Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Holiday

Hasselback Potatoes

Dinner, Holiday, VegetablesTove Balle-PedersenComment
071630C5-B4AB-4616-82B4-83F26B0A4DD5.jpeg

Hasselback potatoes is a Swedish dish invented in the 1950’s created at the Hasselbacken restaurant in Stockholm. And they were very popular during the 70’s and 80’s, but do no deserve to be forgotten. Personally i love them for their crispy outer and creamy center.

Normally I won’t add any flavors to the butter, but fresh herbs like rosemary and thyme goes really well with the potatoes, as do garlic. If you like another flavor profile, you can use other types of fat or oil, like olive oil and duck fat.

Serves 3-4 depending on the size of the potatoes.

Ingredients:

8-10 potatoes, the size of a golf ball, I used Yukon Gold potatoes

60 g salted butter (About ½ stick)

salt

Direction:

7B48BC0D-9765-429A-8C3D-1445CAE86953.jpeg

Preheat the oven to 400℉ (200℃), and line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper, set a side.
Place a potato up against a handle of a wooden spoon. Slice the potato into thin slices, not cutting all the way through. The handle of the spoon helps you not slicing the whole way through. Repeat with the remaining potatoes.

Place the potatoes on the baking sheet and brush them with the melted butter, making sure to get in between all the slices. Sprinkle with salt. Bake potatoes for about 55 to 60 minutes, brush the potatoes with more butter every 20 minutes. Bake until crisp and tender.

Serve them as a side.

Enjoy!

Fastelavnsboller - Lent Buns

Cake, Desserts, HolidayTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
Fastelavnsboller, Lent Buns.

Fastelavnsboller, Lent Buns.

Fastelavnsboller comes in many shapes and sizes. There are the pastry kind, filled with custard, or a fruit jam, the choux pastry kind, filled with a custard or another whipped cream-based filling, or the ones made with an enriched dough baked with remonce and/or custard. This one is a mix of the two latter ones. It’s basically an enriched dough with remonce and filled with a raspberry whipped cream.

Back in Denmark this year have been crazy, and the newest trend is selling the most fancy fastelavnsboller. There are huge lines to the bakeries to get your hands on these cakes, maybe the Corona restrictions made people want to have some extra special, I don’t know. Here is my contribution to this craziness.

Makes 15-18

Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 500 ml milk

  • 150 g butter, salted

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 50 g fresh compressed yeast, or 4 teaspoons dry yeast

  • 800 g all-purpose flour (hold some back, to see if the dough need it all)

  • 150 g sugar

  • 1 teaspoon ground cardamom

  • 1 pinch of salt

Remonce:

  • 75 g butter, salted, room-temperature

  • 75 g sugar

  • 75 g marzipan or almond paste (with over 60% almonds)

Raspberry whipped cream:

  • 500 ml heavy whipping cream

  • 4 tablespoons raspberry jam

  • 2 teaspoons chambord (raspberry liqueur)

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 1 tablespoon confectionery (powdered) sugar

Directions:

Remonce:

Mix the sugar and marzipan well. Add butter little by little until it’s just incorporated. Be careful not to over mix or the remonce will be runny when baked.

Dough:

In a large bowl mix most of the flour, I save about 1 cup, with the rest of the dry ingredients including the dry yeast if using.

In a saucepan heat milk and butter until finger warm, you want all the butter melted, remove pan from heat. Mix in the fresh compressed yeast, if using, and vanilla bean paste.

Mix in the milk/butter mixture and knead the dough in a stand mixer on medium for about 10 minutes until you have a soft, shiny elastic dough. The remaining flour should be added while kneading, if needed. Let the dough rise in a covered bowl for about 90 minutes until it doubled in size.

Divide the dough in two, roll each portion into a rectangle and divide it into 9 squares.

Preheat the oven for 400℉ (200℃).

Put a teaspoon remonce in the center of each square. Fold the four corners up to the center and press to seal all edges, letting the air inside escape. Put fastelavnsboller onto a parchment paper lined baking sheets with joint side down. Leave to rise covered for about 30 minutes. Brush with egg wash  and bake for about 10-12 minutes until golden. Let the bun cool completely, before cutting and filling.

Raspberry whipped cream:

Mix the raspberry jam with the liqueur and vanilla bean paste in a little bowl and set aside. Whip the heavy whipping cream with the sugar until you have s medium stiff cream. Gently fold in the raspberry mixture, and put the cream into a piping bag with a star tip.

Cut the top of the buns, and pipe some raspberry cream inside, place the top back on, put a little dot of cream on the top as decoration and sprinkle with freeze-dried raspberry or confectionary/powdered sugar. Serve the fastelavnsbolle with a nice cup warm tea or coffee.

Enjoy!

Pleated Christmas Heart Cookies

Christmas, Cookies, HolidayTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Pleated Christmas heart cookies

Pleated Christmas heart cookies

The pleaded or weaved heart is quintessential Christmas for Danes. The pleaded Christmas heart is said to contributed to the Danish Storyteller H.C. Andersen. The oldest known heart is kept at The H.C. Andersen Museum in Odense. As a child we learned to make pleaded Christmas hearts, and we placed them on the Christmas tree. Last year I saw someone make cookies like the pleaded hearts, I knew I wanted to make some. I took offset in the checkerboard cookies, and replacing the cocoa with food coloring.

Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 340 g butter, salted and room temperature

  • 200 g confectionary sugar (powder sugar)

  • 90 g almonds, bleached and grounded

  • 2 egg yolk

  • 2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 500 g all-purpose flour

  • Red food gel coloring, for the red part of the dough

DIRECTIONS:

Cream the butter until soft and creamy. Add the confectionery sugar, mix until fully combined, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed. Add the ground almonds, egg yolks, vanilla and flour, and mix until just blended. Be careful not to over mix the dough. Remove half of the dough, and mix the other half with red food coloring, until you get a bright red. I used Christmas red Wilton gel color, and I had to use most of the little jar, to get the right color. Wrap the doughs in plastic film and places dough in the refrigerator for about 30 minutes, so the butter firms up, making it easier top work with.

Divide each color in 2, rolling one half into a log with a 1-inch (3 cm) diameter. The other half form it into flat squares. Cover the log and square in plastic wrap, and put it back in the refrigerator. Roll each flat square of the dough out between 2 pieces of parchment paper, to a little under ⅓-inch (9 mm) thickness. Place the dough on a baking sheet, and place it back in the refrigerator for about 1 hour.

Assemble the cookies:

Remove one of  the doughs from the refrigerator, peel off the paper from both sides and set the dough onto a fresh sheet of parchment. Using a sharp knife, slice the dough lengthwise into square strips about ⅓ inch (9 mm) wide. Place the dough strips in the refrigerator, while repeating the other dough.

Remove dough strips from the refrigerator. Lay a strip of the white dough lengthwise on the baking sheet, then lay a strip of red dough next to the white, another strip of white and finally another red, so you now have 4 strips alternating colors. Press the three strips gently together so that they stick to one another. You can brush the sides with some diluted apricot preserve, to help the dough glue together.

Do this with the rest of the strips, so you end up with logs of striped cookie dough.  Place the logs on top of each other, so the red dough and white dough alternates and you have  4x4 colors per log.

Gently press the logs together on all sides. Wrap the log with plastic wrap, a place in the refrigerator.   Make more logs with the remaining dough.

C1200AC5-2B3C-4E49-B264-D48C7B818AD9.jpeg

Take out the round logs, an cut them in half lengthwise. Firmly press 1 red and 1 white half log on top of the 4x4 colored logs. Placing them on to sides next to each other. Now you have a pleated hearty, when you cut the log in slices.

Chill the logs for at least an hour before slicing.

Preheat the oven to 375℉ (190℃). Line baking sheets with parchment paper.

Slice into cookies about ¼ inch (6 mm) thick. Set the hearts about ½-inch (1 cm) apart on the baking sheet and bake for about 7-8 minutes, until the withe parts are very lightly browned. If your oven is baking unevenly rotate the sheet halfway through. Cool on the parchment paper on a wire rack. 

Store the completely cooled cookies in an airtight container.

Enjoy!

Mrs. Cross’s Christmas Syrup Cake - Sirupslagkage

Cake, Christmas, Desserts, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
Mrs. Cross’s Christmas Syrup Cake - Sirupslagkage.

Mrs. Cross’s Christmas Syrup Cake - Sirupslagkage.

This type of cake was one of my mom’s favorites. She always told a story about getting a syrup layer cake at a friends house, where the buttermilk came from their own cows. Maybe my mom’s childhood food memories were tied to fond memories like my own. The syrup cake were not tied to Christmas in my home, but by adding the orange jam and chocolate is leans itself towards Christmas. My mom served hers with a sprinkle of powdered sugar on top, the chocolate ganache make it more decadent.

Ingredients:

Batter:

  • 125 g dark syrup

  • 75 g sugar

  • 75 g butter

  • 250 g all purpose flour

  • 1 teaspoon baking powder

  • ½ teaspoon backing soda

  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon

  • ½ teaspoon ground cloves

  • ½ teaspoon ground allspice

  • ½ teaspoon ground ginger

  • 150 ml buttermilk

Filling:

  • 5-6 heaping tablespoons Orange jam

Buttercream:

  • 250 g butter, salted and room temperature

  • 250 g confectionary sugar (powdered sugar)

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

Chocolate ganache:

  • 200 ml heavy whipping cream

  • 200 g dark chocolate, finely chopped, I used Valrhona

  • 10 g butter

Garnish:

  • orange zest strips

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 355℉ (175℃).

Batter:

Melt butter, sugar, and syrup in a sauce pan, remove from heat, and let it cool for a few minutes. Mix the dry ingredients, and add it to the warm mixture, together with the buttermilk. Pour the batter into a 8-9-inch (22cm) springform, the bottom lined with parchment paper. And bake it for 30-35 minutes. Let the cake cool completely, before removing from the form.

Buttercream:

Cream the butter with the sugar for about 8-10 minutes, until it’s white and fluffy. Mix in the vanilla.

Ganache:

In a saucepan heat the cream to an almost simmer, remove it when small bubbles start forming at the edges. Pour it on top of the chopped chocolate and add the butter. Let it sit for about 30 seconds before you start stirring the mixture. This will give the chocolate time to start melting. Stir the ganache until it is smooth, glossy homogeneous.

Assembly:

Using a serrated knife, slice the cake horizontally in 2 layer, using gentle sawing motion. Spread the orange jam in a even layer on the lover part of the cake. On top of that spread all the buttercream in a thick even layer. Place the top part of the cake on top of the buttercream. Give it a little press to make the buttercream come out to the edge. Pour the ganache over the top of the cake, it’s ok if the ganache drips over the edges. Sprinkle with some orange zest on top, befor the ganache sets.

The cake will benefit from sitting a few hours or even overnight in the refrigerator before serving.

Enjoy!

Panettone French Toast

Breakfast, Brunch, Christmas, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
Panettone French Toast

Panettone French Toast

The past few years we bought a panettone from Manresa Bread for Christmas. This traditional Italian Christmas bread is a mix between a bread and a cake. I’ve see the ones at the grocery stores for years, but it was first when I got interested in sourdough bread baking and saw the panettone at our Local Manresa Bread store, I wanted to try it. It is as yummy in the morning with coffee as it is in the afternoon with a glass of something sweet. But the panettone is a large bread/cake, so I wanted to see if you could use the leftovers in another way, and here, French Toast a very good option. I do like French toast, but often it is very sweet and I find it to lack texture. But the panettone version add a more complex flavor profile and the breads own texture and the dried berries make it a very delicious breakfast. But I like a bit of salt with my sweets in the morning, so we added some bacon to our plates, and it was just perfect. when serving people with a larger appetite, add a sunny side up egg to the mix.

Serves 2.

Ingredients:

  • 1 large slice Panettone (1-inch/2-3 cm) thick (I used a ginger lemon cherry panttone from Manresa Bread)

  • 1 egg

  • 4 tablespoons heavy whipping cream

  • ½ teaspoon vanilla

  • 1 lemon, the zest of

  • 1 pinch salt

Directions:

723E7C65-4146-4C6A-8900-B4CCB369436E.jpeg

In a wide, shallow bowl, beat the egg, cream, vanilla, and salt together with a whisk until well-combined. Place the bread slice in the custard and gently press it down to help the bread absorb the custard, then flip it over and do the same to the other side of the bread. 

Heat a good amount of butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the custard-soaked bread to the pan and cook until it’s browned, it takes about a minute. Flip the bread and fry on the other side until it is browned. Serve the French toast immediately with a light sprinkle of powdered sugar and a drizzle of marble syrup. I served with a couple of slices of bacon, to bring some saltiness to the plate.

Enjoy!