Brownie Yule Logs

As you may have noticed from my last post, I’m not the quickest to jump on a trend bandwagon. I saw brownie yule logs all over Instagram last year (or maybe it was 2022?) but I finally wanted to give it a try this year.

I purchased the Finch Bakery Yule Log instructions / recipe (well worth the £3) and gave it a go a few weekends back.

The first attempt I went with was the chocolate brownie Yule Log, that I filled with biscoff and milk chocolate. I followed the Finch Bakery recipe and instructions, and was amazed that things went well & the roll turned out brilliantly. Genuinely expected it to go far worse for my first attempt!

The above image shows some of the steps involved.
– Baked the brownie and allowed it to cool fully, before mixing it in my stand mixer.
– Lined my sheet tin with cling film, and pressed the brownie into it
– Allowed that to set again, then added the filling – in this case a mixture of Biscoff and oreo crumbs.
– I then rolled the log, using the clingfilm to help hold it in place.

I wrapped the log and allowed it to fully chill before coating with melted chocolate. I used milk chocolate for the outside of this one, and added some fondant toppers.

Feeling confident after attempt 1, I decided to try a Blondie Roll with PB filling. I used a different recipe to the one on the Finch Bakery sheet, which is a blondie I had successfully made before.

Things seemed OK at first, until it came time to roll the log, and the blondie just crumbled into a sand!

At first I thought about giving up on this one and using the crumbs for some truffles, but I saved it by adding more “wet” ingredients to the mixture to get it to a rollable consistency (basically oil & peanut butter!)

This time around, it went a lot better but was VERY THICK thanks to the extra ingredients. No-one would complain to that though!

I coated this log in blonde chocolate mixed with raspberry powder to give it more of a PB&J vibe.

Undetered from the issues with the PB roll, I decided to try a peppermint bark one. The brownie layer was fine, but my white chocolate ganache filling was too wet and I had to scrapre it off and re-do it before rolling. You couldn’t tell though – and this one was my favourite (taste wise):

At the end of all this, I decided to try one more roll… this time feeling inspired by the cornflake rolls I have seen posted by Georges Bakery. My friend got me his “Rebel Bakes” book earlier this year for my birthday, so I decided to try making the caramel cornflake recipe to use in a roll.

Take 1: Making the caramel from scratch & I managed to burn the sugar. I binned it and tried again.

Take 2: This time, my sugar wouldn’t melt & I ended up having to bin that batch too.

Take 3: I decided to deviate from the Rebel Bakes book and instead try making a “wet” recipe. This went to pot too – the sugar was not browning and the mixture just looked like a wet fudge. Rather than waste even more ingredients, I ended up combining that with chocolate and marshmallows to form a decadent cornflake cake.

To add to my annoyance, I couldn’t get the cornflake mix to “roll” without breaking so I ended up just squeezing it into one big log & coating with a mix of white and dark chocolate.

In spite of this one annoying me the most, it was the best tasting cornflake roll – so at least that part went well!

I ended up slicing the logs last week. I boxed some up for friends (alongside the cookie pie slices) and then took the rest to work with me.

Birthday Brownies

I’m at the age where all my friends are turning 40, and I decided to make another brownie slab to celebrate.

I used the recipe from George’s Bakery “Rebel Bakes” again for triple chocolate brownies.

The message on top was inspired by a birthday card I saw on Thortful. The letters were made using white chocolate candy melts (some coloured red) and sprinkles from Get Baked which are the best rainbow sprinkles you can buy in the UK.

The topping was made by melting more candy melts and Biscoff spread, and swirling it around the pan.

Once the topping had set, I removed the slab from the pan and wrapped it in baking paper ready for gifting.