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This Is My Favourite

This Is My FavouriteAfter a successful launch in 2005, This is my Favourite, the BBC Children in Need Appeal recipe book for 2006 is well underway. 59 of the UKs top chefs have all donated recipes and offered their support.

As well as giving readers the chance to recreate any of the top chefs favourite recipes, this years book will include a very special BBC Children in Need Dinner Party menu ‘My Favourite Night’.  The aim is to entice both restaurants and you to prepare the recipe and host a special My Favourite Night dinner party during the week leading up to the telethon on Friday 17th November. Register your dinner party on www.thisismyfavourite.co.uk to help in the attempt to host the ‘biggest national dinner party… ever’!

My Favourite recipe book goes on sale nationwide in October but it is available online now at www.thisismyfavourite.co.uk, priced £10.00. Proceeds for the book will go to the BBC Children in Need Appeal.

Our personal favourite is the Sticky Toffee Pudding from Paul and Jean Rankin who spice up this comfort food classic with Bushmills Irish Whiskey.

Sticky Toffee Pudding Serves: 6-8
Preparation time: 10 minutes
Cooking time:35 minutes

Ingredients:

Sticky Toffee Pudding

  • 200g fresh dates, stoned and finely chopped
  • 175g self-raising flour
  • 1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla essence
  • 1 teaspoon coffee essence
  • 100ml milk
  • 85g unsalted butter
  • 140g sugar
  • 2 eggs, beaten just to break the yolks
  • Vegetable oil, for greasing
  • Whipped cream, to serve

Butterscotch Sauce

  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 8 tablespoons light golden brown sugar
  • 200ml whipping cream
  • 200ml Bushmills Irish whiskey
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla essence

Method:

Preheat the oven to 180oC, 350oF, Gas Mark 4

Pour 175ml of boiling water over the dates and set aside to soak and cool. Sift the flour and soda together.

Add the essences to the milk.

Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. Add the eggs slowly, waiting until it has been incorporated each time, before adding more.

Fold the flour and milk alternatively into the egg mixture. Lastly, pour in the dates. The mix will be rather light and runnier than a cake batter. Ladle into 6-8 greased individual moulds and place on a baking sheet in the centre of the oven. Bake for 30 minutes approximately, until the puddings are firm and starting to pull away from the sides of the molds.

Remove from oven and turn out onto a wire rack to cool.

To make the butterscotch sauce, put the butter in a medium-sized saucepan, over medium-high heat. When the butter is bubbling, add the brown sugar. Stir together for about 3 minutes, until the sugar has dissolved, and the whole mass is foaming and bubbling. Carefully pour in the cream, followed by the Bushmills, and turn down the heat. Let it all come together and boil for about another minute or two, and then remove from the heat. Add the vanilla. Allow to cool slightly.

To serve, place the puddings on warm plates and ladle a generous spoonful of the sauce over each one. Dollops of whipped cream will top them off perfectly. If wrapped in clingfilm, the puddings keep well for a couple of days, and can be re-heated in just a minute or two in the microwave or covered in some of the sauce in a medium oven.

Originally taken from ‘New Irish Cookery’ by Paul and Jeanne Rankin. Published by BBC Books.

 

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