Traditional South African Cooking......
These recipes have been inherited over the centuries
from the Dutch, the Malaysians and the French Huguenots - and favourite
recipes, often characteristic of a particular region - have been passed
down from one generation to the next.
Here are a few traditional sweet treats that are still
firm favourites in South Africa today.....
MILK TART
The milk tart, with it's puff pastry base borrowed from the French,
was introduced to South Africa by the Dutch.
BASE
- 50g butter
- 30ml sugar
- 1 egg
- 200ml self-raising flour (110g)
- 1ml salt
- 15ml milk
FILLING
- 500ml milk
- 75ml sugar (60g)
- 150ml cake flour
- 2 eggs, separated
- 1ml salt
- 25ml butter
- 5ml vanilla essence (1 tsp)
- ground cinnamon
METHOD
- For base: Beat butter and sugar together. Add egg and beat until light
and fluffy. Sift flour and salt together; add, with milk, to the creamed
mixture.
- Grease a 23cm ovenproof pie dish and press the dough into it using
a spatula.
- For filling: Heat milk and sugar together in a heavy-based saucepan.
- Add some of the warm milk to flour and return to saucepan. Add egg
yolks and salt.
- Boil until thickened, stirring frequently. Remove from heat, add butter
and vanilla esence, and fold in lightly beaten egg whites.
- Pour onto base, sprinkle with cinnamon, and bake in a preheated oven
at 180C (350F) for 30 minutes.
HERTZOG-KOEKIES
INGREDIENTS
- 500ml cake flour (280g)
- 10ml baking powder (2 tsp)
- 1ml salt
- 50ml castor sugar (40g)
- 125g margarine
- 3 large eggs, separated
- 50ml water
- 200g smooth apricot jam
- 300ml sugar (240g)
- 500ml desiccated coconut (160g)
METHOD
- Sift the flour, baking powder and salt together. Add castor sugar and
rub in margarine.
- Beat egg yolks and water together and add to dry ingredients, mixing
to form a soft dough.
- Roll dough out thinly and press out circles. Line the base of greased
patty pan tins with dough circles.
- Spoon a teaspoonful of apricot jam into the middle of each circle of
dough.
- Beat egg whites until soft peak stage. Add the 300ml sugar gradually,
while still beating. Add coconut and spoon egg mixture onto apricot jam
filling.
- Bake in a preheated oven at 180C (350F) for 20 - 25 minutes. Turn onto
a wire rack to cool.
SOETKOEKIES
Originally, soetkoekies were decorated with 'rooi bolus' - a red powder
mixed with the dough.
INGREDIENTS
- 750ml cake flour (420g)
- 5ml salt (1tsp)
- 5ml ground cloves
- 5ml ground mixed spice
- 5ml ground cinnamon
- 5ml bicarbonate of soda
- 250ml sugar (200g)
- 125g butter
- 125g lard
- 2 eggs, beaten
- 125ml sweet red wine
METHOD
- Sift dry ingredients together and add sugar.
- Rub in butter and lard until mixture resembles breadcrumbs.
- Add beaten eggs and red wine and mix to a soft dough.
- Leave to stand a few hours, or overnight if possible.
- Roll out to a thickness of 3mm and cut out cookies with a cookie cutter.
- Place on a greased baking tray and bake in a preheated oven at 200C
(400F) for 10 - 12 minutes.
MOSBOLLETJIES
Mosbolletjies are buns originating from the Cape winelands, where they
were made from dough leavened with must or mos - the juice of the grape
in the first stages of fermentation - instead of yeast. If fresh grapes
were not available, raisins were used instead.
INGREDIENTS
- 500ml raisins with seeds (300g)
- about 600ml lukewarm water
- 2,5kg cake flour
- 800ml warm milk
- 375g butter
- 15ml salt
- 400ml sugar (320g)
- 30ml whole aniseed
METHOD
- Chop raisins in a food processor. Add lukewarm water and leave, covered
to ferment for four days. When the raisins have risen to the surface, the
yeast, or must, is ready.
- Strain yeast through a muslin cloth and reserve the liquid to make
yeast mixture rise. Discard raisins.
- Prepare yeast sponge mixture by adding 250ml of the flour to the liquid
and mixing to a thin batter. Beat slightly, cover, and leave in a warm
place until double in size.
- Add warm milk to butter and allow to stand.
- Sift the remaining flour and salt together. Add sugar, butter mixture,
yeast mixture and aniseed, mixing well. Add more milk if necessary.
- Brush surface of dough with melted butter, cover, and leave to rise
in a warm place overnight.
- Knock down, cover, and again leave to rise in a warm place until dough
has doubled in size.
- Shape dough into balls and pack tightly in greased deep loaf tins.
Brush with melted butter. Leave in a warm place to rise until double in
size.
- Bake in a preheated oven at 180C (350F) for about 1 hour, until golden
brown.
VETKOEK
INGREDIENTS
- 500ml self-rising flour (280g)
- 2ml salt
- 25ml sugar
- 1 egg, beaten
- about 275ml milk or water
- cooking oil for deep-frying
METHOD
- Sift flour and water together and add sugar.
- Mix egg and water together and stir into dry ingredients. Mix until
a sticky dough is formed.
- Deep-fry spoonfuls of dough in hot oil until golden brown on both sides.
Drain on paper towels.
- Serve with butter and syrup or honey.
TIP: Vetkoek should preferably be eated on the same day as cooked.
KOEKSISTERS
SYRUP
- 6 x 250ml sugar (1,2kg)
- 750ml water
- 3ml cream of tartar
- 5ml cold water
- 3ml ground ginger
- 1 cinnamon stick OR 1ml ground cinnamon
- rind of one lemon
- 20ml lemon juice
DOUGH
- 4 x 250ml cake flour (560g)
- 20ml baking powder
- 5ml salt
- 30ml margarine
- 15ml sugar
- 2 eggs
- about 200ml water
- cooking oil for frying
METHOD
- For syrup: In a large saucepan, dissolve the sugar in the water and
bring to the boil.
- Mix cream of tartar and cold water together and add to the syrup. Add
ginger, cinnamon, lemon rind and lemon juice.
- Boil for 10 minutes and leave to cool. Refrigerate until very cold
- overnight, if possible.
- For dough: Sift dry ingredients together. Rub in margarine until the
mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add sugar.
- Beat eggs with 200ml water and add to dry ingredients, mixing to a
soft dough. Add more water if necessary.
- Knead the dough lightly for a few minutes, until smooth. Cover with
plastic wrap and leave to rest for at least one hour.
- Roll out dough to a thickness of 5mm. Cut strips 1cm wide and 8cm long.
Join ends of 3 strips and plait. Alternatively, take two strips 15cm long,
join ends and roll.
- Deep-fry koeksisters in oil until brown on both sides. Dip immediately
into ice cold syrup, making sure that the koeksister is soaked through.
- Remove with a slotted spoon and turn onto a wire rack. If syrup becomes
warm, return to the refrigerator. Store koeksisters in the refrigerator
before serving.
TIPS:
- Do not fry koeksisters too quickly or the outside will be cooked, and
the inside still raw.
- Use two bowls of syrup. Keep one in the refrigerator while using the
other.
- Keep koeksisters in the deep-freeze and remove 30 minutes before use.
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