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Traditional Bakewell Pudding (serves 8) © Kevin Ashton 2006

by WannabeTVChef @ 2007-04-09 - 22:44:45

St George’s Day-English Food Is Not a Joke
British food and British Ingredients have gone through a complete metamorphous in the last 10-15 years. Great award winning restaurants have sprung up all over the country.
The country is awash with farmers markets selling quality grown and produced ingredients to a very savvy British public. These markets are more than just a place to buy great food; they are vibrant social gatherings where foodies can swap information and ideas.

With in 7 miles of were I live there’s a goat farm producing cheeses & free range chicken eggs, a farmer who raises Barbury ducks, another farmer who raises award winning Black Aberdeen Angus Beef, free-range pork and lamb, lots of asparagus between now and early June and that is followed closely by the short but sweet English Strawberry season, the scent of the strawberries during picking can sometime be smelt from the road. New varieties of cheeses being produced locally such as Worcester Gold, Elgar and Hereford hop.

Throughout the year there is now an almost endless amount food festivals both national and local that celebrate the cornucopia of home grown ingredients. Offering opportunities to UK Foodies to relearn about historical foods of Britain and enjoy and sample the new foods of these sceptered isles such as a Balti’s a type of Indian cooking proudly born in Birmingham.

So if you still think you know about British Food………..maybe its time you paid us a visit!!!

British food and drink exports have broken previous trading records and reached an all time high in 2006, according to figures released today (20 April) by market development consultancy, Food from Britain (FFB). Finishing the year at £10.5billion, food and drink exports have increased by 5.8% in the last 12 months alone, exceeding the previous highest level of £10.1 billion achieved a decade ago.

P.s Strangely enough this habit of bashing British Food in the US is repeated in the UK were US restaurants are portrayed as places where you can only get huge portions of mediocre food. Having lived for 13 years in the US and now back in the UK for the last 13 years I have found that most of the people criticizing either have never visited the other country or they are basing their opinion on an experience from years ago. I think the other problem that perpetuates this stereo-typing is most visitors don’t seek out good places to eat they just go to the tourist traps.

Bakewell Pudding.jpg 2

With St George’s Day about 2 weeks away I thought I’d make my next recipe very, very British. Bakewell Tart is a well-known English dessert though out the country but what you may not know is its origins are quite different. Created in the Derbyshire town of Bakewell in the 19th century. The original dish had a puff pastry crust instead of a short crust pastry of the version most of us are familiar with. The other big difference is the texture of the filling which in this recipe is eggier and lighter making this Bakewell dessert the number one in my book.

Ingredients
350g (14oz) puff pastry
75g (3oz) unsalted butter
90g (3 ½ oz) caster sugar
5 large eggs
125g (4 ½ oz ground almonds)
Few drops of almond essence
4 Tbsp seedless raspberry jam
125g (4 ½ oz) fresh raspberries

Method
1. Preheat the oven to 190 C if fan assisted or 200 C if the oven has no fan (gas mark 6).
2. Lightly butter a 10 inch quiche dish and roll the pastry out until it is about 4mm thick.
3. Once you have lined your dish with the pastry don’t trim and of the excess.
4. Gently spread the raspberry jam over the base of the pastry then use ¾ of the fresh raspberries and crush them gently with a dessertspoon.
5. Cream the sugar with the butter and almond essence until white and fluffy.
6. Gradually add one beaten egg at a time, then add a little of the ground almonds, beating on a medium to low speed.
7. Continue to altenate between the eggs and ground almonds until you have mix them all in.
8. Pour the mix into the pastry case then use a palette knife to gently spread evenly.
9. Now use a very sharp knife to trim off the excess pastry and crimp the edges.
10. Bake in the centre shelf of the oven for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the filling is set and lightly brown.

To Serve
Dust lightly with icing sugar and decorate with the remaining raspberries.
Serve warm with custard or single cream- or cold as a cake.

© 2006 © 2007 All rights reserved. No content on this website including, but not limited to, text and photography may be reproduced without prior explicit written consent.

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PlyrYaKAPlyrYaKA [Member]
2007-04-10 @ 16:33

Tha looks lovely, but wheres the cherry in the middle

WannabeTVChefWannabeTVChef pro
2007-04-11 @ 12:39

Lol....obviously you only ever eaten Bakewell with Enumbers (that's what the cherry contains)..heh..he

Regards
Kevin

Chyna_DollChyna_Doll [Member]
2007-04-11 @ 11:30

LMAO @ cherries comment from PlyrAKA!

Mmm.. that does look good!

WannabeTVChefWannabeTVChef pro
2007-04-11 @ 12:45

Thanks Chyna Doll

Kevin x

PlyrYaKAPlyrYaKA [Member]
2007-04-13 @ 12:20

How would you feel presenting a TV show on the internet, a new company called "Joost" has started and it might be employing seeing as it's current channels are shit

WannabeTVChefWannabeTVChef pro
2007-04-22 @ 14:18

Dear PlyrYaka,

I like your idea and have visited the Joost site, are they broadcasting yet?

I've sent an email to them, but I'm not sure whether they produce programs or just broadcast them?

I tried tracking down The Recipe Channel ..but my lead just dead-ended.

Is there a specific program or cooking channel you have watched?
Regards
Kevin

MaureenBMaureenB pro
2007-04-22 @ 12:07

Hi Kevin,
I agree with your view, "...that perpetuates this stereo-typing is most visitors don’t seek out good places to eat they just go to the tourist traps." As an American living in England, I noticed how bad American food can be when our family stayed for two weeks at Disney World in Orlando, Florida. The majority of the food on offer was disgusting junk food and it would be very easy for visitors from other countries to judge the culinary taste of the whole country if they didn't go anywhere else to sample food in the USA. Alternatively, I'm sure there are plenty of American tourists (and other nationalities) who visit the UK and judge the food based on visits to fast food restaurants and pubs. (I'm not saying all pub food is bad, mind you, but - well, you know what I mean).

Thanks for the recipe for the traditional Bakewell Pudding. It certainly looks delicious. I bet it's a much lighter treat when it's made with puff pastry instead of a short crust pastry.

WannabeTVChefWannabeTVChef pro
2007-04-22 @ 13:00

Dear Maureen,

Once again many thanks for your kind and thoughtful contribution to my blog, long may that continue!!

Yes your correct about the puff pastry making this dessert lighter but also the filling is closer to a quiche in consistancy than the almond cake version most Brits are familiar with.

Best Wishes

Kevin

OneProudMommaOneProudMomma pro
2007-04-22 @ 20:23

Truly gorgeous. I spent my honeymoon in Bakewell and succumbed to eating a traditional pudding.

I am so grateful that I did. The Mr. Kipling equivalents have absolutely nothing in comparison.

I will be trying this one next week.

WannabeTVChefWannabeTVChef pro
2007-04-23 @ 16:45

Thanks OneProudMomma for join the blog
and for your kind words....let me know how it turns out.

Regards
kevin

sam [Visitor]
http://becksposhnosh.blogspot.com/
2007-04-23 @ 02:28

Hi Kevin - thanks for your entry - I make Bakewell tart a lot and would be intrigued to try this partiular recipe which as you say is quite different to the one I usually do. Yesterday I made some Maids of Honour using Puff pastry. They were good.

thanks for taking part

Sam

Margaret [Visitor]
http://www.kitchen-delights.blogspot.com
2007-04-23 @ 09:33

Your recipe for Bakewell Tart is new to me - I have seen it made with puff pastry before but not so many eggs. I am glad I found your blog now I can see what a real chef cooks and also use some of your recipes.

PlyrYaKAPlyrYaKA [Member]
2007-04-23 @ 16:19

Joost are still in the beta stages at the moment, if u want i could recommend u to bacome a tester so u can see wot I'm goin on about

WannabeTVChefWannabeTVChef pro
2007-04-23 @ 16:50

Yes please....then I might find out whom within the company to talk to

Regards
Kev

PlyrYaKAPlyrYaKA [Member]
2007-04-23 @ 19:38

Then I need your email, if you don't want it public u can pm me.

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