Recipes — The Boy Who Bakes (2024)

Edd Kimber

Recipes

Recipes — The Boy Who Bakes (1)

Edd Kimber October 12, 2016

This is my second recipe for Chocolate Week and it's a fabulous dessert for the weekend ahead, no more difficult than a chocolate brownie,the method is actually pretty similar, the caramel cream served with the cake really makes this something special. There is no denying it's on the richer side the spectrum so if you want to lighten it up a little you can always serve it with some poached pear, something fresh to cut through the richness of the chocolate and cream. For me this is best served fairly quickly after baking when it is at is lightest, made with whisked egg white the cake melts in the mouth, but over time the cake becomes a little more brownie like, especially if you refrigerate it.

For the caramel cream, the way to get that rich and dark, almost bitter flavour is to properly caramelise the sugar. Place the sugar into a small pan and cook over medium heat. Once it has melted and started to caramelise you need to watch it carefully, it can burn quickly. If the sugar doesn't caramelise enough the cream will end up just tasting sweet, you need to take it right to the edge, stopping just before it burns. If the finished caramel, before adding the cream, has the colour of a dark rusty penny you should be set.

If you fancy trying the dish for yourself I will be making this on stage at the Chocolate Show at Earls court this upcoming weekend (on the 16th at 2pm) and I'll be bearing samples.

Flourless Chocolate Cake
200g unsalted butter
200g dark chocolate (around 65-70% cocoa solids)
5 large eggs, separated
150g light brown sugar
50g caster sugar

Salted Caramel Cream
100g caster sugar
Pinch of flaked sea salt
400ml double cream

To make the cream place the sugar into a saucepan and cook over medium/high heat it has melted and caramelised, turning the colour of an old rusty penny. Add the salt and swirl to combine.Pour in the cream, adding in two additions, pouring slowly as it may bubble up violently.If there are any lumps of caramel, place back over the heat and cook until smooth. Pour into a bowl and press a sheet of clingfilm onto the surface of the cream and chill until thoroughly chilled..

To make the cake line the base of a 9-inch springform tin with parchment paper and lightly grease the tin with a little butter. Preheat the oven to 180C (160C fan).

Place the butter and chocolate into a bowl set over a pan of simmering water and stir until melted. Remove and set aside for the moment. Place the egg yolks and brown sugar into a large bowl and using an electric whisk mix together for about 5 minutes until thick and pale. Pour in the chocolate mixture and mix until smooth and combined.

In a separate bowl whisk the egg whites until they hold soft peaks then sprinkle in the sugar and whisk until the meringue holds soft glossy peaks. Add the meringue to the chocolate mixture in three additions, folding gently to combine. When no streaks of egg whites remain gently pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 40-45 minutes. Remove from the oven and allow to cool to room temperature (it will collapse in the middle but don’t worry you want that to happen)

Serve the cake at room temperature, topped with some of the cream whipped to soft peaks.

Edd Kimber October 10, 2016

It is National Chocolate Week here in the UK and that means it is also Chocolate Week here on The Boy Who Bakes. Over the weekI will posting a whole host of utterly delicious and decadent chocolate recipes. Im starting the week with a doozy, Chocolate Sables, from my book Patisserie Made Simple.

Im not just baking these just because they’re delicious, and boy are they delicious, I’m baking them because im joining in with the wonderful #cookiesandkindness project launched by Dorie Greenspan. It is such a simple idea, bake a batch of cookies and share them with someone, posting about it online to show the world that there is still a lot of love out there. Every month Dorie will post a recipe on her website as a suggestion but you can bake whatever you fancy, just share the love, and the cookies of course. I bake these cookies on a regular basis, with or without the chocolate coating, and it makes a lot, a natural to share. When making the dough it’s formed into two logs and sliced into cookies. I bake off one half of the cookies for now and the second batch are refrigerated or frozen for a later date. So when making these to share why not do the same thing, it extends the happiness. giving a batch of cookies and a batch of cookie dough, the perfect gift.

Recipes — The Boy Who Bakes (3)

To find out more about the #cookiesandkindness project and to get the story on how Dorie got into food I popped across the channel to Paris so we could record an episode of Stir The Pot together. I have met Dorie before but after spending an evening together I can honestly say that Dorie is one of the kindest, most encouraging and passionate people I have met. This episode of the podcast is a gem and if you love food and baking (if you don't how on earth did you get here) I would thoroughly recommend you to give it a listen. If I could also ask a big favour, if you are liking the podcast could you also help spread the love and tweet about it, leave a review on iTunes, or simply subscribe, it would mean the world!

Chocolate Sables

The Chocolate Sablé is the little black dress of biscuits: reliable, grown-up and with just a little hint of naughtiness! They take no time at all to make, but the rewards are bountiful. I use 1/2 teaspoon of sea salt in these biscuits, which might seem like a lot to some people, but salt and chocolate were meant to be together – it highlights the chocolate flavour and enhances the overall taste. Just don’t use table salt; you need a good flaked sea salt, such as fleur de sel. To dress up these cookies even more, I have dipped them in tempered chocolate and sprinkled them with cacao nibs, but this is optional – they are still a wonderful treat without it.

Makes 40

For the sablé dough
275g plain flour
40g cocoa powder
3/4 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1/2 teaspoon flaked sea salt
200g unsalted butter at room temperature, diced
50g caster sugar
200g light brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
175g dark chocolate (60–70%cocoa solids), finely chopped

For the coating
250g dark chocolate (60–70%cocoa solids), tempered
cacao nibs, to sprinkle (optional)

Sift the flour, cocoa powder and bicarbonate of soda into a medium bowl and add the sea salt, then stir together. Set aside.

Put the butter in large mixing bowl and, using an electric mixer, beat until smooth and light. Add the sugars and vanilla extract, and beat together for 2 minutes until smooth. Add the dry ingredients to the bowl and mix together until you have a mixture that looks sandy (which is what sablé means in English), add the chocolate and mix to combine. The final dough should look almost like soil; it should not have formed into one large ball of dough. This is the key to getting the correct texture;mixed for too long the biscuits will be tough.

Tip out the mixture onto a work surface and gently press together to form a uniform dough. Divide in half and roll into two logs, 4cm thick.

Wrap in clingfilm and put them in the fridge to chill for 3 hours or until firm. (At this point you can freeze the dough for baking at a later date, or do as I do and bake one half of the dough and freeze the second.)

Preheat the oven to 180C (160C fan oven)/gas 4 and line three baking trays with baking parchment. Remove the dough from the fridge and, using a thin, sharp knife, cut into rounds about 1cm thick. Put the biscuits onto the baking trays, leaving 2cm between each one. Bake for 10–12 minutes until set around the outside but still soft in the centre.

Leave the biscuits to cool on the trays for 10 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

Line a baking tray with baking parchment. Once the biscuits are cool, dip each one halfway into the tempered chocolate, allowing the excess to drip off. Put onto the prepared tray and sprinkle with a few cacao nibs before allowing the chocolate to set fully at room temperature. The biscuits will keep for up to one week stored in an airtight container.

Tip
Although I have given a suggestion for the cocoa percentages of the chocolate used in this recipe it is purely a guide; you can use whichever chocolate you prefer. The key is to use one that you love.

(recipe is taken from my book Patisserie Made Simple by Kyle Books and the recipe photograph is by Laura Edwards)

Edd Kimber July 21, 2016

Pavlova is one of those great recipes that you should have in your arsenal, once you know the technique you can whip up a delicious dessert without even thinking about it. Using whatever fruit you have on hand, you can make them whatever season, pile it high with berries and stone fruit in the summer, blackberries and chocolate at christmas, its a super simple recipe that will always please a crowd. It takes minutes to whip up and it really is a low effort recipe. The difference between plain old meringue and pavlova? Its a texture thing. A true pavlova should be delightfully crisp on the outside with a pillowy marshmallow like centre. The key to this perfect texture is baking the pavlova in a low oven and adding a little vinegar and cornflour, which helps stabilise the meringue and give that delicious marshmallow texture.

Summer Berry Pavlova
Serves 10-12

6 large egg whites
350g caster sugar
1 tbsp cornflour
2 tsp cider vinegar
500ml double cream
2 tsp vanilla bean paste
600g mixed berries

Preheat the oven to 150C (130C fan).

Place the egg whites into a large bowl and use an electric mixer to whisk on high speed until the whites hold soft peaks. Whilst continuing to whisk slowly pour in the sugar whisking until the meringue holds stiff glossy peaks. In a small bowl mix together the the vinegar and cornflour then pour into the meringue and whisk for a minute or so until it is fully combined. Scrape the meringue onto the middle of a parchment lined baking tray and spread out into a disc.

Bake in the preheated oven for an hour then turn off and allow to cool fully in the oven (I do this the night before and just leave it overnight).

To finish the pavlova whisk the cream and vanilla until the cream holds soft peaks then spread over the the top of the pavlova finishing with the fresh berries.

Recipes — The Boy Who Bakes (4)

Edd Kimber June 30, 2016

This recipe is special to me for one big reason. It isn't a complicated or fancy recipe, in fact it's as simple as it gets. It's not from my childhood and it wasn't passed down through my family. It's simply a biscuit that helped me launch my baking business. A couple years ago I had the idea of taking my career in baking to a different level and opening up shop. This is how I found myself down at London's Maltby Street Market come rain or shine, every weekend selling my wares. To my surprise the melting moments became one of the favourites (along with the salted peanut and chocolate cookie sandwich, filled with homemade marshmallow fluff). I think they remind us of being kids, they're a bit like shortbread and are simple and humble, almost British in style, when in fact this recipe hails from Australia. I may not run that business anymore, because I became too busy with other work (hello Patisserie Made Simple) but I still regularly whip up a batch of these biscuits. To add a little bit of sunshine to this disappointingly grey summer I have filled the biscuits with both vanilla buttercream and a bright passion fruit curd and let me tell you, one wont be enough!

Melting Moments
250g unsalted butter, room temperature
½ tsp vanilla bean paste
85g icing sugar
250g plain flour
40g custard powder (or cornflour if you cant find it)
¼ tsp salt

Filling
75g unsalted butter, room temperature
150g icing sugar
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
pinch of salt

Passion Fruit Curd
80ml passion fruit puree (from about 5-6 passion fruit)
5 large egg yolks
150g caster sugar
100g unsalted butter

To make the curd place the puree, yolks and sugar into a heatproof bowl and whisk together until combined. Place the bowl over a pan of simmering water and cook, stirring constantly until the mixture thickens. It should be thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Take the bowl from the heat and add the butter, mixing together until melted and combined. Pour the curd into a sterilised jar and seal, refrigerating until needed.

Preheat the oven to 160C (140C fan) and line two baking trays with parchment paper.Place the butter, vanilla and icing sugar into a large bowl and beat together until smooth and creamy. Sift the remaining ingredients into the bowl and gently mix together until you form a uniform dough, this can easily be done either by hand with a wooden spoon or with a mixer.

Using your hands roll the dough into small balls (I weigh these, 20g each) and place onto the prepared trays leaving a couple of inches between each biscuit. Using a fork dipped in flour press the fork onto the centre of each biscuit leaving an indent.

Bake the biscuits in the preheated oven for 20-25 minutes or until uniformly coloured. These shouldn't brown around the edges (due to the slightly lower temperature) so if you want to confirm they are fully baked flip one over, there should be a uniform golden colour across the base. If there is a darker, almost damp looking patch in the middle pop them back in the oven for a few minutes.

Allow to cool on the baking trays for five minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. Whilst cooling make the buttercream. Place the butter into a large bowl and beat together until smooth and creamy, then slowly add in the icing sugar a little at a time, beating until fully combined. Once you have added all the sugar add the vanilla and salt and beat together until light and fluffy.

To assemble the biscuits place the buttercream into a piping bag fitted with a small plain piping tip a pipe a circle of buttercream around the edges of half the biscuits. Fill the hole left behind with some passion fruit curd and top with a second biscuit (if youre not making the curd you can also use the jam of your choice or even some salted caramel. These will keep well for around four days in a sealed container.

Edd Kimber

Recipes — The Boy Who Bakes (2024)

FAQs

What is a female baker called? ›

A female baker is called a "baker" just like a male baker. There is no specific term that distinguishes a female baker from a male baker based on gender. Both men and women who professionally prepare and bake bread, pastries, cakes, and other baked goods are simply referred to as bakers.

What happened to Edd from Great British Bake Off? ›

Edd Kimber (2010)

After his landmark win, he ended his career as a debt collector to become a full-time food writer and has released three cookbooks: Say It With Cake, The Boy Who Bakes and Patisserie Made Simple.

What do you call a person who bakes cakes and cookies? ›

1. countable noun. A baker is a person whose job is to bake and sell bread, pastries, and cakes.

What is the difference between a baker and a cook? ›

Baking requires precision and accuracy when measuring out ingredients; you need exact amounts of each ingredient to get the desired results. Cooking, on the other hand, is often much more flexible as you can frequently taste as you go and adjust recipes to your liking.

What is a fancy word for a baker? ›

Synonyms: pastry cook, pastry chef, confectioner, cook, pâtissier, more... Collocations: learning to be a baker, wants to [be, become] a baker, want to be a baker when I grow up, more...

What is the old name for baker? ›

Baker is an occupational name, coming from the Old English word 'baecere', which means to dry with heat. Early holders may not have only baked bread, and may also have owned a communal oven. The term 'bakster' was the female form of this, and variants have arisen along the same lines.

Who is the richest Bake Off winner? ›

Nadiya Hussain, 38, won GBBO in 2015, and earns the most of all the winners. Boasting over 870K Instagram followers, she earns £3,726.87 for every post she uploads. She has an estimated net worth of £3.7m, according to Heart FM. This is down to her TV shows and cookery books.

Who stormed off Great British baking show? ›

Diana Beard stirred up a storm on series five when it appeared she had taken Iain Watters' Baked Alaska ice cream out of the freezer. A frustrated Iain threw his creation into the bin and even presented said disposal unit to the judges when it was time to bring his bake up to the front of the tent.

What is the illness in The Great British Bake Off? ›

The Great British Bake Off has become embroiled in a fresh fix row after fans accused contestant Tasha of 'faking an illness' to stay on the show. During Wednesday's episode, Tasha fell in the overheated tent and had to leave midway through the 'Chocolate Week' episode.

What is a female pastry chef called? ›

A pastry chef or pâtissier (pronounced [pɑ. ti. sje]; the French female version of the word is pâtissière, pronounced [pɑ.

What is the role of baking soda in making cakes in bakeries? ›

Formally known as sodium bicarbonate, it's a white crystalline powder that is naturally alkaline, or basic (1). Baking soda becomes activated when it's combined with both an acidic ingredient and a liquid. Upon activation, carbon dioxide is produced, which allows baked goods to rise and become light and fluffy (1).

What do you call a person who bakes bread or cake? ›

If you're a baker, it's your job to bake bread, cake, or other baked goods. A baker usually works in a bakery. Professional bakers make pastries, hearty loaves of bread, or cupcakes, depending on their specialty.

Who is the most famous cake baker? ›

Buddy Valastro

American celebrity chef and television personality known as the "Cake Boss" for his successful bakery, Carlo's Bakery, and his television show of the same name.

What is a Sioux chef? ›

What Does Sous Chef Mean? Sous chef is French for under-chief in the kitchen. The chief is either the executive chef or the chef de cuisine. Sous chefs are above all of the other cooks in the kitchen and they speak for the chef, commanding the same respect that the chef has earned.

What is a baker called in a restaurant? ›

Job Description for a Pastry Chef. In a formal professional kitchen managed according to the French brigade system, a pastry chef or baker is one of a number of station chefs, sometimes called line cooks.

What is the Roman name for a baker? ›

PISTOR (ἀπτοποιός), a baker. Both with the Greeks and Romans the bread was originally prepared and baked at home. In large households this practice was long continued.

What's the difference between a bakery and a patisserie? ›

In simple terms, a boulangerie is a French bakery whereas a patisserie is a pastry shop. Boulangeries sell everyday items like bread and croissants and you'll find them even in the smallest towns. It's hard to walk down a French street without spotting one, or three! Patisseries, on the other hand, are more specialist.

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