I have been baking biscuits a lot lately. One of my kitchen resolutions a year (or two?) ago was to overcome my fear of baking biscuits, and I think I have leaped over that hurdle nicely.
In fact, I’ve
realised that because biscuits are so fast to make — whiz up all the
ingredients in a food processor, or melt-and-mix them in a saucepan with a
wooden spoon, before popping them in the oven for mere minutes — they’re well
suited to mid-week after-work baking, done because the cupboard is bare and you
can’t wait til the weekend to replenish it. Or because you know your weekend
will be full of good weather and gardening work, and you won’t want to be
inside in the kitchen at all. Or, just because.
The baking part
of biscuits was my stumbling block in the past. With a cake, it’s easy to tell
when it’s done, or when it needs an extra five or ten minutes safely. With a
biscuit, there’s a big difference between ‘12-15 minutes’ (have you noticed
that can be a standard biscuit baking time? or is it just my recipes?). Twelve
can mean soft and cakey, 15 – heck, 13 – can mean short and crisp, or hard and
crunchy.
Which are all
desirable outcomes on the spectrum of biscuitness* but, well, sometimes the
close proximity of those times flummoxes me. Especially when a biscuit may be
soft and pillowy to the touch when straight from the oven, but once cool, sets
hard and crisp. Trusting that transformation is something I am still getting
used to. Sometimes I want a jaw-breaking ginger biscuit, but a matter of a
minute less in the oven means I get a chewier version. As I said, that’s not
always a bad outcome; I just need to adjust my expectations slightly.
I’ve made these two
recipes a few times lately, and each time they’ve come out differently. And
it’s not just due to the baking time, I’ve realised, but whether the eggs from
mum’s chooks are small or large (I may use two super-small bantam eggs for one
normal egg), how many walnuts I feel like, how much glace ginger I have left in
the pantry, and whether I think ‘one teaspoon of golden syrup? Bah! That’s not
worth having!’. Yep, maybe all these variations have a lot to do with it as well
… I feel like each time batch is a mystery batch, but I am learning not to
mind. All variations go well with a cup of tea, and that, I think, is all that
matters.
*Ask people how
they like their Anzac biscuits, and they’ll fall into two camps: chewy versus
rock-hard. It’s an ongoing debate in Australia.
Wholemeal cocoa
biscuits
Adapted from a
great book of mum’s, ‘Australian Quick n Easy Muffins, cakes, biscuits, slices,
loaves, scones’. I’ve made these cakey as well as short and dry, like a good shortbread.
- Prep a couple of baking trays and preheat oven to 190. Or 180, which is what I do sometimes.
- Gently melt 125 gms butter with 1/2 cup light brown sugar in a saucepan. Remove from heat when done and allow to cool a little.
- Using a wooden spoon, beat in 1 egg. Then sift and stir in ¾ cup plain flour, ¾ cup plain wholemeal flour, 1 ½ tbspns cocoa and 1 ½ tspns baking powder.
- Now the next measurement is imprecise, but the quantity of walnut pieces I have used has varied each time according to what’s in the pantry, what looks right on the day, and just what I feel like. So stir thru anywhere between ½ to 1 cup of walnut pieces. Sorry.
- Take walnut-sized spoonfuls, roll into balls and place on baking trays, flattening slightly. Bake biscuits for about 15 minutes. Cool on trays for a few minutes before transferring to racks to cool completely.
Ginger biscuits
Adapted from the Women’s Weekly ‘Best Ever Collection’. These can turn out cakey or hard, though I have noticed they seem to get harder after a few days (no, not stale!).
- Prep a couple of baking trays.
- In a food processor, whiz up 2 cups plain flour, ½ tspn bicarb soda, 1 tspn ground cinnamon, 2 tspns ground ginger, 1 cup sugar and 125 gms cold butter.
- Add 1 egg, ½ tbspn golden syrup, and 1-2 tbspns chopped glace ginger, depending on your ginger preferences (and pantry supply!). Whiz til combined.
- Now turn out into a bowl and use your hands and give a couple of squeezes to bring the dough together.
- Take walnut-sized spoonfuls, roll into balls and place on baking trays, flattening slightly (fork indentations, as seen in the photo above, are purely decorative in that old-fashioned way). Fridge these for around 20 minutes or so while you do the washing up and tidy away the kitchen, and start preheating your oven to 180.
- Once the biscuits have chilled a bit and your oven is preheated, bake biscuits for about 20 minutes or until nicely golden brown. Cool on trays for a few minutes before transferring to racks to cool completely.
Yum e! I do love a good homemade biscuit. My children are also very partial to a biscuit and I figure a homemade one is always better than the store bought variety. Both these recipes sound great, I might just try the wholemeal cocoa one this week! Happy baking :)
ReplyDeleteyou too jane, and your kids! and i agree - homemade biscuits so much nicer. bought ones are always the same each time - no surprises or variation from batch to batch!
DeleteI made them e...they are great. Not too sweet and perfect with a coffee this morning :)
Deletefantastic, jane! thankyou for letting me know!
DeleteI especially like the look of the wholemeal cocoa biscuits. I always prefer mine chewy or cakey rather than hard, and I'm a big fan of shortbread, I've been making it a lot lately.
ReplyDeleteshortbread makes me think of christmas; mum makes it ready for the holidays. which are fast approaching!
DeleteNow I want biscuits, and it's too late a night for baking biscuits! They both sound wonderful, I need some new biscuit recipes to try so I may just give it a go. I've even managed to make matching aprons for myself and my little boy especially for our baking adventures. I'm sure he would love ginger biscuits (might hold off on the cocoa biscuits for him..). Lovely :)
ReplyDeletematching aprons - baking partners in crime. how fun! i hope whichever one you make works the way you like a biscuits to be, jacqui.
DeleteWell done Elizabeth... home baked biscuits are the best and soon you'll be pumping out all different kinds! Enjoy this... it's such a pleasure. PS great looking biscuits there, can I have one now please? xo
ReplyDeletepull up a chair and i'll pour you a fresh cuppa lizzy :-) thank you!
DeleteI just love Anzac and ginger biscuits. Yum!
ReplyDeleteyes after writing this post, i realised i hadn;t made anzacs for a while, theyare next on the list, frogpond!
DeleteI love the way in the second one part of the method involves cleaning dishes :) that way you can put the kettle on while they are baking and enjoy a fresh biscuit with your cuppa! The best thing about home made baking is that it is not too consistent. Yours all look very yummy.
ReplyDeleteif we wanted consistency, we'd buy a packet biscuit; you're right, AA!
Deleteha, i like watching rachel khoo in her 'little paris kitchen' do the dishes. i've seen telly shows where the (male) chef sits around listening to jazz while waiting for the timer to go off. in the real world, we don't have kitchen slaves to do the dishes for us!!