Apricot, Nectarine and Almond Pain Perdu

stale bread and croissants get the “ooh-la-la” treatment

This recipe has the double smarts. First to use up left over bread, croissants and wrinkly fruit and second to create a tart without the bother of making pastry. For when you butter the bread and press it outwards in and up the tin it creates a delicious crisp crust. Finally it gets zazzed up by a large slosh of Amaretto .”Voila” – something out of nothing magic.

Ingredients & Gizmos

The quantities are “approximate” – leftovers are. Here is what we had and what worked in a 23cm spring cake form. Allow for tidbits for the helper.

  • Softened butter – I probably used a generous 100g
  • Half a stale baguette, 3 croissants, 1 pain aux raisins
  •  2 eggs
  • 500- 750ml creme legere plus some Greek yogurt (I might not use the yoghurt again as a tad too acidic and prone to curdling) or milk
  • 3 tbsp sugar
  • Quite a lot of apricots and nectarines just past their “eat fresh” days
  • Generous slug of Amaretto (optional – almond essence would also work)
  • sugar for dusting
  • Chopped almonds

 How To

  • Break the bread and croissant into chunks and butter pieces individually
  • Place each piece butter side down in the tin, smearing the butter around the tin as you go so as to create a lined tin. Pack the pieces in quite tightly. Now fill with a second layer so the tin is roughly 2/3 full
  • Annoint the bread ensemble with the Amaretto as if making a sherry trifle
  • In a bowl loosely mix the eggs together with the cream or milk and sugar. Pour 2/3 of the custard mixture over the bread and allow it to soak it up.
  • Halve the apricots and nectarines and build up a circle starting with the outer circle of apricot pieces on top of the bread. Make a second and central circle until covered.
  • Pour over the remaining custard mixture
  • Bake at 180C for 35-45 minutes until the fruit is softly baked and the crust is golden
  • Sprinkle a little sugar over when warm and the chopped almonds

Serve warm with creme fraiche, a dreamy garden and a best mate.

Two out of One: Couscous & Yellow Split Pea Stuffed Tomatoes and Couscous and Yellow Pea “Falafel”

Splendid, fat, juicy and sweet – served on a summer evening with a green salad only a dollop of thick creamy Turkish yoghurt is needed.

First we make Veggie Stuffed Tomatoes and here I used couscous so no need to pre-cook and yellow split peas – which I did pre-cook. As I had stopped off at the Turkish store on the way to Caroline’s “petite cuisine” things took a  Turkish turn… some sumac, mint and allspice went in the mix.

As the mix was made with couscous, or perhaps as I was over enthusiastic there was quite a lot of stuffing left over and so to…

Couscous and Yellow Pea Falafel

 

Delicious little fried or baked patties ..

Here we added lots of extra things to give flavour to the  couscous and yellow peas . So for this they are great for little bits and pieces lurking around the fridge awaiting a recipe home.  We found chopped black olives, garlic, lots of parsley, more herbs some salt and pepper and bound the lot together with an egg.  If the mixture is too crumbly then more egg and more water may be needed.  It should stick together when you hold it in a clenched fist. 

We grilled some and we fried some – with extra spring onions and little tomatoes – for a great light lunch.  Make them as small balls or as flattened mini burgers and serve with a green salad or inside a wrap with a yoghurt or tahini sauce or just  box them up and take to work/ school as a healthy snack. 

 

Raspberry & Redcurrant Streusel Bars

Favourite things …think shortbread , jam and streusel, able to be wrapped up as brown paper packages ..how could these not be stupendously great bakes? And they are.  Ive long been thinking how to make a crumble bar but crumble? too crumbly. The answer is streusel.

These are the way to use up left over jam – fillings are endless.  A few improvs and ideas: Apple chunks with salted caramel sauce, mincemeat (when mince pies become too much) , apricot and white chocolate, prune, plum and dark chocolate, marmalade and quince and my favourite apple chunks with blackberry jam.

These are pretty simple to make because the base is just pressed into the tin and streusel is well…lumpy crumble 😉

Ingredients for 1 x 13 x 9 inch baking tin (the aluminium one from IKEA)

Base

  • 130g butter
  • 80g sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 125g wholemeal flour
  • 250g white flour

Filling

  • 2 jars of leftover jam; or
  • 1 jar of jam and 1 pack of fresh or frozen fruit

Streusel

  • 80g oats
  • 130g light brown sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 cup (75g) white flour
  • 120g very cold and cubed butter (I freeze it then cube it)

Drizzle

for showing off – totally unecessary

The juice and a little zest (the rest add to the jam) of 1 lemon and enough icing sugar until the glaze fribbles off a spoon.  I didnt have an icing bag to hand so I used a plastic bag and snipped the corner off and froze the rest for another batch.

How To:

  • Preheat the oven to 160C. Line the bottom and sides of the baking tin with baking paper
  • Make the base: Stir the melted butter, sugar, vanilla,  together in a medium bowl. Add the flour and stir until everything is combined. Press the mixture evenly into the prepared baking pan. Prick with a fork which will prevent the base “bubbling”
  • Bake for 15 minutes – do not let the base brown.
  • Remove the crust from the oven, and turn the oven up to 180C
  • Spread the jam/ fruit over the warm base  (make sure the choice is not too watery)
  • Make the streusel as the base is baking:  Place the oats, brown sugar, cinnamon, and flour together in a medium bowl. Cut in the chilled butter with a knife.  I blend the butter with my hands into crumbs because Ive been doing this since childhood.  For streusel the crumbs should be slightly larger than the fine sand of crumble.
  • Sprinkle the streusel over the filling. Press down because these are bars and you want them to all hold together.
  • Bake for 20-25 minutes until just golden.
  • Zig zag the glaze over if you feel like it
  • Chill in the fridge or eat warm as a dessert.
  • Top Tip: Cut into squares while still warm.  They freeze perfectly