Bolu Gulung

If I had to choose only one cake of mom’s kitchen, I would probably choose her bolu gulung aka rolled cake. Just like many other Indonesian cakes, they use a lot of egg yolks to get that soft texture. I had always enjoyed being in the kitchen when mom baked her cakes. And once she transferred the cake from its tin, I liked to nimble on the thin layer of skin left in the tin. I find it both satisfying to peel it off and tasted just as good ?

I haven’t tried on any new recipes these past months even though my to-try list keeps growing. Last weekend I tried on mom’s recipe of bolu gulung, however I only experimented with half recipe. Firstly, I don’t have the rolled cake tin and secondly the most important reason was it frightens me to try whole recipe and wasted so many eggs if it failed.

Not sure where she got this recipe from but as far as I remember, she has made this since we were kids. Here is the full recipe for 30 cm x 30 cm cake tin:

  • 2 whole eggs
  • 10 egg yolks (a lot, right?)
  • 120 grams castor sugar
  • 50 grams all-purpose flour
  • 125 grams melted butter
  • vanilla extract
  • Your favorite jam for filling, or can be substituted with buttercream

Preheat oven at 200C, line the cake tin with baking paper and set aside.

On a mixing bowl, beat the eggs while adding sugar a little at times until it is pale and fluffy.

Then add in melted butter and vanilla extract, keep beating on low to incorporate everything. Make sure no melted butter is sitting on the bottom of the mixing bowl.

Lastly, carefully fold in the sifted all purpose flour to the egg mixture until well combined.

Pour the cake batter to cake tin and gently tap the tin to kitchen bench to release any trapped air.

Bake the cake for about 12 – 15 minutes, keep an eye on the cake while baking. The top of my cake was not brown enough after the 15 minutes baking time even though it has been fully cooked. So, I put it on broil mode for another 2 – 3 minutes until it turned light brown.

Once it is done baking, gently flip the cake to another sheet of baking paper and roll. I left mine rolled until it cooled to room temperature before unrolled it and spread with generous black cherry jam. Then the cake should be easily rolled back and tied both end of baking paper to help hold the cake shape.

It is best to cool the cake in the refrigerator for at least an hour before serving.

Some helpful tips:
  • To prevent the skin of the cake stick to baking paper when it is rolled, some says to sprinkle little bit of icing sugar on the baking paper.
  • Do not over bake the cake as it will crack and not have the flexibility to roll.
  • For buttercream filling, make sure the cake is cooled to room temperature. For jam, usually it will not matter if the cake is still slightly warm.
bolu-gulung2
The ingredients and final cake batter

 

bolu-gulung3
I tried to make hearts pattern, which most of them turned out to be failed heart shapes ?

 

bolu-gulung4
Learn from my mistake, I did not broil my cake long enough that the top skin was not brown enough and it stuck on my baking paper ?

So as you can tell my cake was far from perfect in appearance but tasted almost like mom’s! It has definitely earned hubby’s approval ? But indeed as most people would agree, practice makes better, right?

Pink Clay CP Soap

Now that my clay orders have arrived, I should try experiment with them on my new batch of cold processed soap. In this batch, I use many stuffs from my new order, including the clay, new fragrance oil, and new silicone soap mold. I mixed a little bit of the white clay with pink clay to tone down the reddish pink color. As for the fragrance, I used citrusy yuzu oil.

I had no idea how I came up with that color and fragrant combination, totally not matching ( ⚆ _ ⚆ ) Probably a yellowy or cream color would work better with such fragrant 🙂

But overall, I am pleased with soap and how it lathers. The addition of clay does help to retain the fragrant even weeks after curing process, so I will definitely use clay again in my next batch!

 

 

Sweet Potato Bread

I have been so busy lately and felt terrible that this blog has been abandoned. Adjusting with new job at the busiest time of the month is just taking up a lot of my time, so when I get home late at night, I really do not have the energy to do any blogging. For the same reason, I had not been experimenting with many exciting new recipes, be it baking or cooking. There is still a long list of things I want to attempt, but finding the time and energy is a real challenge at the moment.

Last weekend, I ticked one of the recipe from my list which is another bread recipe. This time we added mashed sweet potato to the bread. The original recipe calls for purple sweet potato, but since I only have the usual sweet potato, so that was what I used. I am surprisingly impressed with the result! Very soft bread, although it is not as fluffy as the milky bread with tangzhong, but it remains really soft until the next day. I guess the addition of mashed potato makes the bread somewhat solid in texture, a little heavier than the tangzhong method. But overall, we think it is a winner and that’s why this recipe is a keeper and I shall make an effort to share it with my readers 🙂

sweet potato bread3

The original recipe is from Femina, one of those popular Indonesian women magazines, not sure when it was published, but here are the ingredients:

  • 300 grams bread flour
  • 100 grams sugar (I used 75 grams)
  • 3 tablespoons milk powder
  • 100 grams mashed sweet potato
  • 50 grams butter at room temperature
  • 150 ml warm milk
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1.5 teaspoons instant dry yeast (I used 1 teaspoon)
  • 1 teaspoon salt

Mix the dry yeast with warm milk, 1 tablespoon of sugar (from the total sugar listed above). Set aside until it is frothy.

Combine flour, sugar, milk powder and egg yolks in a separate mixing bowl. Keep mixing while adding in the warm milk mixture a little at a time.

Mix until it forms a ball then add in butter, salt and mashed sweet potato.

Knead until the dough is smooth and flexible.

Leave it in a warm place for proofing about 1 hour or more when it is double in size. Since I used less yeast, I find it takes longer to reach that state, mine took about 1.5 hours.

Once it is double in size, punch the dough to release trapped gas. Divide it into 9 portions and fill with your favorite topping. I used Nutella and small pieces of cheddar cheese to balance out the sweetness of Nutella.

Let it rest for another 15 minutes and meanwhile, preheat the oven at 200C.

By the time the oven is ready, brush the surface of each dough portion with egg wash (I used 1 tablespoon of the egg yolk from above ingredient mix with 1 tablespoon of milk).

Bake for about 20 minutes and brush the surface of bread with butter once it is finished baking.

Happy eating, and I hope you like the recipe as much as we like it 🙂

sweet potato bread

Roti Boy Wannabe with Tangzhong Method

During the Easter long weekend, I have been testing a few Roti Boy “Wannabe” recipes I found on the web and whilst all of them resulted fluffy bread, I am still not very happy with the topping. I reckon there must be a secret ingredient to the original roti boy recipe (¬_¬) Note that I usually just make half of the recipe when trying out new ones, also for roti boy, it is best to have them fresh. So by making half the recipe, usually they are gone within the same day or latest the day after baking.

I have posted a recipe of roti boy copycat before in here and I was pretty happy with the recipe. But since then I have experimenting with few more recipes and in my opinion, nothing really beats the tangzhong method to result in super soft bread and actually stay soft for longer. No magic in here, it is just the fact that the dough contain much more liquid than the usual recipe and you will have to knead it longer to achieve the flexible stage – hence the super soft bread texture.

On my third attempt, I realized why not I use my favorite tangzhong method to make the bread. Whilst I really can not do much about the topping, at least make the bread super soft and fluffy would be nicer (っ˘ڡ˘ς), so here we go the recipe below:

Bread, the source is here:

  • 300 grams bread flour
  • 30 grams sugar
  • 8 grams instant dry yeast (I used 1 teaspoon)
  • 25 grams milk powder
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 egg, lightly whisked
  • 50 grams whipping cream/thickened cream
  • For the roux: 20 g Bread flour and 1/2 cup water

Filling:

  • 10 small cubes of cold butter (if using unsalted butter, sprinkle tiny pinch of salt to each cube of butter)

Topping:

  • 50 grams butter at room temperature
  • 50 grams icing sugar
  • egg white from 1 egg
  • 60 grams all-purpose flour
  • 10 grams milk powder
  • 1 teaspoon ground coffee
  • 1 teaspoon coffee mocha paste, for darker colour

Prepare the water roux at least few hours before you start the bread dough, so that the water roux is at least at room temperature.

I prefer to combine my yeast in the slightly warmed milk and 1 teaspoon of sugar (from the 30 grams as recipe calls for) and let it becomes frothy before adding in to the flour.

Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl and let the mixer does the hard work until it form a ball.

It will still be quite sticky at this stage, so you’ll need to knead the dough a bit on floured surface until it is smooth.

Then, let the dough to rise in warm place for about 1 hours until it becomes double in size.

Release any trapped gas from the dough then divide to 10 equal smaller balls.

Flatten each dough ball and add in the filling, close them up then roll again to a smooth ball. Repeat for all dough balls.

Place them on a baking tray lined with baking paper and let the rest for 30 – 45 minutes, meanwhile we prepare the topping.

Topping: combine all ingredients together, whisk until everything is incorporated well. If it is too thick, add water a little at a time (started with 1 tablespoon, then mix well, and add again if needed). The consistency should not be too runny either that you will not able to pipe it onto the top of the bread. Place in a plastic bag or piping bag and snip off the end a little bit.

Pipe the topping in swirl motion starting from the middle all the way down the side of each bread. Repeat for the rest of the bread.

Bake in preheated oven at 170C for about 20 minutes.

roti boy tangzhong2

Chocolate Braided Bread

I made this bread from the remaining of the eggless donuts dough that I tried and yet failed again. Instead of throwing them away, I hoped that it would be nicer to be baked as bread. And exactly true, the dough makes a good bread even though it does not contain any eggs. The water roux has acted as natural bread improver that creates soft texture bread.

So here we go, full recipe as seen on this post:

Divide the dough into two equal portions.

Add 1 tablespoon of sifted cocoa powder to one half and knead to mix well.

Flatten the white dough portion to a somewhat rectangular shape, try to match the length of your baking pan. Smother generously with chocolate spread (can be substituted with peanut butter or even water, lightly brushed) on the surface of the flatten white dough leaving about 1 cm of each sides. I made mistake by spreading it all the way through and made a massive chocolate mess when rolled the bread later.

Flatten the chocolate dough to about the same size as the white dough and lay on top of the chocolate spread.

Roll up the bread dough into an oblong shape, secure both ends.

Flatten the bread roll a little bit and cut into three portions, but not all the way through, leave about 2 cm of one end uncut. Braid the dough and place in a baking pan.

Let it rest for 15 minutes and bake on preheated oven at 180C until it is thoroughly cooked. (Mine took about 20 minutes)

Brush the bread with butter while it is still hot to have that glossy look 🙂

braided bread
Note that I used Kraft Chocolate Hazelnut spread this time, trying out new brand. Hubby still prefers the good old Nutella, so will definitely go back to our trusted brand again 🙂