Showing posts with label Mother's Day dessert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mother's Day dessert. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Nigella's Lemon Pavlova #Recipe by @LibbyKlein #Easter #Mother's Day

Libby Klein I've followed Nigella Lawson since Nigella Bites. The mid nineties to early two thousands was the heyday for traditional cooking shows before they turned into competitions and Nigella was one of my favorites. I've tried to win that signed cookbook to no avail, and I make her carbonara recipe whenever we feel we need a special meal. I can't order it in a restaurant because half the time it comes as scrambled egg pasta and it's too easy to get it right on my own. Nigella has spoiled me. 

When I saw this recipe for Lemon Pavlova I saved it in my must make folder for a special occasion. The special occasion that finally arrived was it's snowing and I've been sick so I want a treat. So here we are. This makes 8-12 slices and it doesn't keep fresh for very long so maybe wait until you have an event or dinner party to roll it out. You can make the merengue base a day ahead. This would make a perfect dessert for a spring event like Easter or Mother's Day.



Lemon Pavlova by Nigella Lawson

Yield 8-12

Ingredients

6 egg whites
375 grams of caster sugar (2 1/4 cup of fine granulated sugar)
2 1/2 teaspoons corn flour (corn starch)
2 unwaxed lemons (are lemons usually waxed?)
50 grams flaked almonds (1/2 cup sliced almonds)
300 milliliters double cream (1 1/4 cup heavy whipping cream)
325 gram jar lemon curd (I personally like Tiptree but any kind you like will do)

Directions (I'm going to post these exactly as Nigella wrote them because they're kind of fabulous)

1.     Preheat the oven to 180°C/160°C Fan/gas mark 4/350°F and line a baking tray with baking parchment. Beat the egg whites until satiny peaks form, then beat in the sugar a spoonful at a time until the meringue is stiff and shiny.

2.     Sprinkle the cornflour over the meringue, then grate in the zest — a fine microplane is best for this — of 1 lemon and add 2 teaspoons of lemon juice.

3.     Gently fold until everything is thoroughly mixed in. Mound onto the lined baking tray in a fat circle approximately 23cm/10inches in diameter, smoothing the sides and the top with a knife or spatula.

4.     Place in the oven, then immediately turn the temperature down to 150°C/130°C Fan/gas mark 2/300°F, and cook for 1 hour.

5.     Remove from the oven and leave to cool, but don’t leave it anywhere cold as this will make it crack too quickly. If you think your kitchen is too cool, then leave the pavlova inside the oven with the door completely open. When you’re ready to eat, turn the pavlova onto a large flat plate or board with the underside uppermost — I do this before I sit down to the meal in question and let it stand till pudding time. This is so the tender marshmallow belly of the pav melds with the soft topping.

6.     Toast the flaked almonds, by frying them in a dry pan over a medium to high heat until they have started to colour. Shake the pan at regular intervals and don’t let them burn. This doesn’t take more than a minute or so. When they’re done, remove to a cold plate so that they don’t carry on cooking.

7.     Whip the cream until thick and airy but still with a soft voluptuousness about it, and set it aside for a moment.

8.     Put the lemon curd into a bowl and beat it with a wooden spoon or spatula to loosen it a little. Taste the lemon curd (if it’s shop-bought) and add some lemon zest and a spritz of juice if it’s too sweet.

9.     With a light hand, a glad heart and a spatula, spread the lemon curd on top of the meringue base. Now top with the whipped cream, peaking it rather as if it were a meringue topping. Sprinkle with the zest of the remaining lemon — you can grate this finely or coarsely as you wish — followed by the flaked almonds, and serve triumphantly.



Vice and VirtueLayla Virtue, a blue-haired, 30-something recovering alcoholic and former cop is trying to reinvent herself as a musician—between AA meetings, dodging eccentric neighbors at her trailer park, and reconnecting with her mysterious dad—in this ​unforgettable new mystery brimming with hilarity and heart.


Layla is taking her new life one day at a time from the Lake Pinecrest Trailer Park she now calls home. Being alone is how she likes it. Simple. Uncomplicated. Though try telling that to the group of local ladies who are in relentless pursuit of Layla as their new BFF, determined to make her join them for coffee and donuts.

After her first career ended in a literal explosion, Layla’s trying to eke out a living as a rock musician. It’s not easy competing against garage bands who work for tacos and create their music on a computer, while all she has is an electric guitar and leather-ish pants. But Layla isn’t in a position to turn down any gig. Which is why she’s at an 8-year-old’s birthday party, watching as Chuckles the Clown takes a bow under the balloon animals. No one expects it will be his last . . .

Who would want to kill a clown—and why? Layla and her unshakable posse are suddenly embroiled in the seedy underbelly of the upper-class world of second wives and trust fund kids, determined to uncover what magnetic hold a pudgy, balding clown had over women who seem to have everything they could ever want. Then again, Layla knows full well that people are rarely quite what they seem—herself included . . .

Silly Libby
Libby Klein grew up in Cape May, NJ where she attended high school in the '80s. Her 
classes revolved mostly around the Culinary sciences and Drama, with one brilliant semester in Poly-Sci that may have been an accident. She loves to drink coffee, bake gluten-free goodies, collect fluffy cats, and translate sarcasm for people who are too serious. She writes from her Northern Virginia office where she serves a very naughty black smoke Persian named Sir Figaro Newton. You can keep up with her shenanigans by signing up for her Mischief and Mayhem Newsletter on her website. 
www.LibbyKleinBooks.com/Newsletter/







Thursday, May 7, 2015

Lucy Burdette's Best Mocha/Chocolate Frosting for Mother's Day #recipe







Hamming it up over my dad's birthday cake

LUCY BURDETTE: Happy Mother's Day everyone! We are grateful for all the mothers in our lives, in what ever form they came--mothers, grandmothers, aunts, stepmothers, friends, sisters... Now on to cake:)... 

My mother loved to eat and to read and loved her family and her pets. But she did not love cooking. Of course she did cook most every night for our family of six. 

And she did love to celebrate birthdays. Each birthday person was allowed to choose the cake of his or her desire. We were predictable. My father always chose yellow cake with mocha icing. My older sister and I always had angel food cake with whipped cream as the frosting. My mother didn't like cake, so we made her tapioca out of a box.

But I've been thinking about that yellow cake, so cake it will be for my retro Mother's Day contribution. I suspect my mother's cakes came from a box, too, as the 50s and 60s were the age of convenience foods. (And how could she have made food from scratch when she had a full-time job and four children and 3-6 pets?)

This frosting is basically chocolate with coffee added instead of milk. If you don't like the taste of coffee, skip the coffee and replace it with milk. If you want a more intense chocolate flavor, add more cocoa.

Ingredients

2/3 cup unsweetened Cocoa powder, sifted
Two sticks unsalted butter, softened
3 cups confectioners' sugar
3 tablespoons strong coffee
2 teaspoons vanilla

After sifting the cocoa powder, beat in the unsalted butter until fluffy. Now and one cup of confectioners' sugar and 1 tablespoon coffee and beat well. When the mixture is combined, beat on high for one minute. Repeat that procedure with the other sugar and coffee. Then beat in 2 teaspoons vanilla and taste for sweetness.

This batter may look familiar and that's because I'm crazy, crazy for this yellow cake:). It's the perfect host for chocolate frosting, delicious without being overpowering. I found this in the BACK IN THE DAY BAKERY COOKBOOK, which I highly recommend for your cookbook shelf.





Ingredients for the cake

1 and 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 and 3/4 cup cake flour
1 Tbsp baking powder
2 cups sugar
3/4 tsp salt
2 sticks unsalted butter, softened but still cool
1 cup milk 
4 eggs, room temperature
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp almond extract


Heat oven to 350 degrees. Prepare two cake pans.


  

    Mix all the dry cake ingredients in bowl of electric mixer at slow speed. Add cool cubes of butter, a few at a time, and continue beating on low for about 1-2 minutes. Beat the eggs in one at a time, mixing well but minimally after each.
 Mix the milk with the extracts.

    Add 1/2 cup of milk mixture to flour mixture and beat until combined. Add remaining 1/2 cup of milk mixture and beat for about 1 minute.



 


 


  Distribute batter evenly into the two prepared cake pans (well buttered and floured.)



Bake at 350 until toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean and cake springs back when touched, about 25 minutes. (check for done-ness with a toothpick or wooden skewer.)

Cool for ten minutes in the pans, then remove the cake to a plate to cool completely.  Then ice as usual, beginning with the middle, layering the second cake on top, and icing top and sides. 

Happy Mother's Day!
Lucy with her mother, circa 1969








When she is not blogging and cooking, Lucy Burdette writes the Key West food critic mysteries

Fatal Reservations, the sixth book in the series, will be in bookstores on July 7, but you can certainly order it now!





Sunday, May 8, 2011

Happy Mother's Day - Not Just Desserts


Happy Mother's Day to all of our fabulous fans.

Whether you're a mother or not, you had one at one time.
This post is a tribute to them and to you.





[Picture on R: My grandmother and great-grandmother
on my mother's side, and me with my little sister. ]

[Photo: My mom with me, "Avery,"
who mom called Daryl Lynnie.]

[Photo below: My grandmother on my father's side.]


To the challenges you all faced. To all your successes. To all your mistakes.

A tribute to the worlds you have conquered. To the children or pets you have raised. To the meals you have made.

To the books you have read aloud. To the unspoken heroes in each and every one of you.

May this day be a special one and open new worlds of insight and intrigue.




Mothers make the memories
Underneath the memories:
Morning's undertow.


And now a Mother's Day recipe.

Here's a simple omelet fromage. Every mother likes "simple."

Ingredients:
2-3 eggs
1 teaspoon butter
2-3 ounces of your favorite melting cheese (Monterey Jack used)
1-2 teaspoons of your favorite herbs

Directions:
Whip up the eggs.
Heat a saute pan to high. Drop in the butter. Let it sizzle. Spread it with a spatula and immediately pour in the eggs. Shake the pan to spread the egg evenly about. Turn the heat down to medium. Lifting up the sides of the omelet with the spatula, let the runny portion of the egg seep to the sides and under the cooked part. It will cook. When you feel it's almost "dry", sprinkle the cheese over the omelet. Using the spatula, fold the omelet in half. Sprinkle the herbs on top of the omelet.

Remove the omelet to a plate, and sprinkle with more herbs. Add your adornments of bread and fruit and you're done. Easy! (Easier than pie.)


And below are I'd like to share a number of links to
recipes from previous posts,
recipes that might be perfect for Mother's Day.


















Happy Mother's Day
Enjoy the day.



If you have a chance, pick up a copy of LOST AND FONDUE.

It's out just in time for Mother's Day.

Your mom might enjoy it!





Saturday, May 8, 2010

Mom's Favorite Flan


Huge thanks to the lovely Michelle Scott for filling in for me last weekend while I was kicking up my heels at Malice Domestic. Her Peach Galette sounds heavenly and elegant.



As always, Malice was wonderful. It's such fun to get together with old friends and meet new ones. I was absolutely thrilled to meet Elizabeth/Riley face to face! Her photo doesn't do her justice. It was a treat to hang out with delightful Avery all weekend, too! I also had the pleasure of meeting charming Alan Orloff who just guest blogged for us. Some wonderful new mystery series and guest bloggers are in the works, so stayed tuned.


Mother's Day is upon us. How did that happen so fast? If there's one thing my mother likes better than cake, it's flan. In fact, it's her favorite comfort offering to friends and family who are under the weather. I feel like we've had a few flan recipes here, but I can't find any of them. Hope Mom's favorite flan isn't a duplicate of someone else's!

This recipe is really quite simple. I think some people stumble a little bit when it comes to the sugar that makes flan so yummy. Here's the trick -- do not leave the stove. Do not go to the door to accept a package. Do not turn your back to iron a shirt for your son. Do not draw a map to Barnes & Noble for Aunt Irma. I admit that I cracked the eggs while the sugar cooked, but I shook the pot after each egg. It's not hard to melt the sugar -- no stirring needed! -- but it's easy to burn if you don't focus on it. The rest is sooo easy and the results are creamy, sweet, and delicious!


Flan


3/4 cup sugar

1 14 ounce can fat free sweetened condensed milk
1 14 ounce can skim milk (use the empty can to measure)
3 eggs
3 egg whites
1 teaspoon vanilla




1. Preheat the oven to 325.

2. As close to the stove as possible, place six ramekins in a baking dish (I like the glass casseroles). If you don't have ramekins handy, use oven safe tea cups or even a quiche or pie plate.

3. Melt the sugar over medium heat in a small pot. Do not stir. Shake the pot from time to time, swirling the sugar. It will seem like it's never going to happen, and then, suddenly, you'll see honey colored melted sugar in the bottom. Keep swirling until the sugar is completely melted.

4. Pour the sugar into the ramekins, distributing evenly. If you're using a quiche or pie pan, roll the sugar around a bit to distribute.

5. Place the remaining ingredients in a blender or food processor. Mix.

6. Pour over top of the sugar.

7. Use a water kettle to pour water into the baking pan around the ramekins. The water should come about half way up. Slide into oven.

8. Bake 40 minutes. Remove from oven and cool. Refrigerate about two hours or until firm.

9. Use a knife to loosen the sides, turn over a plate, and serve!



I had just a little bit left over, so I poured it into a cup. It didn't fit in my water bath, though, so I just stuck it into the oven. The one without the water bath tastes the same and is equally creamy, but it doesn't cook as evenly and it fell.







Happy Mother's Day!




And now our contest news...


Congratulations to Stacy from Louisville!
You've won Riley's Williams-Sonoma’s Ultimate
Grilling Rub Collection!!!

Here's your chance to enter Julie's May Contest!

Julie’s first book in the Manor of Murder Mystery series, Grace Under Pressure, debuts June 1st! To help launch the book and to celebrate its release, she's running a very special contest: Pre-order Grace Under Pressure any time before May 31, 2010, and you're eligible to win a $25 gift certificate from Mystery Lovers Bookshop! (and if you've already pre-ordered, you just need to let Julie know!) No receipts required. Just email Julie at JulieHyzy@gmail.com with the date that you pre-ordered and the name of the bookstore you ordered it from, and your name goes in! (Please put "CONTEST" in the subject header. Thanks!)

Here are a few helpful links to get you started: Mystery Lovers Bookshop (free shipping on book orders over $10!) - The Poisoned Pen - Barnes & Noble - Amazon.com