Cake geeks

We all know computer geeks. Tom from Poke, our dedicated web designers, introduced me yesterday to some of their bread-and-butter: google analytics. This offers the ultimate pleasure to anyone with a website and loads of time to spare. You can find absolutely anything there: who visited your site, when, where are they there from (in our case, UK, USA and Australia are in the lead), how long they bothered to stay tuned, what browser they used etc. etc. etc.
Talking to Tom it dawned on me that I am also a geek, a cake geek. The amount of time I can spend waffling about cakes is unlimited; I am sure I can rival any IT buff.
And I am not alone. Once a week Sarit, Helen and I meet to do just that. In our regular pastry tastings we spend long hours analysing the minutest and most bizarre and far-fetched elements of a cake, comparing textures and flavours, scrutinizing methods, suggesting alternative components, shapes, moulds, going over recent trends, what’s a must and what’s lost its sparkle, who’s the master of brownies and what makes the ideal cupcake. And we also stuff ourselves with cakes, which is fun and (try to believe me!) an agony.


Comments
Hi
we are looking for cupcakes like we had in your Notting Hill shop (the ones with the strayberry icing on top) for our wedding in Sydney. Do you know of anywhere in Sydney that makes cupcakes like these?
Cheers
Tom
Hi Tom,
I have been asking around and couldn't find an answer to your request... sorry (even us cake geeks have our limitations). I am sure, though, that you will be able to find something quite spectacular in Sydney.
Tom,
I would try Yellow in Potts Point. Lorraine Godsmark is a sugar witch. Talk to her.
Corinne
57-59 Macleay Street
Potts Point, 2011
tel: [02] 9357 3400
Thanks Corinne. I will pass on to Tom.
Try Cupcakes Ahoy: www.cupcakeahoy.com.au.
They delivered an enormous box of different flavours to my brother in law for his birthday. Amazingly friendly people to deal with and delivery by mercedes!
Delicious too and spectacularly decorated (crushed jaffas, shaved chocolate etc).
Hi Yotam,
My daughter baked your Clementine & Almond Syrup Cake (Guardian Christmas supplement) for my birthday after Christmas, as we both looked at the beautiful illustration, and couldn't wait to try it. We were not disappointed - it is absolutely stonkingly fabulous! I shall bake another for my work colleagues later on, when the Christmas goodies there have disappeared. I know they will want the recipe too. We also cooked the Pumpkin Wedges and the soup from that supplement too, and thoroughly enjoyed them. Thank you very much. Jackie.
Thanks Jackie!
Yes, this is one of my favourite cakes of all times.
Happy new year.
Yotam
Hi Yotam
like Jackie above, I have now made the Clementine & Almond Syrup cake on three occasions, and each time it has been a real success.
Do you have any similar type recipes? I have a dinner party coming up where the guests have already had a taste (and thoroughly enjoyed) the C&A cake, and thought I would be cheeky and ask for any direction you may be able to give to an alternative.
I so enjoy making your treats (the fish cakes went down a treat as a Christmas morning nibble with friends before we all went off to our Christmas feasts with families), and am gradually working my way through your book. So look forward to the next edition!
Happy New Year - and many thanks for your inspirations.
Jill
Jill,
Below is a recipe for a cake that I published in Waitrose Food Monthly last year. It is delicious and not dissimilar to the clementine cake. You can easily do without the rose petals.
Good luck with it!
Yotam
Pistachio and rosewater semolina cake
Serves 8
Cake
3 cardamom pods
150g pistachios nuts, shelled, plus a little extra to garnish
100g ground almonds
170g semolina
1¼ tsp baking powder
¼ tsp salt
300g unsalted butter, at room temperature
330g caster sugar
4 medium eggs
Grated zest of 1 lemon
1 tbsp lemon juice
2 tbsp rosewater
½ tsp vanilla essence
Syrup
120ml lemon juice
100ml rosewater
120g caster sugar
Cream
200g Greek yoghurt
200g Crème fraiche
1 tbsp icing sugar
1 tbsp rosewater
Optional garnish
40 pesticide-free red rose petals
1 egg white
150g caster sugar
Start with the cake. Grease a 22cm loose-base cake tin and cover the bottom and sides with greaseproof paper. Heat up the oven to 160C.
Take the cardamom pods, crush lightly and remove the seeds to a food processor bowl. Discard the pods. Add the pistachios to the seeds and grind to a semi-fine powder. Add the ground almonds, semolina, baking powder and salt to the ground pistachios and stir to mix.
Put the butter and sugar in a mixer bowl and use a beater to mix until they combine fully. Do not work much so that you don’t incorporate a lot of air into the mixture. Break the eggs and beat lightly, then add to the creaming butter and sugar in small additions, making sure each is fully incorporated before adding more. Scrape the sides of the bowl occasionally.
Once all the egg is fully incorporated, add the dry ingredients and fold in by hand. Do not over mix. Now fold in the lemon zest, juice, rosewater and vanilla.
Transfer the cake batter to the lined tin, level with a palette knife and put in the pre-heated oven. Bake for roughly 1 hour. Check if the cake is ready by inserting a skewer inside. It should come out dry (but oily).
While the cake is in the oven make the syrup. Put all the ingredients in a small saucepan and place on medium heat. Bring to the boil, making sure the sugar fully dissolves, and remove from the heat.
Once the cake is out of the oven brush it with most of the syrup (both the syrup and the cake need to be very hot), leaving about 4 tablespoons of syrup for later. Place the cake and reserved syrup on the side until they come to room temperature.
To serve the cake, cut it into wedges and lay them on serving plates. Whisk together all the cream ingredients and spoon a generous dollop on top of each slice. Drizzle with some of the remaining syrup, finely chop the reserved pistachios and sprinkle on top.
If you wish to add sugared rose petals to your garnish, you’d need to prepare these in advance. Turn down the oven temperature to 70C once the cake is out. Dip the petals gently in egg white, shake off any excess, and scatter just enough sugar to cover the leaves without creating lumps. Transfer to an oven tray lined with grease-proof paper and place in the oven. Leave there to dry for 30-45 minutes or until the petals are totally crisp. Place in a sealed dry container and scatter over the cake just before serving.
Hi Yotam,
I just wanted to tell you how brilliant your cookbook is. My boyfriend got it for me for Christmas, and I made your chocolate fudge cake this weekend - we've already eaten half of it, and I've brought some in for my colleagues who are also raving about it!
I don't live in London but when I'm next in town I'm definitely popping in.
I'm going to try some of your other cake recipes with wheat-free flour - wish me luck!
Nicole
Good luck Nicole! ...and yes, do pop in when in London for sweets and all the rest.
Hi Yotam,
Firstly, can i say how much i have enjoyed your recipes from your cookbook. I am having a wonderful time slowly cooking through it recipe by recipe! I was lucky enough to visit two of your stores over christmas when i was visiting the UK and throughly enjoyed both experiences. Your staff do an amazing job.
While i was there i had one of your raspberry cupcakes which was heavenly. I have made both cupcake recipes from the book which were delicious but was wondering if you had a recipe which excluded nuts? My brother is allergic to them and feels deprived every time i make a batch!
Thanks again for all your delicious creations Yotam!
Karina
Thank you Karina! Yes, I am rather proud of my staff.
Here's a nutless cupcake recipe I haven't tried but Sarit, head pastry chef, says it's good. Hope it works for you.
185g unsalted butter
280g caster sugar
150g white chocolate
250ml milk
230g plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
2 eggs
Melt butter and sugar till warm. Add white chocolate and stir until it melts. Mix in remaining ingredients and fill up the cases.
I cooked yoru Clementine & almond cake yesterday for chinese new year, and it was the most amazingly perfect cake I've ever made, thanks so much for helping me build up my cake rep!
wow! thank you. we are celebrating a belated chinese new year on saturday. can't wait.
wow. I think I must be in an alternate universe. an entire page of cake conversation. I'm in the US so I cannot, sadly, pop over to one of your shops, Yotam, but I sooooooooooo would like to. Instead, I'm going to try to find your Clementine and Almond cake recipe and make myself one!! then I plan to try the recipe I see here today...for I, too, am a cake geek.
Eileen
Always nice to find your lost twin souls.
Just to make your life easier, here is the clementine cake recipe (sorry it's in metric). it is wonderful!
Good luck, Yotam
Clementine and almond cake
Serves 8-10
200g unsalted butter
380g caster sugar
Grated zest and juice of 4 clementines
Grated zest and juice of 1 lemon
280g ground almonds
5 medium free-range eggs, beaten
100g plain flour, sifted
1/8 tsp of salt
Long trips of orange zest to garnish
Chocolate icing (optional)
90g unsalted butter, diced
150g dark chocolate, broken up
¾ tbsp honey
½ tbsp cognac
Preheat the oven to 160ºC.
Lightly grease a 24cm spring form tin and line the sides and base with baking parchment.
Place the butter, 300g of sugar (leave 80g for the syrup!) and citrus zest in a mixer bowl and use a paddle attachment to combine everything well. Do not work the mix too much or incorporate much air. Add half the amount of ground almonds and continue mixing to fold through.
Add the eggs gradually, scraping the bottom and sides of the bowl a couple of time as you go.
Add the remaining ground almonds, flour and salt and work them until the mix is completely smooth.
Spread the cake batter inside the cake tin and level it out with a palette knife.
Place the cake in the oven and bake it for 50-60 minutes. Check that it’s ready by inserting a skewer inside. It should come out a little bit moist.
When the cake is almost cooked through boil together in a small saucepan the remaining sugar and the citrus juices (the juices should add up to approximately 120ml – remove some if needed). When it comes to the boil remove the syrup from the heat.
As soon as the cake comes out of the oven brush it with the boiling syrup, making sure all the syrup is soaked through.
Leave the cake to cool down completely. You can then serve it as it is, garnished with orange strips, or store for up to three days in an air-tight container.
To make the icing, put the butter, chocolate and honey in a heat proof bowl and place over a saucepan with simmering water. Stir until all is melted, remove at once from the heat and fold in the cognac. Pour the icing over the cool cake, allowing it to dribble naturally around the sides without covering the cake completely. Let the icing set and then garnish with strips of orange zest at the centre of the cake.
Thank you so much for the recipe, Yotam! Not to worry about the metric, I will translate to American...I CANNOT wait to try it out and eat it up. Possibly (no promises) I will share it with the significant other.
Eileen
Hi
This is the first time i've visited your site and have spent much much longer on here than i planned to! I just wated to say how impressive i think it is that you take the time to respond to comments and to answer questions.
I'll be popping in soon to your notting hill shop!
Anna,
I enjoy the online contact. Hope to see you soon in real life.
Hi there,
After reading your story in Gourmet magazine, I was fortunate to have a delicious lunch at the store in Notting Hill. (I live in the United States.) I bought your cookbook and am so enjoying it but wonder if you could provide the recipe for the little rectangular cake with citrus glaze and chopped pistachio nuts? A perfect cake!
Kind regards,
Polly
Polly, I am afraid some great things must remain a mystery. This is one of them. Sorry
Hello Yotam
I just tried your chocolate brownie recipe and for some mysterious reason some disaster seemed to have happened - despite following every step in the cookbook the mixture doesn't look like a 'normal' brownie mixture - there's some liquid (or is it oil?) on top when I pour the mixture into the tray, then some liquid keeps bubbling away while it was in the oven. According to your recipe the surface must be 'totally dry' before I take it out, so I waited and waited and waited.... 40 minutes went by and it's still wet on top! I took it out nonetheless and - as you would expect - it's all dry inside already. Any idea why this is the case? did something split (not sure what!) along the way?
Also this recipe seems to produce a very thick mixture - is this correct?
Thanks!!!
So sorry to hear about your brownie ordeal.
Brownies are highly sensitive and it also happens to us often that they don't come out just right.
I am not sure what went wrong in this case. It may have to do with the particular ingredients you have been using. I can only suggest reducing the butter by 10% and increasing the flour by 10%. I hope this does the trick.
Good luck!
hey yotam,
just wanted to say thanks so much for devoting all those pages to sweet things in your cookbook. Unlike alot of contemporary cookbooks where there are a few sad little pages of uninspiring puddings at the end, sweet things are definately not a token thing in your world! blueberry and lemon teacakes are my favourites so far - cooked them successfully in a muffin tin (no bundt moulds in the cupboard) and that produced a generously size individual cake - moist, fragrant and zesty; lush!
i also love the design aesthetics of 'ottolenghi' - the shiny bright white and tomato red that offset the bursting freshness of your food.
please open a branch in greenwich soon!
kate
Hi Yotam
I visit your shop in Islington very regularly, (at least once a week be it for cake, lunch, dinner or take away) Obviously I love the food!
However my wife and I love your hazelnut ganache tart which you seem to serve very irregularly. please could you make this more of a regular feature.
Thanks
Oliver
Oliver,
Sure. We will try and make those more often. Seems like everyone has a different favourite. If only the counter was bigger!
Best wishes
I love all the cakes I buy in the shop but have not yet used the cookbook to make any.
I do however want to make the lovely blueberry and vanilla cupcakes - can I use the above recipe and add blueberries and then use the hazlenut cupcake icing and add vanilla?
Hi, i am a fan. I lived in Notting Hill at the time of the opening of your shop and have had many wonderful bites at the store. I also have the book and love trying the recipes. I wanted to ask you what the logic behind chilling a greased cup cake is.thank you.
@ Lizzie, this should do the trick. I suggest also adding some lemon zest to the cupcake mix. When adding the blueberries make sure you stir gently so they don't break. Good luck.
@ Valentina, chilling tins allows the butter to stick better. When pouring in the cake mix the butter doesn't smear.
Hello,
I am a big fan of Ottolenghi and have been going for years (Ledbury Road).
You used to do a lemon drizzle teacake (the cone shaped one with a hole in the middle) which was superb. I hadn't seen it for some time so assumed that it was seasonal but it seems to have now been replaced with a pollenta lemon cake.
Is there any chance that you could either start doing it again or provide a recipe, please?!
I keep bragging about how good it is to friends and taking them for lunch only to find that you no longer do it.
Charles, I have asked Sarit, our head of pastry, to see if we can make it. Trouble is, the lemon polenta cake is so popular but still quite similar to the one you mention so we can't so both or a regular basis.
Thanks for the comment!
Thanks for the response to the 'magic' behind the chilling greased tin. i am going to reproduce your strawberry friand today. had it at the notting hill store last week..and boy it was delicious.
This strawberry cake is fantastic, I must agree. Good luck with it.
I think I must be obsessed - I am desperately trying to find the proper tea cake tins for your recipes.
I ordered a Nordic ware tin (Garland), which is beautiful, however, it's just too small - eight moulds within the tin. As far as I can gather, your cakes need a tin with 10cm diameter at the base. I tried your suggestion of uktv food, with no luck. I really would love a good strong tin, like the Nordic ware one - do you have any other suggestions please?
And... thanks for being so inspiring.
Hi. First i wanted to thank you for the book. I lived in London for a while and would stop by your store every saturday!!! Now i´m back in Portugal and it´s nice to be able to cook the food at home (not as good of course!!)
I know some recipes should be kept a secret, but i´ve been CRAVING for the past couple of years you choclate flourless cake (mini). It´s the best cake i´ve ever had, and no recipe comes close!!! So if your heart feels kind, please (pretty please) share the recipe ;)
Thanks for the tasty work!!!
Hi,
It is hard but I must refuse, Mafalda.
I get plenty of requests for recipes every week and I have to make sure that not all our secrets are revealed.
Through our book and other publications we already share many of our unique ideas but some items must remain exclusively ours.
I hope you understand.
Hi Yotam,
I first saw your quesedella in a copy of the Gaurdian I bought by chance because I was on the train to London to visit my daughter and needed something to read. I made it on the Sunday I returned home, and since then have cooked many of the vegetarian recipes from your book, and am a convert to the Guardian on a Saturday. As a vegetarian (I know you and your food is not) you have given me more inspiration than any vegetarian cookery or book I have ever bought - so thanks enormously for that. I came up to London ( a year later) this weekend with my wife to see our daughter (at 23 and impoverished ex pattern design student) and took her to Islington on Friday night. It was the 1st time for myself, my wife and my daughter to sample your food in your own restaurant and I have to say it was fantastic. Apart from the usual psycophantic stuff you must get all the time I am writing this because we bought some Anzac biscuits for my mother in law - she had them as we got off the train in Bridgend S.Wales (where we live). She has just been on the phone crying out for the recipe - which I dissapointed her in saying was not in the book. I have always been surprised at how generous you are in publishing your recipes and see from your last blog that you do however hold on to some of your greatest secrets, so I fear that you may not oblige in granting my wish to share this one - be great to know for sure though.
Thanks
John Williams (Bridgend)
Myra, try Kitchen Ideas on Westbourne Grove in London (020 7221 2777). You can call them and ask. They don't have the Nordic tins but have something similar. Talk to Bob and ask him about the moulds to recreate the tea cakes from the Ottolenghi cookbook. He should know.
John, having read your note I find it extremely hard to say no, especially to such a big fan.
Still, as you correctly noted, some Ottolenghi recipes are kept discreet for pure business instincts.
I hope you buy many more anzac biscuits!
Hi Yotam,
We were in London last week and visited your notting hill restaurant after reading your amazing new book and had to say the food tasted as good as it looked in the book!
I have tried making the sour cherry and walnut loaf but I find on the second rise it kind of flattens down a bit once in the oven, I couldn't get sour cherries so I used cranberries instead, would this be the problem?
Also, we saw your excellent muffins in the shop and loved the shape, are they a special mould you use or can you purchase them somewhere?
Thanks
michael
@ Michael, the walnut loaf is quite delicate so it can be that it was over-proofed or possibly didn't get enough kneading. It wouldn't be the cranberries though.
The muffin moulds we use are just deep moulds we get from the states. I haven't seen them in the UK I am afraid.
Thanks Yotam,
I think it may have been the over proving on the second rise, does it need a good bit kneading after the first rise? I was quite careful with it, rolled it into shape then wrapped it in clingy to rise. It rose quite well but once it went in the oven it kinda flattened out, i'll give it a bit of a pummeling the next time.
The muffin moulds in the book have a kind of cutout in them and look well used :-) I'll have a search for them, any pointers on what to look for in terms of size or name? I did a quick google and there are absolutely millions of option, the shape you get them looks amazing and the muffin pan we have are so close together they would stick to each other.
I wish you all well and the book is tremendous, what would you recommend as the next thing to try?
Oh yes the polenta cake was the best thing I tasted that weekend!
@ Michael, muffin moulds should be about 6cm wide and about the same in depth. You fill them almost to the brim.
I'd recommend making the apple and olive oil cake next. It's wonderful.
Hi Yotam - greetings from Krakow!
I have been exceedingly irritated by your book because ever since cooking my first recipe from it (roast butternut with burnt aubergine and pomegranate molasses) I have not wanted to waste time cooking anything else - it's that good. It's a tough commitment though as butternuts are not available here so I have to bring them over in my hand luggage or persuade my friends to and/or grow it. However, today I finally broke the spell and made the the sweet tarlets - fruit with marscapone cream, dark chocolate, white chocolate & raspberry, and lemon meringue. Of course they didn't look nearly as neat as the ones in your photos but they tasted amazing. Thank you. The only major problem I had though was with the dark chocolate ganache - it went grainy and looked like curdled sponge. Sifting cocoa over it didn't help disguise that something was really not quite right. Can you give me any idea of what I did wrong? Or what I could have done to rescue it (if anything - I tried mixing in another egg yolk but it didn't help)?
Thank you
Ewa
Hi Ewa,
Instead of butternut you can also use other pumpkins, or even sweet potato. try it.
About the tarts, I believe the melted chocolate and butter may have been too hot and caused the yolk and sugar mix to cook straight away. If you dare try this again, allow the chocolate mix to cool down substantially before folding in the yolk.
Regards to Krakow. I am planning to go there before the end of the year.
Hi Yotam!
I fell in love with your cookbook after trying the polenta-orange cake recipe in Gourmet. I have some technical questions I hope you can help me with. I tried the cake the first time with regular polenta and it was moist, but had a rugged texture. Second time I used the recommended instant polenta and it was like my bubbe's Passover cake....soooo dry. Any ideas what went wrong? Would an extra yolk help?
Reading this blog I want to fly to the UK for breakfast in the morning! May you open a branch on this side of the pond soon!
Nathalie
Nathalie, sorry about the unfortunate incidents with the cake. It should really work with the instant polenta.
To combat dryness reduce the dry ingredients (almonds and polenta) by a fraction and make sure you don't over-bake.
American Ottolenghi - maybe one day. There's more and more reasons to come to America now.
Greetings and salutations Yotam!
The rosewater and pistachio meringues which I baked to your recipe were heaven. :-)
I tried twisting the recipe by omitting the rosewater and mixing in passion fruit and, in others, crushed raspberries. Though they tasted fantastic and looked good they were a nightmare to get off the baking paper. Most of the meringues became a mush. Any suggestions?
Also do you have any advice for combining chocolate into meringues?
Many thanks
Tor from Stratford on Avon - the town in need of cake geeks - a lovely location on the river avon for your next restaurant
Tor, I will make sure to stop at Stratford on Avon one of these days to add a bit of geekiness.
About meringues, the problem is adding moisture. Rosewater is concentrated so a little goes a long way. You will need to reduce the passion fruit juice or add less raspberries (or freeze-dried fruit, now available in many places) so the mixture doesn't turn too wet.
Also, make sure you brush the baking paper with vegetable oil before you shape the meringues.
Instead of chocolate, fold in some cocoa powder to your meringues. Chocolate doesn't like the temperatures meringues are cooked at. Alternatively, you can brush your cooked meringues with some melted chocolate but that's a totally different story.
much luck!
Hi there,
I was in Ottolenghi this week and loved the blueberry and almond mini bundt cakes with lemon drizzle. I am an avid baker and want to try out the cakes at home. Would i be able to find the recipe in your book? Where do i get mini bundt cake pans or if the recipe were to be used for a normal size bundt cake how would i need to change the measurements?
Thanks
Tanya, the recipe is available in our cookbook and is easy to follow.
I know you can get mini bundt pans at Kitchen Ideas on Westbourne Grove, Bayswater. Also, similar shapes are sometimes available from Divertimenti.
I wouldn't use a normal size tin. It's quite a heavy cake so might not hold its shape.
Much luck!
Yotam,
A while ago you published a recipe in the Guardian for a chocolate and madarin cake... i made it once, and thought it was fabulous. Unfortunately I've lost my copy. Could you remind me of the recipe.
Gary
Gary,
Check out this link:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2008/dec/06/puddings-christmas-recipes-desserts
Hi Yotam,
I am one of Helen's sister, Lily. I can't wait to visit Ottolenghi when I visit Helen in September and get to see all the fabulous food at Ottolenghi and hope to meet you all then too!!
Lily
hello yotam,
I'm from catalonia and we've been at your shops several times, each time we go to london. once in notting hill, we've taste an incredible bread and butter with cherries, as you can imagine is not an habitual thing we have in spain, I know is simple but I've tried several recipes from internet but the result was not de same, could you please explain me something about that?
thanks and fins aviat!!!
Hi Jordi,
We use our own croissant or pain au chocolat, which are the best in town, and add dried soured cherries. We then soak them with a mixture of cream, egg and sugar and bake.
Hope that helps.
please could you tell me where i could buy the muffin tins you use for your muffins?
many thanks
Hello Yotam,
My wife and l both love your book and especially the meringue recipes but how do you make the raspberry glaze on the one's pictured in the book we currently are trying a syrup coloured with red food colouring is this the right way,
Cheers Barry and Lucy
Jude, I am afraid you can only get them in America. These tall tins are available in many cookery stores there but I have never come across them in the UK.
@ Barry,
I am afraid this is something we choose to keep a secret. There's no colouring though, just natural fruit puree.
Good luck!
Hi, to all who have been looking for the 10cm bundt used to make the teacakes, i have just bought 6 from amazon £2.25 each.
I have also found a website called silvernutmeg.com who sell the muffin trays called: chicago metallic crown muffin pan, these produce the deep muffins with the crown or mushroom top.
Hope this info is useful
jude
Hi there,
I too am a huge Ottolenghi fan. I work around the corner from the Kensington shop, and gaze longingly in the window most mornings!
I also love baking, and have made your Fig tart (from the Guardian a few months ago) and the poached pear and cranberry upside down cake, which was a triumph!
But after reading the comments on this site, I'm desperate to try the Clementine and Almond cake. Obviously clementines are out of season now, so is there another citrus fruit which would work equally well? And would it be OK to use a 23cm springform tin, as I don't have a 24cm? Any advice gratefully recieved! Julia
Hi Yotam,
I bought your book and have tried several recipes, they are all so delicious and come out really well. Congratulations on your drive, good taste, your absolutely amazing cooking and thank you for sharing such good food and so many recipes.
I have a request?!? Is your recipe of the passion fruit tart that I so often have at the Nottinghill shop somewhere? if not, is it possible to share it?
I hope to be able to attend one of your cooking classes, but I'm waiting for a desserts cookery class and fit it in with another class - any idea when you'll have another go at desserts??
Many thanks and keep cooking from your heart.
Maria Teresa
Julia, thanks! 23cm would be fine, just a bit taller. Use oranges, mandarins or clementines. They all work. Good luck and many sweet moments.
Maria Teresa,
It's great to hear the book is so useful. About passion fruit tarts, I am afraid this one we keep a secret, which gives you another good reason to come to Ottolenghi. The lemon tarts in the book are pretty similar though.
I might do a dessert class next year. We should publish the next set of classes in September.
Hi Yotam,
Just to say - I found perfectly good clementines, and used my 23cm tin. The cake looked amazing, and tasted even better!
Thanks so much for the inspiration!
Julia
Hi Yotam...mainly I wanted to say THANKS to you so, so much for writing this brilliant book and bringing both excellent baking and innovative savouries to the general public! I have run a small wholesale artisan bakery (The Blue Angel Bakery) for over 5 years now (no competition to you guys, I just supply local coffee shops, restaurants etc)and work completely alone,with just Radio 4 for company. Your restaurants and now book have provided so much inspiration in developing my own original recipes....American & Middle Eastern baking are my major influences. I really wanted to thank you for providing a macaroon recipe that is straightforward and works ever time, no matter what. I have been searching for so long! Other recipes always add a 'mystique' to what should be a simple process (leaving piped mixture to form a 'skin' for example) and never work satisfactorily to give that bubbled base & beautiful crisp top that is the hallmark of a good macaroon.Even with years of experience, I never tire of learning and gaining new skills! I have great fun thinking up new varieties now that I know they will work.I am a frequent visitor to your Islington branch, and will continue to come and marvel at the beautiful displays! Very best wishes from a fellow Cake Geek extraordinaire x
Rachel,
Thank you. Thank you.
Dear Yotam,
Thank you for your fabulous cakes.
My partner and I always buy a couple of slices of apple and cinnamon cake whenever we go by.
Trouble is, it is sooooo delicious that neither of us want to be the first to finish eating. So,
a) we put off eating it for a long as possible (i.e. 2 minutes)
b) then we eat it very, very slowly
c) one of us stops eating half way through to make some more tea or pop out to the shops
d) the other simply has to stop eating too or they'll have to face the torture of looking down at an empty plate while the other eats theirs.
e) we co-ordinate a clean-plate finish down to the last forkful, so that we don't have any cake lying around for either of us to fight over.
At time of writing, we are at step C - and have been for some time....
In conclusion, my advice is to eat this cake covertly, decadently, on your own, without any distractions.
Wow, what a process!
Hello there!
Wow! I am really impressed by your website and blog, they both have a really lovely personal touch to them which makes me feel very welcome. Also, I am also ashamed to admit that I skipped through your colume in the guardian everytime until a certain mango rice salad (which was so simple to make yet absolutely delicious) caught my eyes, even then I didn't know about the restaurant and book (all sound amazing!) until today, sorry! But I have to say I am now VERY intrigued and am planning to pop over to one of your place before catching a flight home to Hong Kong in about 2 weeks time (one reason for convincing myself to take a train from edinburgh instead of flying), so don't be alarm if your staff see someone staying for lunch, afternoon tea and dinner because I want to try as much food from the shop as i could!
Thank you in advance for making my trip home something to look forward to, lol.
Vian
I hope it is as good as it seems and worth this extra journey. I will keep my eyes peeled for you. Thanks!
Hi Yotam
Like you, cakes are a passion of mine. I was cooking with my grandmother form the age of 3!
I am now 47!
I started a deli with my wife 27 months ago but did not really make many cakes (the occasional fruit cake and a cooked cheesecake (granies recipe). Then last year we were on our way out of business and had to do something. So I started making cakes and wow I have not looked back since.
I so relate in your book to the comment about the waiters saying they are the best brownies ever. I have also had those comments on my brownies and carrot cake. I know that feeling!
I am striving to get those comments on my other cakes and like you trying to get the best possible result.
When I get upto town again I have to pop into one of your stores but wonder which is the best for cakes?
Regards
Quinn
I hsve a deli in Bexhill
Hi Yotam
A friend's baby, Kolo, is coming up to his first birthday and has an allergy to eggs. She would like him to have a good old fashioned birthday cake for his first. Do you have an suggestions for good egg less cakes? It can still contain all other dairy products like butter and milk.
Thanks
Lou
Quinn, now you know how satisfying it is to get all these compliments every day. Makes you feel you're in heaven.
Good luck with all those cakes!
Lou, try this link:
http://uktv.co.uk/food/recipe/aid/600076
I haven't tried it but it seems good.
Wish you well.
Hello.
I am in Wales and the lavender here is still blooming. I made your honey and lavender tea cakes in london with FRESH lavender and with fantastic dark, strong Corsican honey that someone had brought back for us as a gift. Actually, I also used Greek yog rather than soured cream. I didn't have the right tins and so I just used ordinary muffin trays and paper cases and slightly less drizzly glaze, and they were great! But my recipe book is at home in London, and I can't remember the measurements. Is there any chance that you could post the recipe so that I can take advantage of the lavender? Thank you.
Kate
Here it is Kate, uneditted:
Lavender and honey
Makes about 6
Melted butter for greasing the tins
225g butter
115g caster sugar
115g lavender honey (or plain if you can’t get it)
3 eggs
245g flour
1 tsp baking powder
½ tsp baking soda
½ tsp salt
½ tsp cinnamon
110g sour cream
½ tsp chopped dried lavender
Icing
20g lemon juice
10g honey
125g icing sugar
Dried lavender for decoration
Preheat the oven to 160C.
Place the butter, sugar and honey in a mixing bowl of an electric mixer and use a beater to cream them together until light and fluffy (using your hands will add a challenge and take longer). Break the eggs, beat them lightly with a fork and add to the creaming butter gradually, allowing each addition to incorporate fully before the next one.
Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cinnamon. Add the lavender to them. Either manually, or while the machine is running on low speed, fold in the flour mixture and sour cream into the batter in 3 additions, alternating between the two.
Spoon the batter into the buttered teacake tins, clearing 1.5cm away from the edge. Level out the mix and clean the edges of the tins.
Bake in the preheated oven for 25-30 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean when inserted inside. Remove from the oven and leave the cakes in their tins for about 10 minutes. Turn out while still warm and leave to cool.
To make the icing, mix the lemon juice and honey in a small bowl. Whisk in icing sugar to make a thick enough glaze to drizzle over the cakes (you might need to adjust the amount of icing sugar). Use a pastry brush or a spoon to coat the top of the cakes, allowing the icing to drip down the sides. After glazing, sprinkle with a little bit of the dried lavender.
Just wanted to say thank you, Yotam - I just cooked your rosewater semolina cake for our office bake-off, and it won against scores of other cakes. So thanks to your recipe, I now have a fantastic wooden spoon trophy. I will now try the lavender and clementine cake recipes....
May you win many more spoons!
Finally I have found an establishment as passionate as I am about food. I was beginning to think that I was the only Chef left who opted for the 'make everything' route.
I run a small bespoke Catering business in Dorset and like to let my food do the talking, my business is growing in a remarkable way, people definately know real food.
I am about to embark on a Local food store and Cafe sourcing all my meats and produce from Dorset, can't wait to get my hands all the fantastic produce we have here on a daily basis.Any tips on getting it right?
Have just bought your book- truly fantastic and inspirational.
Dear All, We have just been for a short break in London and we discovered your shop in Notting Hill by accident. We simply had to stop for a cake each which we ate outside in the warm sunshine. They were so utterly divine that we walked back the following day and had lunch. The food is absolutely outstanding and we are both distraught that now we're back in York we're unable to visit the shop. I have bought the cook book and am very much looking forward to trying the recipes. We're back in London in November and will be definately visiting again with our 18 year old Son in yet another attempt to encourage him to eat healthily! We can't wait. Many thanks xx
@ Margot,
It sounds like you are on the right track and don't need us. I wish you loads of luck and keep us posted.
@ Suzanne,
Good luck with the conversion of your son. Please come again and keep on eating our cakes.
What a fab website!
I've been a fan of the Kensington store (every time I'm in London!) and your cookbook for some time now, and my husband and I are faithfully working our way through your recipes - all of which have been amazing so far. Just today we're eating the plum, marzipan and cinnamon muffins for tea :) Delish!
I was wondering whether you could share the recipe for the amazing savoury muffins that I always get when I come to the shop - I think they have pine nuts, basil, sun-dried tomatoes and mozzarella in? I could die happy if I didn't have to wait for the next trip to London to have these again...
Keep up the amazingly good work! You bring a lot of happiness to very many people.
Hi Yotam,
My best friend has just moved to Islington, and on Saturday we had to go visit "the giant meringue shop" (on account of the meringue mountain in the window) with some friends - only once we had bought and stuffed ourselves with cake in a local park did I realise that it was you from the Guardian column.
Excellent cakes. Well done. The salads looked awesome too. We will be back :D
All the Best,
Anna
hi a freind of mine bought me a lemon and mascapone tart back from you resterant i have to say it was fantastic could you tell me the recipe for the pasty as we both agree it was the best pasty ever thanks oli
@ Marchelle, @ Oli,
Thanks. As much as I would like to give away more recipes I am afraid that some we have to keep to ourselves. Still, you can always come to Ottolenghi for a muffin or a lemon tart.
Anna,
Yes, it's the same one that feed you salads and cakes.
Hello Yotam, I eat regularly in the Islington restaurant and have become obsessed with your fruit slices (plum, apricot, pear). I have tried making them myself by adapting a classic French recipe, but have had limited success. I heard a rumour from some of your staff that you might be publishing a second Ottolenghi cook-book before Christmas. Might this include the recipe for the fruit tart? I ask because I am holding off buying the current cookbook in the hope that the new one will include the recipe for this marvellous treat. Kind regards Helena.
Hi Yotam
I am not happy at all with your shops - they are all in London! When will Winchester beckon to you? It will be easier for us to get to when we cannot curb our craving for your fabulous food!
Your cakes are so divine and though I am also a cake geek, I will not try baking them....I will just pop into your shop and indulge! And your salads, I can just happily become a vegetarian eating them!
For now, I shall just dream on until our next visit to London....
Best wishes
Leda
@ Helena, I am afraid the fruit slice recipe is not about to be published. Sorry.
Still, next year, in April, I will publish a new book of vegetarian recipes (no cakes I am afraid) that is now in the making and is looking great!
@ Leda, London's waiting for you!
Hi Yotam,
Greetings from Dublin!I visited London last month and choose to stay in Islington just so I could easily pop in and out of your Islington branch. I literally tried breakfast, dinner and tea there and was not disappointed!Complements on your passion fruit mer.tart-SOOOOooooo good!!!I also loved the Choc&hazelnut brownies and have tried to recreate them at home using the brownie recipie in your cookbook.It worked out well but was hoping you'd share a tip with me-how do you create the chocolate-chunk effect in them? Such a nice surprise when you don't expect it!
Many thanks,
Sofia
Help! I want to make your Apple & Olive Oil Cake but where we live we can't get Bramley apples - here in Trinidad we can get Red, Gala, Granny Smith and Golden Delicious though. Which is the best to use as an alternative? I was thinking Granny Smith or Golden Delicious.
Thanks a million!
Antonia
@ Antonia, Granny Smith, definitely. Good luck with it!
@ Sofia, what you can do is dot the brownie with large chunks of hazelnut milk chocolate. Delicious.
Hi Yotam!
Thanks for the reply re the Granny Smith apples - made the cake and it was a huge success! Just as your book says it gets better with time.... my other half took some into work and they wanted him to come back with more the next day to check it still tasted as good ;)
Next time think I'll cut the apple chunks a tiny bit bigger so that they can stand up to the raisins/sultanas which plumped up wonderfully.
Thanks again! A
Hi Yotam,
I'm getting married in January and would absolutely love to have a yummy chocolate cake made by Ottelenghi as our wedding cake! However, I asked at the Islington branch and found that the one occasion cake you do isn't big enough for the number of guests we have and any layering would be a no no as it is so delicate.
We're so keen to have an Ottolenghi cake that I thought I'd take a chance and ask whether you have any suggestions for creating something bespoke for our big day??
Thank you!
Doy
Doy,
I am afraid I must disappoint you. Our cakes don't work well in giant sizes and wedding cakes aren't our expertise.
Good luck with it,
Yotam
Hi Yotam,
I was in London last July and my aunt introduced me to your wonderful shop in Kensington, and sent me home (to Sydney) with a copy of your cookbook which I am absolutely loving. I've made several meals for friends who have all been overwhelmingly impressed - the flavours are just wonderful!
Two questions, though. I made the apple and olive oil cake a few weeks ago (it looked great, and the comments on this blog were an added recommendation!) and it came out a bit dry. I left out the sultanas as neither I nor my husband like them, so I'm wondering whether that might have done it and whether I should have added some extra liquid to compensate? Or perhaps the oven was just a bit hot?
On a non-cake-related note, I am absolutely stunned by the goodness of pork belly with the plum and rhubarb relish - these are just coming into season over here in Australia so I've finally had a chance to try it! But I noticed both the relishes have summer fruits in them, and the last thing you want on a hot summer's day in Sydney is to have the oven on for over 3 hours! Any chance of a relish recipe to go with the pork that has winter fruits in it, so I can enjoy it when the weather cools down again?
My parents will be in London in March, and I will be sending them straight to your shop.
With many thanks, and greetings from hot sunny Australia!
Katrina
Hi Yotam,
I am having a few friends (all big Ottolenghi fans) by for a casual dinner and was thinking of making the turkey meatballs from the cookbook. What would you suggest for side dishes? I'm happy to cook any recipe in the book (especially the desserts).
Thanks!
@ Annie, try making the carrot and peas on page 66 and the burnt aubergine on page 27. Good luck.
@ Katrina, if you don't like sultanas try increasing the amount of apple. But don't increase by too mush or the cake will be too wet.
For a wintery pork relish, replace the plum with pear and leave out the rhubabrb if you can't get any. You'd need to reduce the amount of sugar!
Have fun!
Hi Yotam,
Love the book. Made the peach and raspberry teacakes. Used some silicone kugelhopf dishes. Made 8 instead of 6 but looked just like the picture and taste divine. Will try the others. Will visit shop when in town.
Thanks for the great book again and loved your story at front
love Jean
Yotam
I regularly visit the cafe on Ledbury Rd for both savoury dishes and boxes full of cakes! It is almost impossible for either my partner or I to step out of the house (on Westbourne Grove) without passing by to pick up cakes. In fact, we know exactly what we want, no messing around, just military-style operation to pick the cakes up and run home!
I should be very grateful if you were able to pass on the recipe for the moist chocolate bar cake.
Many thanks
S
Hi Yotam,
we have an office bake off in a couple of weeks time - I can't decide between the Sticky Chocolate Loaf or Clementine and Almond cake. I might just cook both and decide for myself, but if you have any thoughts on which one might bag me the prize I would be grateful!
There may be extra "brownie" points if the recipe could be made flourless, don't want to loose the quality, but if you have any suggestions for ammending either recipe, it would be much appreciated!
Many thanks,
Bonnie.
@ S, I am afraid this one is not to be disclosed. There are plenty of other great ones in the book.
@ Bonnie, the clementine cake will definately make you the winner. Chocolate fudge cake in the book is flourless and delicious. But go for the clementine, despite the flour.
Hello Yotam
Thank you for publishing so many amazing recipes, every single one I've tried has turned out a success. Somehow I lost the last page of last year's An Ottolenghi Christmas, I'm absolutely devastated as the Amaretti were one of the best things I've ever baked. Is there anywhere I'd be able to find this recipe again?
Also sometimes when I make macaroons they come out with cracks - do you know what causes this?
And one last question, when I made the caramel and macadamia cheesecake - I struggled a bit with the caramel sauce, I tried the same thing 4 times and had 4 different and incorrect results, I had to go with the last one seemed okay but when cold was more like a chewy toffee. What is the correct consistency of the sauce?
Thank you so much!
x amy
I'm also a cake geek (more of the sampling than baking variety most of the time though) I just wish it wasn't such a calorific hobby!
Although not strictly cakes I've baked the macaroons from the book a few times and they always tend to be a bit misshapen - are there any tried and tested rules for getting the right shape when putting them on the baking sheet?
@ Ellie, I am afraid in this case practice makes perfect, nothing else. Lucky, though, that even the misshapen ones still taste delicious.
@ Amy,here is the link to the Amaretti biscuits:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2008/dec/06/puddings-christmas-recipes-desserts
Macarrons crack when the mix is dry. Try reducing the dry ingredients by a fraction.
The caramel sauce needs to be runny but still set when cooled. It all depends on how much you cook your sugar. It will set harder if you cook it longer and darker.
Hi, Yotam we've been again at notting hill and islington and we enjoy a lot as always with your mezze and of course with your pastry, I would like to know if there's any relationship between the chocolate fudge cake and your chocolate flourless teacake I like very much this one and I would like to do it.
thanks you so much
Jordi, I am afraid they are totally different.
Hi Otto,
My wife Pamela is a big fan of your book (I'm a big fan of the cakes she's made from it), and she's coming up for a significant but unmentionable birthday in March. She writes about food in Delhi (eatanddust)and has an obsession with high tea parties. I'd like to send her to one of your pastry and cakes classes. do you have any planned in the new year?
with best wishes,
Dean
Dean, I am afraid no pastry class is scheduled for next year. I will publish as soon as we plan one.
I'm so excited!! I didn't realise you had such a great blog going on here. Such handy tips!!
I purchased your book while I was on an overseas trip earlier this year. (I only realised that it was sold in Australia for some time and alot of my friends had it already!)
An absolute fan of your stores I can't say enough how much of a legend you and your team are. Such gorgeous and unique recipes and the fact you response to questions is even more of a bonus!.
Hope to have you out on a cooking demo to Australia soon!!!
Cheers
Amanda
Hi Yotam
Quick question in relation to the sweet pastry recipe in the cookbook:-
If I make the pastry ahead and decide to freeze it, what do I need to do to it before I can use it again (defrost to room temperature or just put in fridge etc)?
Many thanks
Sarah
@ Amanda, what can i say, thank you!
@ Sarah, best is to leave it in the fridge overnight and then roll out cold the next day.
To speed up the process you can also leave it at room temperature for a few hours until completely defrosted, but then chill again for at least 30 minutes. The pastry needs to be cold when you work with it.
Have fun.
Hi Yotam!
I love Ottolenghi and just a few days ago, got my mom hooked on it too and we started going to the one on Ledbury road every day! She was only here for a week and now she keeps calling me claiming how she misses the potato salad and the various cakes we've tried!
I'm a big fan of the almond croissant and I always have to have one when I grab coffee there...I was wondering if it has any marzipan instead or if it's just crushed almonds?
Thank you :)
Anna
Many years ago, I was lucky enough to work on Ledbury Road when you opened your first shop (indeed, your arrival made my day so much brighter), and despite no longer working in the area, I still make it a priority to go to your branch in Islington as often as I can.
I was in there earlier and was lucky enough to finally catch the blueberry & vanilla cupcakes and they are every bit as good as I imagined (the icing in particular is probably the best I've eaten thus far) and I was wondering if there was a recipe for them anywhere online as having consulted my Ottolenghi cookbook, it's not there (I'd definitely have made them if it was!)
Many thanks
Sophia x
PS. I'm going to be in Islington next Thursday 14th Jan. so if it's possible, it would be ace if there are some blueberry & vanilla cupcakes!
@ Anna, the almond croissants have almond cream inside (grounds almonds, butter, sugar, egg). Keep one enjoying!
@ Sophia, I am afraid there isn't a recipe for the blueberry muffins around. But you can adapt the hazelnut muffin from the book by adding blueberries. The icing is similar.
Hurrah! I have just managed to book dinner with you guys tomorrow night. Somehow at such late noticed I have been lucky enough to be squeezed in at 7pm and although we need to vacate by 8:15 and we may be forced to straddle a table leg or two, I am already salivating over the crusted tuna slices and passionfruit tarts that are bound to end up on our table!
Now I must say that having had your cookbook for over a year I have been inspired to ensure that my pantry is stocked with new and wonderful ingredients that allow me to whip up at short notice mouth watering masterpieces. What really gets me is that in each bite I know that someone who really is passionate about food and inspired by flavour has created that recipe and I can’t help but want to surround myself with that. Have you ever thought about running culinary courses?
Jilska, I hope you'll enjoy dinner.
Where have you been all this time? Here are some class options:
http://www.ottolenghi.co.uk/blog/category/cooking-classes
Hope you can get a seat!
I recently visited your Islington Store and indulged myself on your truly amazing chocolate chip cookies. Can you share the recipe with me?
Thanks Yotam
Mark
Hi Yotam,
I was in London on Friday and being an avid fan of your food via the cookbook and The Guardian, I sought out your shop in Ledbury Road (round the corner from where I used to live in the Nineties - why ever did I move?).
Your shop is truly amazing. Great design, really helpful staff and fantastic food. I sampled a chocolate and almond cake, which was out of this world. Sadly, I think this is one of your recipes which must remain secret - but I just wanted to check whether you've changed your mind and want to share it?
Also, there was a gorgeous pie, made with smoked bacon, caramalised onion, egg and lots of other delicious stuff. I checked the cookbook and the web to see if you've published this recipe but sadly to no avail. Just wondering if there's any chance of you releasing this one or if it too falls into the 'must remain secret vault'?
Fingers crossed and thank you for all the fantastic food, recipes and blog work (and for introducing me to the world of sumac and zatar).
Best wishes
Catherine
@ Mark, @ Catherine,
I hate to say no but I have to refuse your requests. You can imagine, we need to leave ideas for the next Ottolenghi book.
Thanks for the compliments.
Hi Yotam
Im a huge fan of Ottolenghi and always visit the nottinghill store when im in london. I live in Dubai now and have just tried making the rosewater meringues but folded through a touch of cocoa at the end of the whisking instead. Ive done this before and it worked brilliantly. This time the meringues refused to harden in the oven they felt almost rubbery. They appear not cooked in the middle and are very chewy to eat. Can you help, i cant think what i have done wrong or differently to last time.
Thanks so much in advance for your help.
Anna, meringues tend to be quite capricious (due to different quality of egg whites). If this worked for you before I suggest to try again. Adding too much cocoa tends to stop the meringues from firming up. The eggs shouldn't be cold. Good luck next time.
Hi Yotam,
I wanted to make the marbled chocolate meringues and in your book. You had suggested to fold in some chocolate powder to someone else but I noticed there isn't a basic meringue recipe. I had a look at the ingredients for the other two listed in the book but if I eliminiate some of the ingredients I'm sure it won't work. Any suggestions here for what I need to do?
Thanks
Amanda
Hi Yotam
I have been a huge fan of your shop since the Notting Hill branch opened.
Now having moved away from the area, I make sure to go at least weekly to your islington branch. I have sampled nearly everyone of your cakes and salads. My flat has fallen in love with the lemon (is it marscapone cream) tart. I would love to be able to make a full size tart. Is there any chance you could give me the recipe.
Thank you in advance for your help.
Hi Yotam,
I have to say that your cupcakes are the absolute best in London - and I mean by a country mile. Every other place I've been to seems to use a sack of sugar for the icing. How is it you achieve such a mousse-like texture? Cheese?
oh and I recently picked up a slice of a ricotta-based, chocolate-chipped and hazelnut cake from your Islington shop. I forget what it was called, exactly, but am wondering if it's going to be a regular....?
Regards,
Paul
@ Amanda, use double the amount of sugar to egg whites and then fold in some (not much!) cocoa powder and you should be fine.
@ Michelle, I am afraid this is one of our best kept secrets. Sorry.
@ Paul, if you have our cookbook look at the cupcake icing recipe on page 214. This is the general principal. The ricotta and hazelnut cake is gaining popularity so you should be seeing it more and more.
Hi Yotam,
I just wanted to say that Ottolenghi is absolutely one of my favourite places in the entire world. I first came across your food haven in Kensington when I was shopping with my mother about 2 years ago. I drooled at the cakes in the window and went inside to discover a range of delicious-looking salads. I have been hooked ever since! My only complaint is that the food is so irresistable, I struggle not to buy anything, and I spend a lot of time walking past your shop in Notting Hill!!! :)
I have always had a very sweet tooth. This has somewhat diminished in recent years, however, I still thoroughly appreciate a good cake. I am a big fan of cooking, especially baking, and I often make cakes for my family and friends as it fills me with great pleasure to put smiles on their faces. My favourites from Ottolenghi have to be the strawberry and vanilla financier, the flourless chocolate and orange cake and last, but most certainly not least, the rose and vanilla cupcakes. I recently bought your cookbook and have been making salads for lunches to take to work during the week. I am yet to try out your cake recipes, but I noticed that my favourites are absent from your book. Is there any way you could share the recipe for any of these three? I would most like to hear the cupcake recipe, not because I am a cupcake fan as such, but because I have a love for any dessert that is flavoured with rose. I understand some things must remain guarded but I ask on the off chance that this is not one of those :)
Thank you for providing so much joy in my life! I look forward to many new delights at Ottolenghi in the future.
With great appreciation,
Frances
P.S. On a side note, you are one of only two places I have found that makes a good mince pie. Actually, your mince pies are the BEST I have found. Congratulations!
Hi Yotam,
Can you tell me a good brand for rose water? I have tried a few in the past and the quality was very variable. Alternatively, is it easy to make?
Thanks,
Frances
@Frances, what can I say? You praises make me blush, quite literally. The recipes in the book represent our range when we worked on the book, about 3 years ago. So, obviously, many recipes aren’t there. I am afraid I must disappoint and say we will probably not publish these recipes in the near future. However, try the cupcake recipes from the book and add some rosewater to the icing. A good brand is the Lebanese Cortas. You can find it in many Arab shops.
Thanks Yotam, you're a star!
Hi Yotam
I love your food although can only visit rarely as I live in Bristol! Last time, I had a delicious small blueberry cake with a particularly luscious and dense texture - I woulod love to experiment with reproducing it and wondered if you would share the recipe - or give me a little hint as to the origin of the magic! Thank you so much for all your inspiration!
Warm wishes
Mark
Mark,
I am not quite sure which cake you mean. Was it an individual lemon and blueberry cake or a cupcake? What was the finish like?
Hi Yotam,
I love your beautiful cakes but am sometimes limited by my wheat intolerance, do you have any recipes for a super delicious wheat-free cake?
Thanks,
Amelia.
Hi Yotam -
Could you please tell me if you've ever used agave syrup (from a plant) instead of sugar?
What was your opinion of it and would I be able to replace sugar with this for some of your recipes?
As a diabetic I'm trying to find sugar alternatives that are not harsh chemicals.
Thanks very much!
@Amelia, let me refer you to the Ottolenghi Cookbook. The orange polenta cake can be done without flour if you substitute the flour for more polenta and reduce the butter by about 10 percent.
The chocolate fudge cake is flourless and the cheesecake can be done without the base.
I would also try the lemon and blueberry teacakes, substituting the flour with more ground almonds and reducing the amount of butter. You'd need to experiment.
@Joanne, I like agave syrup but I haven't tried using it in cakes. I suggest that if you replace the sugar with syrup you should try to reduce the liquid content. Good luck!
Hello Yotam,
A few years ago I found the recipe of your carrot and walnut cake in a magazine. I tore the page and kept it loose in one of my cookbooks. I must have made the cake at least 15 times.... we just adore it. Unfortunately I lost the recipe during one of my visits back home in France, where your cake is hugely popular with my friends and sweet-toothed family. I haven't been able to find the recipe on the internet. Is there anywhere I can find it? I have made the cake plenty of times but my memory isn't good enough to remember the exact proportions. Thanks in advance. Marianne.
Hi Marianne, I just posted the carrot cake recipe on my blog, especially for you.
http://www.ottolenghi.co.uk/recipes/carrot-cake
Hi Yotam,
My husband bought a chocolate cake from your store for my birthday and it was the best cake I have EVERRRRRR had. Thanks so much. I just finished the last few crumbs today. Your cake made me happy.
Do you have eggless cakes too? My mother in law is coming over and I would love to bake a cake for her, but she doesnt eat eggs.
I am surely coming to your store, having spent so much time on your website, I cant wait to eat in the restaurant.
Thanks, Taruna
Taruna, I am afraid you haven't come to the right people. We always use eggs! Can you not convince the mother-in-law to have some?
Hi Yotam,
Many thanks for your reply.
I wish I could ask my mother in-law to eat eggs, but she doesn't as she is a vegetarian. I have found recipes that advise to add greek yogurt, some even cola, but nothing that works well. It would be so nice if in the future you come up with a recipe for vegetarians :) That will be a my wish :)
I wish you a happy weekend ahead!
Taruna
Fabulous cookbook. Amazing recipes. The chocolate fudge cake is fab. I made it with a mixture of Meunier chocolate and Lidl Madagascar. Wow!
Ran into trouble with the Apple and Olive oil cake. It was light and moist but a touch too wet (dare I say rubbery?). 3 Braeburn apples could be any weight? Mine weighed 835g unpeeled and 550g once cut up. I left out 85g and it still looked like too much apple? Help!
Charlotte, yes, you did use quite big apples. The total weight of the apples going into the mix is 360g. However, the main problem, I suspect, is the kind of apple you used. Bramley or Granny Smith are the ones suitable here. Good luck!
Thanks. I used Bramley (can't think why I wrote Braeburn?!). So what are we after here? Both apples are sour but the Bramley collapses and the Granny Smith stays firm. I like the idea of the sourness of the apple contrasting with the sweetness of the cake.
I am guessing the type of Maple syrup you use will make a big difference to the flavour of the icing? Can you suggest a brand? I bought a medium strength from Waitrose but maybe a stronger one would be more suitable?
Beautiful food, thank you for so much inspiration! My partner is a new zealander and so quite fond of meringues and I've been making him the brown sugar meringues from your book, simply gorgeous...but I have noticed that the odd time their surfaces remain a wee bit sticky while the bottoms are dry. Any suggestions? It has been a humid summer here, could that be it? Or am I not cooking the whites enough?
Thankyou.
ps. Am eagerly anticipating the arrival of my pre-ordered copy of Plenty and am hopeful to someday be ordering a patisserie book?
@Charlotte, both Granny Smith and Bramley are sour and low on water content and that's what we are after. The fact that Bramley disintegrates doesn't matter that much as you are still going to get bursts of flavour in places. As to the maple, it isn't a make or break issue as long as you use a good, flavoursome pure maple syrup, such as the one you mention.
@Sarah, the moisture in the oven is exactly the reason. Try to make smaller batches so the meringues create less steam inside. Also, open the oven door a few times during the cooking to allow some of the steam out.
Hi Yotam, As a family, we are obsessed with everything in your store, especially the chocolate chip, pecan cookies (the moist, chewy ones). We are moving back to NYC and wanted to taste my "last" Ottolenghi cookie and your Kensington store told me that they just ran out of them.
Your cookbook has the recipe for the crunchy chocolate chip cookie but I am OBSESSED with the chewy ones. Would you be able to share the recipe for the chocolate chip & pecan cookies so that I can make it for my self and kids when we are back in NYC? They are the BEST cookies I have ever had!! THANKS a lot, Abbie
Abbie, I am so sorry I have to say no to your sweet request. This is one of our best kept recipes. However, let's float the question out here and see if anyone can recommend a really good chewy chocolate chip cookie in NYC. I am sure there's so many.
Hi Yotam,
Firstly I would like to add to the constant stream of admiration I see above, and express how much I LOVE Ottolenghi, I am completely obsessed with every single aspect of your food; and frequent your shops as much as possible.
I have recently been going through the cookbook, making a number of different recipes a day. I absolutely love baking and yesterday I had a lot of fun with the macadamia nut and caramel cheescake. However, I don't feel I have quite perfected the recipe. My main problem is that my version seems to have quite an eggy taste. This has happened before when i have tried to make a cheesecake. Do you have any tips on avoiding egginess?! Also is the caramel on top meant to completely solidify when cooled? If so, how do you cut through it?
I thank you on behalf of most people I know for introducing London to such a delicious and inspirational culinary experience!
Calypso
I was just reading the last post from Abbie on Choc Chip Cookies. Funnily enough, I was doing some research on the same and just found an article yesterday on chewy choc chip cookies on the New York Times site (July 9, 2008).
Quite interesting — talks a lot about the method, refrigerating the dough, and sprinkling with sea salt at the end (I love this idea). Also about who's baking the best ones in NYC.
You can read the article here http://nyti.ms/14i8v and try the recipe here http://nyti.ms/9kwU8j
Hope this might help with the cravings!
Thanks, Jane. Fascinating
Thanks for sharing this Jane!
Hi Yotam,
Hope you are doing great. I just bought your cookbook and am loving the simple instructions and beautiful pictures.
I just made the Apple and Olive Oil cake. I wanted to bake a small cake so I reduced all the ingredients by half. I skipped the sultanas entirely. I read above that 360g of Bramley apples are enough, so I used 180g of them.
I am a little unsure about the baking time. I initially kept it on Gas 3 for 45 minutes, but it wasn't done, so I kept increasing the time a little at a time. Finally I kept it for the same 1.5 hours, the cake had a crisp wafer like layer on top, but on the inside was nice and gooey. I worry that I kept it on too long, I haven't had it at your restaurant so I don't quite know how it should have turned out.
How long do you think I should have baked it for?
Thanks so much for the lovely recipe. I baked after so long (nearly one year) and it felt really nice.
Thanks,
Taruna
@Calypso, I am not sure about the egginess. The amount of egg is normally the deciding factor. The recipe shouldn't yield and eggy result. As to the caramel sauce, it should be runny.
@Taruna, I think the cake was baked for too long. The top should be dry and soft but not crispy. It may be that your tin was too deep. Is your oven properly set?
I have just tried to make your cinnamon and hazelnut meringues. I simmered the egg whites and sugar over water but now i cannot get the meringue mixture to whip up to a meringue consistency. I think that the problem is that i heated the mixture too hot as i can see condensation on the roof of my magimix. Do you think that is the reason and that i will have to start again?
Many thanks
Kind regards
Jane
Jane, The egg whites and sugar can get quite hot and the recipes should still work. What worries me is the word "magimix". Are you whipping up the meringue in a food processor?
Hi,
My fiancee has a severe nut allergy which includes all nuts, sesame and pinenuts. It makes life tricky as she (and I!) also love cakes and many things normally containing ingredients such as tahini (hummus etc).
Do you have any suggestions for good substitute ingredients to use in cakes requiring almond meal, or other nut meal? Also if you have some suggestions for substitutes for tahini or pistachios in middle eastern food that would be great too!
Many thanks,
Tal.
Tal, I am sorry but I really don't know much about this subject. You would probably need to consult a specialist book.
Hi Yotam
love Ottolenghi (Islington) and have introduced lots of friends to it over the last few years who all love it too. I bought some cakes on Friday for my family including the cherry bakewell tart and something similar to a sponge cake with strawberries in it that the waitress said was a financier. Both were absolutely delicious - any chance of the recipe for the financier? My mum was very impressed with it but she's not a londoner no regular Ottlenghi fix for her...Is it in Plenty?(which I will be buying asap!)
Also, my friend and I once had a blueberry and chocolate bread and butter pudding at Ottolenghi - it may have been 2 years ago. But we never forgot it. Keep looking out for it but haven't seen it since - will it be making a reappearance anytime?
best wishes
aliya
Aliya, thank you. I am afraid these recipes are not available. They are still kept secret. Possibly in future books...
Hi Yotam,
Greetings from New Jersey!
I'm making your Apple & Olive Oil Cake with Maple Icing for my father-in-law this weekend to celebrate Father's Day.
What type of olive oil do you recommend for best results? Would extra-virgin olive oil be too strong to use in this cake? EVOO is what I normally have in my pantry.
Hope to make it to London soon to finally eat at one of your locations!
Kind regards,
Phyllis
Phyllis, extra virgin is what you want. It works! Hope to see you here soon.
In response to the NYC chocolate chip cookie question, I would highly recommend City Bakery on 18th Street. They also have amazing pretzel croissants.
Love the new cookbook. Especially the green pancakes. But the two recipes I was desperately holding out for aren't in there! Can you help? I make your sublime caramel and macadamia nut cheesecake all the time (one of my godchildren even now calls me Cheesecake Anna!), but was hoping for a recipe for the delicious roasted strawberry and lime one you serve in the restaurants.
Also, the sublime cornbread with chilli and cheese, which I adore!
Pretty please. My cooking arsenal just isn't complete without these two worldbeater recipes.
hi,
im trying the 2nd time the chocolate fudge, first time it broke up and it was to buttery, even using the right amount as on the recipe. any idea what happened? 2nd time just in the oven, but it is this time not a nice runny chocolate mix, it has some sugar clots. any tips regarding the right amount of ingredients and mixing would be appreciated.
thanks
Hi Yotam - Ive recently bought both your books and loving all the recipes! Im catering a friends 50th birthday BBQ and plan to make several of your wonderful salads, and also various of your sweet tarts. Im wondering which tart cases you use? .. I have used some muffin tins today to make your mascapone tarts today but they seem smaller than the tarts in your pictures .. any advise would be great - thanks!
@Anna, those are top secret I am afraid...
@Nana, I am not quite sure what went wrong. The muscavado sugar must not be too lumpy or day. Use fresh. Did you wait for the chocolate mix to cool down well?
@Marian, small muffin tins are the ones we are using. They are available from all cook shops. I hope you find them and happy birthday to friend!
how do we find out about the bookings for sydney 2010
I recently visited a Cupcake shop in Buenos Aires that made the most delicious cupcakes. Once which was particularly good was a passion fruit frosting. I often find that the frosting on cupcakes is way too sweet, but this wasn't and they managed to pile it high (about 4cms high). I have tried to recreate this using cream cheese, a little butter and passion fruit juice, but it just ends up a little sloppy. The consistency was not overly buttery when they made it, just smooth, not glossy, but help a real concentration of flavour.
Is there anything you can recommend? A mix of passion fruit jelly crystals to stabilise...???
Hi
I happened to pass the Holland Road shop yesterday and tried one of your delightful almond and cherry cakes - it was divine, light pastry, scrummy jam and beautifully moist almond sponge. Next time I am in London i will be back and bringing my friend with me.
@Jenny, try here and looking forward to seeing you: http://siff.com.au/cmspage.php?intid=127&linkid=125
@Lorna, you may want to consider making some passion fruit curd the same way you make lemon curd and then folding it together with some whipped up mascarpone cheese and a little whipping cream.
@Julia, thanks. Do come back!
Hi Yotam,
I just ordered both cookbooks and LOVE THEM! I have a question about flour. For the Italian Loaf you use both Italian 00 flour and strong white flour- why both? How is the Italian 00 different from strong white? Is there a substitute for the Italian 00 if I can't find it?
Thank you,
Sara
Sarah, thanks. The 00 is very strong and therefore essential for this king of light-textured bread. Substituting all for normal strong white flour should work but will be denser.
Hi Yotam,
Thanks for the clementine and almond cake recipe - I made it over the weekend and it was a great success.
Any plans for a cake book (...please!)
Lucy, no plan but it is a definite possibility for the future.
Hi Yotam
After following your recipes in the Guardina magazine I finally made it to buy some cakes from your Islington restaurant at the weekend - the praline cheesecake and strawberry cupcake were fabulous. They tasted just as good as they looked - maybe even better!
I am wondering which cakes you would recommend to make a day or 2 in advance of a large party?
Many thanks and I look forward to returning soon. Fran
Otto your receipe books are wonderful. I have a little wholesale business in New Zealand which makes lovely little cakes, pies and brioche and I am always looking for new ideas. At the moment I am trying to work out how you colour the meringues!
In New Zealand we have a very strong cafe culture and wonderful way of making coffee. your food really suits our way of life.
Thank you so much and if you are ever in NZ come and see us.
Regards
Maggie
@Fran, cheesecakes, un-iced, keep well chilled for 3-4 days. Have you got the Ottolenghi cookbook? Try the one there. Also, the carrot and apple cakes both keep really well and even improve over the first day or two.
@Maggie, thanks!
Hi Yotam,
This isn't cake related but I just wanted to make a comment. My father is Israeli and he taught me how to cook, so middle eastern food is what I grew up eating, it's my favourite. Saying that, I love food in general and love to try flavours from around the world.
Being vegetarian, I'm really enjoying your recipes in The Guardian. So many big, sunny, fresh flavours! I made the mejadra yesterday and it was soooo good! My partner has already asked me twice about when I'm going to make it again!
You make lots of suggestions that are new to me - about the combining of flavours. It was a while ago now but I believe you suggested putting tahini with cauliflower?.. That's become a bit of a staple in my house now.
Keep sharing the love!
Thank you,
Rhona
Thanks Rhona, will do and you keep combining cauliflower and tahini. It's heaven.
I live in New York (a suburb in Long Island to be exact) and I will be attending The French Culinary Institute in Feb. 2011 to become a pastry chef. I adore baking and I am always looking for new and interesting recipes to try when I came across this page looking for a raspberry lemon cupcake recipe. I saw all the beautiful pastries and I saw your raspberry lemon cupcakes. I bought your book hoping the recipe would be in there. I'm enjoying the book very much but I am disappointed that I did not find the recipe. Could you please share the recipe for those beautiful raspberry lemon cupcakes and the recipe for the icing I would greatly appreciate it.
Thank You,
Jacqueline.
@Jacqueline, I am sorry to disappoint you but I am afraid we choose to keep some of our recipes under wraps, the one you're after included. However, check out some of these great baking recipes that I published recently: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/aug/28/yotam-ottolenghi-cakes-cookies-tarts-recipes
Awww :( Thank you for answering though I tried my own version last week and my family and I enjoyed them. Still a work in progress as I am a perfectionist when it comes to baking. Thank you for the link also I can't wait to see what recipes I'll want to try.
Jacqueline.
Hi Yotam,
I'm going to be brave and try and bake a big batch of macaroons in different flavours for a tea party...before I get up to my elbows in macaroons can I check - are they freezable?
As in, bake the shells, freeze in a tupperware with paper between layers, defrost and fill the day before the party?
If not I'll do more teacakes!
Many Thanks,
Eve
@Eve, they freeze very well. Make sure you freeze them soon after baking and defrost on the day you stick them together.
Hi Yotam,
I was a student at Leiths 3 years ago and very much enjoyed your lecture, your food, and more recently your books and restuarants.
I have a client who loves Lemon Polenta Cake. Can I use the orange polenta cake recipe and subistitute in the lemons?
Really appreciate any pointers.
Sarah
Sarah
Hi Yotam,
I came across your cookbook at a friends and i think i am in love with you. I love hosting large dinner parties and your book has given me several ideas that no other book has. And what i like most is that i am not talking recipes here but combinations and flavours that i am dying to explore. i havent made anything yet but i know it would be spectacular. thanks so much in advance.
Alia
DElhi
@Sarah, in principal you can. I would probably increase the sugar a little. Good luck.
@Alia, wow! Thanks. Looking forward to hear how the actual cooking went. Hope you stay in love after it.
Hi Yotam,
I used to work on Lonsdale road and regularly (at least 4 times a week) pop in to your Ledbury branch for some yummy food.
I've been back in Thailand for 10months now and I'm really craving your lemon and mascapone tarts. Please please can you post the recipe on here for me and I promise I'll bring back something yummy for you from Bangkok :)
Many thanks
Premjit
Hi Yotam
I am a big fan of your teacakes and having found a silicone version of the bundt tins I have made all three in your cookbook several times.
Do you have any suggesions for another flavour. ( I was thinking christmas/seasonal version or chocolate/ground almond)
@Premjit, I like your style. But I am afraid not this time... ;)
@Catherine, this one looks good:
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Pumpkin-Spice-Bundt-Cake-with-Buttermilk-Icing-233011
Try spreading roasted cranberries on top.
Hi Yotam,
I am a HUGE fan of Ottoleghi and regularly visit with family and friends.
I always get the Lemon Pistachio & Polenta cake to go as it is my mother's favourite cake in the whole world!
Her 60th birthday is fast approaching and I was wondering if you would be so kind and to let me know the recipe for the cake (as I cannot find it in your cook books - which I have at home) or online.
Please help! She would be overjoyed!!
Many thanks
@Patricia, I would have loved to make your mom happy but I am afraid this is one of those recipes we just can't give away. Sorry...
Dear Yotam and Sammi
I just wanted to let you know that your recipes are being made and loved in San Diego California.
A girlfriend sent me both your books and we have been in heaven trying out your different recipes
from the salads to the meringues - fantastic!!!
Thanks , I am really enjoying them both.
I look forward to coming into your stores on a visit to London one day.
Any chance of you coming to La Jolla, please contact me, I am a huge fan and would be happy to show you around.
Thanks, Beryl
Hi, I know this isn't a cake related question but please help!
I love your aubergines with tomato, goats cheese and hazelnuts.
The aubergine slices literally fall apart they are so tender.. How can I cook my aubergines to achieve the same level of tenderness?
Thanks.
Hello
Thank you for posting such lovely recipes.
We recently tried your Pear and Cranberry Upside Down cake which tasted amazing but we had trouble with the caramel topping. We followed the instructions but the sugar and butter just separated as well as hardening very quickly. We still used it though...
Can you please let me know what we did wrong?
thank you
Amelia
Love the food, love the recipes, love the enthusiasm of your followers on the site.
Completely understand your reaons for not revealing your "secret" recipes but am worried about the succession issues... You need to reassure your readers that these recipes are being documented & preserved for posterity - somewhere, somehow - and that paranoia about alimentary espionage is under control.
@Beryl, no plans as off yet but will let you know. By the way, Plenty is getting an American edition. Our very soon!
@Lexa, brushed with lots of oil then cooked on high temperature in a fan oven. When we cook them, the oven is full so they sort of steam each other.
@Amelia, you need to continuously mix the sugar and butter, without stopping. They will come together in the end. Try again.
@Helen, all is under control! Thanks
Dear Yotam and Sammi,
I, like many others love Ottolenghi!! Every time I walk past your window in Motcombe street I am in ore of the beautiful display.
I recently bought your cook book and was planning on making the toffee and banana brownies. However, I was slightly confused by the recipe, to whether I just add 140g of bananas mashed or I make a banana jam and if so what the recipe is for a banana jam.
I also have to add that I adore your butter bean hummus!! and dream about your white chocolate cheesecake with a brownie bottom!! they are incredible!
Thank you,
Iona
@Iona, thanks for the love! You'd need banana jam, apricot jam or raspberry jam. Banana jam is hard to get. To make it you need to cook 400g of bananas with 30ml of lemon juice and 200g of sugar mixed with 10g of fruit pectin. Whisk the whole time as you cook everything on the stove. It needs to bubble for a few minutes before you remove from the heat and allow to cool down.
Hello,
I have been making lots of delicious things from your cookbooks! I LOVE them, and have given the books to friends as gifts.
I also ADORE the lemon polenta cakes in your shop. I have even tried to recreate them at home. Not as good as yours, though! I just wondered if you have some advice on how your chopped pistachios are so lovely and green? I bought some pistachios from the supermarket, but when I chopped them up they were an ugly golden brown and green mixed together. Needless to say, my Ottolenghi "wannabee" cakes were not very pretty.
Thanks for your amazing food!
Louise
@Louise, first, thanks for all the kind words. It is all about the pistachio variety. If you go to a Middle-eastern grocer you are likely to find some of our amazingly green pistacios.
Dear Yotam,
There aren't good enough words to express what a wonderful thing it is to live close by your Islington shop/restaurant and to have your two cookbooks at home.
I have a question. My boyfriend's birthday is coming up in two weeks and I want to get him a really nice birthday cake. Do you do birthday cakes that can be taken home? If not, do you have any recommendations?
Thanks so much (for everything, not just this).
Luisa.
@Louisa, there are plenty of options. Best thing is to contact the restaurant and they will be able to help. You are welcome (for everything)
Yotam
Just wanted to say a huge thanks to you and Lucy at your Islington restaurant for helping to arrange our forthcoming 75th Birthday. Thanks for taking the time to sign our present. Lucy has been a complete star.
I made the raspberry and peach cakes from your book this afternoon and they are fantastic - light, fruity and just scrummy.
We're looking forward to our party at Islington this week - thanks for all of the splendi recipes.
Go for the cake book - it would be a service to humanity.
@Paul, it was a real pleasure. And yes, Lucy is a star, I agree. Hurray to cake!
Dear Yotam
I feel almost that I have stolen from you so great is the combination of pleasure and guilt.
I have made your clementine and almond cake four times now to such great acclaim and flattery that I really need to give you what's rightly yours and pass some of it on.
The recipe is very easy to follow and the cake is simple to make but the results... ah the results. Wow! Not only in the eating, but also in the admiration of the diners. The ratio of effort to admiration was very much skewed to the admiration side. A recipe so simple give a lot of pleasure.
Thank you, Andrew
Dear Yotam,
Since my last visit to your Islington shop at the weekend, I have been dreaming about Ottolenghi's every night. My word, those cupcakes are delicious.
Strawberry Cupcake: divine.
Passionfruit Meringue Cupcake: glorious.
Rhubarb Cheesecake: sumptuous.
The mouthwatering list of delectable delights goes on and on. The best cakes bar none. Any chance I could have a stint in your kitchen for some insight into your secret recipes? (Don't answer that).
Now to go out and buy the recipe books. I need to check which one has the most cake recipes.
CAKE, CAKE, CAKE, CAKE, CAKE.
Yotam
I so enjoyed imagining trying out your salted almond meringues as published in Vogue May 2011. I spotted the recipe at the hairdresser's and thought I would be able to get the recipe online. Alas it does not seem to be available anywhere else! Any chance you could post it here? I will be sure to try them out for upcoming charity event and if all goes well I am sure they will become one of my staples. Thank you so much for oodles of foodie inspiration!
@Andrew, lovely and very generous of you to let me know. I am happy for you to keep on baking and receiving ALL the fame.
@Claudia, Claudia, Claudia - there are only cakes in the Ottolenghi cookbook (none in Plenty) so go out, buy it and have fun.
@Gaby, here's you meringue:
Salted almond meringues
Makes 6 medium size meringues
50g whole skinned almonds
¼ tsp malden sea salt
½ tbsp water
170g caster sugar
3 free-range egg whites (about 90g)
½ tsp white wine vinegar
½ tsp cornflour
A few drops of essential orange oil or almond essence
1 tsp flaked almonds
Heat the oven to 180C. Scatter the whole almonds inside a small ovenproof dish, sprinkle over the salt and water and roast for 10 minutes, or until light-brown. Remove from the oven, chop the almonds coarsely and leave to cool down.
Line a separate baking sheet with greaseproof paper and spread over the sugar. Put in the oven for about 8 minutes, or until the edges of the sugar just begin to dissolve. As soon as the sugar is hot enough, start whisking the egg whites in a free-standing mixer. Once they begin to froth, carefully pour the hot sugar into the working mixer and keep on whisking on high speed for up to 10 minutes, or until the mixture is firm and glossy. Fold in the chopped almonds, vinegar, cornflour and almond essence.
Reduce the oven temperature to 140C.
Secure the parchment paper to your baking sheet by placing a little bit of meringue at each corner of the tray. Use two tablespoons to scoop out and shape the meringues onto the tray, making six similar, swirly balls. Sprinkle a few flaked almonds on top of each meringue.
Place the meringues in the oven for 10 minutes, turn the oven down to 120C and cook for another 50 minutes. When ready, the meringues should be nice and dry underneath and still a little soft in the centre.
Hello Yotam
Living on the North York Moors, it is a rare treat to visit London and have the time to visit one of your restaurants. I had this pleasure earlier in May when I was treated by a friend at the Islington restaurant. We both finished our meal with the most scrummy blackberry financier. I have both your recipe books, but it's not in either. I have also scoured the net, but to no avail. Please might you share this wonderful secret?
With kind regards
Sharon
@Sharon, these friands are quite similar: http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/aug/28/yotam-ottolenghi-cakes-cookies-tarts-recipes?INTCMP=SRCH
Hope it goes well!
Dear Yotam,
A dear friend has asked me to make her wedding cake in September.... I will be using your carrot cake recipe for one layer and your apple olive oil cake for another, I've made them both several times, they are perfection. However, the couple have asked for a coffee cake for the third layer, and in addition have requested no chocolate or nuts. I am stuck and was wondering if you have any suggestions up your culinary sleeve!
(The cake is not going to be stacked, so the weight of the coffee cake does not matter.)
Many thanks,
Naomi
@Naomi, I am honoured. I am afraid I don't have a good recipe without nuts. The good ones always seem to have walnuts in them. Good luck!
Dear Yotam,
I have recently been trying out recipes from your tremendous book, 'Ottolenghi, and everything I have made has turned out great. Well almost...
Brownies - something went wrong. I followed the instructions explicitly (I think!) but after I had added the flour it was apparent that the mixture was very dense, and oily. In the oven the butter appeared to separate and gather at the top. Strange, eh?
Any suggestions on what I might have done wrong would be greatly appreciated. (Incidentally, I removed the chocolate/butter mixture from the heat before it had a chance to crystallise. Maybe it needed to cool down more before going into the sugar/eggs mixture?).
All the best,
Bill
i visited the upper street shop last week and had the chocolate and hazelnut ricotta cake, its by far the best cake ive ever had, cooked a few things from your book before and wud loved to know of a reciepe for this or something similar, the texture of it was not what i was expecting and def goin bak for more next time im in london
May I say Ottolenghi, Notting Hill, was paradise for a five month pregnant lady who was craving for cake this lunchtime. A bag of small sponge cakes, a raspberry meringue and the lemon polenta and pistachio cake did the job! Once I returned home and my 4 year old daughter got her hands on the last few sponge cakes we are both now addicted. Thank you!!!!
Where did you source the mini ball tin for the sponge cakes - they are a perfect size?
Shall be back very soon!
@Bill, that may be the reason. Also, the chocolate shouldn't be too high in percentage. About 60% cocoa solids max.
@Rob, I am afraid you'll need to come back. This one's a secret.
@Vanessa, those are widely available in silicon. Try Kitchen Ideas on Westbourne Grove.
we are from barcelona and we enjoy a lot at ottolenghi each time we visit london, this last time we were at upper street and it was even better than ever. It doesn't matter if it's salty or sweet is always spectacular, congratulations for you and your team.
This summer we are going 4 days to stockholm, I don't know if you could sugest me any adress of deli, take away or restaurant.
thanks so much.
Hi Yotam,
I recently was travelling in london with a friend from Australia on a foodie trip and we were lucky enough to go to all your Ottolenghi Stores at least once (Islington three times, breakfast, lunch and dinner!), dinner at Nopi AND had a fabulous class with Becky Harrymen at Divertimenti. Yes, we like your food a little bit :). I just wanted say a big thank you and congratulate you. Your cafes and restaurants are wonderful and we had consistently fantastic experiences at all of them. We spotted you there but didn't want to interrupt you but i wanted to say thank you. Also Becky gave such a great demo and it was such a pleasure to be there. We would love to see you in melbourne next time you visit Australia!
Thank you,
Karina
just to let you know that you can buy a really fantastic bundt muffin style tin frm a website called bakery bits - quite pricey but very good quality and gives the same shape as the ones in the Ottolenghi cookbook.
It is citrus season here and I have been making the amaretti biscuits using orange zest - divine. Normally these turn out perfectly, time after time. But the last few times I've made them, they have fallen flat rather than staying in little balls like in your photographs. I've tried adding more ground almonds but they still don't keep their shape. Any idea of what could be going wrong? Something to do with the egg whites, beating them too much/not enough?
Any help greatly appreciated!
@Jordi, thank you so much. I am afraid last time I was in Stockholm was 20 years ago so can't really help you. I hope you enjoy the Swedes and eat Jansson's temptation - one of my favourite dishes ever.
@Karina, thank you thank you!
@Rebecca, will have a look.
@Sarah, not quite sure what it could be. I suggest that you chill the mix before shaping. Also, try a different honey. Good luck!
Hi Yotam,
Today was the first time I heard of your shop (sorry). I am a cake geek but didnt know about you. I heard of you and went to your shop in Islington. I just wanted to tell you that it was so beautiful. I am on a diet, but I had to put that on hold and have a savory muffin (some sort of pesto and goat cheese muffin) and a cake. AMAZING! Just wanted to tell you that!
Hope you continue to do well...and make lots more cakes! I see some of your recipies here and I am going to try one. No doubt I will be back in your shop soon...that muffin was soooo good!
Ishara
Yotam,
I have both your cook books and my family love the unique and different recipes.The books stay on my kitchen bench so that I can cook delicious meals that are loved by my family. Next week I am doing an Ottolenghi dinner party and then sharing the recipe source.
We will be in London in January and will be visiting your store on a regular basis.We are foodies from Melbourne, Australia.
Regards
Kris.
@Ishara, thank you.
@Kris, See you soon and love to my beloved Melbourne.
Hi Yotam
i had a two hour stopover in London this week and I sprinted to your fabulous Belgravia store to stock up on goodies! what a treat,i must have bought one of everything! i would love to be able to buy your preserves and spices online,or a hamper, they would make a brilliant present for a friend of mine, is this something that would be available in future?
thanks Edwina xx
p.s Please please open a store north of the border!
@Edwina, We may be selling online in the future but haven't got specific plans. North of the border? It's way too far...
I saw you do a demo at Harvest this weekend. I don't watch much TV so (sorry but) you were a new name to me! I had a raspberry and white chocolate tart from the Chef's kitchen which was so good I actually yelped when I bit into it..
This never happens. Nor does the desire (knowing my pastry fear) to make the recipe over and over and over again until I can make something that approximates what I tried.
Is the recipe in a book somewhere? Please point me in the right direction...
Thank you from me and my jaded, spoilt tastebuds....
Hi Yotam,
I've made your apple and olive oil cake a few times and intend making it for my daughter's 1st birthday. I want to double the quantity and use a 26cm tin. Can you recommend how long I should cook it for? Should I change the oven temperature and would the larger tin suit the volume of batter?
One day I'll make it to London (a bit far from Melbourne)!
Cheers,
Morgana
@Josie, thanks for the compliment! The recipe is in the Ottolenghi cookbook: http://www.ottolenghi.co.uk/blog/2008/04/24/the-cookbook/
@Morgana, I can't tell you exactly how much longer it will take to bake the cake, probably another 20-30 minutes. Just check often with the skewer so not to over-bake it. The quantity to tin size sounds about right and there's no need to change temperature. See you (one day) in London
Thank you Yotam - had best go shopping and cooking!
Hello, we will be in london next month with my girlfriend. She loves your pastry as well as me, but she is allergic to gluten, we know that some of yours are gluten free as the flourless chocolate teacake and others, but we don't now really if the lemon polenta cake has gluten or not and the chocolate fude cake? thank you very much.
@Jordi, both the lemon polenta and the fudge cake are gluten free. Come soon.
I would like to bake your cakes for my celiac friend. Have already done the polenta cake which he loved, and now wonder about replacing polenta for the flour in some of your others? like the pistachio and rosewater semolina? or the clementine and almond? or is this just a bad idea? Thanks!
Hi,
I lived in London for a year, and visited Ottolenghi many times for your fabulous food and, very importantly, cakes.
When I moved back to Denmark, I took your cookbook with me, and now do the cakes myself, with great pleasure. However, I cannot find my Ottolenghi favorite in the book, the chocolate cake with Baileys cream. Is it possible to find the recipe somewhere?
Thank you very much,
Trine.
I am looking for cakes with mint - anything considered but it needs to have mint and/or chocolate for about 10 hungry ice skaters. Can you help?
@Elizabeth, in theory, such alterations can work. Cakes are very temperamental though, so a good dose of experimenting is required.
@Trine, I am afraid this one is a recipe we must week to ourselves. Truly sorry. Try the chocolate cupcakes from the Ottolenghi cookbook. They are similar in a way.
@Richard, no ideas on this front I am afraid. Sorry.
As your neighbour I am just so much in love with your white chocolate cheese cakes. Is there any chance you could post the recipe for the filling as I have both your books but unfortuantely it's not in there? I would love to make them for my family back home in Austria at christmas...
I now live in the south of France but when in London always go to Ottolenghi. My absolute favourite is the little oval cake with fruit in it (there is sometimes a fig and a couple of weekends ago blackberries- made with very little flour or none? and almonds ... with the marscapone on the top. I bought both the cookbooks to be able to find this recipe and I just can't find them in the cookbooks to get my fix! :(( Am I missing something?
Rachel
@Veronika, those are a best-kept secret... Sorry.
@Rachel, not exactly the same but in the same spitrit:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/aug/28/yotam-ottolenghi-cakes-cookies-tarts-recipes?INTCMP=SRCH
The chocolate fudge cake recipe requires 70% and 52% cocoa solids chocolate
It is easy to get 70% but I can't find 52% anywhere. Even Bournville is only 35-39%.
Do you have any suggestions where I could buy some, or if not, do you have any suggestions of a substitute for the 52% chocolate. What would the effect be if I used a reduced amount of Bournville but increased the quantity of 70%?
Any help would be most appreciated
@Liz, you can use a higher grade like 60% but otherwise a mix of the two will be fine. Happy baking!
I am also a cake geek, but more at the eating end than the making end. I was wondering if you do any baking lessons as I'd love to learn from an expert, I have a tendency to experiment slightly too much whilst cooking which works quite well for other food but not for cake!
Having lived in london for the past 5 years, I had the opportunity to experience the wonderful culinary creations of 0ttolenghi. I recently returned to Canada with both cookbooks, however, I am missing the delicious savory muffins. I was wondering if this recipe is available? Thanks, can't wait for my next return trip!
@Tavi, all our cooking classes are based on savoury at the moment but sounds like I should consider doing baking too!
@Kim, unfortunately the savoury muffins are one that we are keeping secret, sorry.
I am fascinated by the idea of Turkish Spinach cake, the sweet variety. But I dont want it to taste like an eggy sweet spinach omlette. Do you have a recipe for this cake or any suggestions of ingredients that would enhance it? Thankyou for your wonderful passion for cooking. I just received your book for christmas! Thanks.
@Kim, I am not sure what you mean exactly but I don't have a sweet spinach cake recipe. Here is a link to a savoury spinach pie... Hope it helps! http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/mar/20/herb-pie-recipe-vegetarian-ottolenghi?INTCMP=SRCH
Yotam,
May I just say, how delighted I was when I first discovered your shop in Notting Hill. Since, I am addicted to your cakes!-;)
Now, hopefully I can book myself in one of your cookery classes this year.
That would be fantastic!
@Nora, Thank you! More classes to be announced later this year.
Your chocolate chip cookies? Amazing.
Any chance you could share that recipe?
@lauren, the cookies are one of those recipes that we are keeping secret sorry.
Hello! Tried and make the apple and olive oil cake with maple icing... Cake was beautiful, but icing was a bit 'sad', quite different from the fluffy, gorgeous one you find at your shops
my icing came out just too liquid and not fluffy: what could have gone wrong!
thanks a lot for your help!
bakefanatic
@Giancarlo, I'm sorry to hear it didn't work. There could be a few reasons for this. If the butter was too soft it wouldnt combine and become light and airy with the sugar. Have it at room temperature but not melted. The cream cheese should be full fat, if it is light then it has a higher water content. Try it again and let me know how it goes.
Not sure if I posted this question correctly but hoping to try again. There is an amazing nz company producing freeze dried herbs/fruits, and i'v been thinking of a way to use the passionfruit powder. Wondering about making the amaretti biscuits, but substituting desiccated (or shredded?!) coconut for the ground almonds and adding some passionfruit powder instead of almond essence. From one cake geek to another, what do you think, would it work? Have had great success with them adding different flavors such as cocoa powder or rosewater, etc.
Hi Yotam! re-tried and it worked! i started working with the butter as soon as it reached 10 degrees, which made a huge difference... last question: i have quite a few friends that dont like cinnamon, do you think this cake would also work without it? i think so, but wanted to check the master's view! thanks again!
@Giancarlo, That's great news! Try using ground clove or allspice, but only half the quantity.
@Sarah, it sounds like a great idea. I have some of the dried apple here, it's great. Let me know how your experiments go!
Dear Yotam
I have just cooked your sweet potato wedges with the wonderful dip with lime, lemon grass and ginger in it. I served them on the side and used your baked aubergine with pomegranet recipe on a bed of quinoa. It was one of the best meals ever!! I was so inspired I looked on line to see if there was a way of contacting you to say how much I love your Plenty recipe book. We had the green pancakes the other week and they were sooo good! I married my vegetarian husband in February after being with him for five years - I became veggie three years ago. Your cookbook is perfect for us. So I wanted to say thank you.
best wishes Caroline
@Caroline, Thats great news. I am happy to share these recipes and its great to hear they are enjoyed. Thanks
As an avid cook and a 'cake geek' I am a huge fan of your work. I would also go as far as saying that your books are two of the best I have in my ridiculously large collection. I refer to them constantly. Your approach to food is so refreshing, I just love it!!!
So when can I add a third Yotam?? Have you one in the pipeline?
Thank you, Kell
@Kelly, I have good news for you, there is a third book coming out in September. It's called Jerusalem, a modern take on the wonderful flavours and traditional dishes of the vibrant city.
Dear Yotam,
I live in Australia but was lucky enough to stay with friends in Islington last year who live directly across the road from your shop! My mum and I are gluten intolerant and for her birthday on Monday I was hoping to make her your 'Lemon, Polenta and pistachio cake'. (simply amazing)
I do have one of your books but could not find the recipe in there. Is there anywhere I could get this recipe? is it published in your other books?
Wish I was closer to your delicious food.
Thanks
Katie
@Katie, The Lemon, polenta and pistachio cake is one of those we have chosen not to publish sorry. What did you decide to cook instead?
Dear Yotam,
I will have to come back to England to get my fix! Thank you for your response anyway.
I made my Mum your carrot and walnut cake. It was delicious. The whole family loved it so thank you!
Katie
Your clementine and almond cake is one of my favorites, thank you for sharing the recipe! Just wondering if I can substitute the flour with rice, corn or potato flour to make it gluten free for a friend? Any advice would be appreciated!
Cheers, sarah
Hiya.
I have to provide a pudding for 14 people in November, and I have to make it the day before the dinner party...
Every winter I rediscover your Christmas 2008 Guardian supplement - I love it!
Should I make the Almond and Clementine Syrup Cake (which I saw in a Sept 2012 supplement too ;-) or the Dark Chocolate Mousse with Baileys Cream? (I've wanted to try both for nearly four years now... :-) Which will be 'freshest' 24 hours after making?
Or do you have another suggestion?
I'd appreciate any advice!
Nell.
@Nell, they are both great choices for the following day. The chocolate mousse is silky smooth and a real treat but you will need to make a double recipe. Same for the cake, you will need 2 for 14 guests and this will leave you left overs which you can enjoy for days after. Enjoy!
@Sarah, I think any of them could work to replace the flour as it isn't a large quantity, but I haven't tried it myself. Do a test run, and let me know how it goes!
Hi just to say a massive thanks to yotam for the clementine and almond syrup cake and spiced cookies recipes . I have a stall at the farmers market in Lincoln once a month and both these items were so well received at today's market . I made sure you were mentioned many times , thanks again . Eileen
Hi Yotam
I was watching your programme on Morocco and saw you make the easy version of Warakyou made in the riad. Would it be possible to have the proportions of water, flour, oil and salt as I would love to have a try.
Many thanks
Fatemah
Hi just to say my sister and I had lunch at your Islington branch yesterday and were in food heaven for the duration. We have been enjoying cooking and eating our way through your recipes since your first book came out!
We took some of your delicious cakes home to share with our family, the white chocolate cheesecake with raspberries was a stand out and I will be making that myself very soon!! We also took a hazelnut, chocolate and ricotta cake which was divine and reminded me of a cake my Oma used to make, is it possible to get the recipe for this cake as it does not appear in any of your book :-(
Keep up the amazing work and keep the recipes coming! We will be back soon!
Thanks
Zaina
Hi there, I've just bought the Ottolenghi - The Cookbook and it's tremendous (as I'm sure you know!). I've been in the cooking doldrums a little of late and this has reignited my enthusiasm! I tried the Chocolate Fudge Cake recipe yesterday and it came out really wet despite keep giving it longer and longer in the oven (the crusty bits around the edges are delicious though!).
Things that could have of affected it are:-
- didn't use a springform cake tin. I used one with a loose bottom and the sides were fairly high (9cm)
- when I stirred in the egg yolks to the melted chocolate mixture it then seemed to look a little grainy, not sure whether this indicated the mixture was too warm and the egg had scrambled slightly?
- I wasn't sure whether I'd overdone the meringue (I'm a bit of a meringue novice, I love them but avoid making them as it would seem like a dangerous path to type 2 diabetes). The meringue was very firm I thought and it took some stirring in.
I'm keen to give the recipe another go and came across this thread when doing a bit of googling so thought I'd add a comment - your thoughts would be appreciated.
Regards
Denise
Hi Yotam,
At christmas I had the pleasure of eating one of your flourless lemon and pistachio cakes. Ever since then it's been on my mind, and now that I'm back in Australia, your store is just TOO FAR AWAY!!
Does this recipe feature in any of your books?
Thanks for bringing so many delicious things into this world!
Lani
@Eileen, thank you!
@Fatemah, sadly I didn't get the recipe! I can only say it is a pancake consistency.
@Zaina, @Lani, not great news I'm afraid, neither of these recipes have been published.
@Denise, this is a hard one. The tin, egg (yes, chocolate was too warm) and/or meringue shouldn't affect it. It is quite a moist cake when in the oven and will set more once out. If it doesn't I would normally say leave it in the oven for longer, but you tried this... Did you cook it in the two stages?
After cooking and cooling put in the fridge to help it set. It is meant to be soft and fudgey so bring it back to room temp before serving. Good luck!
Hi Yotam
I was wondering if you could help me. I am charged with making a friend's wedding cake in August and she wants sweet tarts - but I have to somehow make these in advance and transport them from London to the south of France before filling them with only basic kitchen equipment the day before the wedding.
If I make sweet pastry and blind bake it in advance, maybe shaving 5 mins off the cooking time, could I freeze it cooked and then defrost and reheat (not in a tin) the day before the wedding? Or do I have to freeze it unbaked in the tin/in a ball and then panic the day before?
I was also thinking of using your white chocolate and raspberry recipe but substituting passion fruit jam/coulis instead of raspberry, or would that be a bit sweet? She wants passion fruit/tropical flavours.
Thank you for any help in advance and happy Easter,
Laura
Hello Yotam
I was in London a few weeks ago and had a great lunch at your Islington restaurant, everything was absolutely and without reservation fantastically and inspiringly good, but the cake, the CAKE, the Orange & Almond cake at the end was without a doubt the most delicately yet at the same time robustly flavoured and exquisitely textured and wizardly concatenation of deliciousness that I have ever put in my mouth. What is more, the experience almost passed me by, as the cake I think looks quite modest and unprepossessing and certainly does not stand out amongst the other much more baroque creations displayed in your shop window (and also sounded quite dry, both literally and figuratively, on the basis of your charming employee’s description). But my friend (with whom I was sharing dessert) insisited on a flourless creation, so the Orange & Almond cakelet it was. I was utterly transported, my taste-buds zinging and singing odes of joy, and immediately felt the need to try to reproduce this supreme empress amongst cakes. I looked through all of your recipe-books and found nothing comparable, but then came across a Christmas recipe in the Guardian for a Clementine & Almond cake which sounded like it could be related to the Orange & Almond cake I so enjoyed. The Guardian Clementine & Almond cake was however a large cake (baked in a cake-tin), whereas the Orange & Almond cake I had in your shop had been baked in a cup-cake/muffin tin. So I am therefore writing with a few questions: (1) Could I indeed bake the Orange & Almond cakes (in their smaller incarnation) on the basis of the Christmas recipe for a Clementine & Almond cake from the Guardian (and, if so, how long would they need cooking (15-20 minutes?)); (2) if the Clementine & Almond cake from the Guardian would require some tweaking to produce the smaller Orange & Almond cakes, would you have any quick tips on how to effect such tweaks?; and (3) please, please, please could you put the recipe for those smaller Orange & Almond cakes in your next recipe-book? Many thanks for that amazing cake and for any answer you may have the time to give me. Best regards, Martin Burns
@Martin, that's great to hear! You can definitely use the Clementine and almond recipe for individual cakes. Bake them at 160C for about 40 minutes, checking they dont get too dark. reduce the oven to 150C if they start to. Enjoy!
@Laura, It is such a wonderful honour to make a friends wedding cake, congratulations! I am 99% sure the tart cases will be fine if cooked, transported, defrosted and filled - without the process of reheating. The best way to be sure is to do a test run. Also think about how you are getting them to France. They will be very delicate.
Passion fruit and white chocolate will be delicious, just dont use too much sugar in the passion fruit jam/coulis. Good luck!
Hi Yotam,
I came down to London after having developed a pretty strong obsession with your cookbooks and recipes for quite some time.. And ended up going to Notting hill and Nopi within 24 hours! I was like a kid in a toy store. They are both outstanding... I loved seeing the vibrancy and diversity of the beautiful ingredients so much that they are like spalshes of paint on a white canvas and are all the decoration the store requires! One of the things I tried that i can still taste in my mind daily is the apricot sponge tart (you make them in a variety of flavours), the fruit so tender but still with a bite, the sponge so moist and base so crispy was amazing!! However I can't seem to find the recipe anywhere and I have 15 people this Friday night and am desperate to make it... Can you help??
Thanks so much and just to add I think it's lovely you have such a personal touch on this site with your fans.
@Gemma, I haven't published this recipe but this is the basis of it. You will need to test it a few times to get it right, probably not the best idea to test it on 15 friends!
Make a plain crumble base, compress in a cake tin. Spread over a generous layer of almond cream, and top with fruit. Bake 200C until cooked in the centre and golden on top. Glaze with apricot jam. Leave to cool, then enjoy!