• Home
  • About Me
  • Combi-Steamer 101
  • Tips & Tricks
  • Work with me
  • In-home cooking classes
  • Need help choosing your appliances or just got a new kitchen?
  • Appliance help-line!
Cookwise

Author Archives: Trudy

Perfect pavlova

January 21, 2018 12:00 pm / 3 Comments / Trudy

Pavlova

The classic pavlova is always a tradition in our house on Australia Day.   There is still the ongoing issue of who actually invented the pavlova?  Whatever and whoever wins on that score between us or the Kiwi’s is irrelevant to us – we just love it any day but particularly on Australia Day!

My tips for the perfect pavlova would be;

Use room temperature egg whites that are as fresh as possible, making sure that there isn’t one skerrick of yolk in it.

Make sure your bowl and the beaters are super clean.  Wash and dry them thoroughly in hot, soapy water first.

Don’t be in a hurry to add the sugar and certainly don’t add it in large quantities.  The trick is to let it dissolve before adding the next bit.

Make sure that it is completely stiff and doesn’t drop from the beaters at all.  You can then shape it on the circle you have drawn on the baking paper and smooth it out beautifully….

Cook it on a Conventional or Static Oven setting.  Not Fan Forced.  You don’t want to blow it around and you do need the elements on the top and bottom for the light browning that happens on a beautiful pavlova.  As the top and bottom elements are on be sure to place it in the centre of the oven.

Let it cool – IN the oven with the door ajar.  You can do this by sticking a wooden spoon into the top edge if your oven doesn’t stop at the appropriate spot.

Finally – it must be served with FRESH fruit, never canned as it just doesn’t stack up.  Remember it’s also gluten free!

Ingredients:  Serves 10

6 egg whites
1½ cups (330g) castor sugar
1 tbsp. cornflour
½ tsp white vinegar

300g cream, whipped
1 tbsp. icing sugar mixture
1 tsp vanilla essence
fresh fruit of your choice to serve but 2 passionfruit a must….

Method:

  1. Preheat oven to a very slow 125°C Conventional.  You shouldn’t use fan forced for a pavlova.
  2. Mark a 23cm circle on baking paper and put onto a flat oven tray.
  3. Beat egg whites with an electric mixer with a tiny pinch of salt until soft peaks form.
  4. Gradually add castor sugar a little at a time, beating well after each addition until it is all incorporated and the meringue is well beaten and glossy.  It should be stiff enough to turn upside down without falling out of the bowl!
  5. With a large spoon gently fold in cornflour and vinegar.  Make sure it is all incorporated but do it gently – you don’t want to flatten the egg whites.
  6. Spread the mixture onto your paper circle and using a palette knife or spatula shape it into a huge, high circle.  Level the top.
  7. Bake in the slow oven for about 1½ hours.  Turn off oven.  You may have a couple of cracks, but that’s ok.
  8. Leave the Pavlova in the oven to cool with the door ajar.  This can be done overnight.  Stick a spoon or something in the door if your oven doesn’t have a stop at that level.  You will get a few more cracks now, as it cools.
  9. You can make it ahead of time and store, covered until required.  Not suitable to freeze.
  10. Before serving whip cream with icing sugar and vanilla.  Top Pavlova with cream and decorate with fresh fruit.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Desserts, Gluten free, Party Food

Chocolate & cherry panettone zucotto

December 30, 2017 2:25 pm / 1 Comment / Trudy

Panettoni zucotto

Years ago I discovered a great recipe for using panettone and made a strawberry Zucotto.  Everyone really enjoyed it and thought it was such a good idea as you always end up with at least half a panettone that no one knows what to do with.  This is a great alternative to using the leftovers as a bread and butter pudding in our warmer months and a nice way to incorporate the Italian Christmas tradition into your own Christmas or New Year celebrations.

The great thing about this recipe is you can make it a few days before and leave it covered in the refrigerator until you need it.  It makes a lovely addition to a Christmas dessert table if you have a large number of guests or even better for a dessert on Christmas Eve, Boxing Day or New Year’s Eve when you don’t feel like cooking.  Terrific also if you are travelling somewhere where you need to bring a dessert.  It packs easily into an esky with an ice-pack in its original pudding basin for a long drive.

The addition of the fresh cherries in the centre makes it a much lighter, fresher dessert than the traditional.

Ingredients:  Serves 10-12

100g hazelnuts
1/2 (about 400g) large panettone or most of the smaller size
3tbsp Cointreau liqueur
juice 1 orange (remove rind and reserve before juicing)
500g fresh ricotta
1 x 250g ctn mascarpone
80g (1/2 cup) icing sugar mixture
100g 70% dark chocolate, finely chopped
2 tbs finely grated orange rind
200g fresh pitted and halved cherries

Cocoa powder, to dust

Method:

  1. Preheat oven to 180°C. Spread the hazelnuts over a baking tray. Bake in oven for 5-10 minutes or until toasted. Place hazelnuts in a clean tea towel and rub to remove the skins. Coarsely chop.
  2. Use a serrated knife to cut panettone lengthways into six 1.5cm-thick slices.  Arrange the 3 largest slices, overlapping slightly, around the side of a 2L (8-cup) capacity pudding basin. Place smallest piece of panettone in the base of pudding basin. Brush panettone with about two-thirds of the orange juice and Cointreau which have been combined making sure you cover all the sides and the base.
  3. Use an electric beater to beat ricotta, mascarpone and icing sugar in a bowl until smooth. Stir in hazelnuts, chocolate and orange rind until combined. Spoon half the ricotta mixture into the lined pudding basin, pressing firmly.
  4. Top with another layer of panettone which has been brushed on one side with the orange juice mixture
  5. Now layer pitted cherries over the panettone and top with remaining ricotta mixture.
  6. Top with remaining panettone slice brush with the remaining Cointreau. Place on top of this layer of pudding to enclose filling. Cover pudding basin with plastic wrap that comes over the sides of the basin and place in the fridge with a weight on top for 6 hours or overnight to chill.  Use some cans from the pantry as your weights.

Turn pudding onto a plate and dust with cocoa powder. Cut into wedges and serve with vanilla ice-cream 🙂

Recipe adapted from Taste.com

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Christmas cookery, Desserts

Last minute Christmas cake

December 23, 2017 3:05 pm / Leave a Comment / Trudy

GIFT VOUCHERS FOR IN-HOME COOKING CLASSES NOW AVAILABLE FOR CHRISTMAS!  Please email me, trudy@cookwise.com.au for more information.

Emergency Christmas cake

If you are like everyone else and Christmas has sneaked up on you this year then this Last minute Christmas cake is just what you need to mix together to get you into the Christmas spirit.  Like our Best-ever Pudding here, we do like dark, rich, un-iced cakes.  Funny about that, you grow up in a family that either has cakes with icing or without.

I can remember my mother telling us that she didn’t have time to make a Christmas cake months ahead.  If she missed a particular week in November at the latest, that was it we didn’t get one!  Pity she didn’t know about this recipe in those days as we really disliked dry, purchased cakes and it spoilt Christmas not to have a cake to eat.

So if you have the need for a last minute Christmas cake then try this recipe.  The brandy-soaked dried fruit and fruit mince fast-track the mixture to give it all the qualities that a cake that has been baked months ahead.  You can, if you wish, make it way ahead of time if you prefer and keep it in an air tight container.

Happy Christmas to you all and thank you for your support during the year.  Watch this space as I try to do some more exciting things next year 🙂

Ingredients: 
530g mixed dried fruit
70g mixed peel
75g dates, chopped
75g pitted prunes, chopped
½ cup brandy
410g jar fruit mince
250g butter, melted then cooled
1 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar
4 eggs, beaten lightly
2 cups plain flour
1 cup self raising flour
2 tsp mixed spice
blanched whole almonds to decorate
extra ¼ cup brandy (optional)

Method:

  1. Soak the dried fruit in half cup of brandy, covered overnight.
  2. Line a deep square 22cm tin with 2 layers of brown paper and 2 layers of baking paper.  Extend the paper 5cm above the top of the tin as shown.
  3. Preheat oven to 120°C Fan forced and set rack at the bottom rack in the combi oven or above centre in a conventional oven.  I use the combi for this type of baking as it is a more accurate temperature than my conventional oven and a smaller cavity to heat, therefore being more economical to run.
  4. Mix bottled fruit mince into the brandy-soaked dried-fruit.
  5. Stir in butter and sugar and mix well.
  6. Add eggs and sifted dry ingredients and mix well.  Spread mixture into tin and smooth top.
  7. Decorate with blanched almonds as shown.
  8. Bake for 2¾ hours or until cooked when tested.  Brush cake with extra brandy if required and cover whilst still hot with foil.  Wrap in a large towel and let cool in tin overnight.  If you are not brushing it with extra brandy then remove from tin, cool and place in an air-tight container.

Enjoy!

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Cakes and Biscuits, Christmas cookery

Peach & raspberry trifle

December 16, 2017 2:17 pm / Leave a Comment / Trudy

Peach & raspberry trifle

Not only for Christmas, a trifle is always a favourite.  Especially one that combines beautiful Summer fruit that can be prepared the day before and serve a crowd.  Trifles have come a long way since my mother’s version with Swiss roll, sweet sherry and packet custard.  Even though it was basic (not even containing jelly as most traditional trifles do) we still loved it as she had a trick of diluting the sherry with fresh orange juice so you didn’t get that overwhelming hit of alcohol.  In this version I took that idea and diluted the peach schnapps with the raspberry puree.  It works well, just enough to make it a very good trifle!

Ingredients:  Serves 8-12

400g frozen raspberries
½ cup peach schnapps liquor
½ cup sugar
Half x 500g packet sponge finger biscuits
300ml cream
¾ cup crème fraiche
½ tsp vanilla bean paste
2 punnets fresh raspberries (keep a few for decorating the top)
2-3 ripe & juicy white peaches

Method:

  1. In a small saucepan saute frozen raspberries with the sugar until the sugar has dissolved and set aside to cool.
  2. Add the peach schnapps.
  3. Whip the cream and fold through the creme fraiche & vanilla paste.
  4. Dip the sponge finger biscuits into the cooled raspberry mixture and line the base of a deep glass bowl. Be generous with the mixture to ensure the biscuits soften.  Add a few slices of fresh peaches and a few fresh raspberries.
  5. Now add a layer of the cream mixture.
  6. Continue in this manner until all the mixture is used, making sure that the biscuits are softened.
  7. Finish with a cream layer and fresh fruit.
  8. Cover and refrigerate overnight.

Delicious, this will become your new favourite trifle!

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Christmas cookery, Desserts, Party Food

Christmas mince pies

December 2, 2017 6:00 pm / 5 Comments / Trudy

Christmas mince pies

I have been making these traditional mince pies since I started the Cookwise children’s cooking classes in 2001.  I even found the original recipe hand-out that I gave the kids with the Santa picture on the top.  They are quick and easy to make as the dough is just all mixed in the food processor.

It was a boiling hot day when we made these and this dough is very forgiving.  We rolled it out and lined all the tins then baked them later in the day.  Just keep them in the refrigerator until you are ready to do this.

I don’t bother making the fruit mince as the ‘Robertson’s’ jar tastes great.  The pastry is delicious and perfectly short.  Make lots as they won’t last!

Ingredients:  Makes 24

1½ cups Plain flour, sifted
1/2 cup Self raising flour, sifted
1/3 cup icing sugar
150g chilled butter, cubed
1 egg yolk
2½ tbsp. iced water
1 jar purchased fruit mince (for double quantity I used 1½ jars)
extra icing sugar for dusting

Method:

  1. Process flours, icing sugar and butter in food processor until well combined and mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs
  2. Beat the egg yolk with the ice water and add into the flour with the motor running.   Process until mixture just starts to come together.
  3. Shape into a disc and wrap in plastic wrap.
  4. Refrigerate for 1 hour
  5. Roll out and cut into shapes to line tins.
  6. Fill with 1 teaspoon of purchased fruit mince and cover with a star shape of pastry
  7. Bake at 180°C Conventional or 160°C Fan Forced for 25-30 minutes until lightly golden
  8. OR you can try in the Combi 180°C + 30% steam for 30 minutes
  9. When cold sprinkle with icing sugar to serve

Will keep for 5 days in an air-tight container (if they last that long 🙂

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Christmas cookery, Pastry

Time to make the Christmas pudding!

November 6, 2017 4:45 pm / 7 Comments / Trudy

making-pudding

As the festive season fast approaches now is the perfect time to make the Christmas pudding!

Number one on Google for cooking in the steam oven for several years this recipe has become a firm favourite in my family.  Moist and delicious, it will easily serve 12-15.  There are many comments over the years for cooking instructions to make smaller puddings as well.  See the recipe here.  There is also a gluten free, quick sago pudding option here as well.

So if you didn’t make this pudding in your steam oven last year then try it now.  So much easier than watching a pot on the stove in case it boils dry, cooking it in the steam oven for six hours only means you have to refill the water container a few times which frees you up to do other things with your day!

Christmas pudding

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Christmas cookery, Desserts, Steam Oven

Orange & coriander duck breasts

August 23, 2017 10:06 am / Leave a Comment / Trudy

I love cooking duck, especially duck breasts which are now easy to buy from the supermarket and not super expensive like the old days.

I particularly like to finish cooking them in the combi steam oven so you get that hit of moisture which perfectly cooks them to medium rare.  Plus, while you are rendering down the fat and crisping up the skin you can cook the cous cous and vegetables in the steam oven and throw together this delicious little sauce!

It honestly is the most used appliance in my kitchen.

Ingredients:  Serves 2

2 duck breasts, trimmed of any excess skin and removed from the fridge to come to room temperature 20 minutes before cooking
Rub with ground coriander & sprinkle with salt
Sauce:
Juice & rind of half a large orange.
¼ cup Verjuice
¼ cup chicken stock
Segments from other half of the orange
½ tsp of ground coriander (extra)
Knob of butter
Fresh coriander, chopped finely

Cous cous to serve flavoured with other half of the orange rind, a few currents and chopped, fresh coriander.  See Tips & Tricks page here

Steamed fresh vegetables here

  1. Method:
    Score the duck skin being careful not to cut into the flesh. Place the seasoned duck breasts into a cold non-stick pan over a medium heat skin side down.  Render the fat from under the skin for at least 10 minutes or until the skin is crispy.  You will need to tip off the fat from time to time.  Keep this for using again 🙂
  2. Preheat the combi to 190°C with the empty solid tray inside the oven to heat up as well.
  3. Remove the duck breasts and place them into the heated solid steam oven tray, skin up.
  4. Turn the combi from oven to Combination mode 190°C + 30% steam for 6 minutes for medium size duck breasts.
  5. Remove from oven to rest well.
  6. While the duck is cooking make the sauce:  Remove almost all of the duck fat, add the ground coriander and cook for a minute.
  7. Add all the other ingredients except the fresh coriander and boil to reduce.  Stir well to remove all the bits on the base of the pan.
  8. Add a knob of butter, fresh coriander and swirl to mix.
  9. Slice rested duck breasts.
  10. Plate up with cous cous on the base, top with steamed vegetables, rested duck and cover with orange & coriander sauce.

Duck skin should be crisp but if you have a combi with a grill and like it a little more crispy then flash it under the grill for a couple of minutes before slicing.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Combi Steamer, Dinner parties, Main Courses

Teriyaki salmon

July 7, 2017 4:35 pm / 7 Comments / Trudy

After our server was recently migrated I lost this last post, so here it is again in case you missed it.

Want perfectly crispy skin salmon without overcooking the salmon in the process?

Then try this method of marinading the salmon for a few minutes, steaming it and finishing it off in a pan if you don’t have a combi oven.  A great way to utilise the steam oven away from the traditional thinking that ‘steaming’ is always wet, pale food.  It is an excellent appliance for pre-cooking food that will save time plus retain the nutrients and flavours.

The results were excellent, quicker than cooking in the pan alone and with more accurate results the flesh was slightly pink in the centre which is the way we like to eat our salmon but with crispy skin which was slightly caramalised from the sugar in the sauce.  Exactly what you want with a decent teriyaki sauce.

I have utilised the pan for cooking some eggplant as well.  Apart from having an extra pan to wash up with this recipe it was all delicious!

Ingredients:  Serves 2

Teriyaki Sauce:  (This makes enough to put in a jar for other meals)

1/3 cup Mirin
½ cup soy
2 tsp rice vinegar
½ tsp sesame oil
¼ cup castor sugar
3 cloves garlic, crushed
1 tbsp grated ginger
2 small pieces salmon, skin on
½ eggplant
dash of peanut oil

Steam oven rice here to serve and steamed green vegetables here.

Method:

  1. For the Teriyaki sauce, mix all ingredients into a screw top jar. Shake then open and stir until sugar dissolves.  Set aside.
  2. Check the salmon for any bones, wipe over with kitchen paper and place into the solid, perforated tray which has been lined with baking paper. Spoon over a little of the Teriyaki sauce to marinade the fish while you are waiting for the rice to cook.
  3. Now, wash your rice and follow the instructions on cooking
  4. Place into steam oven and set timer for 100°C for 17 minutes. Set another timer somewhere else to alert you in the last couple of minutes of this cooking time.
  5. Slice eggplant and salt to remove any bitter juices. Rinse off and pat dry.  Cut slices into quarters.
  6. Heat a non-stick frypan with a dash of peanut oil. Add eggplant and stir fry until golden and almost cooked through.
  7. When you have 1½ minutes remaining on the rice, open the steam oven and add the salmon and green vegetables. They can either be in a separate tray or just placed on top of the rice.  Close the door, depending on your steam oven the appliance hopefully will reheat again to 100°C.
  8. Remove the salmon, add skin side down to medium-hot pan with the eggplant pushed away to the sides. Now add 2 tablespoons of the Teriyaki sauce, let the skin fry a little then turn it over.  Don’t have the pan too hot or it will burn.  Cook for exactly 2 minutes in total.  Cooking times will depend on the size of your fish.

Remove and serve with the rice, steamed vegetables and drizzle over the sauce that has collected in the baking paper from the salmon.  You will have extra Teriyaki sauce if you wish to use that too.

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Fish, Gluten free, Japanese, Main Courses, Steam Oven

Korean bulgogi salmon

May 5, 2017 3:24 pm / 5 Comments / Trudy

Korean food is a cuisine that I love. However, I have to admit to not cooking it a lot myself, until now!  The best Korean food we have ever had was in New York City when the two of us sat at a four person table, completely covered with ‘side dishes’ that automatically came with the meal 🙂

This year I am going to try to cook a lot more Korean and Japanese food in both the combi and steam ovens and as I’m always on the lookout for salmon dishes this fits the bill perfectly.

This recipe has been prepared for all of you who have the newer models of combi steam ovens that have a top grill element or more precisely a Fan grill combination mode.  If you don’t have a top element in your combi like me then you can still cook this dish except you won’t get that deep caramelised browning you would expect.  You can see this from the photo.

Make sure you take your salmon out of the refrigerator to bring it to room temperature about 30 minutes before cooking otherwise you will need to cook it for longer.

Ingredients:  Serves 2

2 salmon fillets with skin on, cut in 2cm strips lengthwise (a great way to divide up those fillets that are way too big for one person)

Marinade:
1½ tablespoons light soy sauce
2 teaspoons of Mirin
juice half a lime or lemon
1 tablespoon honey
1 clove garlic, crushed
2 teaspoons grated ginger

Method:

  1. Mix all marinade ingredients together, stirring to dissolve honey.
  2. Slice salmon leaving skin on.  The skin will hold the salmon together.
  3. Marinate in a flat dish in one layer for at least one hour.  Turn half way.
  4. While the salmon is marinating cook some steam oven rice here adding vegetables of your choice in with the rice towards the end of the cooking time.
  5. Remove the rice and vegetables and set aside.  Wipe out the steam oven and preheat the oven to 200°C.  I have found that you do need to preheat when cooking very quick-cooking items.
  6. Cover the flat baking tray with baking paper.  Lay the salmon slices out in a single layer on top.
  7. Switch the combi to Fan grill 200°C + 85% steam, add the salmon fillets in the upper part of the combi and cook for 3-5 minutes.  This will depend on how you like your salmon cooked, its size and temperature.
  8. Serve with steamed rice, green vegetables and purchased Korean kimchi.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Combi Steamer, Fish, Korean, Main Courses

Malaysian glutinous rice & pandan dessert

April 30, 2017 2:56 pm / 1 Comment / Trudy

After returning from our eating trip to Penang I wanted to try one of my favourite Malaysian desserts in the steam oven.  So much easier than the original recipe I found and it tastes delicious!

I have used fresh pandan leaves in the glutinous rice but only essence in the green top layer.  I had a bad experience once with chopped pandan leaves curdling a panacotta custard so I wasn’t game to put in the water from the pureed leaves into this custard (as in the original recipe).  Have a look at that recipe if you like but the pandan essence (providing it is a good one from the Asian food shops) is fine.  Be mindful though it is very green.

So easy in the steam oven, just pour over the top layer and cook.  It must be served at room temperature and doesn’t keep well.  The glutinous rice becomes hard and chewy but can be warmed a little in the steam oven to rejuvenate.

Ingredients:

For Bottom layer:
300g white glutinous rice, washed well and soaked in plenty of water overnight
100ml coconut milk or cream (I used a 400ml can of Ayam Light coconut cream and just split it)
100ml water
2 pandan leaves, ripped in strips and tied in a knot
1 tsp salt

Top layer:
200ml thick coconut cream
¼ cup water (wash out the coconut cream can with this)
3 x 70g eggs
¾ cup castor sugar
¼-½ tsp pandan essence (or to your liking/colour/taste)
2 heaped tablespoons cornflour

Method:
Bottom layer:
Drain the rice.
Mix together with all the ingredients for the bottom layer.
Pour into small, solid steam oven tray.
Cook @ 100°C steam for 30 minutes.  It should be sticky but cooked.  Remove pandan leaves.
Line a square 23cm cake tin with baking paper and transfer cooked rice into pan.
Press down firmly to make a solid, dense layer.
Set aside.

Top layer:
Prepare this while the bottom layer is cooking.
Whisk the eggs, sugar and cornflour in a medium size mixing bowl until the sugar has dissolved and the mixture has lightened in colour a little.
Add the coconut cream, water and essence to colour.  It should be a mid-green if you are using essence.  Be careful it is very bright.  I only use a dash.
Pour over glutinous rice layer, cover the dish with foil.
Cook @ 100°C steam for 30 minutes.
Remove from oven and set aside with the foil over to cool.
Cut into squares or diamonds to serve, see my note above  🙂

 

This is a recipe I adapted for the steam oven & made it gluten free, from rasamalaysia.com

 

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Print
Posted in: Desserts, Gluten free, Malaysian, Party Food, Rice

Post Navigation

1 2 3 … 21 Next »
This unique blog is mostly a Steam Oven and Combi Steam Oven site. It will help you maximise the use of this fantastic appliance with all sorts of delicious recipes, tips and advice. I am regularly adding new posts so please re-visit regularly, book a Sydney in-home cooking class or subscribe below.

Recent Posts

  • Perfect pavlova
  • Chocolate & cherry panettone zucotto
  • Last minute Christmas cake
  • Peach & raspberry trifle
  • Christmas mince pies

Latest Comments

  • Trudy on Tips & Tricks
  • Shelley on Tips & Tricks
  • Trudy on Tips & Tricks
  • Eva on Tips & Tricks
  • Trudy on Combi steamer roasting table

Subscribe to Cookwise via Email

Please enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Previous Posts, sorted by categpry

© Copyright 2013 - Cookwise
Infinity Theme by DesignCoral / WordPress
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.