Tuesday, August 20, 2013

The Best Koeksister recipe & my adventures in the Klein Karoo


It was only about 3 hours into the drive along Route 62 when I realised what I was actually doing; I was travelling 400km into the middle of the Klein Karoo (aka nowhere) in search of 'The Perfect Koeksister'. Those that know me, expect nothing less, but still, it was quite crazy. Even for me.

The beautiful Klein Karoo

To catch you up to speed, a koeksister is a plaited, deep-fried doughnut drenched in a seriously sticky syrup. It's a treat as South African as milk tart, biltong and beer. 

South African koeksisters

Like American's and their doughnuts? Koeksisters are a big deal here - we take them as seriously as our rugby! We even have a monument dedicated to the treat!

Koeksister monument in Orania, Northern Cape

My search for sweetness led me all the way to the little town of Ladismith where rumour has it, I'd find the best. Although tuisnywerheid's have all but died out in the big cities, in a small town like Ladismith it is still the place to go for the best cakes, rusks and jams (and  also the latest skinner/gossip!) 

Ladismith Tuisnywerheid
Lallie Botha, Ladismith Tuisnywerheid Founder
Only the finest bakers get their goodies displayed on the shelves here. It was while scanning the fully-laden racks that I met Lallie Botha who tells me she was Ladismith's first koeksister queen back in 1972 when she founded the tuisnywerheid. Back then, she would go through an 85L drum of oil each month! I was convinced I was in the right place - the people of Ladismith definitely love their koeksisters! After giving me some tips on what to look out for in the perfect koeksister, Lallie dished the dirt on who makes the best and sent me on my way (with 5 bottles of homemade jam).


While walking through the town of Ladismith, I couldn't resist stopping a few locals to ask about their favourite koeksisters. But it seemed the town was completely divided on who makes the best and I sensed a little competition between two particular bakers. It was definitely time for me to meet the koeksister contenders!

Me and Euradia Muller, Ladismith Koeksister Queen

My first visit was to the home of Euradia Muller, who greeted me, voorskoot (apron) and all, before hurrying back into the kitchen while fretting that her koeksisters were now sitting in the syrup too long! Over a cup of milky rooibos tea brewed in a green teapot on the stove, Euradia caught her breath long enough to tell me that there are no secrets when it comes to making koeksisters! I could barely hide my disappointment. Had I come all this way for nothing? 

Euradia's koeksisters

Euradia wakes up at the crack of dawn to make the dough before the heat of the Klein Karoo sets in. She uses an heirloom ruler to measure her koeksisters - a lady after my own OCD heart! Her 'sisters are cut into rectangles which are then halved and twisted before being deep-fried and plunged into ice cold syrup. She tells me that it is very important that the syrup is very cold. Finally! I had something to go on! My excitement was short-lived though as she then explained that the recipe was passed down to her by her mother who refused to give it to anyone. The recipe used to be kept under lock and key but is now engraved in her mind and she cooks it off by heart. My koeksister trek (mission) seemed more and more doomed. On leaving I was handed a neatly wrapped tray laden with freshly baked koeksisters and the instructions to store them in the fridge as soon as possible. But, as far as a recipe was concerned, I left empty-handed!



My disappointment was immediately forgotten though when I felt the warm Karoo hospitality the minute I was welcomed through the backdoor of Cynthia du Plessis' farm kitchen. After I was shown photos of her 4 grandchildren, and told the long story of how her and her husband Willem moved from Pretoria to stay in Ladismith, I finally managed to sway the conversation back to her koeksisters. On hearing whose kitchen I'd just come from, Cynthia tells me she used to be a fan of Euradia's but now bakes her own (I didn't press the clearly sensitive matter!) But the big question was, would she share her secret recipe with an English girl from the big city?

Me and Cynthia du Plessis, Ladismith Koeksister Queen

I was in luck! Cynthia welcomed my enthusiasm with open arms and proceeded to run me through all her baking secrets like I was her granddaughter! I learnt to knead dough with my fists like a real Afrikaans tannie and mastered the trick to twisting the koeksisters just the right way so they don't unravel while frying. And when it came to the syrup, I thought I was terribly clever when I eagerly offered my new-found knowledge from Euradia to use ice cold syrup, only to be told that it was actually the wrong way to make koeksisters! Ai. It seemed the only thing the two ladies did agree on, was that koeksisters need to be stored in the fridge to stay crisp. At least there was that!

Cynthia deep-frying her famous koeksisters. She makes about 8 dozen each week!

As we finished deep-frying the twists, I stole a taste of Cynthia's koeksisters. As to who's were the best? I was undecided as they were equally delicious! But thankfully, this time, I left the kitchen (via the backdoor) with my mind filled with years of wisdom, a scribbled recipe in one hand, a packet full of fresh koeksisters in the other and two newly-adopted ouma's who insist I come back to visit soon. 



Cynthia’s Koeksisters
Recipe by Cynthia du Plessis
Note: While 165ml baking powder is a lot, Cynthia assured me it's to keep the koeksisters crunchy in the syrup. Who am I to question the koeksister queen?! 
This recipe makes a large amount of koeksisters, so it's safest to halve this recipe.
Makes 4 dozen

1250g cake flour
½ tbsp salt
165ml baking powder
1 ¼ cups milk
1 ½ cups water
5 large eggs
62g butter or margarine, softened
oil, for deep-frying

Syrup
12 cups sugar
6 cups water
2/3 cups lemon juice
1 ½ tbsp cream of tartar
1 tsp caramel essence (optional)

Sift the flour, salt and baking powder into a large bowl.
Whisk the milk, water and eggs together and add to the dry ingredients.
Mix to form a soft dough then knead thoroughly for 10 minutes, adding a little butter or margarine in every now and then.

As for the kneading (aka punching) Cynthia says when her and her husband have an argument, she makes koeksisters to release her stress!

Cover the dough with clingwrap and place in the fridge overnight.
Make the syrup by combining the sugar, water, juice, cream of tartar and caramel essence in a large pot and stir over low heat until the sugar is dissolved.
Boil the syrup for 10 minutes then allow to cool to room temperature.
Break off a fist-sized chunk of the dough and roll out into a long sausage on a lightly oil-greased surface, then using a rolling pin, roll out to about 10cm wide. Cut into 1cm strips.

This looks so much easier than it is! 

Up until now I had always thought koeksisters were plaited! They are actually twisted.
Take each strip then roll into a sausage, twist the ends around each other to form a koeksister shape and pinch the ends closed.


Heat the oil to 180C then deep-fry the koeksisters, a few at a time, turning often to brown on all sides, until golden and cooked through.


Cynthia's husband, Willem made her a nifty contraption (above right) to help keep the treats in the syrup! So cute!

Drain from the oil and immediately plunge into the room-temperature syrup, making sure to keep the koeksisters submerged so they soak up the syrup. 
Drain the koeksisters from the syrup and allow to cool.
To keep your koeksisters crispy, store them in the freezer. Remove them from the freezer 15 minutes before you want to serve them. 

Enjoy with a lekker koppie rooibos tee!

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Thursday, August 15, 2013

Tiramisu chocolate éclairs


Photography and styling by Katelyn Williams

Baking captured my heart from a very young age and I can remember sitting on the floor in front of the oven watching the cupcakes steadily rise. It fascinated me and you'll still sometimes find me sitting and peering through my oven door! There is something just so enchanting about combining a few ingredients and then watching the sticky batter magically rise into a perfectly fluffy cake. 

Choux pastry is the most miraculous of all; with no baking powder or yeast, a gooey, tacky dough miraculously inflates to form a pastry so light and airy that it threatens to float right off your fork. It's hard to believe that choux pastry uses nothing but steam to rise to the occasion! 

I've given my good ol' chocolate éclair recipe a modern touch here and filled the little puffs with a tiramisu filling; lashings of whipped cream, rich mascarpone, a shot of espresso and a hint of vanilla. Tiramisu seems like such an appropriate match to these chocolate éclairs - and not just because the word means 'pick-me-up'!

Oh and if you would like a little more detail on the exact steps involved, see my previous post on choux pastry.

Photography and styling by Katelyn Williams
Tiramisu chocolate éclairs
Makes 24

1 cup cake flour
pinch salt
80g Stork Bake margarine, cut into small blocks
1 cup water
4 eggs, lightly beaten

For chocolate éclairs
200g dark chocolate, melted
½ cup cream, whipped
½ cup mascarpone cheese, softened
1 shot espresso coffee
½ tsp vanilla essence
1 tbsp castor sugar

Cocoa powder, for dusting

Sift the flour and salt together. Heat the butter and water until just melted then bring to a rolling boil.
Immediately remove from the heat and add all the flour at once. Mix until a smooth dough forms, place back on the heat and cook for about 1 minute or until the pastry pulls away from the sides of the pot. Allow to cool completely.
Beat the eggs into the pastry a little at a time until smooth, shiny and of a piping consistency. 
Place the pastry in a piping bag fitted with a large fluted nozzle. It is now ready to be used as desired.For éclairs, pipe long tubes of dough about 10 cm long. Bake at 200˚C for about 15 - 20 minutes or until puffed up and golden. Turn off oven, remove the puffs, pierce each with a skewer to allow steam to escape and immediately return to the oven to dry out for 15 minutes. 
To assemble chocolate éclairs, dip the tops in melted chocolate and allow to set. Whip the cream until stiff before folding in the mascarpone, espresso, vanilla and sugar. Place in a piping bag and fill the éclairs. Dust with cocoa powder, if desired.

TIPS
*  it is very important to beat the egg in a little at a time into the completely cooled dough
*  sprinkle a little extra water on the tray before baking – the extra steam helps the pastry rise even more, making it lighter.
*  don’t be tempted to open the oven and take a peak or your pastries may run out of puff!

STORAGE
*  unfilled choux pastries can be stored in an airtight container for no more than 2 days – just pop them into the oven for a few minutes to crisp them up again.



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Monday, August 12, 2013

Vanilla custard slices


This recipe was given to me by my childhood best friend, Tammy whose mom used to send her to our farm with a tin filled with these creamy slices almost every Friday after school. We'd sit in the treehouse we built ourselves and devour them, getting custard all over our hands and then relishing the process of licking the creamy filling off our fingers. I must add that the recipe wasn't just handed to me, it was handwritten and carefully placed in a folder along with all my best friends' favourite recipes (also scribbled down on paper) for my 18th birthday. The title of the little cookbook? 
'Katelyn's Favouriteistest Favourite Flop-proof Recipe Cookbook - Made with love by all her friends' 
How awesome is that? Pretty awesome. 
Almost as awesome as these custard slices.

Photography by Gunther Schubert of Vorsprung Studio 
Custard slices
Makes 16-20

2 x 200g packets unsalted cream crackers
½ cup cake flour
100ml maizena or cornflour
20ml custard powder
pinch of salt
100ml water
1 tsp vanilla
3 eggs, separated
1L milk
1 cup white sugar
60g butter or margarine

Lemon glaze
1 cup icing sugar, sifted
juice of 1 lemon

Line a 20 x 30cm cake tin with baking paper and arrange the crackers in the bottom.
Make a paste with the flour, cornflour, custard powder, salt, water, vanilla and egg yolks. Heat the milk, sugar and butter and add to the paste while whisking. Return to the pot and cook until the custard is thick, stirring continuously.
Whip the egg whites until stiff then fold into the lukewarm custard. Pour the custard over the crackers and place another layer of crackers on top. Allow to set in the fridge until completely cool.
Mix the icing sugar and lemon juice together with a little hot water to form a paste and drizzle over the tops of the custard slices. Cut into slices and serve.

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Sticky caramel baked puddings

If you're trying to stick to a diet, I suggest you look away now, because this is possibly the most decadent, delicious, oozy, luscious baked pudding in my repertoire - so unctuous it comes with its own warning. No surprise then that it is based on a recipe by the anti-diet diva herself, Nigella. Caramel is my latest obsession and it seems toffee trumps chocolate in the food world these days so this is my ode to the caramel fad. With a few white chocolate chunks thrown in for good measure, of course.


Eating healthily and living a balanced, active lifestyle is an important part of my life, but there are occasions that demand a pudding of this calibre. Like those freezing weekends when it pours with non-stop rain and you seek the refuge of your duvet and live in your slippers for 2 days or those Monday evenings when only something supremely sweet will cure a terrible case of the Monday blues. And if anything, it will be the best dessert to impress friends with – super easy and you can casually say 'caramel is the new chocolate you know' , because it totally is.



Sticky caramel baked puddings
(serves 4)

200g dark brown sugar
350g self-raising flour
1 cup milk
2 eggs
2t vanilla extract
100g butter, melted
200g white chocolate chunks
200g tinned caramel
50g butter
4 cups boiling water

Combine the dark sugar and flour. Whisk the milk, eggs, vanilla and melted butter together and pour into the flour mix, stirring to combine. Fold in the chocolate chunks. Divide between individual moulds – filling up to halfway. Combine the caramel, butter and boiling water and pour over the puddings. Bake at 180°C for 25 minutes until the tops are firm to the touch. Serve with caramelised banana slices, if desired and top with marscarpone or whipped cream.


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Monday, August 5, 2013

Chicken meatballs with courgettes and chickpeas

The world loves meatballs. How do I know this? Meatballs are one of the few foods that pop up in just about every type of cuisine across the globe. From the local frikkadel to the palm-sized meatballs of Italy smothered in tomato sauce (called ‘polpette al suga’), then there is of course the spiced kofta which feature in Mediterranean countries, North Africa, Asia and India. The Swedish serve theirs with dill sauce while the Spanish enjoy theirs as tapas. Meatball subs, poached in a broth, with soy sauce, with spaghetti, on a bun, on a stick, grilled, fried; they come in flavours and forms for every palate!



While my meatball recipe isn’t traditional, it is rather a fast supper solution – dinner in a dash, if you will. It’s quick, it’s tasty and it’s healthy and that’s all you really need to know isn’t it?  Swop the courgettes for aubergines, butternut, peppers or ready-to-roast veggies (no chopping is an added bonus) and dinner is a mere 30 minutes away. And if there are any leftovers? Toss through cooked pasta with a spoonful of pesto or softened cream cheese and you have lunch (or dinner) version 2.0.


Chicken meatball, courgette and chickpea sauté
Serves 4

500g chicken mince
1 tub Mediterranean Delicacies Chicken liver pate
salt & pepper, to taste
1 egg
handful basil, chopped
handful Italian parsley, chopped
1 small onion, chopped
1 garlic clove, crushed
½ - 1 cup fresh breadcrumbs
olive oil
700g courgettes or baby marrows, chopped into chunks
1 red onion, sliced
4 garlic cloves, chopped
juice from 1 lemon
1 tin chickpeas, drained and rinsed

Mint tzatziki
1 tub Mediterranean Delicacies tzatziki
2 tbsp chopped mint


Combine the mince, chicken liver pate, seasoning, egg, herbs, onion, garlic and breadcrumbs together. Form into golfball-sized balls and set aside. Heat some oil in a saucepan and fry the meatballs until golden. Add the courgettes, onion and garlic and sauté until softened. Squeeze in the lemon juice and add the chickpeas. Season to taste. Serve warm with the mint tzatziki.




*This post has been sponsored by Mediterranean Delicacies who make a fabulous range of yummy pesto, dips, phyllo pastry, olives and other delicious Med-style goodies. 





{GIVEAWAY} Mediterranean Delicacies are giving away TWO Morphy Richards Induction Cookers! Follow this link to enter their latest competition.






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