Thursday, 30 July 2015

The Butter vs Margarine debate.... now that's a can of worms



Since entering the cooking frenzy that owning a Thermomix creates, I’ve joined plenty of cooking sites. Not previously big on cake making I’ve been experimenting with the particularly quick cakes – see my previous blog- Cakes whipped up in 10 seconds

However I was concerned at the amount of butter we seemed to be consuming. Being in the mature age category one comes up against the cholesterol numbers from time to time and I’d hate a big heart clogging consequence of my new found cooking frenzy. I expressed my concern on the cooking site and received the wrath of the margarine haters including Superkylz, my daughter. I investigated further.
Housewives of the 70s were no different to modern housewives- the debate was always the benefits of cooking results with butter vs margarine

Also being of the at certain mature age I remember the “you ought to be congratulated “campaign of the 70s and 80s when margarine swept across the nation and became the healthier substitute for butter because it was made out of vegetable oils.  1984-You-Ought-To-Be-Congratulated ad

Anyhow I did a bit of research and shock horror some margarines are not all that much better than butter- especially when they are made from animal fats. I’ve always used Fairy Margarine for cooking  (I think my Dad or one of his friends had shares in it) In hind sight I remember the rumour as a young one that it was really a lower cost butter substitute.  

Housewives of the 70s were no different to modern housewives- the debate was always the benefits of cooking results with butter vs margarine and the Meadow Lea campaign supported the mother who used it for cooking. I’m a bit of a cost based cooker. I preferred margarine for cost and KJ and rarely read the labels. 

I’ve always found butter user unfriendly for spreadability. (I’m not fussed about leaving it out of the fridge and truly I’m not that organised to take it out in advance of cooking.) A nice soft spreadable margarine is easier for spreading on bread and quickly frying an egg, onion etc. 
Shock horror- Fairy has similar Kilojoules as butter

A Google search on butter vs margarine will send you everywhere and while I don’t believe I’m eating petrol or plastic as some claim I had been enlightened and I began to read the labels. Any way it turns out Fairy and Woollies cooking margarine is shock horror made of animal fats. The kilojoule count for the cooking margarine and butter is 3040-80kj per hundred grams.

A light Olive oil spread option  got the Heart Foundation tick but it wasn’t recommended for baking. 

Meanwhile I had a few disappointments on the Thermo cakes e and decided to try a softer option to use for creaming butter and sugar.

The St Vincent de Paul Welfare Centre I volunteer at  gives out an Aldi Pure Vita Canola Spread which is Heart Foundation approved and only 99c for 500g. I read the label and while it contains Canola and vegetable oil it does also list some of the nasties such as colour and flavours. On the positive side it’s 2410kg per 100g which is 21% less Kj.  It is also derived from non GM Canola seeds.

You can see how light these mini muffins are
I tried it in my 30 Second Orange Cake and was very pleased with the lightness and it maintained its freshness for longer. It worked OK in my Yoghurt Cake and Yoghurt Cake Muffins too. 

To take the experiment a little further I used a Woolworths Homebrand Canola Spread.  At a bargain $1.60 for 1Kg it has less Canola and more Palm Oil (not so good for the environment). It has a much softer consistency than the Aldi brand and didn’t mix as well in the Thermo blades. I tried it with a short pastry mix too- not entirely satisfied. Based on advice from the Thermo community on Facebook I added a second orange and the cake and muffins were the best yet. The extra orange made the cake even moister and extended the mixture enough to make 12 mini muffins – perfect for the grandkids' afternoon tea!!
Some of the butter, margarines and spreads compared

The  30 Second Whole Orange Cakewas originally found on the recipe community. I’ve modified it with the second orange as follows an it is optional to reduce the amount of sugar.
30 Second Orange Cake  Serves 12-15
2 whole Oranges cut into quarters
225g butter or Canola spread
3eggs
200g or less of raw sugar
300g SR Flour
Method
Preheat oven to 180 degrees. Grease a ring tin or a round cake tin.
Place butter or Canola spread into Thermomix bowl and mix for 7 seconds at Speed 8
Add Sugar, eggs and SR flour and combine 20 seconds Reverse speed 4
Pour into cake tin and bake for 50-60 minutes or until skewer comes out clean- see variation below.
Hint:
Mixture was enough for cake and 12 mini muffins (adjust cooking time accordingly).
You could add poppy seeds to make Orange and Poppy Seed Muffins/ Cake
Ice if necessary
 butter or margarine?
To each their own- make your own decision about butter or margarine but if cost, heart smart and KJ are important then the Aldi’s Canola Spread is a viable option.
I’ve costed the Orange cake as follows- but at this time of year you could reduce the cost of oranges by 50c if you score a few fresh oranges from a friend’s tree like I did. Stick a few quartered ones in the freezer too.
  • Made with butter $4.12
  • Made with  Aldi Pura Vita Canola Spread $2.37
  • Made with Woolworths Homebrand Canola Spread  $2.27

Happy cooking
Robyn

Sunday, 12 July 2015

Cakes whipped up in 10 seconds.. now that's fast food

I love a tasty cake and icing sugar, jam and cream shouldn't really make up the taste.While a working mother the "like mother used to make " cakes that involved creaming butter and sugar, delicate addition of eggs were replaced by packet mixes and/or reduced for quick sale bought cakes.
While packet cakes have come a long way  I object to paying over three dollars for a box of what basically amounted to flour and some artificial flavouring especially when you were then asked to then add oil, milk and several eggs.
Since buying my Thermomix I'm in cake heaven. I'm loving the 10 second, 20 second  and thirty second all in cakes such as the Coconut bread, Golden syrup cake and the 30 Second Orange cake.

Since buying my Thermomix I'm in cake heaven.

As a regular volunteer at several places now it nice to take a little morning tea treat to fellow volunteers or an afternoon snack or freshly baked  little lunch to the grandkids' house.

Here's my favourites

(10 second) Coconut bread- cost  $1.75 approx
If this cake lasts long enough it toasts up quite well like banana bread. The toasted coconut smell is amazing. This  10 Second Coconut Bread recipe was originally found here but here's my Nanny version.I reckon you could easily add chocolate chips or raspberries for a nice alternative. I'm waiting for some nice frozen Aussie ones to come on the market.
Prep: line a loaf tin with baking paper and preheat over to 180 degrees C
80g desiccated coconut
90g sugar
150g self raising flour
35g oil
250g milk

Method:
Measure ingredients into Thermomix bowl
(This is why it is called The 10 Second Cake) Mix for 10 seconds on speed 5
Pour your batter into the tin and bake for 20-25 minutes at 180 degrees. You can test the cake with a skewer to see if it is cooked through
Ice if desired when cool - some tropical flavour such as lemon or lime or orange would be nice
Coconut Bread



(10 second) Marmalade cake: cost $2.04 approx
Having a surplus of homemade marmalade and no time to ice cakes saw this little invention. Yum

Prep:Line a large loaf tin with foil. Spray or grease the foil. Spread a layer of marmalade over the bottom of the tin. sprinkle a handful of coconut over the marmalade. Heat oven to 180 degrees C.

Ingredients:
400g SR flour
500g milk 
90g oil
80g golden syrup
50g sugar
1 tsp vanilla essence
Method:
(How easy is this?)
Measure all the ingredients into your Thermomix bowl .
Mix on speed 6 until combined.
Pour onto your marmalade and coconut mix.
Bake for 40-60 minutes .
Carefully peel off the foil, cool and enjoy.


The volunteers looooved this one....

20 Second Yoghurt Coffee Cake: cost $2.01  approx
This cake was a modification of another yoghurt cake after an impulse purchase of reduced for quick sale coffee flavoured yoghurt 4 tubs for a $1. You could add chocolate chips for a mocha twist.
Prep: grease a large ring tin and preheat oven to 170 degrees C

Ingredients:
165 g raw sugar
2Tb instant coffee mixed in a little water
2 eggs
180 g yoghurt, Natural or coffee flavoured
130 g vegetable oil
1 tsp vanilla essence
275 g plain flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp bicarb soda
Method:
Place all the batter ingredients into the Thermomix bowl and blend for 20 seconds on Speed 5.
Check  the mix, scrape the bowl and mix a few extra seconds if necessary
Pour into the prepared tin.
Bake at 170C for 30 minutes or until a skewer inserted in the middle comes out dry.
Ice with coffee or chocolate icing if desired.


Save a little from the tin for a Yoghurt Coffee Muffin
The volunteers also loved the 30 second Orange Cake found on theThermomix Recipe Community  It's a great use of all those spare citrus at this time of year and yes... you do throw in the whole (quartered ) orange skin and all. One word sums up this cake. Delicious.

Happy cooking...See my next story on the Muffins.