Apple Strudel

Apple Strudel

The Viennese pastry that holds the cafe culture of Habsburg Europe in a single bite, the apfelstrudel that arrives on a small plate next to your melange at every old coffeehouse from Vienna to Prague. You roll cinnamon-spiced apple, raisins, and toasted breadcrumbs in layers of tissue-thin filo until the pastry is nearly transparent (a real Viennese cook will say you should be able to read a newspaper through it before you fill), then bake the whole roll until the outside is shattering golden. A heavy dust of icing sugar at the end, and a warm slice eaten with a quenelle of softly whipped cream or a scoop of vanilla ice cream while the pastry crackles under the spoon. The contrast is everything: the brittle, dry, almost-paper-thin pastry against the tender, juicy spiced apples soft enough to give to a teaspoon. Coffee on the side; an afternoon in front of you.

Desserts 40 minutes Serves6
Baklava with Rose, Cardamom and Pistachio

Baklava with Rose, Cardamom and Pistachio

Where classical Turkish baklava layers walnut or pistachio between many sheets of filo, this version rolls each sheet around a generous spoon of pistachio-and-cardamom filling, into cylinders that pack onto a tray. The bake is short and hot; the syrup is the heart of the dessert - sugar and water boiled to a single thread, stirred off the heat with a tablespoon of rose essence so the perfume stays bright. The hot baklava meets the cool syrup; the syrup soaks the cylinders to their cores. Cut into 5 cm pieces while warm, served on small plates with strong coffee.

Desserts 55 minutes Serves12
Banoffee Pie

Banoffee Pie

The toffee layer is the only stage that takes time: an unopened tin of sweetened condensed milk simmered in water for 3 hours turns into deep amber dulce de leche. The biscuit base is digestives crushed and bound with melted butter, pressed into a tart tin and chilled. The toffee goes on cold, the bananas are sliced just before serving (so they don't brown), the cream is whipped to soft peaks. Assembled in order. Dusted with cocoa or grated dark chocolate. Cut with a knife dipped in hot water for clean slices.

Desserts 8 hours 25 minutes Serves8
Bread Pudding (Creole)

Bread Pudding (Creole)

Stale French bread (a day-old baguette is perfect) tears into 3 cm chunks. Custard: whole milk, eggs, sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, nutmeg, lemon zest. Raisins steep in 4 tablespoons bourbon for plump. Bread soaks in custard 30 minutes; raisins fold in. Tips into a buttered 25 × 18 cm dish; dots with butter. Bakes for 45-50 minutes at 175°C till the top is bronzed and the centre is set but still custardy. Whiskey sauce: butter melts with sugar; cream and bourbon stir in; warmed but not boiled. Pours over the pudding at the table.

Desserts 1 hour 40 minutes Serves8
Cheese Blintzes

Cheese Blintzes

A two-stage dish. First, thin crepes (much thinner than a pancake - almost see-through) cooked one side only on a buttered pan, stacked under a clean cloth. Then a filling of farmer cheese (or ricotta drained well) mashed with egg yolk, sugar, vanilla and a little lemon zest. A heaping tablespoon of filling on the cooked side of each crepe, folded into a tight envelope, and fried briefly in butter on both sides until golden. Served warm with cold sour cream and a spoon of red-berry compote.

Desserts 1 hour 25 minutes Serves4
Cheesecake Brownies

Cheesecake Brownies

Two mixtures, one tin. The brownie batter goes in first: dark chocolate and butter melted, sugar and eggs whisked light, folded together with flour and cocoa. The cheesecake topping is full-fat cream cheese beaten with sugar, an egg yolk, vanilla and a squeeze of lemon - the lemon keeps the white layer bright against the brown. Spooned over the brownie in dollops, then dragged through with a knife to make figure-eight ribbons. Baked low and slow so the cheesecake sets without browning much; cooled fully before slicing.

Desserts 4 hours 55 minutes Serves16
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