The Durvillea Diary – Cookies, oh my!

 
 
We Durvillea Girls love. to. bake.
 
Yesterday (Labour Day) was my friend Tim’s 28th birthday. Tim has quite the sweet tooth - so I decided to bake him some world-famous-in-my-family cookies. My mother discovered this recipe several years ago in Bill Granger’s ‘Sydney Food’ cookbook. I highly recommend this recipe to anyone — my friends love me a lot when I make them.
 
 
Please enjoy my ‘Wicked’ notebook…
 
Pre-heat your oven to 180 degrees celcius.
 
Now, being the young independent woman that I now am, starting up my new kitchen, I have yet to purchase an electric beater. So yes, mam - I did it like they did before electricity came about… I creamed that unsalted butter and brown sugar with a wooden spoon! It wasn’t actually too difficult, just make sure your butter is nice and softened first (NB you don’t want to melt your butter at all, as you’ll think you have a nice creamy texture, but then butter will come back up to room temperature and it will be no more).  
 

Creamed them the old school way...

 
 Also starting up my new pantry, I found myself without any vanilla extract! However, luckily I have such well decked-out friendly neighbours… this vanilla bean paste is pure luxury. However, I used about half the quantity of vanilla required as this is more concentrated.  
 

Mmm vanilla - borrowed from friendly neighbour J.T.

I even said “Hi-diddly-ho, Neighbour!” 

After adding the vanilla, I mixed in a lightly beaten Astrolabe Farm fresh egg.

 

Free-range, organic, of course!

 
When you add eggs to creamed butter and sugar, don’t fret if it looks like it is curdling!  Once you add your dry ingredients, it will come right.
 

Adding the lightly beaten egg

 

All whipped, light and fluffy!

 
Now you’re ready to fold in your dry ingredients – at this stage I like to ditch the wooden spoon for a good spatula. 
 
I usually use Swiss Chocolate with this recipe when I’m being a little bit fancy, however, this time I used some good old Cadbury milk chocolate buttons (as this is what I had in my cupboard). I do prefer to use bigger pieces/chunks than chocolate chips.
 

Classic kiwiana Edmonds

 
I start folding in the 1 & 1/2 cups of  chocolate pieces when the dry ingredients are about 3/4 combined, so that way you are working the mixture a bit less.
 

Important not to over-mix

 
At this point, you can also spoon the mixture into glad-wrap or grease-proof paper and create little logs that you can freeze, slice and bake at a moment’s notice! 
 

Working their magic

 
They are best placed in the centre of your oven. I like to take them out when that are starting to get quite toasty brown around the perimeter. I like a bit of crunch – but they should still be soft in the middle. (FYI I would usually line my baking tray with grease-proof paper, however I didn’t have any, so I greased my tray with a little bit of melted butter, just in case!).
   
Baked and ready for cooling

Now, they may not be the neatest looking little cookies – more on the rustic side – but holy moly they are tasty.  

I know what you’re thinking — is that cookie going to fit in that jar? It did.
 
 I even dressed them with a bow.
 
P.S. Hannah (Jules Taylor employee and also Tim’s other-half) made him a pretty epic Bart Simpson birthday cake. I am going to try and secure a photo of it from her, and put it up on our facebook page this week (if she lets me)! 
 
-Genevieve
 
 

Tis the season – Yule log recipe from Jane & competition

The raspberries are ripening and on Saturday we bought our first cherries of the season. Christmas is upon us, so what I have I done? Well, I have done quite a few good and interesting things in the last few weeks but very few to do with Christmas preparations. I keep saying it is just one dinner, a few presents, and family to stay. However after three weeks away on a northern hemisphere tour we are home and I have a small sense of panic. Just a sniff.

Foremost for me at Christmas is family. This year we will have all the girls home, my sister Nicki and her family, which of course includes our Sophie, and my father. We are fairly traditional at Christmas. Breakfast, presents, champagne, lunch, lounging about, fun activities (planning croquet this year) and left-overs for tea. As you may have read we like to decorate the house for Christmas. Arabella takes the role of Christmas decorating fairy. I also enjoy setting the table with my Christmas napkins and wearing my Christmas apron.All accompanied by various drinks. Christmas lunch will be a roast turkey, but my favourite part is making desert. It is decadent and fun. Actually I really love the whole thing of the people I love best in the world gathering around the table.

Last year we (Libby the baker daughter) and I made a yule log for Christmas lunch. The combination of chocolate and fresh summer berries is excellent. This recipe comes from Nigella Lawson’s Nigella Christmas.
Yule Log
For the cake:
6 eggs, separated (luckily my new chickens have come into lay)
150g caster sugar
50g cocoa powder
1 tsp vanilla extract
3-5 tsps icing sugar to decorate

For the icing:

175g dark chocolate, chopped
250gg icing sugar
225g soft butter
1 x 15ml tablespoon vanilla extract

• Preheat the oven to 180 C
• In a large , clean bowl whisk the egg whites until thick and peaking, then, still whisking, sprinkle in 50g of the caster sugar sugar and continue whisking until the whites are holding their peaks but not dry.
• In another bowl, whisk the egg yolks and the remaining caster sugar until the mixture is mousy, pale and thick. Add the vanilla extract, sieve the cocoa powder over, then fold both in.
• Lighten the yolk mixture with a couple of dollops of the egg whites, folding them in robustly. Then add the remaining whites in thirds, folding them in carefully to avoid losing the air.
• Line a Swiss roll tin with baking parchment, leaving a generous overhang at the ends and sides, and folding the parchment into the corners to help the paper stay anchored.
• Pour in the cake mixture and bake in the oven for 20 minutes. Let the cake cool a little before turning it out onto another piece of baking parchment.

- Jane

Here is how to enter the competition. We already have one entry on last week’s blog from Sharon for a Midori & Bailey’s trifle!

Competition details:

Post up your favourite Christmas recipe, meal, or serving suggestion on this blog and we will do the second draw this coming Friday 10th December for the next two bottles of Durvillea wine (your choice)

Terms and Condition to Enter:
* Must be over 18
* Comments must be posted on this blog, not our facebook or twitter accounts
* Only those in New Zealand and Australia are eligible for this competition
* One person’s recipe a week will be drawn from a hat each Friday until the 17th December and that lucky person will win 2 bottles of their choice of Durvillea wines
*Everyone who posted a recipe will go in the draw for the Durvillea Sauvignon Blanc magnum to be drawn 17th December