Pudding club: Apple soufflés

Previously on Pudding Club: Chocolate mousse / Pear and Ginger cake / Chocolate/Chestnut torte / Beef Wellington canapés / Crème renversée au caramel

So last night at pudding club, I opted for a new tactic – take ingredients and use our friends’ large well equipped kitchen to assemble a pudding on site.

A tactic with varied results. I was making soufflé, which you really need to know your oven for, and have a bit of a practice. My practice run earlier in the week had gone reasonably well:

Possible next Pudding Club: Eric Lanlard's apple snuffle

This is based on Eric Lanlard’s recipe from the series Glamour Puds

Soufflé, like chocolate mousse, is one of those things that looks really impressive, but is made with very few ingredients and is quite easy to make, particularly with an electric whisk. Unlike chocolate mousse, you have to get the oven timings right, which needs a little practice. And preferably, the same oven when practising as on the night.

So, the night before, I peeled and cored 6 cox apples, sprinkled with cinnamon and a small amount of water, and roasted in a fairly hot oven for 45 minutes. Push the roasted apples through a sieve. (peeling them first makes it much easier to get them through the sieve, and adding a little water means you don’t leave half the apple as burnt bits on the roasting tin)

Come the evening itself, prepare 4 large ramekins: line with sponge fingers and sprinkle a little calvados over them. We have some fab calvados, bought directly from the farm in Normandy where it is distilled, so we always have a story to tell about the spirit.

Separate four eggs and mix the yolks in with the apple purée, and beat the whites to stiff peaks. Once the whites are ready, slowly add 200grams muscovado sugar whilst continuing to whisk. Then take a third of the egg white and mix well with the purée/yolk mix before folding the in the rest of the egg whites carefully to preserve the air. (This thing about adding in a third and mixing well, and carefully folding in the remaining amount is a new thing to me – but I have now seen it on several different cooking programmes in the same week.)

Pour the mix over the sponge biscuits and bake in a hot oven, 210 deg C for 9-12 minutes. It’s a soufflé, so don’t open the oven door until they are cooked. Hope you have an oven with a window! When they are cooked, the soufflé will rise quite considerably in height, and a skewer should come out clean.

My effort last night wasn’t quite cooked enough, but still a little tasty.

Apple soufflé

I think it could probably have stayed in another five minutes without burning too much on top.

Another similar Eric Lanlard recipe is “Soufflé Pompadour” – which uses oranges instead of apples, and is cooked in the hollowed out orange shells, which are place in teacups to serve.

Advantages of using friends’ kitchen and equipment?

Recipes which might make an outing for a future Pudding club:

Eric Lanlard / Glamour puds:

  • Galette des rois (looks relatively simple, but relies on good presentation, which always lets me down)
  • Tarte borguinione – which looks pretty similar to this old favourite, but with the welcome addition  of chocolate and red wine…

Raymond Blanc recipes

  • Délice au chocolat – fiddly, much?  But a biscuit base made from praline and bran flakes?!

PS, is it just me, or Raymond Blanc – Chris Noth – separated at birth?
Chris Noth / Raymond Blanc

Librivox is still ace

I’m enormously chuffed that my reading of The Invisible Man is on the list published today of Librivox Readers’ Favourites.

I read it aloud to my computer nearly four years ago – horrifying thought – and it’s still popular all this time later. I know that it is, because I get a steady stream of highly flattering emails from people who have enjoyed it.

Was saying only last night how I really must find time to record something else. Many of the things I made a little list of how now been well recorded by other people, so I am open to suggestions for a summer project.

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Daily View 2×2: 18 March 2010

How to sign "Thank you" in BSLOf all the days in history I’ve had to write about so far, March 18th seems about the dullest. Nothing particularly interesting has ever happened today, so that’s a bit of a challenge for the day just leaving the starters blocks.

About the best the wikipedia page for today can offer up is that John Updike was born today and the Tolpuddle Martyrs were sentenced to transportation. Terry Schiavo’s feeding tube was disconnected and BSL was first recognised as an official British language.

2 Big Stories

Ashcroft’s lawyers silence ‘Panorama’

The Independent reports:

The BBC has shelved a Panorama documentary about the business affairs of the Tory billionaire Lord Ashcroft, because of a threat of legal action.

The Corporation has received what one insider described as “several very heavy letters” from Lord Ashcroft’s lawyers. There is now little or no prospect of the investigation being broadcast before the general election, if it goes out at all.

Plan to ban items from bins to boost recycling

The Guardian has a report on how Labour want to take even more responsibilities away from Councils, by legislating exactly what waste should be recycled:

Black bins for household waste could become a thing of the past under proposals to be published tomorrow to ban almost everything thrown away by households from being sent to landfill.

Paper and card, food, garden waste and plastics are all on a list of items that would have to be recycled, composted, or burned for energy. The move would represent a transformation in England and Wales, where about half of what people put in the bin at home or at work ends up in holes in the ground.

Presumably another stupid unenforceable Labour idea that will be floated and then dropped in fairly short order.

2 Must-Read Blog Posts

What are other Liberal Democrat bloggers saying? Here are two posts that have caught the eye from the Liberal Democrat Blogs aggregator:

  • Joe Otten kinda likes the slogan
  • Sure the Tory slogan has the word change. They want us to think that they are Barack Obama. But of course Obama is a Liberal and a Democrat. And where is their change? And who is it for? Sure the Labour slogan has the word fairness. But they’ve been in government for what seems like 30 years, and where is this fairness? So maybe it sucks to have a slogan that must be explained. At least – unlike the other parties – we have one that can be explained.

  • Alex Folkes notes the post Conference Lib Dem poll boost
  • Turns out that when people hear more from the Lib Dems, they support us more. Who knew?

Spotted any other great posts in the last day from blogs that aren’t on the aggregator? Do post up a comment sharing them with us all.

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Digital economy bill must be debated in the Commons

So despite conference taking our peers out for a friendly word in their shell-like, it seems the Digital Economy Bill has successfully cleared the hurdles in the House of Lords.

Some industry experts are relying on the bill passing simply because it runs out of time, the MPs fail to scrutinize it, and it gets through thanks to the wash-up.

So now is the time to write to your MP to insist the bill gets a proper hearing in the Commons.  38 Degrees have information and a campaign to help you do that.

Daily View 2×2: 16 March 2010

Good morning, and welcome to Daily View. I’m standing in for your usual Tuesday host because Sara was rushed into hospital yesterday. Get well soon, Sara.

March 16th in history saw the resignation of Harold Wilson in 1976; in 1995, Mississippi finally ratified the 13th Amendment and officially outlawed slavery in US.

Today is the birthday of Isabelle Huppert and Jimmy Nail.

2 Big Stories

Police investigate Labour MP Ashok Kumar’s death

Police and doctors are investigating the death of a Labour MP whose body was found at his home yesterday.

Dr Ashok Kumar, 53, had been working as normal, with major commitments as parliamentary private secretary to Hilary Benn, the environment secretary. He was also campaigning for Corus steelworkers’ jobs in his Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland constituency. His body was found after anxious staff failed to rouse him by phone and called emergency services, who broke into his home.

Steve Richards has noticed something about Nick Clegg

Suddenly it is almost impossible to switch on the TV or radio, read a newspaper or a political blog, without Nick Clegg, the leader of the Liberal Democrats, featuring in some form or other. For a long time Clegg despaired of being noticed in the media. Now he is almost as ubiquitous as David Beckham, with slightly more hope of being an active player this summer.

There is, though, a twist. Every time Clegg is interviewed in this period of unusual prominence he is asked a variation on the same question. Sometimes it is all he is asked in interviews lasting a considerable length of time. What, Mr Clegg, would you do in the event of a hung parliament?

2 Must-Read Blog Posts

What are other Liberal Democrat bloggers saying? It’s still close enough to conference that debates and speeches are still on people’s minds. Here are two posts that have caught the eye from the Liberal Democrat Blogs aggregator:

  • Millennium Elephant’s unique take on the proceedings
  • The City of Brum is FAMOUS for MAKING THINGS, not least CARS including the famous cat-monster brand of Jaguar, but also all sorts of things from custard and chocolate and HP Sauce to jewellery and Bakelite. Also two of Great Britain’s famous failed banks were founded here (Lloyds Superbank wot we own, and Midland wot was bought up by the HSBC), but never mind that.

    So it was GOOD to be debating the importance of reclaiming Great Britain’s position as a manufacturing nation there in the Iron City. And Captain Clegg made a point of this in his big speech too, saying we need a change from an economy based just on City bankers gambling.

  • Caron Lindsay is slightly critical
  • I am going to be critical – but only about the quality of the video. Dark suit and black backdrop do kind of make him look a bit strange.

    It really must be a nightmare to wake up on the morning of a keynote speech with a bad throat, but despite that Nick did really well.

Spotted any other great posts in the last day from blogs that aren’t on the aggregator? Do post up a comment sharing them with us all.

And Two Tuesday Bonus Links today: