Fruit Pastry

Fruit Pastry
Cooking Is Fun Unlimited

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Oven Fried Chicken




6 chicken tenderloins
1/2 cup buttermilk
1/2 cup flour 
1/2 cup Panko crumbs
1/4 cup rolled oats that have been pulverized in a blender till a crumb consistency
2 tbsp olive oil
3 pinches salt to flavours the coating 
1/2 tsp oregano

Seasoning for the marinade
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp paprika
1/2 tsp garlic powder

Method
In a shallow glass dish mix the marinade seasoning and the buttermilk.
Add the chicken to it and coat the tenders with the marinade using a pair of tongs.
Cover and let it marinate in the fridge for about 1 hour.
When ready to make preheat your oven to 400 degrees Farenheit.
Take a 13 by 9 inch baking tray and line the bottom with baking foil.
Spread the olive oil on it.

Now take a large gallon size ziplock bag.

Add the Flour, Panko, oat crumb, salt and oregano..
Seal and give the crumbs a good shake and a mix.

Bring the chicken out from the fridge.
Remove the excess marinade by blotting each piece on a paper towel.
Discard the towel.

Now place the baking tray in the oven for a few mins. While that heats get the chicken ready.

With tongs add each piece of chicken into the crumb bag.
Seal and toss the chicken in the bag.
Make sure you use your hands to coat all the chicken pieces with the crumb.
Remove each chicken piece, open the oven door and place it on the heated tray.
Repeat with all chicken till they are lined up on the tray evenly.

Bake the tenders for 11 minutes on one side.
Then flip them to the other side and let them crisp up for another 8 mins.
 Once done remove from oven and serve warm with steamed veggies or with your favourite dipping sauce.

Middle Eastern Sweet Coconut cake





Ingredients

1 cup sugar
6 eggs at room temperature
2 cups corn oil or canola
1 cup milk
2.5 tsp baking powder
1.5 tsp cardamom pdr
1 teaspoon lemon juice
2 cups flour
3 cups of shredded unsweetened coconut..can use fresh or dried
1/3 cup roasted pistachios crushed coarsely as garnish.

For the Syrup
2 cups water
2 cups sugar powdered
2 tsp rose water or 1 tsp rose essence

Prepare the syrup ahead.
First dissolve the sugar and water.
Then bring it to a rolling boil for 10 minutes.
Take off the heat.
Add the essence and let it cool till your ready to add to the cake.

Now for the cake.
Preheat your oven to 350 deg F.
Blend together with a wire whisk the eggs, sugar, milk, oil, lemon juice, cardamom pdr.
Combine your flour and baking powder together in a bowl.
Add this gradually to the wet mixture and incorporate well.
Now add the coconut and stir well into the cake batter.
Grease a 13" by 9" baking tray or an oblong baking tray. I used a deeper oval digs that yielded a thicker cake by size and I had to bake it a further 4o minutes so the center got done evenly.
Add the cake batter to the pan.
Spread evenly with a spatula.
Tap the edge of the pan so the batter sits well in the cake pan.
Bake for 30-40 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean.
Once it bakes remove from the oven.
Use a fork to score little holes all over the cake.
Now with a ladle slowly pour the syrup on to the hot cake.
Make sure you evenly distribute the syrup throughout the cake and that it's absorbed all over.
Cool and serve topped with crushed pistachios.
This cake can be eaten with whipped cream on top or just plain with a drizzle of honey!

Mumbai style Potato Fritters

4 medium potatoes, boiled, peeled and coarsely mashed
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp turmeric pdr
1 tsp grated ginger
1 tsp grated garlic
1 green chili deseeded and chopped fine ( optional , you can skip it)
3 tbsp chopped onion
3 cilantro sprigs chopped
1 1/3 cup garbanzo bean flour/ Besan
1/4 tsp cumin pdr 
1/2 tsp salt for the batter
A little over 1 cup of water
Oil to deep fry



In a wide plate with your hands mix together the potatoes, salt, turmeric, ginger, garlic, onions, chili, cilantro until you have a sort of homogenous mixture.
Wash hands.
Then with slightly dampened hands divide the mix into equal parts of 25 portions.
Form each of these portions into smooth balls.
Set aside.
In a mixing bowl whisk together the flour, cumin pdr, salt and if you like more heat you can add 1/2 tsp of cayenne pepper powder to this batter.
Gradually add the water into the flour mix and blend till you get a batter that's only slightly thinner than pancake batter.
Now in a deep frying skillet or a small wok heat around 3 cups of oil.
Your oil is ready when you drop in a tiny dash of the batter and it puffs up and rises to the top.
Don't have the oil on super high heat. A mellow medium high will do for deep frying.
Now carefully one at a time dip the potato ball into the batter, coat and drop into the hot oil.
Wait for the batter to set on the first ball that's in the oil before dredging the second ball into the batter and dropping it into the oil.
I reccomend frying only two at a time so you can get an even result.
Use a slotted spoon to fry them.
Let the two balls fry for a few seconds before turning them over in the oil.
Your Vadas are ready when the intensity of the oil bubbles subside and the outer covering of the Vadas are firm to touch when you tap the slotted spoon over it.
And you have a nice golden exterior.
Remove them into a plate covered with draining paper towels.
Repeat the process with the remaining balls, frying them two at a time.

Serve them as warm as you can, sandwiched between two halves of an English muffin that's been smothered with the sweet tamarind sauce and sprinkled with the Chili Garlic Dry Chutney....