After going
to art school, “I just needed a trade,” Hollywood, 56, confesses. “The Eighties
were difficult for everybody, everyone was on the dole. So you needed a trade
to get some money – it was hard, being young. Getting a trade was always a
bonus, whether you were a plumber, a bricky or whatever, and I ended up being a
baker.
“It was a
skill I had to learn, but I did pick it up fairly quickly” – and he knows how
lucky he is to have fallen in love with the art of baking. “Any person who does
a job they love – it’s not like work. Getting out of bed in the morning was
difficult, but you get used to it.”
Hollywood
wrote his latest cookbook, Bake, while in the Bake Off bubble in 2021 – and he
couldn’t have chosen a better environment. “It gave me the drive, because it
was all on tap – some of the things I was eating at the time, I was thinking I
could better that, or do something like that.”
“I do relax when I’m baking, when I’ve got a lump of dough in my hand, or if I’ve got a cake in the oven, I’ll watch it rise,” says Hollywood. “I relax, because my mind is off anything else. I’m just concentrating on what I’m doing".
Ultimate
sausage roll recipe
Ingredients:
(Serves 6)
For the
rough puff pastry:
225g plain
flour, plus extra to dust
½tsp fine
salt
200g cold
unsalted butter, diced
Juice of ½
lemon
180–200ml
cold water
For the
filling:
1tbsp oil
1 small
onion, finely diced
400g
sausage meat (or your favourite sausages, skinned)
125g
Stilton, crumbled
1tbsp thyme
leaves
A pinch of
white pepper
To finish:
2 egg
yolks, beaten, to glaze
2tsp
nigella seeds
2tsp sesame
seeds
Method:
1. To make
the pastry, put the flour, salt and butter into a bowl. Mix the lemon juice
with the water and add three-quarters of the liquid to the bowl. Gently stir
until the mixture comes together to form a lumpy dough, adding the remaining
liquid if required. Don’t knead or work too much – you want lumps of butter
through the dough.
2. Tip the
dough onto a floured surface and flatten to a rectangle. Using a rolling pin,
roll into a narrow rectangle around 2.5cm thick. Fold one-third of the dough up
on itself, then the opposite third down over that, as if folding a business
letter. Wrap the pastry in cling-film and chill for at least 20 minutes.
3. Unwrap
the pastry and repeat, rolling the pastry at 90° to the original roll, to a
rectangle 40cm x 15cm, then folding as before. Wrap and chill for 20 minutes.
Repeat the process twice more, chilling the dough for at least 20 minutes
between folds.
4. Heat
your oven to 200°C/Fan 180°C/Gas 6 and line a large baking tray with baking
paper.
5. For the
filling, heat the oil in a small frying pan over a medium heat, add the onion
and cook for seven to 10 minutes until softened and just turning golden brown.
Leave to cool.
6. In a
bowl, mix the sausage meat with the cooled onion, crumbled Stilton, thyme and
white pepper. With floured hands, roll the filling into a 20cm-long sausage and
wrap tightly in cling-film. Chill for 30 minutes.
7. Roll out
the pastry to a rectangle, 30cm x 20cm, and trim the edges to neaten. Place on
the baking tray and chill for 20 minutes. Unwrap the sausage and lay it along
the pastry rectangle, 6cm from one edge.
8. Brush
the exposed pastry with beaten egg yolk, leaving the 6cm border clear. Fold the
egg-washed pastry over the sausage filling to meet the border and encase the
sausage filling. Press the edges firmly together. Press a floured fork firmly
along the length of the sealed edge. (You may need to keep dipping the fork in
flour to stop it sticking.)
9. Brush
the sausage roll all over with more egg and score the pastry on the diagonal.
Chill for 15 minutes. Heat your oven to 210°C/Fan 190°C/Gas 6½. Brush the
pastry again with egg, all over, then sprinkle with the nigella and sesame
seeds. Bake for 30 minutes or until the pastry is golden and crisp and the
sausage meat is cooked through.
10. Leave
to cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes before slicing. Serve with your favourite
pickles and chutney.
Victoria
sandwich recipe
Ingredients:
(8-10
slices)
4 large
eggs (in their shells)
About 270g
caster sugar
About 270g
self-raising flour
About 135g
unsalted butter, softened, plus extra to grease the tins
About 135g
soft margarine
To finish:
125g
raspberry jam (good-quality)
A little
caster sugar, to sprinkle
Method:
1. Heat
your oven to 180°C/Fan 160°C/Gas 4. Grease two 20cm sandwich tins and line the
bases with baking paper. Weigh the eggs first (in their shells), then weigh the
same quantity of sugar and flour. For the butter and the margarine, you need
half the weight of the eggs.
2. In a
large bowl, cream the butter, margarine and sugar together using an electric
whisk until pale in colour and light and fluffy. Scrape down the sides of the
bowl and beat again.
3. Beat the
eggs together in a jug, then gradually add to the mixture, beating well after
each addition. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and mix again. Sift the flour
over the surface of the mixture and gently fold in, using a large metal spoon.
4. Divide
the mixture between the prepared tins. To ensure the cakes are exactly the same
size you can weigh the cake mixture into each tin. Gently smooth the surface
with the back of the spoon to level it.
5. Bake in
the centre of the oven for 25 minutes until risen, golden brown and the cakes
spring back in the centre when lightly touched with a fingertip. They should be
slightly shrunken away from the edges of the tin. Leave the cakes in the tins
for five minutes, then remove to a wire rack. Leave to cool completely.
6. When cold, sandwich the cakes together with the raspberry jam and sprinkle the top with a little caster sugar.
Chouxnuts
recipe
Ingredients:
(Makes 8)
For the
choux pastry:
150ml water
60g butter
60g plain
flour
60g strong
white bread flour
3 large
eggs
To cook:
Sunflower
oil, for deep-frying
For the lemon
curd filling:
Finely
grated zest and juice of 4 lemons
190g caster
sugar
100g
butter, at room temperature, in pieces
3 medium
eggs
1 extra egg
yolk
100ml
double cream, whipped
For the
icing:
100g icing
sugar, sifted
Finely
grated zest of 1 lemon
About 25ml
water
Method:
1. First,
make the lemon curd filling. Put the lemon zest and juice, sugar and butter
into a heavy-based pan over a low heat and stir until the butter is fully
melted then take off the heat. In a separate bowl, beat together the eggs and
extra yolk then whisk into the lemon mixture. Place the pan back over a low
heat and stir well for 10–15 minutes until thickened. Pass the lemon curd
through a sieve into a clean bowl and allow to cool, before folding in the
whipped cream.
2. To make
the choux pastry, put the water and butter into a medium pan over a medium heat
to melt the butter. Once the butter is melted, turn up the heat and bring to
the boil, then take off the heat. Immediately add both flours and beat well to
incorporate into the liquid. Continue to beat until the mixture forms a ball
that pulls away from the side of the pan. Leave to cool slightly, for five
minutes.
3. Transfer
the mixture to an electric mixer fitted with the paddle beater. With the mixer
on a low speed, slowly add the beaten eggs. Once all the egg has been
incorporated, increase the speed to medium and beat until glossy and thick. The
mixture should just about hold on the end of a spoon and feel silky.
4. Cut
eight 12cm squares of baking paper. Put the choux pastry into a piping bag
fitted with a 1cm star nozzle and pipe a ring, 10cm in diameter, on each paper
square. (Or, as a guide, you can draw a circle on the paper, then turn it
over.)
5. Heat the
oil in a deep-fryer or other deep, heavy pan over a medium heat to 180°C (check
with a thermometer). You will need to deep-fry your choux rings, two or three
at a time: carefully lower into the oil, paper uppermost, then remove the paper
with tongs. Deep-fry the rings for three to four minutes. Drain and place on a wire
rack. Cut a small hole in the side of each ring to let steam out and leave to
cool.
6. Once
cooled, make the hole in the side of each ring larger so you can insert a small
piping nozzle. Put the lemon curd filling into a piping bag fitted with a five millimetre
plain nozzle and pipe into the choux rings to fill, until you meet resistance.
7. For the icing, mix the icing sugar with the lemon zest and enough water to make a glossy icing with a thick, pourable consistency. Brush over the top of each chouxnut to coat and allow to set before serving. Enjoy!
Bake: My
Best Ever Recipes For The Classics by Paul Hollywood is published by Bloomsbury
Publishing. Photography by Haarala Hamilton.