Cream tea means afternoon tea, served with scones, clotted cream and jam. Clotted cream is a bit of a specialty item if you are outside of the UK, but it’s worth finding. It’s thick, heavy, spreadable cream. Look for it in very well stocked supermarkets, in a small glass jar in the dairy case, or in British import stores or other specialty markets. In a pinch you could use whipped cream instead, but I really recommend finding clotted cream if you possibly can.
Read moreOlive no-knead bread
I love the salty, briny punch that olives add to this easy, crusty, no-knead bread. It feels a bit special, perfect for a dinner party, but it’s easy enough to just make for any time. No-knead bread only needs a thorough stir, rather than a lot of vigorous kneading, and then a slow rise, to form a lovely dough that’s very easy to work with and form into a rustic, country loaf.
Read morePassion-coco cream puffs
Fruit feves part 5: passion fruit
I’m a fan of steam powered pastries. Which is to say, pastries that don’t use a chemical or biological leavener, like yeast or bicarbonate of soda, to rise and develop their texture and shape. Instead they rely on trapping water inside themselves, which in a nice hot oven, creates steam, which expands and blasts them into shape. Like puff pastry, which traps hydrated layers between fat layers, so the steam expands pushing the fat layers apart and generating dozens of puffy, flaky, crispy, tender layers.
Read moreyuzu pistachio shortbread
Fruit feves part 4: yuzu
All of these Valrhona fruit and nut feves have been good, but I think that yuzu might be my favourite. They are so citrusy, in a way that seems like it should impossible to capture in chocolate. They seem actually juicy, sour and fresh. The other flavours are really good as well, and they do taste so much like each fresh fruit. The snozzberries really do taste like snozzberries.
Read moreQuadruple almond and apricot cookies
Of all these Valrhona Inspiration feves, the almond ones are sort of the odd one out of the bunch. They are the only ones that are nuts rather than fruit. They are also a bit less intense in flavour, they are mellow and sweet and a bit biscuity, and almondy.
Read moreraspberry almond free-form florentines
The raspberry feves really taste very raspberry-y. Because they are just powdered fruit in white chocolate there is no artificial raspberry flavour, but they also are quite fresh. They don’t have that preserved flavour of dried fruit or jam. These raspberry feves taste like summer, but are available any time of year.
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