Monthly Archives: September 2011

Baking Doughnuts Recipes

Baked Mini Double Chocolate Doughnuts

I bought a mini dough­nut pan last year dur­ing a trip to Japan from Muji (a large chain retail store). It looked too cute I had to buy it — that is what usu­ally hap­pens when I shop in Japan. A lit­tle recipe book­let was also included with the sil­i­cone pan. So I decided to try out this recipe.

Baked Mini Dou­ble Choco­late Doughnuts

Yield: 9 mini donuts

Ingre­di­ents

    Dough­nut Batter:
  • 50 gm Ground Almond
  • 5 tbsp Icing Sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tbsp Cake Flour
  • 2 tbsp Cocoa Powder
  • 1 tbsp Choco­late Chips (I used small choco­late chips)
  • 30 gm Melted Butter
  • Gar­nish
  • Toasted Sil­vered Almonds or any kind of nuts
  • Choco­late Chips
  • Melted Choco­late

Method

  1. Pre­heat oven to 350°F/180°C.
  2. Mix ground almonds and icing sugar together in a small bowl.
  3. Add egg and mix with a rub­ber spatula.
  4. Sift in flour and cocoa pow­der into mix­ture and mix until incorporated.
  5. Mix in choco­late chips and but­ter just until bat­ter comes together.
  6. Spoon bat­ter into dough­nut pan.
  7. Bake in pre­heated oven for 10 min­utes (mini doughnuts).
  8. Cool dough­nuts and remove from pan.
  9. Pipe melted choco­late on the dough­nuts and gar­nish with nuts and choco­late chips.
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The gar­nish seems like a lot of work for these lit­tle dough­nuts but for me, that is the fun part of the recipe. I was sur­prised the recipe didn’t call for any leav­en­ing agents and so lit­tle flour but they turned out great. It was kind of messy get­ting the bat­ter into the moulds, it might bet­ter to pipe the bat­ter if you plan to make mul­ti­ple batches. Since I used a sil­i­cone pan, I didn’t grease it, so if you are using a metal pan you might have to grease and dust the pan before fill­ing with bat­ter. The dough­nuts tasted like a dense choco­late cake. Their mini size makes them so fun to eat. The choco­late chips were the “dou­ble choco­late” part of the recipe, which was good, the dough­nuts were very choco­laty but not too sweet. The gar­nish added a nice tex­ture to the dough­nuts, espe­cially the nuts, they added crunch and a nutty flavour. Con­sid­er­ing that they are baked dough­nuts, I would say they taste pretty good with­out the deep-frying. :D It is good to have recipes that you know you can enjoy more of with­out feel­ing guilty.

I rec­om­mend try­ing this recipe!

Eat Out Restaurant Review

Tramonto at the River Rock Casino

I bought a group buy­ing coupon back in May and didn’t have the chance to visit this restau­rant until recently. It is an upscale Ital­ian restau­rant located on the third floor of the River Rock Casino in Rich­mond, BC. At first I didn’t know there was such a restau­rant in Rich­mond though I live in Rich­mond, espe­cially rarely vis­it­ing the casino. So I went with a friend and my mom. The coupon was a really great deal, I paid $50 for hav­ing $100 worth of any­thing on the menu, includ­ing tips as well plus $10 to play the slot machines. We made the reser­va­tion just about 30 min­utes before arriv­ing (didn’t plan on going until then). We arrived at the restau­rant and was greeted and seated promptly. We sat in front of the win­dow, over­see­ing the Arthur Laing Bridge and the beau­ti­ful sun­set that day.

Their menu wasn’t too big but still offered a vari­ety of dishes to choose from. I thought the prices were quite high with­out the coupon. We ordered an entrée and two pasta dishes. The ser­vice was excel­lent, our server was very polite and I felt like he was really tak­ing care of us.

They served two kinds of breads — a Rose­mary Fococ­cia and a crusty Baguette with whipped but­ter. The bread was prob­a­bly one of fresh­est I’ve had in a restau­rant, we had a sec­ond round :D .

I ordered the Kurobuta:

grilled Snake River Farms Kurobuta pork chop, braised smoked pork cheek ravi­oli, potato gnoc­chi, morel mush­rooms, apple com­pote, Madeira savory jus”

The server reminded that the meat is served a lit­tle pink on the inside and I didn’t mind. It was a very high qual­ity piece of meat and pre­pared quite well — fresh, juicy, ten­der, and not over­cooked. The ravi­oli was also quite good. For me though, the gnoc­chi didn’t really stand out. Also, the morel mush­rooms seemed over­whelmed by the sauce. I enjoyed the pork chop — seared with a smoky flavour and paired with the apple com­pote and the sauce. The clas­sic com­bi­na­tion of flavours com­pli­ment each other very well.

My mom ordered the Linguini:

grilled Qualicum Beach scal­lops and wild prawns, Pinot Gri­gio and pesto cream sauce”

The seafood on the pasta was excep­tion­ally fresh, the pasta was quite good. The pesto is very fine and smooth — not chunky at all, it was very tasty. I thought it was a bit oily, but it was a pesto afterall.

My friend ordered the Orec­chi­ette:

house made Ital­ian sausage, caramelized onions, tomato sauce”

We asked the server how to say the name of this pasta but I have already for­got­ten :P . The name in Ital­ian means “small ears”, which is the shape of the pasta. I really liked the sauce of the pasta, it was smooth and rich in tomato flavour, a lit­tle sweet and tangy, tasted very deli­cious with the pasta. The sausage was also good, I didn’t taste a lot of fat in there.

We had the Tiramisu for dessert. The pre­sen­ta­tion was quite nice. For me, it wasn’t creamy enough and I didn’t taste a lot of Mas­car­pone cheese.

Tiramisu

Over­all we had a great expe­ri­ence din­ing here, the food was deli­cious and the ser­vice was excel­lent. I would prob­a­bly go there again but not often because of their expen­sive prices.

Tramonto on Urbanspoon

Baking Chinese Dessert Pastry

Mid-Autumn Festival: My Mooncake-making Ritual

Mid-Autumn fes­ti­val is tomor­row. I actu­ally don’t know much about the Chi­nese lunar cal­en­dar but I know it is ridicu­lously accu­rate in weather pre­dic­tion. Almost always after the mid-autumn fes­ti­val, the weather will start to cool. The fes­ti­val is a cel­e­bra­tion of har­vest, full moon and get­ting together with your fam­ily and EAT of course. As a kid grow­ing up in Hong Kong, me and my brother used to play with lanterns at night on the streets, it would be so much fun. There are the bat­tery or the tra­di­tional lanterns lit with can­dles. Moon­cakes, is a must-eat dur­ing that day. In Hong Kong, where most of the Chi­nese pop­u­la­tion are of Can­tonese descent, I grew up eat­ing tra­di­tional Can­tonese moon­cakes. The essence of the Can­tonese moon­cakes is its thin “crust” and sweet lotus seed fill­ing with a salty and rich pre­served duck egg yolk, rep­re­sent­ing the full moon. Other fill­ings are also used in other types, like a com­bi­na­tion of five kinds of nuts with dried fruits, red bean paste etc. The lotus seed fill­ing is the most clas­sic. Like many tra­di­tional sweets, it is packed with sugar, fats and cho­les­terol, but who can resist eat­ing one in the midst of the fes­ti­val? I know I can’t. :) l learned how to make them about 5 years ago? I don’t really remem­ber, but ever since learn­ing it, I have never bought moon­cakes. Moon­cakes tend to be over­priced when every­one tries to buy them as gifts for fam­ily and friends. I passed by a local Chi­nese bak­ery a cou­ple of days ago, they are sell­ing them for more than CDN $10 each! It is, at the end, a piece of pas­try. Mak­ing moon­cakes has became a rit­ual for me this time every year. Most peo­ple pre­fer to buy moon­cakes but for me, mak­ing them feels so fes­tive. :D

tra­di­tional moon­cake moulds

These are tra­di­tional moulds I have at home, they are carved from wood — I like them more than the plas­tic ones because they have very nice details, just some­thing a plas­tic mould can’t produce.

It is dif­fi­cult to explain the ingre­di­ents and method in words so I am not post­ing the recipe here. A good fill­ing needs to with­stand heat from the oven so it will turn out nicely. It also needs to be smooth and has a rich lotus seed flavour. I was able to get a fill­ing that is specif­i­cally made for mook­cakes, I can’t find it here any­where in the Asian super­mar­kets here. The process also requires some tech­nique that is best learned in a demon­stra­tion class (I took a class in Hong Kong). :P

lotus seed and red bean fill­ing, pre­served egg yolks, plas­tic moulds and a freshly baked mooncake!

I also have plas­tic moulds, they just look flimsy, like toys — the smaller one is actu­ally bro­ken and glued back together by my dad. There is an advan­tage of plas­tic moulds — no knock­ing on the counter like using wooden moulds in order to get the moon­cakes out. I can’t imag­ine the noise level when these were made back in the days before the inva­sion of plas­tics and machines. The pic­ture above is a freshly baked moon­cake, it takes a cou­ple of days for the oil to get absorbed by the crust so it would look less opaque — like what you would find in the super­mar­kets or bak­eries. I just love the com­bi­na­tion of the sweet rich fill­ing with the salty yolks — sooo good! Also, you can never taste fresh moon­cakes if you don’t make them, because store-bought ones are always made ahead in prepa­ra­tion for the fes­ti­val. Fresh moon­cakes are sooo deli­cious with a crunchy crust with a warm fill­ing — sim­ply unbeatable!

Happy Mid-Autumn Fes­ti­val everyone!

Mini Moon­cakes made with wooden moulds — the details are so beautiful!

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