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Thursday, 23 August 2018

Old-fashioned Sweet Brioche

Basic Brioche
Basic Brioche




This is one of those recipes that I have been longing to share with you. During winter I often baked these sweet brioche buns from my childhood.

Although my brioche buns do not have an attractive appearance, I can tell you without pretension that they were super delicious. The crumb was perfect, very soft and light. 

The ingredients are very simple - flour, sugar, eggs, milk and fresh yeast.  However, this old-fashioned method used by grandmothers is a slow rise method. It takes approximately 4 hours for the first rise and another 2 hours for the second rise. It is worth the wait as you get the traditional taste of brioche.

Usually I prepare the yeast dough in the evening and let it rise over night completely, then I take the dough the next morning, shape it, leave it to rise a bit more, cover with egg yolk and bake it. It’s easier this way and works perfectly well! 

Sometimes I varied the amount of butter and the flavours. The one in the photo is richer in butter and has an orange flavour (I added the zest of an orange to the dough and I used 150g of butter). A real treat, we feasted. 

Now it’s up to you to add your touch to this recipe - by adding dried fruits, various nuts, crystallised fruit, spices (vanilla, cinnamon, ginger, etc.) - however respect the steps of the recipe. 

I have written the method and observations so you can succeed easily. This brioche recipe is great to make at the weekend. Perfect for any brunch, picnic or tea time.

Orange Brioche
Orange Brioche
Orange Brioche
Orange Brioche
Orange Brioche
Ingredients:
300g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
2 eggs
70g sugar 
140g butter, at room temperature (plus extra for greasing)
100 ml lukewarm full-fat milk
10g organic baker’s yeast
1/2 tsp salt
*Icing sugar (optional)

For the egg wash:
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoons milk

Preparation:
1. Mix the yeast in the lukewarm milk.

2. In a bowl, make a well with the flour, sugar and salt. Add the yeast milk and the beaten eggs. Mix well. Knead with a spatula or with the dough hooks of an electric mixer, until a soft and smooth dough is obtained 

3. Then, add the butter in pieces and knead again until dough becomes elastic
(until the dough comes away from the container).

4. Then, cover the dough and let it rise to double its volume (for 4 hours) at room temperature. 

5. When the time is up, remove the dough and place it on a well-floured surface.

6. Knead again and then, divide the dough into 7 portions.

7. Roll the dough into a ball.

8. Arrange the dough on a well buttered cake mould and cover. Let it sit for another 2 hours or until it is puffed up.

9. When dough has doubled in size, and before putting the mould in the oven, brush the buns with egg wash (mix the egg yolk and the milk).

10. Bake in a preheated oven at 180ºC for about 20-30 minutes until golden brown.

11. Remove, unmould, and leave to cool on a wire rack.

Observations:
The amount of butter: the more the dough is rich in butter, the better the brioche. By contrast, the dough will be much harder to shape because it is very soft. As a rule, the weight of the butter is at least 50% of the weight of the flour.

Avoid over-kneading once you incorporate the butter - diced and at room temperature - stop as soon as the dough is smooth. If the dough is kneaded too long, there is a risk of having a rubbery crumb.

Monday, 20 August 2018

A superb night out in Sion

A few weeks ago, during my holidays in Heidi’s Country, we went for dinner at L’Enclos de Valère in Sion.

This restaurant has been on my bucket list for a while and now that I have been, I urge you to try it, because everything was perfect.

But before that, let me take you for a little tour through the centre and the old town of Sion. We arrived in the afternoon and we wandered lazily around the city. For the “things to do in Sion” I invite you to take a look at my post last year. You will certainly fall in love with this medieval town, so full of charm.

Et voilà, the stroll over, now I present to you this wonderful restaurant in the heart of Sion “L’Enclos de Valère”.

We arrived for dinner at 7pm, and we were installed at a table in the pretty shady garden, a haven of peace in the middle of the old streets of the city.

The menu was excellent, the dishes very well presented and the cooking perfect; simply the best!

We chose a menu which consisted of several dishes. Small appetisers (amuses-bouche) to start the feast. The starters were excellent and beautifully presented. The main course and the dessert were superb.

Our Menu:

Les délices de l'Enclos "terrine de foie gras de canard en fine gelée d'abricots, tartare de veau aux perles de jus de truffes, cannelloni au sérac du Valais et coppa en manteau d'orties, tomate et mozzarella de bufflonne au basilic"

Racks d'agneau en croûte aux herbes et à la moutarde, jus parfumé, trio de pommes de terre et jardinière de légumes

Steak de bœuf, beurre café de Paris, pommes frites et salade mêlée

Tarte Tatin avec double crème et glace

Duo de fraises et framboises, double crème de la Gruyère, meringue et glace vanille

What more can be said? We found the welcome warm, the staff friendly and professional, the setting at the foot of the castles just beautiful!!

L’Enclos de Valère Restaurant
Rue des Châteaux 18
Sion 1950
Tél.: +4127 323 32 30

Sunday, 12 August 2018

The Interpretation of Murder - Jed Rubenfeld (2006)


Author: Jed Rubenfeld is a Professor of Law at Yale University. He has been described as “one of the most elegant legal writers of his generation”. He lives in New Haven, Connecticut, with his wife and two daughters. The Interpretation of Murder is his first book. This novel was a huge bestseller and published in thirty-six countries. Since then he has published his second novel “The Death Instinct”.

My thoughts: I remember very well why I bought this book among so many other novels displayed on the shelf of the bestsellers in the Portuguese bookstore Bertrand. What seduced me in this book was the first lines of the novel. Immediately, I knew that I would like to read it.

« THERE IS NO mystery to happiness. Unhappy men are alike. Some wound they suffered long ago, some wish denied, some blow to pride, some kindling spark of love put out by scorn--or worse, indifference--cleaves to them, or they to it, and so they live each day within a shroud of yesterdays. The happy man does not look back. He doesn’t look ahead. He lives in the present. But there’s the rub. The present can never deliver one thing: meaning. The ways of happiness and meaning are not the same. To find happiness, a man need only live in the moment; he need only live for the moment. But if he wants meaning--the meaning of his dreams, his secrets, his life--a man must re-inhabit his past, however dark, and live for the future, however uncertain. Thus nature dangles happiness and meaning before us all, insisting only that we choose between them. »

This story is set in Manhattan in 1909. It is about solving a murder mystery using psychoanalysis with the help of Dr Sigmund Freud, who happens to be in America for one week with a group of colleagues, Sándor Ferenczi and Carl Jung, all followers of Freud’s psychoanalysis theories in Europe.

Dr. Freud is invited to lecture at Clark University, in New York. During this visit he is welcomed and escorted by Dr Stratham Younger, a professor at Clark University.

This story is narrated by Dr Stratham Younger.  A woman, Miss Riverford, is killed by strangulation and soon after, the beautiful 18 year-old Nora Acton, of a reputable family, is attacked. She shows similar wounds to those of Miss Riverford and theories abound that Miss Nora Acton’s attacker is the same person who killed the rich Miss Riverford. The arrest of the killer is complicated by the fact that Miss Nora Acton is unable to remember her attack, claiming amnesia. Hence, Dr Stratham Younger is given the job of analysing Miss Nora Acton and, with the help of Dr Freud, sets out to solve the mystery and help cure her.

As the story unfolds we feel the intrigue grow and start wondering who the villain is. Is it the wealthy entrepreneur George Banwell? Is it the mysterious William Leon of Chinatown, in whose room one of the corpses is found? Or is it Harry Thaw, the notorious murderer of Stanford White, who may have slipped out from the Matteawan State Hospital for the Criminally Insane?

I loved this intriguing plot. I also loved the fact that Jed Rubenfeld has done a tremendous amount of research in order to use true facts and events in this intelligent fictional story. This suspense story is different compared to other crime novels that I have read. There is much more focus on psychiatry, but it is still easy to understand and I must say the reader learns a lot, while being entertained at the same time. A masterpiece that I invite you to read this summer!


Monday, 30 July 2018

Summertime in the Valais

I have been waiting for this day for weeks…the time has finally come to share this post!  We travelled to “Heidi’s Country” (this is how I nickname this secluded place) to spend the summer holidays in the mountain countryside.

Although I have posted our visits previously, each trip we experience is quite a bit different from the previous ones.

We had such a special time and it is my hope that some of the magic we experienced translates into this post.  At the very least, I hope that, by the time you are through viewing it, you will consider adding the Swiss Alps to your bucket list, because it is a region that truly deserves a visit.

I never experienced a morning here when I woke up and was not happy. It is for this reason that I take so many photos so whenever I look at them, I catch myself smiling and I am imagining I am there. It is wonderful to smell nature, feel the cool breeze, listen to the sound of the cow bells and play with the wild cat.

The tastiest fruits come from this region: a plate of raspberries.

Ask a Valaisan foodie to name the most popular dessert in the Valais and inevitably the response from many will be fresh apricot tart. For me, this is also one of the best and tastiest tarts that I have ever tried!

Lots of time to make comforting food, like this traditional British dessert - bread and butter pudding - which I slightly adapted to make it crispy and moist at the same time. Check out the upcoming recipe.

I read two books and will soon be back with my book reviews.  I’m a huge fan of the Portuguese author Eça de Queirós. “O Primo Basílio” (English title: Cousin Bazilio) is an exceptional and fun novel published in 1878 and translated around the world.
Eugenie Fraser’s moving account “The House by the Dvina” is a really beautiful read and I’d highly recommend it!

The nearby village...

One of my favourite things about the Swiss Alps is the absolutely stunning natural beauty.    Scenery doesn’t come more dramatic and more beautiful than in the Valais.

Lavey-les-Bains thermal baths are nearby and we often went to spend a fabulous pampering moment ar these thermal baths surrounded by mountains and greenery. As photos are forbidden there, these are snapshots taken with my smartphone.

The last day of my holidays we took the Tortin chairlift from Siviez to visit the Japanese Garden which is a source of delight to walkers. This magnificent natural site is situated at the end of the small valley of Tortin, at the summit of a beautiful glacial moraine, the view over the region is superb and the water that runs down the numerous meanders makes it special.