| February
2010
I can't say I care much
for February, despite it being the month of my birth and
having the highlight of pancake day. It is a cold, bleak
month. In fact, it is often the coldest month of the
year. Even when it snows, the snow is somehow just
inconvenient rather than magical or festive. It is a
difficult month for the kitchen gardener. Like the first
snowdrops, February brings with it the first itching
feeling that it is time to start growing again, yet it
is too cold, dim and damp to get much growing. If you
pick up a February edition of a gardening magazine they
talk enthusiastically about getting started under cover
but this merely irritates those among us who don't
process a greenhouse. And the windowsills in my house
are too gloomy to grow anything at this time of year.
Experience has taught me to be patient and wait until
March before attempting any serious sowing.
The
other thing about February is that the things in store
really start to deteriorate too. Onion, garlic and
potatoes all decide it is time to start growing again.
Other things such as squash and pumpkin decide it is
just time to give up and rot sets in. If you have any
squash or pumpkins in store then go and check them
because they are easier to transport to the compost heap
when the first patches of mould appear than when they
have turned to a sloppy blob of goo. I don't have any
pumpkins left without rot now so it looks like my 101
things to do with pumpkin quest has been scuppered. How
many did I manage? Maybe 20.
As it happens, I had put
a small portion of pumpkin puree in the freezer and
labeled it "pumpkin for Swiss roll". I came across this
at the weekend and decided it would be a good time to
finally get round to trying the Swiss roll recipe. I had
found it on the Internet originally but it was a poor
recipe. Firstly the ingredients had been written in the
order in which the author had remembered them rather
than the order of use. Secondly, it was an American
recipe so it was measured in cups and spoons.
Why spoons? Why would
you measure butter in tablespoons when it comes out of
the fridge in hard blocks that don't mould readily
around a spoon? And finally, the method seemed bizarre
and unlikely to work successfully. Nonetheless, there
was just enough information to provide me with the
inspiration I needed to try my own version. So on Sunday
afternoon when my eldest daughter declared she was bored
I suggested she helped me out in the kitchen and we made
the pumpkin roll.
| Pumpkin Swiss
Roll |
| 60g butter,
softened |
| 175g caster
sugar |
| 3 eggs
|
| 100g plain
flour |
| 1 teaspoon
cinnamon |
| 1 teaspoon
bicarbonate of soda |
| 180g pumpkin
puree |
| 100g cream
cheese |
| 100g icing
sugar |
| 1 teaspoon
vanilla extract |
| 100g plum jam
|
Grease and line a Swiss
roll tin - that's just a baking tray with rim all the
way round. Preheat oven to 190°C, gas 5. Cream together
the butter and sugar then stir in the eggs. Sift in the
flour, spice and bicarbonate of soda then add the
pumpkin puree and stir well. Pour this mix into the
lined tin and level out. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes until
springy to the touch. Remove from the oven and carefully
maneuver the cake on its paper backing onto a clean tea
towel then use the tea towel to roll it up into the
Swiss roll shape. Leave it like this to cool completely.
Mix together the cream cheese, icing sugar and vanilla
extract. Once cooled, unroll the cake again and spread
the cream cheese icing and the jam over it. Remove the
baking paper as you roll it up again then sprinkle with
caster sugar.
In the same freezer
rummage that had uncovered the pumpkin puree, I also
reminded myself that I still had about 2 pounds of
gooseberries in there too. I took out 12 oz of them on
Sunday morning and let them thaw out. Whilst waiting for
the Swiss roll to cool down my daughter and I had a go
at making gooseberry flapjacks - now that's something
you can't buy in the shops!
| Gooseberry
Flapjacks |
| 12 oz fresh or
thawed gooseberries |
| 3 tablespoons
water |
| 1 tablespoon
lime juice |
| 2 tablespoon
granulated sugar |
| 1 oz corn flour
|
| 7 oz oats
|
| 2-3 oz light
brown sugar |
| 4 oz butter
|
| 1 tablespoon
golden syrup |
Preheat over to 190°C,
gas 5 and grease a shallow tin or tray. Place the
gooseberries in a saucepan with the granulated sugar,
water and lime juice and bring to the boil. Simmer for
about 20 minutes until soft. Force the gooseberries
through a sieve to remove the skin and pips. Return to
the pan. Add enough water to the cornflour to make a
liquid then pour this into the gooseberry puree. Heat,
stirring constantly, until the mixture thickens. Remove
from the heat and set aside. In a bowl, mix together the
oats, sugar, butter and syrup until sticky. Tip half the
oat mixture into the tin and firmly press into an even
layer. Spread the gooseberry paste over the oat layer
then add the other half of the oat mix, pressing down
firmly with wetted finger. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes
until golden. Cool in the tin the cut into pieces.
So later that day I cut
off slices of pumpkin Swiss roll for my daughters and me
and offered Steve a flapjack. The Swiss roll was
beautifully moist and the filling gooey and squidgy -
yet another pumpkin success. I think next Halloween this
might make the perfect centrepiece for a Halloween
party. Steve bit into a flapjack and said, "Wow! What
flavour is that?" Gooseberry flapjacks turned out a
surprise success too.
As the fresh vegetables
slowly deteriorate I can at least comfort myself with
the contents of my freezer and make a proper attempt to
empty out the stored produce before June. On the plus
side, February is the shortest month of the year and
soon it will be March and time to start the growing
cycle all over again. |