Saturday, May 14, 2011

Ultimate Lemon Pound Cake

Ultimate Lemon Pound Cake - made May 10, 2011 from Luscious Lemon Desserts by Lori Longbotham (book #105)



(ARGH - since Blogger went down on Wednesday/Thursday, it looks like it "ate" my last entry and only left an old draft that didn't get posted.  Re-writing and re-posting.  This should've gone before the ensaimada recipe.)

Although the lemons I used for this recipe came from my aunt's lemon tree rather  than my own (mine is still in the budding stage), making a lemon dessert gives me an excuse to post a pic of how my lemon tree is doing.  I planted a dwarf lemon tree back in January (dwarf because my backyard isn't very big) and it's grown about a 25-30% bigger than it was when I first planted it.  Last week I was gratified to note it's got a tiny little lemon growing out of what used to be a blossom.  That's rather  thrilling.  Of course, it's also rather tiny at the moment so it's probably going to be awhile before I can actually harvest any lemons from my own tree.  But still, it's kind of cool to see how it grows and where it comes from.  Truth be told, I never gave it that much thought before and probably wouldn't have if I wasn't growing it myself.  In the meantime, I'm still well supplied from the lemon trees of friends and relatives.


This is a fairly standard pound cake recipe - the tender texture comes from both the cake flour and creaming the ingredients together to incorporate more air.  The lemony flavor comes mostly from the lemon soaking syrup you brush over the hot cake after it's baked.  Brush a first layer over the cake, wait for it to be absorbed, and brush again until you've used all the syrup.  This cake is actually better the day after it's made, to give time for the lemon to be fully absorbed into the cake and for the flavors to meld.  It's a sturdy cake and can be used for picnics or care packages without worrying too much about it in transit.


3 ½ cups sifted cake flour (not self rising)
½ teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon salt
1 ½ cups (3 sticks) unsalted butter at room temperature
2 ¼ cups sugar, divided
6 large eggs
1 cup milk
1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons finely grated lemon zest
1 teaspoon pure lemon extract
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
½ cup fresh lemon juice

1.      Position a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat the oven to 300⁰F.  Butter and flour a 10-inch (12-cup) Bundt pan.
2.      Sift the flour, baking powder, and salt together twice.
3.      Beat the butter with an electric mixer on medium speed in a large bowl until light and fluffy.  Gradually beat in 1 ¾ cups of the sugar, about 3 tablespoons at a time, and continue beating until light and fluffy.  Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.  Reduce the speed to low and add the flour mixture alternately with the milk in batches, beginning and ending with the flour.  Stir in 1 tablespoon of the zest, the lemon extract and vanilla.
4.      Transfer the batter to the prepared pan and smooth the top with a rubber spatula.  Bake for 1 ½ hours or until a wooden pick inserted in the center comes out clean.  Let cool in the pan on a wire rack for 15 minutes.
5.      Meanwhile, bring the remaining ½ cup sugar, 2 teaspoons zest, and the lemon juice to a boil over medium-high heat in a small saucepan, stirring until the sugar has dissolved.
6.      Turn the cake out onto the rack and immediately brush the hot syrup over the hot cake.  Let cool to room temperature.  Serve the cake cut into wedges.

Linked to Everyday Sisters blog

Friday, May 13, 2011

Ensaimada

Ensaimada - made May 12, 2011 from my mom's recipe


I'm still revisiting Filipino baked goods from my childhood.  Ensaimada is a sweet roll lavishly buttered once it's baked and still warm then sprinkled with sugar (my favorite topping from childhood).  Think of it as the Filipino version of brioche as it's essentially an egg bread, similar in texture to challah or brioche.  This was my mom's recipe and something she made regularly when I was a kid.  It's also sold at Filipino bakeries like Goldilocks or Red Ribbon, oftentimes topped with shredded cheese in addition to butter and sugar but I prefer mine with just butter and sugar.

When my mom made this, it was my job to brush the little round foil pans with softened butter for the shaped ensaimada to rise in.  My aunt is currently visiting from the Philippines, my sister's in town and my parents were bringing both of them over to my house so it seemed like a good time to try out my fledging ensaimada-baking skills on a captive audience.  Using 6 egg yolks is an opportunity for egg-white omelets for breakfast later on or else plan to make something like an angel food cake to use up the whites.

Individual-sized foil round pans available at the grocery store

Put in for the 2nd rising

After the first rising of the dough, cut off equal-sized portions of the dough and roll into "ropes", generally 6-8 inches long but depending on how big you want your ensaimadas.  Coil into a round like a cinnamon roll and place in individual foil baking rounds that have been buttered.  Let them rise until they double in size or are over the top before baking.

Best eaten warm!

1 tablespoon yeast
¼ cup warm water (105⁰ – 110⁰ degrees)
4 cups flour
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup milk, at room temperature
3/8 cup sugar
¾ cup butter, softened
6 egg yolks

1.      Melt yeast in warm water.  Let stand a few minutes until mixture is foamy.
2.      Sift the flour and the salt together.  Add 1 tablespoon sugar and ½ cup flour to yeast and water and set aside.
3.      Cream butter, add sugar and continue beating until well blended.  Add egg yolks, one at a time, beating well.  Add flour, milk and yeast mixture.  Beat thoroughly until smooth and elastic (I switched to a dough hook after I added the first cup of flour).  Place in greased bowl.  Cover with clean towel and let rise until double in bulk.
4.      Separate into small equal portions.  Roll out each to a thin rope of consistent thickness.  Roll into a coil and place in buttered individual round foil pans.  Let rise until double in bulk.
5.      Preheat oven to 350⁰ and bake until golden brown.  Once golden brown, brush tops with melted butter and sprinkle with sugar.  



Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Pesto with Shrimp Pasta

Pesto - made May 10, 2011 from The Professional Chef, 7th edition, from the Culinary Institute of America (book #104)

My first basil harvest
Last month, I had noted that I planted some basil along with a few tomato plants so I can make my own tomato sauce and pesto sauce.  It hardly seems possible but in just a few short weeks, my largest tomato plant has already got a few tomatoes growing and I snipped my first basil harvest yesterday.  I never thought I'd like gardening and I still don't consider myself a "gardener" but I have to admit there is something satisfying about nurturing plant life and literally reaping the fruits (and even veggies) of your labor.  I also planted some strawberry plants and sweet corn seedlings and so far they seem to be flourishing.  You can't imagine how exciting it is that I haven't killed any of them yet.

The basil plants are growing taller and, like most novice gardeners, I ended up planting them too close to each other so once they start growing, I could look like I've got a basil jungle growing.  Fortunately, they're growing tall as opposed to wide so as long as I stay on top of the growth, I think it'll be fine.  Not to mention it gives me an excuse to make small batches of pesto on a regular basis.  Plus I love the smell of basil.

The first tomatoes have started to grow

For my first harvest, I turned to one of my few cooking behemoth books, The Professional Chef, from the Culinary Institute of America.  Don't ask me why I invested in such a huge book that I've never used and am not likely to use that often unless I turn into a cook (doubtful).  Maybe because I went to the CIA and ate some of these recipes made by the chefs on the hot side.  Maybe because this was back in the day when I just kept buying cookbooks.  In any case, it's coming in handy now for a quick and basic pesto recipe.

Pesto is pretty easy to put together when you have a food processor.  I used chicken broth in place of half the olive oil just to cut the fat and calories slightly and it seemed to work okay. I used the sauce with some pasta and shrimp and it was probably one of the easiest things I've actually cooked.  I'm starting to see why people get into this gardening stuff.  Growing the basil was fun and harvesting, aka snipping off the leaves, was easy.  I've also learned you can make the pesto and freeze for future use so you don't have to eat it all at once.  Now that's going to come in really handy.


2 ounces/60 grams basil leaves
3 tablespoons/45 ml toasted pine nuts
¼ ounce/7 grams garlic paste
¼ ounce/7 grams salt, as needed
2 to 4 fluid ounces/60 to 120 ml olive oil (I used half olive oil, half chicken broth)
2 ounces/60 grams grated Parmesan cheese

1.      Rinse the basil well, dry thoroughly and chop coarsely.  Transfer to a food processor or mortar and pestle.  Grind the basil, pine nuts, garlic and salt together, adding oil gradually, to form a thick paste of a saucelike consistency.
2.      Adjust the seasoning with salt and add the Parmesan cheese as close to serving time as possible.

Monday, May 9, 2011

My grandmother plus revisiting another kind of bibingka

Bibingkang Galapong - made May 9, 2011 from Memories from a Philippine Kitchen by Amy Besa and Romy Dorotan (book #103)

Nanay
I've been thinking of family and my heritage lately.  Partly because of Mother's Day and wanting to make something (puto) to note my mom's hometown in the Philippines.  And partly because Mother's Day this year, May 8, was also the death anniversary of my paternal grandmother, Nanay Berta.  Although the Filipino word for grandmother is "Lola", we all called my grandmother Nanay, children, grandchildren, great grandchildren and more "greats" alike.  My paternal grandfather (Tatay Andres) and my maternal grandmother (Lola Valerie) died before I was born and my maternal grandfather (Lolo Miller) died when I was a teenager.  So Nanay was the dominant grandparent figure in my life.  Even if she hadn't been, I suspect she would've made a strong impression anyway as she was always a force to be reckoned with.  Orphaned at age 7, she dropped out of school to go to work and, regardless of having only a second grade education, she went on to successfully build her own business and raised, fed, clothed and educated 9 children to adulthood.  She was widowed young so she was a single parent much of her life as well.  She embodied a strong work ethic and was never afraid to speak her mind, including cussing out anyone she thought should be cussed out.  That may be one of the things I miss most about her - life with Nanay always had some color in it.  Nanay passed away on May 8, 2004 at the age of 94 so she's been gone for 7 years now.  But she was a strong matriarch and, to those of us who were lucky enough to grow up with her and still remember her, she was such a vibrant presence that she literally lives on in each of us, in our lives and in our memories.

In thinking of Nanay and remembering those times with her, I had a hankering to re-visit some of the desserts from my childhood.  Perhaps more to recapture memories of simpler times and carefree days than for the actual desserts themselves.  Or maybe just to honor the heritage I came from and remember my familial roots that helped shape who I am today.

Earlier this year, I had first posted a recipe for the sticky kind of bibingka, a Filipino cake, and alluded to a more cakey version that's spread with melted butter and sprinkled with granulated sugar once it's baked.  My mom always made it when I was a kid, in a round foil pan lined with banana leaves.  The cake itself wasn't very sweet but that butter & sugar combo on top of warm cake was hard to beat for a kid with my sweet tooth.  Unfortunately I couldn't find that original recipe.  I vaguely remember it had Bisquick, milk, sugar and eggs but beyond that, nothing struck a chord.  It's been years since I've made it myself and I drew a complete blank on the recipe. My mom didn't know where it was as she hadn't made it in years either and I searched fruitlessly for it amongst her recipe clippings in an old recipe box she had at home.  But nada. So I turned to this cookbook of Philippine recipes that a friend had given me for my birthday a few years ago to see if I could resurrect something similar.

Place foil cake pans on a baking sheet in the oven
Their recipe has cheese and an optional salted duck egg incorporated into it as is traditional.  I don't believe in duck eggs or cheese in my cakes so I've left those out.  On the advice of my mom, instead of processing the galapong (short grain rice) as instructed in the recipe, I skipped that step and used sweet rice flour (mochiko) instead.  I did adjust the amount of rice flour though since it's meant to be more concentrated and was drier than galapong.  I decreased the amount to a little over 1 cup, perhaps 1 cup and 2 tablespoons of mochiko.  The batter was a bit stiff so I also increased the milk by 2 tablespoons. I only got 3 cakes out of this rather than 4.  Be sure to use banana leaves to line the pans as that's part of the taste and tradition.  You can find banana leaves in sheets or rounds at any Asian grocery store.

Brush the warm cake with butter and sprinkle with sugar

After the first 10 minutes, I also decreased the oven temp to 400 degrees.  The tops were browning but the middles weren't done on the inside and I didn't want the tops to burn.  I took them out after 20 minutes but I think they were just slightly underdone.  They were moist but a bit dense.  I think next time around, I would add a little more milk and bake an extra 5 minutes.  Overall, it was still pretty good though, despite my taking some liberties with the original recipe.  For those who don't have much of a sweet tooth, this cake isn't particularly sweet but has good flavor.  But I do have a sweet tooth so even after all these years, my favorite part is still the melted butter and crunchy sugar on top of the warm cake.


Galapong (rice batter)
1 ¾ cups short-grain rice

Bibingka
Softened unsalted butter for the pie shells
Four 6-inch banana leaf rounds to line the pans
1 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
¼ cup plus 4 teaspoons sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
1 ½ cups galapong (I substituted 1 cup + 2 tablespoons sweet rice flour)
4 eggs, separated
¾ cup coconut milk
¼ cup whole milk (if substituting the sweet rice flour for the galapong, increase milk by another 2 tablespoons)
1 salted duck egg, quartered (optional)
½ cup grated Gouda cheese
½ cup crumbled feta cheese
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted, for brushing
½ cup freshly grated coconut

1.      For the galapong, rinse the rice under cold running water, drain, and place in a medium bowl with cold water to cover.  Refrigerate overnight.  Drain and rinse again, then drain in a colander for 30 minutes.  Transfer to a food processor and process until the mixture is finely ground, about 1 minute, scraping up the sides of the processor as needed.  Work through a coarse sieve.  Return the solids that did not go through the sieve to the food processor and process again, then work again through the sieve.  You should have about 1 ½ cups galapong.
2.      For the bibingka, preheat the oven to 450⁰F.  Brush the four 6-inch pie or tart shells with softened butter and line with banana leaf rounds.
3.      Sift together the flour, ¼ cup sugar, baking powder and salt into a large bowl.  Whisk in the galapong and make a well in the center.  With a whisk, beat the egg yolks, coconut milk and milk in a separate bowl.  Pour into the well and with a rubber spatula, mix slowly until smooth.
4.      In the clean bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, beat the egg whites until stiff but not dry.  Fold the whites into the galapong mixture.
5.      Divide the mixture among the lined pans.  If you’re using the duck eggs, nestle a quarter into the middle of each cake.  Sprinkle each cake with 2 tablespoons of the Gouda followed by 2 tablespoons of the feta, and finally 1 teaspoon of the sugar.
6.      Set the cakes on the top rack of the oven and bake until firm and set and lightly browned on top, about 20 minutes (after the first 10 minutes, I decreased the oven temp to 400 degrees).  If the bibingka are set but not browned, preheat the broiler and broil them about 6 inches from the heat source, watching carefully, until bubbly and lightly browned, about 3 minutes.
7.       Brush the bibingka with the melted butter while still warm.  Unmold each bibingka onto a serving plate.  Serve with the grated coconut.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Puto - a steamed Filipino vanilla cake

Puto - made May 7, 2011 from an old family recipe


My mom is from a small town in the Philippines that's known for its puto, a steamed white cake best eaten warm with melted butter and a sprinkle of fresh coconut on top.  I remember when I was a kid in the Philippines, whenever we visited my mom's side of the family, we always had "Puto Binan" which was the town's local specialty.  The cakes were flat and in a rough rectangular or oblong shape, wrapped in banana leaves to keep fresh.  There are many varieties of puto and the mark of a good puto is its fluffiness.  You get the texture from steaming the cake rather than baking it.  Steamed "baked" goods are common in parts of the world where the majority of home kitchens don't have ovens, as is the case in the Philippines.  It's also common for puto to contain rice flour instead of wheat flour since rice is a staple there rather than wheat.

Best eaten warm with butter & coconut
Ironically, this recipe is made with Bisquick so I don't know if I can call it really authentic.  But this is one of the recipes from my childhood so I'm sticking with it here. My mom used to make this when I was a kid and in honor of Mother's Day, I thought I would use the old family recipe and bring it over to my parents' house. Despite Bisquick as the main ingredient, this doesn't taste like fluffy pancakes like you'd expect from using Bisquick.  Instead, it really is a vanilla cake.  The directions are sparse but it's still an easy thing to put together.  Make sure you steam them thoroughly - if the puto is underdone, it'll be heavy and too moist.  Because you're steaming them, it's harder to overcook puto but don't leave them in there too long or they'll be tough.

Puto doesn't have a long shelf life so they're best eaten the day they're made.  If you have any left over, wrap in plastic and store in an airtight container.  When you reheat them, it's better to re-steam them.  If you're going to microwave them, cover with a wet paper towel and microwave for only a few seconds at a time until they're warm enough.  Don't leave in too long or the texture will toughen up and/or dry out.

2 cups Bisquick
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1 cup whole milk
1 teaspoon vanilla

1.      Mix all ingredients together and spoon into small greased ramekins.  Puto will rise so only fill the ramekins 2/3 full.
2.      Steam for 10 to 15 minutes in a steamer or until done, depending on the size of your ramekins (toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean). 

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Cashew Macadamia Crunch

Cashew Macadamia Crunch - made May 6, 2011 from Hershey's Classic Recipes from Publications International (book #102)


Yet another Hershey Book from Publications International.  I must've gone through a phase of picking up these types of books whenever I saw them in the bargain aisle at Barnes & Noble.  They generally have a certain number of the exact same recipes as well as the same type of recipes but I can never resist the yummy-looking pictures that accompany most of the recipes.  These people know how to market to people like me.

Instead of the usual brownies, cookies and cakes that go into these books though, I decided to try this easy candy recipe.  I've been wanting toffee ever since I went to the SF Chocolate Salon and (cough) gorged myself on chocolate samples.  I've made my own toffee before but have had mixed results.  Sometimes I overcook it and it's too hard and other times I undercook it and it's sticky-chewy instead of having the easy snap of good toffee.  Buttercrunch is a little easier than toffee.  Some people might use them synonymously but I consider buttercrunch the easy version of toffee.  You don't have to work with candy thermometers or worry about the sugar crystallizing as it caramelizes or it going grainy.

Spread as evenly as you can over the chocolate chips
Case in point, this recipe couldn't be easier.  I just came back from a brief trip yesterday and didn't really need to "bake" but I was meeting friends today and you know I can't go empty-handed.  Yet I was tired from a cross-country flight and not enough sleep so I wasn't up to full-on baking.  This recipe came to my rescue as it literally couldn't have been easier to make.  You spread the chocolate chips in an even layer in the pan, boil the crunch mixture until golden brown, spread over the chocolate chips and cool.  When you boil the buttercrunch, keep stirring it so it browns evenly and the nuts don't burn.  You only want to cook it until it's a nice golden brown, about the color of Almond Roca.  Spread it over the chocolate chip layer and let it cool to lukewarm then put in the refrigerator to set the chocolate.  Cut or break it up into irregular pieces.  Although the recipe specifies milk chocolate, you can use any type of chocolate.  I prefer milk chocolate so that's what I used.  You can also substitute in whichever nuts you like but I'm a fan of both cashews and macadamia nuts so I stuck to the recipe as is.

I really, really liked this recipe.  Not only was it super easy to make on several hours' sleep, but it tasted good too.  It had the perfect crunch without being hard on the teeth.  I also like how it looks "homey", as in clearly homemade - this could become my new go-to candy to include in Christmas foodie gifts. I broke this up into irregular-sized pieces, piled the pieces into cupcake liners, wrapped each cupcake paper in plastic wrap and included them in goodie bags.


2 cups (11.5-ounce package) milk chocolate chips
¾ cup coarsely chopped salted or unsalted cashews
¾ cup coarsely chopped salted or unsalted macadamia nuts
½ cup (1 stick) butter, softened
½ cup sugar
2 tablespoons light corn syrup

1.      Line 9-inch square pan with foil, extending foil over edges of pan.  Butter foil (I sprayed lightly with nonstick cooking spray.)  Cover bottom of prepared pan with chocolate chips in an even layer.
2.      Combine cashews, macadamia nuts, butter, sugar and corn syrup in large heavy skillet; cover over low heat, stirring constantly, until butter is melted and sugar is dissolved.  Increase heat to medium; cook, stirring constantly until mixture begins to cling together and turns golden brown.
3.      Pour mixture over chocolate chips in pan, spreading evenly.  Cool.  Refrigerate until chocolate is firm.  Remove from pan; peel off foil.  Break into pieces.  Store, tightly covered in cool, dry place.

Makes about 1 ½ pounds of candy


Friday, May 6, 2011

Caramel-Layered Brownies

Caramel-Layered Brownies - made April 30, 2011 from Favorite Brand Name Best-Loved Chocolate Recipes from Publications International (book #101)


It wasn't until I started this baking challenge that I realized how many books I have from the same author(s) or publishers.  The ones from Publications International tend to contain recipes likely sponsored by food companies' test kitchens since they always list the specific brand name ingredients to use.  I've omitted the brand names from the recipes so you should feel free to use the ones you prefer and already know works well (although, of course, the higher the quality, the better your results will be).  This is a recipe book that will likely appeal to less experienced bakers and/or those who like a lot of pictures with their recipes.  It's certainly induced me to try specific recipes over others when I see pictures of how good they look.

Caramel and chocolate is usually a crowd pleaser combination so I chose that to add to the bake sale goods.  I left out the nuts (of course) and the only issue I had with this recipe is that there wasn't enough of the batter on top to completely cover the caramel layer.  The recipe says to hold back 1 cup and I held back more than that since I knew I wanted to cover the entire caramel layer.  Didn't quite work out that way, partly because as the batter cools, it stiffens up so it's not as easy to spread thinly over the caramel layer.  So I sprinkled some chocolate chips over the top as well to try and cover up some of the caramel.

The frosting was probably unnecessary but still good
As the brownie baked, the batter on top spread out over the caramel so that was good.  The caramel only leaked through in a few spots.  It was a little hard to tell when this was done just relying on the toothpick test since some of the caramel also clings to the toothpick and makes it seem like raw batter.  So you might want to time this one.  I took it out when it was still a little underdone so separating it from the foil lining in the pan after it had cooled was a little difficult.  But not impossible since it was easy enough to peel the foil off if you up-end the brownie (which is one of the reasons why I always line my baking pans with foil when I use them).  The brownie turned out well but the caramel did make it a little sweet.  You won't taste the chocolate much on its own since the caramel layer blends in with everything.  It's not quite as distinct a layer as the recipe book picture makes it look.  Still a pretty good brownie if you have a good sweet tooth and want something chewy/fudgy.

4 ounces unsweetened chocolate
¾ cup (1 ½ sticks) unsalted butter
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
1 ½ cups chopped nuts (optional)
14 ounces caramels
1/3 cup evaporated milk

1.     Heat the oven to 350F.  Lightly grease a 9 x 13-inch baking pan.
2.     In the top half of a double boiler, over hot water, melt chocolate and butter, stirring constantly until melted.
3.     Stir sugar into melted chocolate mixture.  Mix in eggs and vanilla until well blended.  Stir in flour.  Remove 1 cup of batter; set aside.  Spread remaining batter into prepared pan.  Sprinkle with chips and 1 cup of the nuts, if using.
4.     Melt caramels and milk over low heat, stirring constantly, until completely melted and smooth.  Spoon over chips and nuts, spreading to edges of pan.  Gently spread reserved batter over caramel mixture.  Sprinkle with remaining ½ cup nuts, if using.
5.     Bake for 40 minutes or until toothpick inserted into center comes out with fudgy crumbs.  Do not overbake.  Cool in pan, cut into squares.


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