M&S extra thick double cream.
Xmas deserts, what say you ?
- gremlin
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
There is some irony in that I've had Steak for Christmas dinner the last 2 or 3 years running. I've been the only meat eater in the house the last few years.
I buy a very small fore rib roast / a very large rib steak and 'reverse sear' it on the BBQ. About 45-60 mins very low and slow with smoke, then 1 or 2 mins a side right at the end over screamingly hot coals.
The meat is about £40 from a proper old school butcher on the high street. Not Milton Keynes high street of course, we don't have one of those, Newport Pagnell.
I buy a very small fore rib roast / a very large rib steak and 'reverse sear' it on the BBQ. About 45-60 mins very low and slow with smoke, then 1 or 2 mins a side right at the end over screamingly hot coals.
The meat is about £40 from a proper old school butcher on the high street. Not Milton Keynes high street of course, we don't have one of those, Newport Pagnell.
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
Back on topic, I’m the only one in the family that likes Christmas pudding or mince pies come to think about it, so I doubt they’ll be on the menu on the day.
We are doing a split duty Christmas dinner this year, one daughter is doing the starter, second is doing the main event, I’m dealing with booze & desserts, current plan is a gallon of lady petrol, primitivo, Malteaser based cheesecake bombe and Jaffa cake torte.
The latter two assuming I can dream up a recipe and method for both.
We are doing a split duty Christmas dinner this year, one daughter is doing the starter, second is doing the main event, I’m dealing with booze & desserts, current plan is a gallon of lady petrol, primitivo, Malteaser based cheesecake bombe and Jaffa cake torte.
The latter two assuming I can dream up a recipe and method for both.
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
We're having Christmas with the Danish rellies this year in er....Denmark....so for dessert I'll be getting into an Æbelskiver eating contest with my cousins.
- Rockburner
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
Jaffa Cake Bread Pudding? (just popped into my head - no idea if it would work or not... )Silly Car wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 4:39 pm Back on topic, I’m the only one in the family that likes Christmas pudding or mince pies come to think about it, so I doubt they’ll be on the menu on the day.
We are doing a split duty Christmas dinner this year, one daughter is doing the starter, second is doing the main event, I’m dealing with booze & desserts, current plan is a gallon of lady petrol, primitivo, Malteaser based cheesecake bombe and Jaffa cake torte.
The latter two assuming I can dream up a recipe and method for both.
My gf apparantly does a very good chocolate bread-pudding made with croissants..... but I've yet to see the proof of this.
Re Xmas puds: I love a nice steamy christmas pudding with brandy-butter, especially when it's been flambed with a liberal dose of 80%vol Stroh Rum. (talk about a "bombe surprise" )
Christmas cake: meh, it's just the same a traditional wedding cake isn't it?
Best things my mother used to make was her infamous sherry trifle (at least half a bottle of sherry into the sponge cake), haven't had that for a while. Or her lemon flan: hrahrarghargahgrahgrhagrhagrhagrhrhrhagrahgrhagrh (iirc it was a very old Delia recipe).
non quod, sed quomodo
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
Every time you post a picture of that style of pan I google them and end up watching YouTube clips to see how easy they are to use…Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 4:47 pm We're having Christmas with the Danish rellies this year in er....Denmark....so for dessert I'll be getting into an Æbelskiver eating contest with my cousins.
I’ve previously had a brioche, marmalade, chocolate chip bread and butter pudding, it was very good which is one direction I could go but I don’t think the sproglets (28 years old on Monday ) like it. I blame their mother…Rockburner wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 5:27 pmJaffa Cake Bread Pudding? (just popped into my head - no idea if it would work or not... )Silly Car wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 4:39 pm Back on topic, I’m the only one in the family that likes Christmas pudding or mince pies come to think about it, so I doubt they’ll be on the menu on the day.
We are doing a split duty Christmas dinner this year, one daughter is doing the starter, second is doing the main event, I’m dealing with booze & desserts, current plan is a gallon of lady petrol, primitivo, Malteaser based cheesecake bombe and Jaffa cake torte.
The latter two assuming I can dream up a recipe and method for both.
My thoughts were a layered cylinder of sponge, orange jelly and dark chocolate ganache with candied orange peel on top but I’ll check to see if the daughters like bread & butter pudding as I like the idea that as an alternative to cheesecake.
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
I refer the Right Honourable Gentleman to my previous answer re a panettone bread and butter pud, dotted with bits of really dark chocolate and strong marmalade. Couple of splashes of scotch if that's yer thing. Make a cream and egg custard, pour it over and whack it in the oven for 30 mins or so.
Winner.
Buy some mince pies. Any leftovers can be made into mince pie ice cream by letting good ice cream soften a bit, then mixing in bits of the mince pie, all smashed up. Pop back in the freezer and enjoy all year round. Or make your own ice cream if you can be arsed.
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
I have not bothered this year, for reasons mostly of laziness, but I sometimes make Mince Pie macaron.gremlin wrote: ↑Fri Dec 13, 2024 3:59 pm Buy some mince pies. Any leftovers can be made into mince pie ice cream by letting good ice cream soften a bit, then mixing in bits of the mince pie, all smashed up. Pop back in the freezer and enjoy all year round. Or make your own ice cream if you can be arsed.
Make macaron as you usually would (I'm sure you all do) and use a mincemeat buttercream as the filling. Said buttercream is a fairly normal buttercreamy affair, but with finely blended mincemeat and brandy included in it too.
My Mum bought one on amazon after I made Æberlskiver at her house one Christmas...it's thin and shit. My (wife's) one is inherited, originally it came from Denmark, it's a big fuck off lump of solid cast iron and is way better.
My (wife's) Aunt Elsabeth has a big rectangular one which can do 20 at once
Last edited by Mr. Dazzle on Fri Dec 13, 2024 4:16 pm, edited 3 times in total.
- gremlin
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
Cheeky.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Fri Dec 13, 2024 4:09 pmI have not bothered this year, for reasons mostly of laziness, but I sometimes make Mince Pie macaron.gremlin wrote: ↑Fri Dec 13, 2024 3:59 pm Buy some mince pies. Any leftovers can be made into mince pie ice cream by letting good ice cream soften a bit, then mixing in bits of the mince pie, all smashed up. Pop back in the freezer and enjoy all year round. Or make your own ice cream if you can be arsed.
Make macaron as you usually would (I'm sure you all do) and use a mincemeat buttercream as the filling. Said buttercream is a fairly normal buttercreamy affair, but with finely blended mincemeat and brandy included in it too.
All aboard the Peckham Pigeon! All aboard!
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Re: Xmas deserts, what say you ?
Northerners act like it's some great culinary mystery which is meant to surprise anyone south of Leeds, but its pretty standard now