I have come across some pretty ghastly versions of
Banoffi in my career. My pet hates are biscuit crumb
bases and that horrible cream in aerosols.
As you can imagine I get a bit pedantic about the correct version - so here it is:
I have come across some pretty ghastly versions of
Banoffi in my career. My pet hates are biscuit crumb
bases and that horrible cream in aerosols.
As you can imagine I get a bit pedantic about the
correct version - so here it is:
BANOFFI PIE
You will need a 10 x 1½ inch (deep) loose bottomed
flan tin
Oven temp: 180 C / gas mark 4
For the pastry:
250g / 9 oz plain flour
25g / 1 oz icing sugar
125g / 4½ oz butter
1 egg and 1 egg yolk
Place the flour and sugar in a bowl, cut the
butter into cubes and then rub it in to the flour /
sugar until it resembles fine bread crumbs. Work in
the egg to form a paste.
Chill for half an hour then roll out to the thickness
of a pound coin and line the flan tin.
Prick the base, line with parchment paper and weigh
down with dry beans.
Cook for fifteen minutes then remove the beans and
paper.
Put the pastry case back into the oven and cook until
it is evenly golden.
Remove from the oven and cool.
To assemble:
1 ½ tins of banoffi toffee (see note below on boiling
the tins or click here)
5-6 ripe bananas
425 ml / ¾ pint of double cream
1 teaspoon of instant coffee
1 dessertspoon of caster sugar
A pinch of ground coffee
Carefully spread the toffee over the pastry base.
Peel and split the bananas lengthways and arrange
them on top of the toffee,
(see how they fit the curve of the pastry -
that’s why God made bananas curved).
Whip the cream with the instant coffee (if they are
granules they will dissolve as you whip the cream)
and the sugar until it just holds its shape - take
care not to over whip it.
Spread the cream over the bananas right up to the
pastry edge then sprinkle sparingly with the ground
coffee.
If you are not serving it immediately cover first
with some baking parchment or greaseproof paper
directly onto the cream and trim the edges then wrap
in cling film.
It does not lend itself to being frozen.
Only one variation is acceptable as far as I am
concerned and this is ‘Apploffi’.
Replace the bananas with a layer of cooked apple
puree made using a mixture of Bramley’s and
Cox’s apples cooked in a little orange juice
with some Muscovado sugar, then cooled. This version
cuts the richness of the toffee and cream nicely.
Find a deep saucepan or casserole that will go in
the oven.
Put into it as many tins as will fit. (THE TINS MUST
BE UNOPENED). It worth doing several at a time to
save on power.
Cover the tins with water and bring to the boil.
Cover with a lid and transfer to the oven set to gas
mark 1 / 140 C (less for fan assisted).
Cook for 3 ½ hours.
This way there is no danger of the water boiling dry
and being in a more controlled temperature you get a
more consistent result.
Lift the cans from the water, cool and store.
An unusual bonus comes from storing these tins over a
period. After some months sugar crystals begin to
form in the toffee and you get crunchy banoffi -
mmmmm.