lundi 13 février 2012



Making Stuffed French Toast
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I know what you’re thinking - as if French toast isn’t hefty indulgent enough as it is. Perhaps you’re right, but if there are days of the year where you can choose to be indulge in some creamy, custardy bread filled with smooth cream cheese and tangy jam, then let it be on Valentine’s. Having said that, the choice of filling is entirely up to you. Be it a classic like pear, ham and cheese, or something a little less conventional. Chocolate too, perhaps?
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STUFFED FRENCH TOAST:
[ 1 loaf French bread, cut into 8 diagonal slices or 8 slices of any stale bread + 1 cup cream cheese, softened  + 1/2 cup fruit jam or preserves  + 3-4 eggs + 1/2 cup milk + 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon ] OPTIONAL: Strawberry slices, or any other fruits.
Spread cream cheese evenly on all 8 slices of bread. 
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Spread jam over cheese on each slice. If you’re using fruits, top the jam with the fruit slices. 
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Then fold the bread in half within itself, so you have what looks like a bread pocket.
Beat together eggs, milk and ground cinnamon in a shallow dish just large enough to hold bread pockets.
Place pockets in dish and soak each side with egg mixture.
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Heat oil in non-stick skillet over medium-low heat. Fry pockets until golden brown, 2 1/2 to 3 minutes per side.
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Sprinkle with icing sugar and serve.
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Enjoy!
Estimated Nutritional Information:
Serves approx 4
Per Serving:
Total Calories: 450kcals
Carbohydrate: 60g
Fat: 19g (9g saturated)
Protein: 9g
Cholesterol: 45mg

dimanche 5 février 2012

Hungry Ghosts - I Don't Think About You Anymore But, I Don't Think About...

Perfect cookies! Les cookies parfaits, quoi!



J'adore l'idée de ces petits biscuits en forme de sachets de thé! Quoi de plus mignon pour une soirée entre fille ou une dégustation de thés!

I completely love the idea of these tea-bag cookies! They're perfect for your next tea party!

vendredi 3 février 2012

There is no trouble so great or grave that cannot be much diminished by a nice cup of tea.  ~Bernard-Paul Heroux
Strange how a teapot can represent at the same time the comforts of solitude and the pleasures of company.  ~Author Unknown

jeudi 2 février 2012

Mmmmm....

Chocolate Crunch Granola for the Non-Breakfaster


Nutritionists do their best to spread one of their favorite mantras to start the day with a balanced breakfast and never leave the house with an empty stomach. It just doesn’t work for me. I’m rarely hungry in the early morning and I don’t see the necessity to force myself to eat when I’d rather not. Weekends excluded, they are a whole different chapter: after a stroll over the local market I can’t wait to scramble some fresh eggs and devor a brioche with homemade jam. Yet, if – against all odds – hunger does strike before lunchtime during the week, homemade chocolate crunch granola is my rescue!
This recipe for chocolate crunch granola is from my latest cookbook and it’s been one of my favorite food-gifts for friends over the last years: it requires only a few minutes active work, puts every store-bought chocolate granola to shame and is so highly addictive, that we even started to have it with ice cream. Oh, and in the event you have a thing for  those little clusters in your granola, those which a lot of granola recipes promise and only very few actually deliver? Yes, they are in there and plenty so! When mixing dry and liquid ingredients, you even get to decide about the cluster size, just break them apart how you like them best – the granolarity is up to you.
This recipe is also featured on Valentinas Kochbuch, alongside a comprehensive interviewwith Coco & truly yours about the work on Geschenkideen aus der Küche (in German language).
Preheat the oven to 175°C (350°F). Line a baking sheet (preferably with extra high rim) with parchment paper, so that the parchment paper overlaps the rim. Chop the chocolate.
Add 125 ml water and sugar into a small pot and bring to a boil until the sugar has dissolved, then remove from heat. Stir in oil, maple syrup and lastly the chopped chocolate until well blended.
Mix the remaining ingredients together in a huge (!) bowl, then pour the liquid chocolate syrup over it. Stir well (either with a large spoon or with your hands) and make sure all oats are well covered with the dark syrup. Break down larger clusters to your liking. Spread evenly onto the prepared baking sheet and bake in the middle of the oven for 30 to 40 minutes (to make sure that the granola bakes evenly, take out the sheet every 10 minutes and stir).
Take it out of the oven as soon as the granola is baked through and let cool completely on the baking sheet – it develops itscrunchiness as it cools. Serve with milk, yogurt or even ice cream and some fruit. Keeps in an airtight container for weeks.
Chocolate Crunch Granola
Recipe source: Geschenkideen aus der Küche, Nicole Stich & Coco Lang, p.78
Prep time: ~15 minutes, baking time: ~30-40 minutes
Ingredients (yields about 750 g)
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100 g dark chocolate (50-55 % cacao)
125 g dark Muscovado sugar (or other brown sugar)
50 ml sunflower oil (or mild olive oil)
3 tbsp maple syrup
500 g oats (quick or rolled)
50 g Rice Krispies or puffed rice
50 g desiccated coconut
50 g sliced almonds or hazelnuts
2-3 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
1/2 tsp cinnamon
a pinch of fine sea salt
enjoy with milk, yogurt, ice cream, fruits...

Recette de Scone à l'anglaise - British Scone recipe

Very British - Scones to  live by



My first handshake with British cuisine has been anything but noteworthy, quite the opposite. My friend Bettina and I had talked our parents into sending us to Britain for several weeks, officially to ramp up our English language skills for school. But more than anything, we were looking forward to spending time abroad and feeling like grown ups. Provided with a litany of good advice and a few warnings we already sat on the plane to London, where we – after hitting ground – hopped onto a bus to Hastings with a bunch of teenagers. Once arrived we were sent to our families and we immediately liked the open-hearted couple and their two small kids. Our temporary new home was small with lots of corners and cats and we felt delirious with joy… until we got served breakfast the next day. Baked beans from a can – spilled over a pale slice of toast – wasn’t exactly what we had pictured as the first meal at our host family. What I didn’t know was that things would get worse.
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When you are looking forward to your daily lunchbox sandwiches, which consisted of nothing more than two slices of white bread, a flimsy layer of cream cheese and exactly three thin slices of cucumber, you can probably imagine the cooking disaster situation at our host family. Being in dire straits, Bettina and I got inventive and experts in covering up almost untouched dinner plates with napkins. And when our guest mother finally asked, if we didn’t like her food and if we had a special wish, we couldn’t help but suggest “Spaghetti!”. We shouldn’t have. Ever tried canned Spaghetti on toast?
If it wasn’t for the little cafe near the beachfront that we had stumbled upon on our second day, I would have died. They sold scones and doughnuts with fresh cream and strawberries and from then on not one single day passed by without us leaving the shop with a box of assorted sweets. We literally lived by them. And the cucumber sandwiches, of course. Well, this was back in the 80s. Anyway, I sincerely hope this was not the average way of cooking back then… You surely now understand why my heart has a weak spot for cucumber sandwiches and scones. Sweet memories!
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So when my friend Cathy offered me her trusted scones recipe years ago, I was more than happy to rush into the kitchen and give it a whirl… which I never did. Until a few weeks ago, when I came across her recipe note. I didn’t pass up the chance this time and gave it a shot, tweaked it and fell in love again. I could easily have scones every other day and to be honest, we’re having them three or four times a week now – for the third week in a row now. (Will this ever end? Is it curable?) Last week I began to challenge myself, to see if I could make them in less than ten minutes – counting from the second I enter the kitchen to the moment I push the tray into the oven – and yes, it is doable, but not quite as easy as I had thought. But believe me, the result is worth every second, the dough is so wonderful flaky and moist…
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Preheat your oven to 220°C (425° Fahrenheit) and line a baking tray with parchment paper. You can prepare the dough either by hand or in a food processor, I love to use the small food processor my Braun blender came with (EDIT Nicky: concerning size, its bowl holds exactly 1l of water):
With a food processor: Give the flour, the baking powder, the sugar as well as the salt a quick spin until well mixed. Cut the really cold butter into small cubes and add them to the dry ingredients using the pulse function four or five times until you can spot no butter pieces that are larger than small peas. Distribute the chopped dried fruits and pulse once or twice, then add the milk (or buttermilk) and pulse again just until the dough comes together and doesn’t show big spots of dry flour anymore – it may still be a little wet though (you can add a little more flour if you think it’s too wet to proceed).
By hand: In a large bowl, mix together the flour, the baking powder, the sugar as well as the salt using a (wooden) spoon. Cut the really cold butter into small cubes and add them to the dry ingredients using a pastry cutter or your fingertips to rub it in until you can spot no butter pieces that are larger than small peas. Mix in the chopped dried fruits until well distributed, then add the milk (or buttermilk) and stir in quickly just until the dough comes together and doesn’t show big spots of dry flour anymore – it may still be a little wet though (you can add a little more flour if you think it’s too wet to proceed).
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Dump onto a well floured board, generously sprinkle with flour and knead very shortly (3 or 4 times should be enough!) to ensure a fluffy crumb (whereas overkneading results in tough scones). Pat into a round disc of about 3 cm (~1,25 inch) thick and cut out rounds with a cookie cutter (mine has a diameter of 6 cm/~2,5 inches) and place them on the parchment paper lined baking tray. (If you dip the cookie cutter in flour after each, the next one will come off more easily. Besides, try not to twist the cookie cutter, because this causes the scones to rise unevenly.) Quickly knead together remaining dough, pat to the same thickness and cut out more scones.
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Lightly beat the egg yolk with one tbsp of milk and brush the tops of the scones. Bake on middle level for 13 to 15 minutes or until golden brown. Let cool on a wire rack. Best enjoyed while still warm with unsalted butter/clotted cream and jam.
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Scones with sultanas and cranberries
Recipe Source: adapted from my friend Cathy
Prep time: 10-15 min., baking 13-15 min.
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Ingredients (yields 6 scones):
200g all-purpose flour, plus more for handling the dough
1,5 tsp baking powder
2,5 tbsp white sugar
0,5 tsp fine sea salt
60g cold butter
50g chopped sultanas and cranberries (or other dried fruits)
140-150g milk (1,5 %) or buttermilk (amount corrected)
for brushing: 1 egg yolk and 1 tbsp milk
serve with unsalted butter or clotted cream and jam

Oh Land - Break The Chain

Intro

This a blog where all tea lovers get to know more about it! This is a bilingual blog, because I personaly  want to have as much english people than french people to read it! There will probably have sometimes other things I love like beautiful pictures, texts I wrote, quotes I love, music, books, movies reviews! These are all things that I think are in the same calm and cozzy spirit tea puts us on. You are welcomed if you LOVE TEA, are OBSESSED with tea, or also if you just would like to know a little bit more about this antique beverage!

Ceci est un blog pour tous les amoureux de thé qui veulent en savoir un peu plus là dessus! Mon blog est bilingue, car personnellement je souhaite qu'il y ait autant de personne parlant anglais que français qui le lisent! Il y aura probablement parfois autres choses que des articles sur le thé, mais aussi des choses que j'aime comme de belles photos, des textes que j'ai écrits, des citations que j'aime, de la musique, des livres, des films que je recommande! Ce sont toutes des choses qui, selon moi, sont dans le même états d'esprit calme et agréable dans lequel le thé peut nous mettre. Vous êtes les bienvenus si vous AIMEZ LE THÉ, êtes OBSÉDÉS par le thé, mais aussi si vous désirez seulement en connaître un peu plus sur ce breuvage datant d'âges anciens!

Sophie, the BIG TEA LOVER <3