crumbs form.
  3. Mix in the melted butter and push this mixture into the base and up the sides of a 8″ round spring form tin.
  4. Chill in freezer while the oven preheats.
  5. Preheat the oven to 180C.
  6. Bake the base for 10-15 minutes until light golden brown.
  7. Cool completely.
  8. Chocolate layer
  9. Place both chocolates in a large mixing bowl.
  10. Gently heat the cream to a simmer, add the butter and pour over the chocolate, mixing until melted and smooth.
  11. Pour into the cooled baked shell, and refrigerate for 30-45 minutes, until lightly set. In the meantime, make the strawberry layer.
  12. Strawberry layer
  13. Sprinkle the gelatin over 1/4 cup cold milk, and place over a bowl of hot water. Stir until dissolved.
  14. Whip the hung yogurt with strawberry sauce until smooth. Then blend in the gelatin mixture.
  15. Whip the cream until medium stiff peaks, and fold through the strawberry cream. {Adjust sugar if required}.
  16. Assemble:
  17. Top the chocolate layer with this strawberry cream, and leave to set for 6-8 hours, preferably overnight. Loosen the sides with a butter knife, slice and serve with fresh strawberries.
  18. Note: You might need to increase the gelatin by 1/2 tbsp if the weather is warm.

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Springform pans and other kitchen wares can usually be found at a discount online.

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Dark Chocolate & Orange Panna Cotta

“Happiness. Simple as a glass of chocolate or tortuous as the heart. Bitter. Sweet. Alive.”
Joanne Harris, Chocolat

Never. Without. Chocolate. There’s something about chocolate … deep, sensuous, satisfying, comforting, seductive, addictive. I was on twitter after ages yesterday and came across a random tweet with someone despairing the lack of chocolate at home! A rather unsettling tweet that was! I had a bar of absolutely delicious bitter chocolate from Moscow that a friend got for me. Mmmm … more chocolate; life was becoming sweeter by the minute!Whats not to love about this fabulous combination, one that is high on my list of favourites and one that I enjoy playing with in my kitchen in the ‘orange’ months which sadly are restricted to the winter ones here. The conversation reminded me of the Dark Chocolate Mousse & Orange Panna Cotta that I made in December but never got down to posting!Couldn’t be a better time to bring this dessert to see light of day and share this quintessentially beautiful pairing … Chocolate & Orange = YUM!!

[print_this]Recipe: Dark Chocolate & Orange Panna Cotta

Summary: Indulgent and ever so pleasing, a dark chocolate orange dessert offers a match made in heaven. Set in glass goblets to enjoy its visual appeal!

Prep Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes {plus setting time}
Ingredients:

  • Dark Chocolate Orange Cream
  • 300ml low fat cream
  • 125gm dark chocolate, chopped {I used 54% couverture}
  • Zest of 1 orange
  • Orange Marmalade Panna Cotta
  • 300ml low fat cream
  • 125 ml whole milk
  • 2 tsp gelatin
  • 2 tbsp bitter orange marmalade
  • 1/2 cup sugar {use slightly less first, then adjust if required since the marmalade will also add to the sweetness}

Method:

  1. Dark Chocolate Orange Cream
  2. Place the chocolate in a large bowl.
  3. Bring the cream to a simmering boil in a small pan and pour over the chocolate. Add the zest of 1 orange and stir until the chocolate has melted and is satiny smooth.
  4. Place 6 wine glasses at a slant in a loaf pan, and pour the chocolate mixture into them. Leave these to set in the fridge for 2-3 hours till they hold shape.
  5. Orange Marmalade Panna Cotta
  6. Sprinkle the gelatin over 25ml or about 1/4 cup of milk and place the bowl over hot water for gelatin to melt.
  7. Bring the cream, sugar & remaining milk to a simmering boil over low heat, simmer for 5 minutes.
  8. Take cream mixture off heat, whisk in the gelatin and bitter orange marmalade. Whisk well so that the gelatin is mixed uniformly. Adjust sugar if required. Cool to room temperature and then pour over the set dark chocolate orange mousse.
  9. Chill until set for at least 4 hours, or overnight.

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White & Dark Chocolate Mousse Dessert with Strawberries … HAPPY 2012!!

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.”
Charles Dickens

Another year draws to a close, merging easily from 2011 into a spanking new 2012. A time-line crossed with celebrations, yet a day like any other. For me, a fulfilling year, one with challenges galore {read pre-teen and teen challenges}, minutes disappearing into days, always a lack of time, yet always time for good food! Raising a toast to a wonderful 2012 for all of you … with these delectable White & Dark Chocolate Desserts with Strawberries.  These are on par with the chocolate covered strawberries that everyone loves to eat.I look back at my blog with satisfaction, with loads of retrospective thoughts, with knowledge that I could have done better, and with happiness at some stuff well done. I loved 2011 for macarons, for fruit like strawberries, for chocolate, for cakes, for bread, for #applelove … for friends galore, and for some small recognition in the local media.A fulfilling journey in every way, a happy learning curve as always but in the end a humbling feeling to hear from my readers. I am honoured to share a few of the words that came into my inbox from day to day this year, a peep at a few … This is what makes PAB so worthwhile for me. You have inspired me through the years.Some days I feel pressurised and suddenly want a blog break, and then ‘that mail’ comes as sunshine to my world, bringing a huge smile on my face. These are words that spur me on, the ‘fuel‘ for my blog, my inspiration …This post is for you dear readers, and for you, all you wonderful food bloggers, who keep my virtual world so inspired, so colourful and sinfully delicious. For the new year, I wish you all the happiness and peace in the world, good healthy food, loads of sunshine … and a goblet of sweetness, a dash of colour! THANK YOU from the bottom of my heart!No resolutions for me. This year I have tried to be more patient {have achieved it to quite an extent}, I have managed to train and tame a playful pup yet had less luck with taming the terrible teens, have enjoyed fruit of each season, have discovered a new found love for the humble aubergine, am still stuck on auto on the camera, have had less time on twitter … and am now ready for the new year!Clichéd as it may sound, hope the year brings more promise, more time as we have a full 365 days to begin with, better time management, yummy recipes and real time tête-à-têtes with my sweet blog pals. I traveled east quite a bit in 2011 {did Hong Kong a couple of times, Sydney, Tokyo}, and wish I can head to Nantes this year … maybe!Here’s wishing for another sweet year of good food, colour, inspiration, more savoury fare, more food for thought and maybe for the soul too! Hoping I have more time to bloghop and tweet … let the good times roll into the next year!Time for a little break, time to bake a cake as the ‘not so terrible anymore teen‘ turns 16 in a couple of days { the New Year is always busy here with her birthday on the 2nd of Jan}, a chocolate and strawberry cake for her is to be ‘produced’ on demand … and then I’ll be back!

Until then, I leave you with sweet wishes for a wonderful 2012! Usher in the year with a nice classy dessert, maybe like this, which is simple, delicious, eggless and can be made ahead. The white chocolate pairs beautifully with the dark, and the strawberries compliment the dessert beautifully. Serve it in fun individual wine glasses or goblets and ENJOY!!

[print_this]Recipe: White & Dark Chocolate Dessert with Strawberries

Summary: A classy combination of white and dark chocolate topped with a strawberry puree … easy and dramatic, leaves you asking for more! {Adapted from Divine Chocolate Desserts by Jose Marechal}

Prep Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes
Ingredients:

  • White Chocolate Mousse
  • 2tsps gelatin
  • 300ml low fat cream {100ml room temperature, 200ml chilled}
  • 200gm white chocolate, broken into pieces
  • 1/2 vanilla bean, scraped
  • Dark Chocolate Mousse
  • 200ml low fat cream
  • 150gm dark chocolate, broken into pieces {55%+ couverture}
  • Strawberry Puree
  • 300gm strawberries, chopped fine
  • 2-3tbsp powdered sugar {increase/decrease as per tartness of strawberries}
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 1tbsp water

Method:

  1. White Chocolate Mousse
  2. Soften the gelatin in 1/4 cup water.
  3. Bring 100ml cream to a simmering boil. Remove, stir in the gelatin mixture util dissolved and then pour over the white chocolate. Stir until the chocolate has melted. Cool to room temperature.
  4. Whip the remaining cream to soft medium peaks, and gently fold into the white chocolate mixture.
  5. Fill 1/2 of this in 6-8 serving glasses {less than half full} and leave to set in the fridge for an hour. Leave the remaining white chocolate mousse out at room temperature.
  6. Meanwhile, make the Dark Chocolate Mousse.
  7. Place the cream and dark chocolate in a heavy bottom pan and simmer until the chocolate has melted. Take off heat and whisk until smooth. Cool.
  8. Distribute between dessert glasses and chill for 20-30 minutes, then top with the remaining white chocolate mousse.
  9. Chill in the fridge for 1 hour, or until when required.
  10. Make the Strawberry Puree.
  11. Lightly crush the chopped strawberries with the powdered sugar with a fork until the strawberries release their juices. Mix in the rest of the ingredients and reserve in a bowl in the fridge. Distribute over the glasses before serving.

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#Welcome2012 Blog Hop. This virtual party is being hosted at Lite Bite.

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Dark Chocolate Caramel Oat & Almond Shortbread

“Children ask better questions than adults. “May I have a cookie?” “Why is the sky blue?” and “What does a cow say?” are far more likely to elicit a cheerful response than “Where’s your manuscript?Why haven’t you called?” and “Who’s your lawyer?“”
Fran Lebowitz

“Can I have another squaaaaaaare pleeeeeeease?” You know the cookies are good if that’s what you hear literally reverberating through the house; even better if it’s the call from the dieting diva square after square! These were indeed GOOD Dark Chocolate Caramel Oat & Almond Shortbread cookies!

There’s something about December, and something about cookies that make me want to bake; bake all the time actually even though power cuts continue to play spoilsport. Baking around silly powerless situations means more cookies since there are fewer chances of them ‘deflating‘ {unlike cakes} when the lights go off!

The wookies were fabulous for fast track ‘faux baking‘. This shortbread is too, non traditional as it may be. You can’t go wrong with shortbread, caramel and dark chocolate, can you? A combination inspired from many shortbread posts, especially this Chocolate Caramel Slice from Nash @ Plateful, and a ‘Month of shortbread baking‘ from Julia‘Mélanger :: to mix’.

This is the season of holiday baking, and only good could come out of such delicious inspiration. GOOD DELICIOUS COOKIES! Winter is the only indulgent time of the year here when shortbread feels ‘guilt-less; you need the butter to keep you warm after all. Warm weather the rest of the year makes the crumb not keep together nice and crisp! For the record, this isn’t true shortbread; the traditional version doesn’t venture away from  a 8:4:2 classic combination of flour, butter and sugar… and a dash of salt perhaps.

I had on hand  hungry kids, butter and a ‘want to bake’ feeling; also a loose bottomed square tin that I had recently bought and was impatient to use. That resulted in … Oats + Almonds + Flour + Butter + Brown Sugar = Crisp shortbread base.

…  to which was added some salted butter caramel {adapted from Jamies sweet blog}, the top smothered in deep, luscious, dark melted chocolate; then briefly left to set! Simple as can be. Next with my Ergo chef knife, the slab was cut into squares {you can do bars/rectangles…whatever grabs your fancy}. YUM! ENJOY!

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Bittersweet Chocolate Orange Strawberry Tart … rich & delicious

“Chemically speaking, chocolate really is the world’s perfect food.”
Michael Levine

Sublime, sweet, seductive … words that can win over the most of us. Bittersweet chocolate paired with sweet scents of orange zest, topped with strawberries in a Digestive biscuit crust – eggless too. I think this might well be a dessert than can please one and all, chocolate lovers that is and tempt the non-lovers too! A Rich Bittersweet Chocolate Orange Strawberry Tart – festive and indulgent for the holiday season!! I made this special tart for Macy’s mBlog Recipe Showcase for which I was invited to share a favourite holiday recipe, with a story alongside. I have an old ‘Digestive biscuit connect’ which I shall share in a bit, though too late for the showcase. Life got the better of me, it’s been busier than usual, and I missed the deadline. Just back from a short ‘happy’ vacation to Tokyo, courtesy Mr PAB who was going there on work and gladly took me along! ’twas like a dream … a bit of which I shall attempt to share soon. In the meantime, this tart is served up here for you dear readers!! It was DELICIOUS and indulgent good! Digestive biscuis have been on my list of favourite biscuits forever, and my first choice always for biscuit bases for tarts and cheesecakes.There was a time, many moons ago, when working with an airline meant regular trips to London. That in turn meant  bags full of delicious goodies including Digestives and Chocolate Digestives. The regular ones were my Mums favourite, though at the time I was quite partial to Walkers Shortbread too. Flight crew who flew overhead New Delhi from London to HKG would often radio in to chat while we manned station ops in the wee hours of the night, and would ask for ‘biscuit wishlists’ as they would stopover in Delhi on the way back. One particular flight crew, who I nicknamed Capt HobNob, made sure he always left a big parcel of HobNobs for me! Those were delicious days, post BOAC ones!!A few years later, shortbread ‘butter alarms‘, carbon footprints and locavore choices came along; an inherent consciousness crept in! Age does that to you I guess! I got ‘food educated‘ and sadly learnt that shortbread was delicious but oh-so-butter laden. My first choice then on were digestive biscuit. IMHO, they make me the perfect pie/tart crust as I don’t have the time to make graham crackers from scratch! I have used Digestives in Chocolate Quark Mousse Tartlets, Strawberry Chocolate Yogurt Mousse, No Bake Strawberry Quark Cheesecake, Apple Brown Sugar Meringue PiesNo Bake Upside Down Mango Quark Cheese Pie What can I say about this beautiful tart … it was just too good to be true {if I may say so myself}. I have kept it eggless as a lot of local readers, being vegetarian, ask me for eggless desserts and bakes. Keeping them in mind, with the holiday season here, time for entertaining, guests, food & fun, I put this tart together. I also kept in mind easily available and mostly ‘there in the pantry ingredients!I love the pairing of chocolate, orange and strawberry. Use a deep, rich, good quality chocolate here. Of course I was rather unsure when I cut it as I didn’t know if it would set well. Luckily for me, the proportions were good and the balance of the filling and tart shell just right. The taste? Délicieux!!

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This recipe is on its way to IndiBloggers food contest …

As I go I wanted to share a little something; two places where PAB has recently been featured. One was in the November issue of Harper’s Bazaar India {was thrilled to see lovely Meeta, Pamela and Mallika there too}, the article on food bloggers called “The Web Culinaries“,and the other a press feature at Lx World, Cakes to Bake‘.
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