04 April


Greek Red Easter Eggs

(κόκκινα αυγά)

Greek Red Easter Eggs

April: Easter Season

Christos Anesti! Christ is risen! This is a beautiful Greek greeting on Easter morning exclaiming that our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ is alive in our hearts!

Eggs are a popular symbol for the spring and Easter season because they represent rebirth and resurrection. Many are dyed in vibrant hues but traditional Greek eggs (kokkina avga) are red as a reminder of His Precious Blood shed for all.

We used natural instead of commercial dyes to color our eggs—by boiling them with the liquid extracted from red onion skins! Red eggs may be placed in a pretty basket, hidden for an egg hunt, used to decorate a braided bread or simply eaten on Easter.

The Greeks sure got a great idea to use red eggs for evangelization! Happy Easter!

Recipe

(Adapted from About.com – Greek Food)

Ingredients

  • red or yellow skins from 5-8 onions
  • 3 -4 cups water
  • 1 tablespoon vinegar
  • 6 eggs
  • vegetable or olive oil (for polishing the red eggs)

Directions

Peel off the skins from the onion and place in a large stainless steel pot full of water. Add the vinegar and bring to a boil. Lower the heat, cover the pot and simmer for half an hour. Strain the red liquid into a glass bowl.

Greek Red Easter Eggs

Allow the red liquid to cool. In a pot, place the clean eggs in one layer. Pour the red liquid over the eggs to cover them. Boil the eggs for 10-15 minutes but no longer than 20 minutes.

Greek Red Easter Eggs

Carefully transfer the red boiled eggs to a glass bowl. Pour the remaining liquid over them and cool to room temperature. Gently dry the eggs on paper towels. Lightly polish the shells with a little oil. Refrigerate the eggs until ready to use.

Greek Red Easter Eggs

Notes

  • We acquire extra onion skins that fall off in the bins at the grocery store and place them in the plastic bag with our onions.
  • For deeper color eggs, cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate the eggs in the red liquid for a few days. We recommend dyeing the eggs on the day Jesus died (Good Friday). Then refrigerate in the red liquid. On the third day, the red eggs are ready when the Lord rose (Easter Sunday).
  • The natural dye will stain plastic or wooden utensils and plates. Use stainless steel or glass when coloring the eggs and paper towels when wiping spills or polishing with oil.
  • When our friend Olga W. came to celebrate Easter with us, she and Islander played a Greek game with the red eggs. Although she was influenced by the Russian Orthodox Church, she is familiar with some Greek Orthodox traditions, such as tsougrisma. Two players tap each other’s red egg in an attempt to crack it. The winner whose egg did not crack first is believed to be blessed throughout the coming year. (By the way, Olga won.)
  • Olga brought over braided bread and decorated it with red eggs for an edible Easter tradition in both Russian and Greek Orthodox churches.
  • Eastern (Greek, Russian, etc.) Orthodox Easter is celebrated on a date different than Western Christian churches; sometimes the dates coincide with the Julian and Gregorian calendars. Check the chart for future dates of Easter.
  • Easter eggs may be naturally dyed in other colors using a variety of vegetables, fruits, spices, herbs, etc. See the “ingredients” list on About.com – Chemistry site.
  • Search our blog for other Easter and egg recipes.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake

(Prince William’s Groom’s Cake)

Chocolate Biscuit Cake 

April 29, 2011: The Royal Wedding Day of HRH Prince William of Wales and Catherine Middleton

Chocolate groom’s cakes are popular in the American South. Across the pond, in jolly old England, Prince William is reportedly having one, too! Alongside the traditional, elaborately-decorated British fruitcake as a wedding cake, the chocolate biscuit (cookie) cake is Prince William’s choice for a groom’s cake. It is a royally rich, crunchy chocolate confection, which is one of his childhood comfort foods as well as his grandmother’s (the Queen’s) favorite tea cake. Many royal wedding watchers and foodies are probably preparing this decadent dessert to celebrate the historic moment when the prince weds a commoner like the rest of us. Then we can get a tiny taste of the rich, royal life—as if we ourselves were attending the fairy tale wedding of the century—and have his cake and eat it, too! Congratulations to the happy couple from HI Cookery!

Recipe

(Adapted from Eating Royally by Darren McGrady)

For the chocolate biscuit cake

  • 1 package rich tea biscuits (we used McVitie’s brand 200 grams)
  • ½ teaspoon butter (to grease a 6 x 2 ½-inch round springform pan)
  • ¼ cup (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, softened
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 4 ounces (4 squares) semi-sweet chocolate (we used Baker’s brand)
  • 1 egg, beaten

Directions

Break the biscuits into ½ – 1 inch pieces but not into crumbs. Set aside. Butter a 6 x 2 ½ – inch springform pan. In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter with the sugar.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake

In another bowl, microwave the chocolate until it is melted. Pour this into the butter and sugar mixture and stir until smooth. Mix in the beaten egg.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake

Fold in the biscuit pieces a little at a time until everything is well coated. Line the springform pan with greased parchment paper. Press into the pan until all spaces are filled and flattened. Refrigerate for at least three hours or until firm. On a foil-lined baking sheet with edges, unmold the cake onto a wire rack. Use a spatula to loosen the cake from the springform pan. Peel away the parchment paper. Brush off any crumbs before pouring the chocolate ganache topping over it.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake

For the chocolate ganache topping

  • 4 ounces (4 squares) semi-sweet chocolate (we used Baker’s brand)
  • ½ cup heavy whipping cream

Directions

Melt the chocolate. Stir in the cream until well combined. Pour the mixture over the cake and smooth it over the top and sides. Transfer to a cake plate or pedestal. Chill the cake to let the frosting set.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake

Let the remaining chocolate cool to thicken. Then whip to a firm consistency (it will be a slightly lighter shade of chocolate). Fill a pastry bag with a decorative tip (we used Wilton tip #2D) and pipe borders on the top and bottom edges of the cake. Refrigerate to set. Bring to room temperature before slicing and serving.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake

Top the cake with additional desired decorations, such as a monogram or bride and groom figures. We used white chocolate/vanilla candy wafers that were melted and cooled in an alphabet mold to make our monograms of the letters W and C for William and Catherine.

Chocolate Biscuit Cake

Notes

  • Thanks always to our dear friend Lisa L. for sending some ingredients from Europe. Unfortunately, the McVitie’s rich tea biscuits that she and her husband John L. (a Welshman) had mailed more than three weeks ago did not arrive in time to make Prince William’s groom’s cake (fortunately, we found the cookies at an English tea shop in town). We also blame the post office for losing our invitations to the royal wedding!!!

Coronation Chicken

Tea Sandwiches

 Coronation Chicken Tea Sandwiches

April 29, 2011: The Royal Wedding Day of HRH Prince William of Wales and Catherine Middleton

Take time for tea and watch the royal wedding today (it is inevitable as this historic event will be all over the news anyway until the media frenzy fades away). So sit back and relax, sip on a cup of tea and savor some sandwiches, such as this creamy, curry-flavored one called Coronation Chicken.

We learned how to make this sandwich and other tea time treats (scones, shortbread cookies, tarts, cupcakes, etc.) when we attended a demonstration class together for fun at Bama Pie Kitchen and Cooking School while living in Oklahoma. Since then, we would host a home-style High Tea with Highlander’s family (his father was born in Britain) whenever they visit us.

Make your menu majestic by including Coronation Chicken Tea Sandwiches for royal wedding watch parties, tea time and other special gatherings with family and friends.

Recipe

(Adapted from Bama Pie Kitchen and Cooking School)

  • 2 chicken breasts
  • 1 cup sour cream or plain yogurt, light/lite or fat-free
  • 1 teaspoon curry powder
  • 2 teaspoons water
  • ¼ – 1/3 cup mango chutney (we used Ohelo’s brand)
  • slices of bread, white or wheat

Directions

Poach the chicken breasts by boiling them in a saucepan until cooked through. Cool then chop up or grate the chicken coarsely. In a large bowl, mix the chicken with sour cream or yogurt.

Coronation Chicken Tea Sandwiches

In a small cup, make a paste with the curry powder and water. Stir the curry into the chicken mixture. Add the mango chutney to taste.

Coronation Chicken Tea Sandwiches

Refrigerate for a few hours or overnight to allow the flavors to blend. Spread the mixture between slices of bread. Cut off the crusts (optional) and slice into triangles or rectangles.

Coronation Chicken Tea Sandwiches

Notes

  • This version of Coronation Chicken Tea Sandwiches is lighter than its original recipe, which uses mayonnaise instead of sour cream or yogurt. It is also optional to add golden raisins and chopped, dried apricots to sweeten the sandwich.
  • Thanks to Islander’s parents for sending Ohelo’s Mango Chutney from Hawaii (formerly named as the Sandwich Islands after the 4th Earl of Sandwich by Captain James Cook in the 1770s).

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