Seeking the right crumpet recipe

For the last two weeks we have been trialing crumpets recipes.  Why now? First because this has always been on my mind, but never a top priority.  At the moment, we are hosting my French niece. She has discovered crumpets with friends of ours while staying with them for a few weeks (I sent her there in June to ensure a full English immersion).  Stating the obvious, crumpets are an english breakfast item.  No chance to find them in France in supermarkets! We decided she may as well go home with a recipe that works well. So we have been actively seeking the right recipe!

crumpet

The first go at crumpets was with a recipe out of an internet search, far from being a success.  The next go was using a recipe from my yellow cooking notebook.  I do not recall where that recipe came from, I had scribbled it on a piece of paper a couple of years ago, inserted it in one of the plastic sleeves, and it was there waiting for the right day!  The “yellow notebook” is the second one of the type, there is also a red one, now full.

After that, I did another internet search and decided to put to the test three recipes simultaneously:

The comparative test

First I brought back all recipes to 200 mL of milk.  This is expected to produce 6 crumpets of 10 cm diameter. Plenty to trial with and judge!

As indicated below, the main difference is in the amount of yeast and the use of butter or not.  The Jamie Oliver’s recipe has slightly more flour. As a result that dough is a little tighter.

Yellow book recipeJamie Oliver recipeGourmet Travellers recipe
Milk200 mL200 mL200 mL
Plain flour125 g150 g125 g
Butter 1 tbsp (10 g)None10 g
dry yeast7 g4 g2 g
bicarbonate soda1/2 tsp1/4 tsp1/4 tsp
salt1/2 tspNoneNone
white sugar1 tsp1/2 tsp1/2 tsp
oil/butter for cookingoiloilbutter

The verdict:

crumpet

As represented in the above photo from left to right.

Yellow book recipe: Very good, very tasty, more complex flavour (due to the butter and the strong flavour brought by the fresh yeast

Jamie Oliver’s crumpets: Very good. closer in taste to commercial crumpets (the dough is a bit heavy)

Gourmet Travellers’ recipe: surprisingly chewy, not my favourite, but the dough is a pleasure to work with (perfect consistency)

The cooking:

I used my crepe pans, perfect for that. I had some non-stick crumpet rings.

We wanted to try the with and without flipping the crumpet methods. The benefit of not flipping it is to keep the bubbles open at the top so when you place butter, honey, jam or maple syrup over the crumpet, it all falls into the holes. Double yummy!

I found that flipping the crumpets ensures that they are cooked on both sides, it is a nice finish look also.  When we did not cook them on the other side, we have had some dryer results and a few burnt bottom ones.  It may be worth looking into using a lid so the steam can be cooking the top part of the crumpet.

crumpet
The second crumpet from the left was left cooking slowly without turning it over.

The winning recipe:

Personally, I am quite happy with the recipe that was in my yellow book.  I however find the ratio of yeast to flour a bit high and may reduce it in the future. For indication 7 g would be used with 250 g of flour.

The full method is HERE.

crumpet

Fish of the week: Barramundi

Fish of the week: barramundi!

We have been getting these beautiful barramundi fillets from the Sydney fish market.  They are really big and one is enough for a family of up to six people. When  I go to the fish market, I bring a big esky bag and choose fish to freeze and stock for a month.  The choice is not completely out of random but neither is it a planned thing.  It is the second time that I buy those large barramundi fillets, they are a treat really, but what a nice one!

Today, I am sharing a dinner menu and fish recipe from the last couple days.

The Menu (dinner)

Entree – Soft goat cheese and grana padano souffle

Main – Barramundi fillets on a bed of soft onions and brussels sprouts, served with green asparagus and hollandaise sauce and side salad

Dessert – Fruit (mandarin)

The souffles were beautiful, they rose so high! And of course collapsed afterwards!  The barramundi was delicious and with the Brussel sprouts and other greens a great combination.

Cooking  the barramundi

Did I have a recipe? No.  I don’t for those types of last minute dinner challenge.  This time I somehow managed to get a semi-passable photo of the dish before my plate become cold and the dish got eaten, so finally a recipe of a savoury dish!

barramundi fish fillet

Barramundi marries very well with lemon flavours and either on of the following: four spices, coriander ground, nutmeg.

Underneath the fish, I placed seven brussels sprouts cut very thinly, half of an onion cut very thinly, 2 garlic cloves cut thinly, 15 g of butter and a cup of water.  I salted the fish on both sides and when the butter was melted, placed the fish on top, added the juice of one lemon, a few small heads of parsley, a dusting of all spices mix and reduced the heat and covered to let cook slowly.

It took about 20 minutes to cook. In the meanwhile, I was frantically getting the asparagus steamed and the hollandaise sauce (also quite lemony) prepared.

For the full recipe, click HERE.

Grilled Barramundi fillets

A good fish is very good with minimum dressing.  barramundiA previous time, I simply seasoned it with salt, a dash of olive oil and coriander grounds on top and placed it under the grill.

Next time I will use something else than baking paper as a support…regardless it was also delicious.

Enjoy Barramundi!