Whether it’s for breakfast, lunch or afternoon tea, these cake and bake recipes will see you through the whole day
I could bake all day. A cake for tea, a nut-freckled meringue for dessert or something soft and fruit-laden for a mid-morning break. And, if guests are around, even for breakfast. Of course, I don’t need to, but there is something deeply civilised about stopping around 10.30am for coffee and a slice of something sweet; making a big savoury flatbread for lunch, its floury surface under a pile of sweet, golden onions and cheese.
And then there is the old-fashioned – almost forgotten – treat that is afternoon tea. No matter how simple, it always feels like a special occasion. I suppose the whole notion of tea at 4pm feels like something from a slower, less frantic era. Indulgent whatever you have on your plate. In my house it is rarely more than a single slice of cake, but this is also my favourite time to entertain, to pass around plates of classic baking for all-comers. For a birthday or a visit from much loved friends I will make a fancy-schmancy cake, by which I mean something that has taken an hour or two of my time.
I am not big on eating dessert after supper, but others will feel robbed if there isn’t something sweet with which to sign off their evening meal. Ideally, it is something that will work for both dessert and a mid-morning break the following day. Some sort of meringue fits the bill (not too heavy and will keep for a day or so). A treat that can be served in thin slices with cream and fruit, or trickled with melted chocolate the next day.
Special occasion breakfast: butternut squash and crisp pancetta tarts
For a special occasion breakfast: butternut squash and crisp pancetta tarts.
Photograph: Jonathan Lovekin/The Observer
A morning treat for when friends are staying. If you can get organised the night before, these tarts can be on the table in the morning; otherwise, they make a fine light lunch. Make the pastry cases the night before, so you have only to fill and bake them first thing the next day.
Makes 6 For the pastry butter 90g plain flour 180g egg yolk 1 grated pecorino 3 lightly heaped tbsp (or parmesan) water 2-3 tbsp
For the filling butternut squash 500g (about ½ medium) melted butter for brushing the tart tins pancetta 90g, thinly sliced eggs 2 double cream 250ml milk 50ml rosemary leaves 2 tbsp, chopped grated parmesan 2 tbsp, grated, to finish
You will need 6 loose-bottomed deep tart tins measuring 8cm across the base.
The night before, make the pastry. Cut the butter into small dice and rub into the flour with your fingertips until it has the texture of soft, fresh breadcrumbs. Alternatively, reduce to fine crumbs in a food processor. Add the egg yolk, the pecorino and the water, a tablespoon at a time, stopping when you are able to bring the crumbs together into a rollable dough. Wrap and chill the pastry in the fridge for 20 minutes.
Peel the butternut squash and scoop out and discard the seeds and fibres. Halve lengthways then slice into small pieces (about the thickness of a pound coin). Put the pieces of squash in a steamer basket and cook over boiling water for 7-10 minutes until tender. Remove, allow to cool and refrigerate. Set the oven at 170C fan/gas mark 5.
While the pastry rests, brush the tart tins thoroughly with melted butter. Divide the pastry into six, then roll out each piece to fit the tart tins. Line the tins with the pastry, pressing it gently into the corners. Fill each with greaseproof paper or foil and baking beans, rest for 20 minutes, then bake for 20 minutes.
Carefully remove the beans and paper and return the pastry cases to the oven for 5 minutes or until the pastry is biscuit coloured and dry to the touch. Remove and set aside till the next morning. (Once the pastry is cool, you may like to loosen them from their tins.)
The next morning, cut the pancetta into pieces the size of a postage stamp and fry in a shallow pan until crisp. Remove from heat.
Preheat the oven at 160C fan/gas mark 4. Beat together the eggs, cream and milk, then season with black pepper and the chopped rosemary leaves. Place the pastry cases in their tart tins on a baking sheet, then divide the slices of butternut and pancetta between them.
Pour in the custard, making sure none goes over the edges (it will stick the tarts to their tins) and dust the surface with the grated parmesan. Bake for 25 minutes until the custard is just set.
Remove from the oven and leave for 15 minutes or so before gently easing the tarts from their tins.
Mid-morning fika: vegan ginger and rhubarb slice
For a mid-morning fika: vegan ginger and rhubarb slice. Photograph: Jonathan Lovekin/The Observer
As much as I cherish the deep, caramel and liquorice notes of a classic ginger cake, I do feel a less sweet and sticky bake is called for in spring and summer. This one is a light and spicy ginger cake with ribbons of rhubarb running through the crumb. Ring the changes with apples in place of the rhubarb or, for midsummer, a couple of handfuls of gooseberries. A perfect mid-morning treat, it needs no creamy accompaniment, just a pot of coffee. Oh, and did I mention it is vegan?
Serves 12 rhubarb 250g self-raising flour 260g baking powder 1 tsp ground ginger 2 tsp dark muscovado sugar 70g light soft brown sugar 70g stem ginger in syrup 70g vegetable oil 95ml golden syrup 50ml
To finish icing sugar stem ginger in syrup 1-2 knobs
Preheat the oven at 160C fan/gas mark 4. Line a shallow cake tin measuring 20cm x 20cm with baking parchment.
Cut the rhubarb into short lengths (about 3-4cm), then slice each piece in half horizontally and set aside.
Put the self-raising flour, baking powder, ground ginger and both sugars together in the bowl of an electric mixer, and briefly mix to distribute the spices and raising agent among the flour. Chop the 70g of stem ginger into small nuggets about the size of a hazelnut.
Pour in the oil, golden syrup, a pinch of salt, the chopped ginger and 160ml of warm water. Mix together briefly, then pour into the tin (it will be slightly softer than the usual cake mixture so do not be alarmed). Scatter the rhubarb pieces over the surface (they will sink in the body of the cake as it cooks) and bake for 45-50 minutes till firm but spongy.
Remove from the oven and leave to cool before dusting with icing sugar and scattering with a little chopped stem ginger.
A bread for lunch: onion, thyme and parmesan flatbread
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