Never work with children or animals…!

So… you know that saying, “Never work with children or animals”? Um, yeah, we kind of ignored it. There were no lions or tigers or bears, oh no, but there most certainly were children and lots and lots of them!

What are we talking about? Our baking workshop of course!

The Friday before the Friday before last, Morningside Children’s Centre – specifically, the lovely Marie – let us loose in one of their rooms to spill flour and break eggs set up a baking station that even the mighty Delia would be proud of. We zested lemons, melted butter and lined up ten sets of mixing bowls, spoons, and measuring cups in anticipation. We were then joined by ten local mums who had signed up to learn how to bake muffins with us and their children. And as the end of school approached, said children joined us too, and that’s when the fun began!

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Clad in plastic pinnies and with name badges on, the kids set about measuring out flour, bicarbonate of soda, baking powder, salt … then yoghurt, sugar, egg, melted butter … and the all important blueberries, or pear and lemon, or raisins. There was so much concentration in the air that we’d like to say you could hear a pin drop, but the reality was that you probably wouldn’t have heard a grand piano drop! Yes, it was noisy, but the children and their mums were having fun and each family managed to produce a tray of six muffin cases filled with their own unique muffin mix in no time at all.

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We were up against it slightly on the cooking front. We had an oven the size of a microwave to cook 60 muffins in before the kids’ attention spans waned, but we pretty much did it and every family got to take home their buns (if they made it as far as their front doors without being consumed, that is!). And not only that, they also received a small goody bag from us including a copy of the recipe and all the equipment they needed to recreate the muffins at home, all packaged up in one of our FCFK Hackney tote bags (so expect to see a flurry of them about town!).

It was a crazy whirlwind of an afternoon but it was great fun. There are things we have learnt, of course, but we would definitely do it again, and we could quite get used to being called “Miss”! And, most importantly of all, Marie reported back that around half of the families who came told her they tried the muffins at home with their children that very weekend. We are over the moon that the workshop had the desired effect. Cooking with kids is messy and hard work, but so rewarding. We think we’ll skip cooking with animals though!

Oh, and did we mention that a photographer from the Guardian came along? No?! Ah ha! Keep checking in and all will be revealed…!  Here he is in action – a photo of a photographer taking a photo.

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Limited edition

We like to think of ourselves as trendsetters here at FCFK Hackney. Back in the summer we blew all other bags out of the water with our totally fantastic tote bag, which sported our logo in hot, hot pink. Even Richard Arnold wanted to wear one on his arm!

But we didn’t want to stop there, oh no! So we came up with what all self-respecting bakers want to dress themselves in – a super stylish pinny of course!

Want a sneak peak…?! Oh, go on then…

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We’re fortunate enough to have a tailor on our committee (hi Laura!). She very kindly has given up her time to create 20 bespoke, hand crafted, limited edition aprons for us (thank you Laura!). Needless to say, we are ridiculously excited and can’t wait to try one on for size. Can you?!

There are only 20 which means people are probably going to have to fight for these bad boys! (We’re already sharpening our elbows!) But because we love our bakers so much, they get first refusal to buy one and that first purchasing opportunity is going to happen at our Christmas social. Can you wait that long?! Oooo ooo, we can’t!

Report back here at the end of the month for a photo of our committee in their pinnies, but first a couple of whoop, whoop, hands in the air, shout outs to two companies who made the aprons possible: Bernstein and Banleys Ltd who kindly donated the cloth and Print Club London in Dalston who were superstars and printed our logo on the cloth for free. Thank you guys; we mean it when we say these aprons would not have come to fruition without your generosity. And a big kiss to Laura too. If you need a tailor, you know who to call!


Cake of the month – October 2013

Whaaat? We’re halfway through November already? How did that happen? Well, they do say, better late than never, so here’s October’s cake of the month – pretty awesome, I’m sure you’ll agree…

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Name of baker:
Olivia Piepe

Name of cake:
Train to Hackney

Ingredients:
Basic Victoria sponge recipe; flour, butter, eggs and sugar. In addition, blue food dye, rolling icing, nutella and dolly mixture, sprinkles.

Method:
I created the base cake first from two Victoria sponges with nutella spread in between. I rolled the ready-made icing and attached it to the top of the cake, and trimmed off the sides. I used a cake mould to create the train set, and added the food dye to include come colour. When the train set was cold, I placed them on the top of the base cake and added dolly mixtures to one piece.

About the baker:
It’s always good to give back and if, like me, you are lucky enough eat lovely cakes regularly then what better way to do so than cake related volunteering. 
As a child I remember the cake at my birthday parties so vividly; pink turrets on a princess castle stands out as a particular work of art. However, there are some children whose parents can’t afford to buy the ingredients to make them a birthday cake, or do not have the cooking resources needed to do so. Hackney has been gentrified in the last few years but there are still a lot of poverty stricken people that have children to care for.  Free Cakes for Kids is a fantastic charity that really helps these people and that I’m thrilled to have found.


Better than the “Bake Off” final?

We know Tuesday nights are for the Great British Bake Off and nothing else, and we know that last Tuesday was none other than the GBBO final, but we had very important work to do, so we had no choice but to make our excuses to Paul “Blue-eyes” Hollywood and the lovely Mary and go and bake up a bit of a storm ourselves. What rebels we are!

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The awesome people (thank you Catherine Conway!) at Unpackaged leant us their equally awesome space (seriously, if you haven’t been there, you need to go!) so that we could hold a special “train the trainer” event for seven of our interested bakers.

Remember we told you about that grant Hackney Council had given us? Well this is where it comes into play. The idea – the dream, if you like – is that we train some of our bakers to be able to teach some of the local parents and children that we work with to be able to bake. We’re not doing it so that our local families stop coming to us for birthday cakes. This is about giving families the skills (and basic equipment/ingredients) to be able to do a fun activity together. Baking: it makes people happy. Eating cake does that too, but eating home made cake is even better.

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We were very lucky to be able to work with Julia Chalkley – a freelance cookery teacher, who teaches all ages, which is just as well really as she was teaching us adults how to teach kids how to bake. And it seemed to work. Julia whipped us all into shape and we managed to produce some very decent batches of very delicious blueberry and yoghurt muffins. But, not only that, we learnt how to structure the time when we run our own baking workshops, and how best to show others, who are unlikely to have ever baked before, how to bake in a way that makes it easy, enjoyable and encourages them to go on to bake again. It was enlightening and we had loads of fun, and our bakers are lovely (even if we do say so ourselves, and even if we may have mentioned it one or two times before)!

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So we missed the Bake Off final, but we can catch it on iPlayer and we still know that Frances rocked it (of course she did – remember those bread sticks made to look like matches?!). And it was so worth it. We met bakers, we ate muffins, we cooked and learnt and are now raring to go with our own baking workshops. The first is at Morningside Children’s Centre in just a couple of weeks. We will, of course, report back here… Wish us luck!


Cakes, cakes, glorious cakes

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We’ve been busy updating our gallery of cakey amazingness and have added some recent gems like this fantastic Spiderman cake. We are so proud of all the cakes our bakers come up with – there’s everything there from butterflies to cars, princesses to pirate ships, and some classic iced sponges with Smartie decorations too. Every one is a winner.

If you take a look at our cake counter you’ll see that we’re now on a whopping 145 cakes baked for Hackney kids since we started. Which is awesome. But… we don’t have a photo of every cake. So, if you’re a baker and can’t spot one of your cakes then please send us a photo, or if your child enjoyed one of our cakes then we’d love to see a picture of that too. Email us at hello@freecakesforkidshackney.co.uk.

Keeeeeep baking!


We hear ya

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A little while back we sent out a survey to all our bakers asking for some feedback on a few key areas. We got a fantastic response which will really help us to improve the service we offer and to shape the way we do things in the future.

It was absolutely lovely hearing the reasons bakers gave for why they bake and what inspires them to be part of the little bit of magic that is FCFK Hackney. What we do wouldn’t be possible if it wasn’t for those who selflessly donate their time, skills and ingredients to create inventive, tasty, awesome cakes and drop them off for kids who they don’t know and will probably never meet. It’s nice to know it means as much to our bakers as our bakers mean to us.

A few bakers were keen to learn more about the “story” behind the cakes. FCFK Hackney endeavours to protect the identity of the children and families we provide cakes for so, for obvious reasons, we can’t share too much information when requests come in. However, we do have a strict referral process, and work closely with organisations like Family Action and local children’s centres, to ensure that cakes reach those children who have genuine cases of need. We will be updating the information on our website to reflect this for people who are interested about how the process works, but, trust us, we don’t give out cakes willy nilly.

Top of the tops in the feedback we received was that our bakers want more socials, and maybe a cake decorating course. We’re combining those two requests for a special Christmas social/icing masterclass. Don’t say we never give you anything, bakers!

Seriously though, if you’re one of our bakers, thank you for the feedback. And, also, just thank you – we don’t say it enough.


Who’s your money on?

Its the quarter finals, peeps!  What do you mean, “Of what?”?  Great British Bake Off of course!  Don’t pretend you don’t watch.  Admit it!  You’re glued to your gogglebox like we are!

So now we’ve all established that we’re avid fans, who’s your money on?  Is it fancy Frances with all her clever ideas?  The somewhat self-doubting Ruby?  Or maybe older and wiser Christine?  From one baker to another – share your innermost thoughts!

Meanwhile, at FCFK Hackney HQ we’re brewing up a few highlights of our own, including workshops and an awesome Christmas social with icing masterclass thrown in (put Sunday 24th November in your diaries – do it, do it now!).  And of course the cake requests keep pouring in and our super bakers keep coming up with the goods.  Check our cake counter for the latest tally of cakes that have made kids in Hackney happy.

We’ll leave you with a picture of lovely Mary and old blue eyes himself. Sorry, we couldn’t stop ourselves…!

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Cake of the month – September 2013

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Name of baker:
Jo Cordy

Name of cake:
Pretty in Pink

Ingredients:
225g unsalted butter
225g caster sugar
1 tsp vanilla essence
4 eggs
200g SR flour
25g cornflour
1 tsp baking powder
4 tablespoons milk

Method:
(Recipe taken from Nigella Lawson’s “How to be a Domestic Goddess”)
Put all the ingredients, except the milk, in a food processor and whizz until combined. Add the milk gradually and mix until you get a soft dropping consistency.

I then divided the mixture in two and added pink food colouring to one half, before putting the mixture into tins and baking for about 25 minutes at gas mark 4.
When the cakes were cooked and cooled I cut the pink layer in half and then sandwiched the plain layer between the two pink layers with pink vanilla buttercream. I covered the whole cake in more pink buttercream, and decorated it with pink fondant flowers in different sizes and shades.

About the baker:
I have lived in Hackney for about four years, and saw a poster for Free Cakes at a children’s centre when I was taking my son (now 19 months) for a drop-in play session. I have always loved baking and loved the idea of being able to give a birthday cake to a child who might otherwise not get one. It seemed like a great opportunity to combine a passion with doing some good in the community, and also to have a chance to get a bit creative with decorations and themes – when else would I have had cause to make a Super Mario cake?!

In the rest of my life, I work part time at a university, running training courses and events for researchers, and spend two days a week at home with my son. I’ve recently introduced him to baking, which he seems to love. Chocolate muffins have been a favourite so far!


What goes around comes around

If we sat down to write a post about all the other worthwhile organisations in Hackney that deserve a mention then we’d be here all day, or several days more likely. So we won’t do that. Not now at least.

We did want to highlight one local initiative though. Why? Well because it needs a little help right now, and because it’s awesome, and it serves cake to boot! We’re talking about NANA. Do you know it? If you don’t, you should!

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NANA is a comfort food cafe run by some amazing older women in the Hackney community. They serve soup, fishfinger sandwiches, bottomless pots of tea and cake of course, all at reasonable prices. What makes it awesome is that the “nanas” come and pass the time of day with you, share their pearls of wisdom, and even give your baby a cuddle while you have a sip of your tea when it’s still warm (luxury, we tell you, luxury!).

Anyway, NANA needs a new home. They were temporarily in the Elderfield pub but they’ve now found a permanent home in a disused public toilet (have faith!) off Chatsworth Road in Clapton and just need a small injection of cash to make it happen. Which is where you might come in…

If you have a couple of quid you might like to put their way in return for a cup of tea in their new premises then we’re sure they’d be delighted to receive it. The last time we checked they still needed to raise over £6,000 and there’s just nine days and counting to do it in. Please take a look.


Cake of the month *cough* summer

As fans of FCFK Hackney will know, we normally run a feature called “Cake of the month.” But a busy few months got in the way of that slightly and some time has gone by without a cake being recognised, so we hatched a cunning plan and decided to catch up by crowning one lucky baker’s cake the title not of “Cake of the month” but “Cake of the whole blinkin’ summer.” So, without further ado, fanfare at the ready, pa pa pa pa pa paaa… (and we promise we’ll be back to normal from September…!)

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Name of baker:

Katie Forsythe

Name of cake:

Computer cake

Ingredients:

8oz each of butter, caster sugar and self-raising flour

4 eggs

Few drops of vanilla essence

Jam

Buttercream icing (made using 4oz butter and 8oz icing sugar plus a few drops of vanilla essence)

Ready made royal icing

Food colouring of your choice (Sugarflair colours are my favourite) as well as icing pens

Method:

Heat the oven to 220 degrees

Line your baking tins. I used four 7 inch square tins to make a rectangle shape.

Cream together the butter and sugar until soft and fluffy. Add in the eggs one by one and combine with the butter/sugar mixture. (If it starts to curdle add in some of your flour which should help.)

Fold in the flour and add the vanilla essence and make sure that everything is combined well before dividing the mixture evenly between the tins.

Bake for around 25-25mins and allow to cool before decorating.

When the cakes are completely cooled down, spread jam onto two of the cake squares and sandwich the other two squares on top. The two cakes should be side by side to make a rectangle shape.

Mix together the icing sugar, butter and vanilla essence to make up your buttercream (sieve the icing sugar to avoid sugary lumps) and spread a thin layer over the cake. You can also use this to hold the two squares together.

Add some food colouring to half of your royal icing to make it the desired shade (I used black colouring to make grey icing). Then roll out a sheet of icing big enough to cover the whole cake. Roll out the remaining royal icing and cut into square and rectangle shapes to create keys. You can stick the keys on to the cake using some left over buttercream.

Use the icing pens to write a “Happy Birthday” message on your keys.

About the baker:

I was always lucky in that my mum made me a special cake every year for each of my birthdays. I still remember the clown cake she made me for my 5th birthday! I decided to volunteer for FCFK Hackney as it make me really sad to think that a child will miss out on these special memories and it’s great to help in the local community (I work for a publisher based in Hackney). I’m looking forward to making my next cake already!