This month has been all about baking! While the weather is
cold, there’s nothing better than a comforting slice of a delicious cake. I’ve
been going through a series of my favourite recipes, including various
chocolaty incarnations, coffee and walnut, sticky toffee sponge and a (quite
sharp) lemon drizzle. But I’m getting a little tired of these standard – albeit
delicious – offerings and want something new.
But where to start gathering inspiration? Thankfully I was
given the chance to have an indulgent chat with baking guru Lilly Vanilli to
get some insight into how she creates her delicious and unusual recipes, plus
who her food heroes are. Here’s the interview, plus a recipe completely
inspired by her.
Anna-Marie: Has your upbringing in Saudi Arabia and travels
across the world influenced the flavours you use?
Lilly Vanilli: Yes
definitely, I always adapt what I’m baking depending on what’s in season
locally and the exciting thing about my current projects (bakeries in Abu Dhabi
& India) is the incredible array of new flavours and ingredients I get to
experiment and work with. Some of those I can bring back with me (like the
spices).
AM: You’re well known for your unique flavour combinations –
do you have any current favourites?
LV: Seasonal produce is generally the starting point for any menu/recipe I put together. Over the colder monthsI’m loving sweet potato, parsnip & beetroot for cakes as well as apple& rosemary. You can also look to the store cupboard more for spices & I generally make everything with warmer, heartier flavours and more booze!
LV: Seasonal produce is generally the starting point for any menu/recipe I put together. Over the colder monthsI’m loving sweet potato, parsnip & beetroot for cakes as well as apple& rosemary. You can also look to the store cupboard more for spices & I generally make everything with warmer, heartier flavours and more booze!
AM: There’s a generation of young bakers looking to you as
inspiration, but do you have any food heroes?
LV: I have lots of food heroes past and present; I always look to Antoine Careme, the godfather of the pièces montée (grad-scale edible centrepieces). I’m currently starting a new off shoot project with the architect & designer Jordan Hodgson (http://jordanhodgson.com/) with the working title Fierce Montée – in which we create stunning edible centrepieces which look to the past for inspiration but are recreated in a very modern style. Using techniques such as 3D printing, for example.
LV: I have lots of food heroes past and present; I always look to Antoine Careme, the godfather of the pièces montée (grad-scale edible centrepieces). I’m currently starting a new off shoot project with the architect & designer Jordan Hodgson (http://jordanhodgson.com/) with the working title Fierce Montée – in which we create stunning edible centrepieces which look to the past for inspiration but are recreated in a very modern style. Using techniques such as 3D printing, for example.
AM: What snippet of advice would you give to others
who want to – as you did – turn their passion for baking in to a business?LV: Focus you time, money and energy on becoming the best you can be in what you want to do. Find your niche that way. Put all you resources into this rather than focusing on PR/marketing/packaging/press. If you do enough of a good thing these things will take care of themselves. There are free tools like social media and word of mouth to support you once you’ve got something worth talking about.
AM: Finally, what are you working on at the moment?
LV: I've been working with Cadbury Crispello to create a simple but visually stunning dinner party piece. The idea was to re-invent the traditional croquembouche, creating a fully edible tower. The idea came about because Cadbury Crispello pieces are easy to build with - shaped like little chocolate bricks, but the wafer and mousse centre is actually very light so they stack nicely.
LV: I've been working with Cadbury Crispello to create a simple but visually stunning dinner party piece. The idea was to re-invent the traditional croquembouche, creating a fully edible tower. The idea came about because Cadbury Crispello pieces are easy to build with - shaped like little chocolate bricks, but the wafer and mousse centre is actually very light so they stack nicely.
Recipe of the month
Taking Lilly’s ideas around seasonality and spice into
account, I’ve made this great walnut and beetroot cake – which was originally a
carrot cake. It’s delicious, moist and very sweet!
Ingredients
· 450g flour
· 2 tsps baking powder
· 300ml sunflower or rapeseed oil
· 1 tsp ground nutmeg
· 1 tsp cinnamon
· 150g light brown sugar
· 125g muscavado sugar
· 150g chopped walnuts
· 350g cooked and grated beetroot
· 3 large eggs
Icing & decoration
· 225g mascarpone
· 100g icing sugar
· 2 tsp lemon juice
· Natural red food colouring
· Large handful of walnut halves
Grease and line an 18cm cake tin and preheat the oven to 180C.
Sift together the flour, baking powder and spices. Next, add the sugar to the dry mix before adding the oil, combine. Add the eggs one-by-on whilst stirring. Next add the beetroot and chopped walnuts, and stir together. The mixture is very thick – so don’t be alarmed! Pour into the tin and bake for an hour.
Place the cooked cake onto a wire rack. While you wait for
it to cool, make the icing. You simply need to mix the ingredients (bar the
walnuts) together until you have a smooth and shiny consistency.
Once is have completely cooled, cut the cake into two
rounds. Generously ice the top of one and sandwich together before icing the
top and sides of the cake with a palette knife. Decorate with the walnuts round
the outside edge of the cake.