Roamancing Mozambique: Bolo de Arroz

Bolo de Arroz is a Portugese rice cake popular in cafes and bakeries in Portugal, Mozambique, Brazil. You’ll know it when you see it because of it’s characteristic cylindrical shape, golden crust, and wax paper wrap that often reads ‘BOLO DE ARROZ.’ (‘Bolo’ meaning ‘cake’, arroz meaning ‘rice’). It’s unique shape and wrapping make it a singular member of the pastry world. It`s usually taller than a cupcake, and thinner than a muffin. It’s in a class all on its own. Bolo de Arroz! I love saying it.

They were a part of why I loved visiting cafes so much while I was in Mozambique.

 

Photo by Inayaili de León

 

So now that I’m far from cafes with delectable looking bolo de arroz-es in their windows, I had to set about making some of my own. I found there isn’t very much on the internet (in English) about recipes and guidance about how to make these cakes. With the questionable help of Google Translate, I looked to Bear’s Kitchen and Outra Comidas for general instructions to work from.

I learned that there are different versions of the cake: the traditional and the more commercialized bolo de arroz. The traditional ones are denser than the adapted versions, which are airier and, from what I read, a bit greasier. Though I think they’d both be yummy, I was looking for a traditional recipe, and so made sure the instructions I used were from purists looking to restore the cake to its past glory.

Contrary to what the name of the cake suggests, it is not made with only rice flour. Most of the flour used is wheat, and to confirm this I asked to go into the kitchen of a little cafe in Mozambique so the cook could show me what he used to make my beloved pastries. The bag of flour he held up for my inspection was undeniably wheat flour. Anyone interested can find a wheat-free version of the recipe here. Because I was looking for a traditional cake, I followed a recipe that used wheat flour and was pleased with the results.

That said, one of my downfalls as a chef is that I don’t have a kitchen scale. And to my dismay, all the traditional bolo de arroz recipes I found used grams and millilitres. So did a risky thing and used an online metric converter to turn grams and millitres into cups. I’m going to include the measurements I used in the recipe here, but I would strongly recommend using a kitchen scale if you can get your hands on one. The dry to wet ratio seemed kind of off in the batter, and I am certain the results would be even better with more exact measurements.

While you can make these cakes in a cupcake, or if you have one, a tall muffin pan, I wanted to have them in the traditional shape with the pleasure of tearing the paper away, and so I made the moulds myself using parchment paper. I am indebted to these instructions on how to do so.

If you don’t want to make your own moulds, skip ahead to the cake recipe below. If you do, you’ll need:

  • Parchment Paper
  • A paste of flour and water
  • A can or vitamin bottle, about 2 inches in diameter
  • A pencil and some scissors

 

What you'll need to make Bolo de Arroz moulds

What you’ll need to make Bolo de Arroz moulds.

 

First trace the bottom of the can onto the parchment paper to make a circle. Each mould will use two of these circles. As I was making 8 cakes, I traced 16 circles.

Next roll the can with the parchment paper so that it is covered with some overlap. With the can still wrapped in the paper, coat the overlapping paper with the flour paste and glue it around the rolled up can to make a cylindrical casing.

 

Roll your bottle or can in parchment paper and seal with flour paste.

 

Slide the casing over the can so that there is about a centimeter of parchment overhang. Cut slits into it on all sides, about 3-4 in all. Place one of the circles on the bottom of the can and coat its edges with flour paste. Then fold the parchment down onto the circle. Put more paste onto the folded parchment and press another circle onto it. That is the base of your mould.

 

Let some parchment paper hang over the bottle. Cut slits into the sides of the overhang and glue down.

Let some parchment paper hang over the bottle. Cut slits into the sides of the overhang and glue down.

 

Wait a minute before carefully sliding the can out of the mould and putting it aside to let it dry. That is your first mould! Repeat 8 times.

Bolo de Arroz

(Makes about 8 cakes)

Ingredients:

  • Butter (softened), 100 gr (7 oz)
  • Sugar, 200 gr (1 C)
  • Eggs, 2
  • Egg yolk, 1
  • Milk, 200 ml (4/5 C)
  • Flour 200 gr (2 cups)
  • Rice flour, 200 gr (1.25 C)
  • Baking powder, 1 envelope (1 Tablespoon)
  • Baking soda, a pinch of
  • Salt, a pinch of
  • Lemon zest (finely grated), from 1 lemon
  • Lemon juice, from 1/2 a lemon
  • Powdered sugar, for dusting
  • Teaspoon vanilla essence (optional)

 

Gather your ingredients together

Gather your ingredients together.

 

Preheat oven to 180 C or 350 F.

Sift the flour, rice flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt into a bowl, mix well, and set aside. In a large mixing bowl cream together butter and sugar until fluffy, using an electric beater. In a third bowl beat together eggs, milk and vanilla if you are using it. It helps if the eggs are room temperature so keep them outside the fridge for an hour or so before you start.

Next add the egg mixture to the butter and beat it in. Then add the lemon juice and zest and mix.

Add the flour mixture in gradually and mix until all the flour is incorporated. The batter will be pale yellow. Mine was thicker than anticipated (a problem I think might be solved by using a kitchen scale to measure the flours). You can trim the parchment paper so that there is just one inch of it above the batter line, or trim it after baking, like I did.

 

Line the moulds in a cupcake or muffin pan. It helps keep their shape.

Line the moulds in a cupcake or muffin pan. It helps keep their shape.

 

The recipe said to bake for 20-25 minutes, but my cakes took longer before the toothpick came out clean — about 40 minutes.

When they were done I took the tray out of the oven and sprinkled icing sugar on top. They still looked pale yellow so I broiled them at 500 F for two minutes to give the cakes their emblematic crust. It worked perfectly.

I distributed them among friends and the consensus was that they were crumbly, lemony and very tasty. They smelled so good too. I don’t think I would go through the trouble of making my own moulds again, but I will definitely make the cakes again. If you try the recipe out, do share how it worked for you. Enjoy!

 

Finished! Bolo de Arroz.

Finished! Bolo de Arroz.

 

A Roamancing New Year!

Wishing you, our wonderful community, a year filled with …

Moments of Utter Delight

 

Lori jumping with utter delight!

Lori Yearwood jumping with utter delight!

 

Interesting Perspectives

 

Bogota, Colombia from a pigeon eye view.

Plaza de Bolívar in Bogota, Colombia from a pigeon eye view.

 

Good Music

 

 

Tasty Eats

 

Some seriously tasty eats in Bogota, Colombia.

Some seriously tasty eats in Bogota, Colombia.

 

Smiling Faces

 

Welcomed by a warm smile from a boy in the market in Hurghada.

Welcomed by a warm smile in the market in Hurghada, Egypt.

 

Dancing

 

 

New Friends

 

Daniel Noll, Audrey Scott and Erica Hargreave in Marsa Alam after their talk at the UNWTO Conference on Partnering with Media in Challenging Times

Daniel Noll, Audrey Scott and Erica Hargreave in Marsa Alam after their talk at the UNWTO Conference on Partnering with Media in Challenging Times.

 

Annelise Larson getting set to dive into her first Lobsterblast.

Annelise Larson getting set to dive into her first Lobsterblast at the Yorkton Film Festival.

 

Our two newest Roamancers: Hannia Curi and Megan Ho.

Our two newest Roamancers: Hannia Curi and Megan Ho.

 

Jaime Tenorio, Steve Peters, Caitlin Burns and Lina Srivastava in Plaza de Bolívar, Bogota, Columbia.

Jaime Tenorio, Steve Peters, Caitlin Burns and Lina Srivastava in Plaza de Bolívar, Bogota, Columbia.

 

Old Friends

 

Enjoying a sunset stroll at Point Roberts with Andrew.

Enjoying a sunset stroll at Point Roberts with Andrew.

 

Lucy Duck simply quackers for the lovely ladies of Yorkton.

Lucy Duck simply quackers for the lovely ladies of Yorkton, Saskatchewan.

 

Ken, Cam and Erica waiting to be charioted to the Golden Sheath Gala.

Ken, Cam and Erica waiting to be charioted to the Golden Sheath Gala.

 

Erica and Caitlin exploring Bogota, as photographed by Lina Srivastava.

Erica and Caitlin exploring Bogota, as photographed by Lina Srivastava.

 

Furry Friends

 

Erica and Satchmo having some red boot adventures in the Canadian wilds.

Erica and Satchmo having some red boot adventures in the Canadian wilds.

 

Cato Cat and Lucy Duck road tripping across Canada.

Cato Cat and Lucy Duck road tripping across Canada.

 

New Experiences

 

Me and Audrey Scott quad biking in the desert near Hurghada, as photographed by Daniel Noll.

Me and Audrey Scott quad biking in the desert near Hurghada, as photographed by Daniel Noll.

 

A Bit of the Ridiculous

 

 

Love

 

Alley Cat Amour in Hurghada, Egypt.

Alley Cat Amour in Hurghada, Egypt.

 

Laughter

 

Quad Biking Cat in Hurghada, Egypt

Quad Biking Cat in Hurghada, Egypt

 

Unexpected Beauty

 

 

… and of course, Good Health!

Happy New Year!

With Love from all of us Roamancers.

xoxo

 

Keep Exploring Canada

Some of the many reasons I love this country I call home, thanks to 35 Million Directors:

 

 

Keep Exploring Canada!

‘Roam On’ by Chris Blake ~ A Tease of Pixengo Proportions

We had the fortune this past winter of having the talented (and might I add, sexily handsome) Chris Blake, write and record a song as a soundtrack to our adventures, ‘Roam On’.  It is an awesome tune, that I love, and being me of little patience I wanted to share it with the World right away.  Luckily, one of our producers, Lori Yearwood, who was working on the song with Chris, is wiser than me (just don’t tell her I said that).  She wanted the song released on a music video of our travels around the World.  She is of course right about this being the way to go, but it also meant waiting, as this is the sort of video that we should get somebody good to do, as oppose to my video butchering jobs. And this is no small job, as we have a lot of video footage to go through.

Did I mention I wasn’t a patient person? Sitting on this song has been killing me, so in experimenting with pixengo the past couple of weeks, it gave me an idea to try and tied over the desire to share Chris’ song  . . . . . .  I could share a tease of it   . . . . . .  a tease of pixengo proportions!

That is exactly what we have done below.  If you click on the photo of our producer, Lori Yearwood, taunting all of us with one of her neighbourhood beaches in California, it will take you to the pixengo, where you simply need to press play for a tease of Chris’s song.  Enjoy!

 

Click on this image of the lovely Lori Yearwood to be taken to a pixengo, where you can hear a tease to Chris Blake’s new song, ‘Roam On’.

 

Only problem is, is that now I want to share the whole song that much more!!!!

Frustrated Kisses,

Emme   xoxo

PS If you are interested in being a sponsor of the music video for ‘Roam On’, we’d love to talk!  info@roamancing.com

 

#RoamancingSF Part I – An Intimate Session with City and Colour

When I first set off for San Francisco last Thursday, I did not expect to be spending my Saturday morning in a San Francisco park, sitting on a hill, listening to Dallas Green perform City and Colour songs two feet away from me. But that’s exactly what I found myself doing, thanks to fate – and Twitter.

City and Colour is a Canadian band which began as a solo project by Dallas Green. I first heard them back in 2005 when the first single, Save Your Scissors, was released. I remember being up late (on a school night, no less) and seeing the music video on MuchMusic. I’ve been a fan ever since, seeing City and Colour live in Vancouver in 2008 and earlier this year in January. As my favourite band, I was extremely excited to see them for a third time this weekend at Outside Lands. Little did I know, that moment would come a little sooner than anticipated.

 

 

On Friday night, after returning home from the first day of Outside Lands, I spotted a tweet inviting the first thirty people to retweet and follow @SpotifyOnTour to an intimate session with City and Colour somewhere in San Francisco the next morning. It was a secret show put on by Spotify on Tour and I wanted go so, so badly. However, I’d seen the tweet two hours after it had been posted and had no chance of being one of the first thirty.

Knowing it was a long shot, I retweeted and followed anyway, tweeting at Spotify how much I wanted to go. The next morning, I was awoken by the sound of my phone beeping – I’d been sent the location! It was only 8:30am but I couldn’t contain my excitement, dancing around the room with joy. The dancing didn’t last long though. Since I was staying with my friend in San Jose, we booked it out of there to make it into San Francisco and to the session on time.

 

Driving into San Francisco for the session

 

The session was being held at Potrero Del Sol Park, conveniently just off the 101 and on our way to Outside Lands. We spotted the big green Spotify tour bus at the edge of the park with a few people already there. We waited, eating doughnuts and adding songs to a playlist featured on a TV on the side of the green bus. I could hardly take the anticipation.

 

Big green bus

 

Finally, we were lead into the park and up a hill. There was the man himself, Dallas Green. It was somewhat surreal to see him so close up, just sitting on a rock in the park. We sat down in front of him, nervously holding back until he motioned for us to come closer.

“Hello, children!” Dallas said. It did feel a bit like story time with the group of us sitting cross-legged in front of him.

Dallas performed acoustic versions of Fragile Bird, Grand Optimist, and What Makes a Man. The whole time, I could hardly believe I was sitting just two feet away from him. I’ve always been mesmerized by his voice and Saturday was no exception. I just sat there, mouthing the words along, amazed at my luck.

 

Dallas Green of City and Colour

 

Afterwards, I caught up to Dallas to say thank you for the performance and to tell him what a huge fan I was. Oh, and to shake his hand. Yup, that’s right, I TOUCHED DALLAS GREEN. I managed to keep my cool before heading back to the car to have a slight freak-out. I don’t think I’d ever had a fangirl moment in my life before, but that’s what happens when you meet your favourite artist and get to hear him sing two feet away from you. Even now, I still can’t believe my luck. A big thank you to Spotify On Tour for making it happen!

Lastly, here’s a little teaser of Fragile Bird before the official Spotify video comes out:

 

 

Disclaimer: This post was not sponsored by Spotify, but I did offer to do a post on the session in an attempt to get the location. Evidently, it worked, so I’m honouring my end of the bargain!