G'day from Australia! I'm fulfilling one of my dream trips by going on a tour of Australia and New Zealand. I wasn't sure I'd be able to get internet access or how often and I likely won't be able to upload pictures until I get back home but I thought I'd try snatching some time to blog while I can and wherever I can get cheap internet access. I'm at an internet cafe at the moment for $3 an hour although my goal is not to spend more than 20 minutes a day online. I'm here to experience the trip, not just write about it. I'll be hijacking my baking blog to blog a bit about my trip. Although knowing me, you know food will feature prominently here. It'll just be Aussie and NZ food.
I've been in transit for almost 24 hours now and am operating on 3 hours' sleep over a 2-day period so I'm a bit punchy. We're in Cairns for the first leg of the tour. Flew to Brisbane first to go through Customs & Immigration. I finally got an Australian stamp on my passport (although I confess to being disappointed that it doesn't actually SAY Australia on it. But I'll know what it is). Then boarded another plane to fly to Cairns. It's more tropical here, i.e. humid and 90 degrees. First thing I need to stock up on is water to keep hydrated. And I thought I had packed the sunblock I had bought especially for the trip only to discover it's nowhere in my suitcase. So that's the second item on the buy list. There's a grocery store near our hotel so I'm checking that out as soon as I log off.
Australia is actually quite expensive and our tour guide, Erica, corroborated this. The store prices so far confirm it. Fortunately I don't have a lot to buy other than food and souvenirs. Gotta go - tomorrow is a trip to the Great Barrier Reef. Stay tuned....
ETA: aerial view of Cairns as we approach the airport to land
Friday, January 28, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Triple Layer Chocolate Mousse Cake
Triple Layer Chocolate Mousse Cake - originally made April 25, 2005 from Chocolatier Magazine, June 1997 issue
I can't let National Chocolate Cake Day go by without posting this recipe - it goes down in the baking archives as the most expensive chocolate cake I've ever made. Normally I don't let the cost of ingredients faze me but when you couple the amount of chocolate this recipe calls for with I-take-my-own-advice about using the best quality ingredients you can afford, well, let's just say, this cake made me realize why fancy bakeries charge as much as they do for some of their cakes.
Don't let the length of the recipe deter you. I admit I made this cake over the course of two days so it can take a bit of time but the steps themselves aren't hard. Some recommended tips: this makes a lot of chocolate mousse, probably double what you actually need for the cake itself. So unless you have other plans for the mousse, you can get away with only making a half recipe for the cake (that'll cut the chocolate cost as well). I probably didn't use very much since I didn't make the mousse layers between the cake layers very thick. Oh and another plug for baking with cake strips as you can see where I had to fill in a bit more mousse because the cake layer was domed and shorter on the sides than the middle - this is a cake baked without the cake strips.
I also ended up with too much ganache and too many Oreo cookie crumbs. Depending on your fondness for chocolate, you can cut the ganache recipe by at least a third. If I were to make this cake again, I also would use chopped toasted nuts instead of Oreo cookie crumbs for the garnish along the sides of the cake, more to add texture than anything else. The cake itself is good and the mousse and ganache make it over-the-top chocolate. This is not for the faint of chocolate heart.
I can't let National Chocolate Cake Day go by without posting this recipe - it goes down in the baking archives as the most expensive chocolate cake I've ever made. Normally I don't let the cost of ingredients faze me but when you couple the amount of chocolate this recipe calls for with I-take-my-own-advice about using the best quality ingredients you can afford, well, let's just say, this cake made me realize why fancy bakeries charge as much as they do for some of their cakes.
Don't let the length of the recipe deter you. I admit I made this cake over the course of two days so it can take a bit of time but the steps themselves aren't hard. Some recommended tips: this makes a lot of chocolate mousse, probably double what you actually need for the cake itself. So unless you have other plans for the mousse, you can get away with only making a half recipe for the cake (that'll cut the chocolate cost as well). I probably didn't use very much since I didn't make the mousse layers between the cake layers very thick. Oh and another plug for baking with cake strips as you can see where I had to fill in a bit more mousse because the cake layer was domed and shorter on the sides than the middle - this is a cake baked without the cake strips.
I also ended up with too much ganache and too many Oreo cookie crumbs. Depending on your fondness for chocolate, you can cut the ganache recipe by at least a third. If I were to make this cake again, I also would use chopped toasted nuts instead of Oreo cookie crumbs for the garnish along the sides of the cake, more to add texture than anything else. The cake itself is good and the mousse and ganache make it over-the-top chocolate. This is not for the faint of chocolate heart.
Chocolate Mousse
28 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
1 1/3 cups milk
½ cup granulated sugar
Pinch of salt
½ cup vegetable oil
2 tablespoons vanilla extract
3 cups heavy cream
Devil’s food cake
4 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
8 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
1 cup water
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, such as Land O Lakes, at room temperature
2 cups granulated sugar
1 cup light brown sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 large eggs
1 1/3 cups buttermilk
Ganache glaze
16 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
2 cups heavy cream
Assembly
25 Oreo Cookies
Make the chocolate mousse
1. Put the chocolate in a food processor fitted with the metal chopping blade. Process for 20 to 30 seconds, until finely ground.
2. In a small saucepan, combine the milk, sugar and salt. Cook over medium heat, stirring with a wooden spoon, until the sugar dissolves and the milk comes to a boil. Remove the pan from heat.
3. With the motor of the food processor running, pour the hot milk through the feed tube. Process for 10 to 20 seconds, until the chocolate is completely melted. Using a spatula, scrape down the side of the work bowl. Add the oil and vanilla extract; process for 5 to 10 seconds, until the mixture is creamy. Scrape the chocolate mixture into a large bowl and cool for about 5 minutes, until tepid.
4. In a chilled 4 ½-quart bowl of a heavy-duty electric mixer fitted with the wire whisk attachment, whip the cream until soft mounds barely start to form and the cream is still pourable. Do not overwhip the cream.
5. Using a large rubber spatula, gently fold one-third of the whipped cream into the tepid chocolate mixture to lighten it. Fold in the remaining whipped cream. Do not overfold the mousse or the texture will be grainy. Cover with plastic wrap and chill for 6 to 8 hours or overnight, until firm.
Make the cake
6. Grease three 10-inch round cake pans. Cut three 10-inch circles of waxed paper and place in the bottom of each pan. Grease the pan well and then flour, tapping out the excess. Set aside. Place the oven racks two shelves apart. Preheat the oven to 350˚F.
7. Sift together the flour, baking soda, and salt. Set aside. Place the coarsely chopped chocolate and the water on top of a double boiler and turn heat to medium high, whisking occasionally until smooth. Remove from the top of the double boiler and cool slightly.
8. Meanwhile, in a 4 ½ -quart bowl of a heavy-duty electric mixer using the paddle attachment, cream together the butter and the sugars. Add the vanilla. Add the eggs one by one, mixing on medium speed until blended. Using a rubber spatula, scrape down the sides of the bowl. With the mixer at its lowest speed, add half of the dry ingredients, and then half of the buttermilk. When blended, add the remaining buttermilk and the chocolate mixture. Mix until blended then add the remaining dry ingredients. Mix on medium speed just until blended and the flour lumps disappear. Divide evenly among the three prepared pans and smooth the tops with an offset metal spatula. Bake for 28 to 32 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean. Remove the pans from the oven and place on wire cooling racks. Cool for 15 minutes and invert. Peel off the waxed paper and cool completely.
Begin to assemble the cake
9. Place a dab of chocolate mousse and then a layer of the cooled cake on a 10-inch cardboard cake circle or the circular insert of a tart pan. Using a large rubber spatula, place about one-quarter of the chilled chocolate mousse on top of the first cake layer. Using a metal cake spatula, spread the mousse evenly not quite to the sides of the cake. There should be slightly less than one-half inch of mousse on top of the cake. Place the second cake layer on top and repeat the mousse layer. Place the third cake layer on top, then spread the remaining chocolate mousse over the top and sides of the cake, coating smoothly and evenly. Place the cake in the freezer for a minimum of four hours.
Make the ganache glaze
10. Place the coarsely chopped chocolate in a food processor fitted with the metal chopping blade. Process for 20 to 30 seconds, until finely ground. Place in a large bowl. In a medium pan, scald the heavy cream and pour over the chocolate. Using a metal whisk, gently stir until smooth and melted. Continue stirring until the ganache is room temperature or just slightly warmer.
Glaze and garnish the cake
11. Place the Oreos in a food processor fitted with the metal chopping blade. Process for 20 to 30 seconds, until finely ground.
12. Remove the cake from the freezer and place on a wire rack that has been set over aluminum foil or a sheet pan. Slowly pour the ganache over the top of the cake, smoothing with a large metal cake spatula. When the top has been coated, slowly pour the ganache around the sides of the cake so it drips down and coats the sides. Use the spatula to spread the ganache evenly over the sides of the cake. When completely coated with the ganache, scoop the Oreo crumbs with your hands and press them onto the sides of the cake, coating its entirety. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Mexican Chocolate Fudge Pecan Cake
Mexican Chocolate Fudge Pecan Cake - originally made June 1, 2007 from The Pastry Queen by Rebecca Rather
I haven't had any further time (or eating audience) to bake anymore this week but in honor of National Chocolate Cake Day, a day I can get behind anytime, I thought I'd post this easy and awesome chocolate cake recipe. It won't count against my baking challenge since I've already tried the recipe but it's well worth making again. According to the cookbook, Rebecca Rather owns the Rather Sweet Bakery in Fredericksburg and it's billed as "The Best Little From-Scratch Bakery in Texas". Just based on this cake, I'd have to put this bakery on my foodie places to visit if I'm ever in Texas.
This is one of the few cakes where I'd advocate including the nuts since they're part of the glaze, not the cake itself. In the glaze, the crunch of toasted pecans adds the perfect flavor and texture complement to the sweet glaze. The cake batter is easy to make but a bit thin so strain the batter as you pour it into the pan if you have any flour lumps. Flour lumps do NOT go away in baking. The cake has excellent flavor and a soft, moist texture. The glaze makes it rich and chocolaty and the pecans add a nice crunch. Oh, and if you notice from the picture, I went off recipe and didn't bake in a tube or Bundt pan but used a couple of 8" pans. No particular reason why but I ended up liking it this way better since it gives more surface area for the glaze :).
I haven't had any further time (or eating audience) to bake anymore this week but in honor of National Chocolate Cake Day, a day I can get behind anytime, I thought I'd post this easy and awesome chocolate cake recipe. It won't count against my baking challenge since I've already tried the recipe but it's well worth making again. According to the cookbook, Rebecca Rather owns the Rather Sweet Bakery in Fredericksburg and it's billed as "The Best Little From-Scratch Bakery in Texas". Just based on this cake, I'd have to put this bakery on my foodie places to visit if I'm ever in Texas.
This is one of the few cakes where I'd advocate including the nuts since they're part of the glaze, not the cake itself. In the glaze, the crunch of toasted pecans adds the perfect flavor and texture complement to the sweet glaze. The cake batter is easy to make but a bit thin so strain the batter as you pour it into the pan if you have any flour lumps. Flour lumps do NOT go away in baking. The cake has excellent flavor and a soft, moist texture. The glaze makes it rich and chocolaty and the pecans add a nice crunch. Oh, and if you notice from the picture, I went off recipe and didn't bake in a tube or Bundt pan but used a couple of 8" pans. No particular reason why but I ended up liking it this way better since it gives more surface area for the glaze :).
Cake
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter
½ cup unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
¾ cup water
2 cups sugar
2 large eggs
1 cup buttermilk
2 tablespoons vanilla extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 ½ teaspoons ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon salt
Chocolate-pecan glaze
1 cup pecans
½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter
¼ cup whole milk
½ cup high-quality dark cocoa powder, such as Scharffenberger
2 cups sifted powdered sugar (sifted then measured)
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon salt
1. Preheat the oven to 350° F. Grease a 9-inch tube pan or a 10- to 12-cup Bundt pan with butter, sprinkle lightly with flour and tap over the sink to remove any excess.
2. Melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium-low heat. Add the cocoa and whisk until smooth. Add the water and whisk until smooth. Be careful not to boil the mixture. Remove the saucepan from the heat. Add the sugar, eggs, buttermilk, and vanilla to the warm cocoa mixture all at once; whisk until smooth. Add the flour, baking soda, cinnamon and salt all at once; whisk until the dry ingredients are completely incorporated. If there are lumps, strain the batter as you pour it into the pan.
3. Bake for 40 to 45 minutes; the cake is done when it has pulled away slightly from the sides of the pan and feels firm to the touch.
4. Let the cake cool in the pan about 20 minutes.
5. Meanwhile, make the glaze: Arrange the pecans on a baking sheet in a single layer and toast them in the 350 degree oven for 7 to 9 minutes, until golden brown and aromatic. Chop the pecans.
6. Melt the butter over low heat in a medium saucepan. Add the milk, cocoa, and powdered sugar and whisk until glossy. Remove the saucepan from the heat and whisk in the vanilla, salt and pecans.
7. Loosen the cake with a knife or spatula and overturn it onto a serving plate. Spoon the glaze over the cooled cake, covering it thoroughly. Don’t worry if some of the glaze pools inside and around the cake. This cake will keep up to 3 days, covered, at room temperature and glaze just before serving.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Chocolate Marble Chunk Cookies
Chocolate Marble Chunk Cookies - made January 23, 2011 from The Good Cookie by Tish Boyle (book #44)
The Good Cookie by Tish Boyle is one of my favorite baking books. Almost every recipe I've tried from it has come out, including some killer brownies. People often ask me what my best, most fudgy brownie recipes are and most of them are from this book or from one of Lisa Yockelson's. Tish Boyle was the editor of the now-defunct Chocolatier magazine. I always enjoyed the recipes and pictures from Chocolatier and was sorry to see it go out of publication, especially since I was a lifetime subscriber. Now I'm always on the lookout for anything Tish Boyle publishes as I'm sure it'll have the same excellent standards.
Over the Christmas holidays, my old college roommate, Caroline, brought me a box of cookies from one of her favorite bakeries in Central CA when she came to visit. One of the types of cookies was a marbled cookie. It wasn't a black and white in terms of having white chocolate chunks in a fudge cookie like the previous cookie recipe I just made but it was actually vanilla and chocolate cookie doughs marbled together. It was pretty good and I thought I'd try to make something like it on my own. Fortunately, The Good Cookie had a recipe that looked like it could be similar. I left out the nuts - that should almost go without saying now.
I only added chocolate chips to the chocolate batter, for no particular reason other than I wasn't really trying to make chocolate chip cookies but a marbled vanilla/chocolate cookie. The dough turned out a bit soft so to do the marbling, I dipped a spoon in the non-chocolate batter to scoop up a bit of dough then dipped it in the chocolate batter to get some chocolate dough then rounded the doughs together with another spoon, shaping between the two spoons back and forth. You don't have to worry about keeping each batter pristine since they're going to be marbled together anyway. I put the marbled dough balls in the freezer first to firm up then baked them in the convection setting of my oven to prevent too much spreading.
The recipe says this makes 60 cookies - if you make them small, I suppose you could come up with 60. I only ended up with 28 "regular-size" cookies. If you do make them a bit larger, adjust the baking time accordingly. The original directions say to bake just until the lighter-colored dough just begins to brown but I baked mine for longer than that since they were bigger and when the lighter colored dough started to brown, the middles of the cookies were still "wet" and raw. I had to bake them long enough that the lighter-colored dough actually did turn light brown. Consequently, they didn't look like white and chocolate doughs marbled together. More like chocolate chip cookie dough marbled with chocolate dough. Next time I'll aim to make them smaller and see if they'll look more like vanilla and chocolate marbled cookies. In any case, these also tasted like chocolate chip cookies marbled with chocolate cookies. They were pretty good but not quite as special as I had hoped. I'm glad I tried them but I don't know if they'd make my holiday baking list (that bar is quite high). Regardless, if you do make these, make them small and be sure not to bake them too long. I know I say that with almost every cookie recipe but the texture really does change - if you underbake them properly, the chocolate cookie part is fudgy, if you bake them "just right" but not overbaked, the chocolate cookie part is cakey but not dry. I prefer the fudgy version. The lighter colored cookie seems like it's just along for the ride.
The Good Cookie by Tish Boyle is one of my favorite baking books. Almost every recipe I've tried from it has come out, including some killer brownies. People often ask me what my best, most fudgy brownie recipes are and most of them are from this book or from one of Lisa Yockelson's. Tish Boyle was the editor of the now-defunct Chocolatier magazine. I always enjoyed the recipes and pictures from Chocolatier and was sorry to see it go out of publication, especially since I was a lifetime subscriber. Now I'm always on the lookout for anything Tish Boyle publishes as I'm sure it'll have the same excellent standards.
Over the Christmas holidays, my old college roommate, Caroline, brought me a box of cookies from one of her favorite bakeries in Central CA when she came to visit. One of the types of cookies was a marbled cookie. It wasn't a black and white in terms of having white chocolate chunks in a fudge cookie like the previous cookie recipe I just made but it was actually vanilla and chocolate cookie doughs marbled together. It was pretty good and I thought I'd try to make something like it on my own. Fortunately, The Good Cookie had a recipe that looked like it could be similar. I left out the nuts - that should almost go without saying now.
I only added chocolate chips to the chocolate batter, for no particular reason other than I wasn't really trying to make chocolate chip cookies but a marbled vanilla/chocolate cookie. The dough turned out a bit soft so to do the marbling, I dipped a spoon in the non-chocolate batter to scoop up a bit of dough then dipped it in the chocolate batter to get some chocolate dough then rounded the doughs together with another spoon, shaping between the two spoons back and forth. You don't have to worry about keeping each batter pristine since they're going to be marbled together anyway. I put the marbled dough balls in the freezer first to firm up then baked them in the convection setting of my oven to prevent too much spreading.
The recipe says this makes 60 cookies - if you make them small, I suppose you could come up with 60. I only ended up with 28 "regular-size" cookies. If you do make them a bit larger, adjust the baking time accordingly. The original directions say to bake just until the lighter-colored dough just begins to brown but I baked mine for longer than that since they were bigger and when the lighter colored dough started to brown, the middles of the cookies were still "wet" and raw. I had to bake them long enough that the lighter-colored dough actually did turn light brown. Consequently, they didn't look like white and chocolate doughs marbled together. More like chocolate chip cookie dough marbled with chocolate dough. Next time I'll aim to make them smaller and see if they'll look more like vanilla and chocolate marbled cookies. In any case, these also tasted like chocolate chip cookies marbled with chocolate cookies. They were pretty good but not quite as special as I had hoped. I'm glad I tried them but I don't know if they'd make my holiday baking list (that bar is quite high). Regardless, if you do make these, make them small and be sure not to bake them too long. I know I say that with almost every cookie recipe but the texture really does change - if you underbake them properly, the chocolate cookie part is fudgy, if you bake them "just right" but not overbaked, the chocolate cookie part is cakey but not dry. I prefer the fudgy version. The lighter colored cookie seems like it's just along for the ride.
2 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
¾ teaspoon salt
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
¾ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
¾ cup granulated sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 large eggs
¼ cup Dutch-processed cocoa powder, sifted
12 ounces bittersweet chocolate, cut into ½-inch pieces
1 ¾ cups pecan pieces
1. Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat the oven to 375˚F.
2. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.
3. In the bowl of an electric mixer, using the paddle attachment, beat the butter and sugars at medium-high speed until light, about 2 minutes. Beat in the vanilla extract and eggs one at a time, mixing well after each addition and scraping down the sides of the bowl as necessary. At low speed, add the flour mixture, mixing just until blended.
4. Transfer 1 ¾ cups dough to another bowl and set aside. Add the cocoa powder to the dough remaining in the mixer bowl and mix on low speed until blended. Add half of the chocolate and half of the pecans and mix until blended. Stir the remaining chocolate and pecans into the light colored dough.
5. Fill one side of a 1-tablespoon measuring spoon with the light dough, making it well rounded, not level. Fill the remaining half with chocolate dough. Roll the doughs into a ball and place on an ungreased baking sheet. Moisten your palm to prevent sticking, and flat the dough into a 1 ½-inch disk. Repeat with the remaining dough, spacing the cookies 2 inches apart. Bake one sheet at a time, for 8 to 10 minutes, until the lighter dough just begins to color. Let the cookies cool on the baking sheets for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack and cool completely.
Store in an airtight container at room temperature up to a week. Makes about 60 cookies.
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Buttercup Golden Layer Cake
Buttercup Golden Layer Cake - made January 22, 2011 from Buttercup Bakes at Home by Jennifer Appel (book #43)
I finally managed to remember to order the Magi-Cake strips to wrap around round cake pans for even baking. Except Magi-Cake strips can only be fastened with a pin and I wanted the ones that fastened with velcro (you ever try stabbing those pins into a cake strip while the strip was around the pan and still manage to keep the cake strip snug around said pan? Total pain - velcro fasteners are better). Fortunately Regency had "Evenbake Cake Strips" with velcro fasteners so I got those. Best things ever - soak them in water before using, wipe off excess water, fasten around the cake pan, pour your batter in and bake. And they worked too - my cake layers rose up evenly instead of baking faster at the edges and having a higher, rounded middle. The only drawback is they came in a pack of 2 (or at least the ones I bought did) so I only had 2 and my recipe called for making a 3-layer cake. But no problem, I only baked 2 layers and used the leftover batter to make cupcakes. I liked the results of the cake layers so much though that I'm probably going to buy another set of 2 cake strips in case I ever do want to make a 3- (or 4-) layer cake.
I've been wanting to try this recipe from the Buttercup Bake Shop for awhile but it called for self-rising flour. I can only find self-rising flour in the 5-lb bags and I don't have many recipes that call for it so it seemed a little excessive to buy a bag just to use 1 1/2 cups of it. But I needed a vanilla cake recipe as I was meeting my cousin and her son for dinner and his favorite flavor is vanilla (my cousin: "Jason, do you want vanilla or vanilla?" Jason: "I think I'll have vanilla"). Since I still didn't have any self-rising flour on hand, I decided to just substitute. The lead-in to the recipe says not to substitute but I was feeling reckless. Instead of the self-rising flour, I used all-purpose flour for all of the flour except I used a scant 1/4 cup in the last measure and added 1 teaspoon of baking powder, 1 teaspoon of baking soda and 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Turned out pretty well so I'm glad I gambled on it. The texture of the cupcakes was light, almost spongy but definitely cakey and the flavor was a nice butter/vanilla flavor.
I think I underbaked the cake layers slightly as they weren't as light as the cupcakes but a bit more dense. I actually liked their texture a bit better, probably because they were a little more moist. The frosting turned out a bit too sweet for me but I'm not really a frosting fan and use it sparingly anyway. This would make a good 3-layer cake as the layers aren't too thick or too thin and stacking all 3 layers would not only look pretty but be manageable enough to eat.
I finally managed to remember to order the Magi-Cake strips to wrap around round cake pans for even baking. Except Magi-Cake strips can only be fastened with a pin and I wanted the ones that fastened with velcro (you ever try stabbing those pins into a cake strip while the strip was around the pan and still manage to keep the cake strip snug around said pan? Total pain - velcro fasteners are better). Fortunately Regency had "Evenbake Cake Strips" with velcro fasteners so I got those. Best things ever - soak them in water before using, wipe off excess water, fasten around the cake pan, pour your batter in and bake. And they worked too - my cake layers rose up evenly instead of baking faster at the edges and having a higher, rounded middle. The only drawback is they came in a pack of 2 (or at least the ones I bought did) so I only had 2 and my recipe called for making a 3-layer cake. But no problem, I only baked 2 layers and used the leftover batter to make cupcakes. I liked the results of the cake layers so much though that I'm probably going to buy another set of 2 cake strips in case I ever do want to make a 3- (or 4-) layer cake.
I've been wanting to try this recipe from the Buttercup Bake Shop for awhile but it called for self-rising flour. I can only find self-rising flour in the 5-lb bags and I don't have many recipes that call for it so it seemed a little excessive to buy a bag just to use 1 1/2 cups of it. But I needed a vanilla cake recipe as I was meeting my cousin and her son for dinner and his favorite flavor is vanilla (my cousin: "Jason, do you want vanilla or vanilla?" Jason: "I think I'll have vanilla"). Since I still didn't have any self-rising flour on hand, I decided to just substitute. The lead-in to the recipe says not to substitute but I was feeling reckless. Instead of the self-rising flour, I used all-purpose flour for all of the flour except I used a scant 1/4 cup in the last measure and added 1 teaspoon of baking powder, 1 teaspoon of baking soda and 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Turned out pretty well so I'm glad I gambled on it. The texture of the cupcakes was light, almost spongy but definitely cakey and the flavor was a nice butter/vanilla flavor.
I think I underbaked the cake layers slightly as they weren't as light as the cupcakes but a bit more dense. I actually liked their texture a bit better, probably because they were a little more moist. The frosting turned out a bit too sweet for me but I'm not really a frosting fan and use it sparingly anyway. This would make a good 3-layer cake as the layers aren't too thick or too thin and stacking all 3 layers would not only look pretty but be manageable enough to eat.
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
2 cups sugar
4 large eggs, at room temperature
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 ½ cups self-rising flour (or substitute 1 1/2 scant cups of all-purpose flour, 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder and 1/2 teaspoon salt)
1 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2. Grease and lightly flour three 9 x 2-inch round cake pans; then line the bottoms with wax paper.
3. In a large bowl, cream the butter and sugar on the medium speed of an electric mixer until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Mix the milk and vanilla together. Thoroughly combine the flours and add in two parts, alternating with the milk and vanilla mixture and beating well after each addition.
4. Divide the batter between the prepared pans. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until a cake tester inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Let the cakes cool in the pans for 10 minutes. Remove from the pans and cool completely on a wire rack.
5. If you’re making cupcakes, line two 12-cup muffin tins with cupcake papers. Spoon the batter into the cups about two-thirds full. Bake until the tops spring back when lightly touched, about 20 to 22 minutes. Let the cupcakes cool in the pans for 10 minutes. Remove the cupcakes from the pans and cool completely on a rack before icing.
6. When the cake has cooled, frost between the layers, then the top and sides of the cake.
Vanilla Buttercream
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
7 to 8 cups confectioners’ sugar
½ cup milk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Food coloring (optional)
1. Place the butter in a large mixing bowl. Add 4 cups of the sugar and then the milk and vanilla. Beat until smooth and creamy. Gradually add the remaining sugar, 1 cup at a time, until the icing is a good spreading consistency (you may not use all the sugar). If desired, add a few drops of food coloring and mix thoroughly.
2. Use and store the icing at room temperature, as the icing will set if chilled. It can be stored in an airtight container for up to 3 days. This yields icing for one 2- or 3-layer 9-inch cake or 2 dozen cupcakes.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
White Chocolate Chip Fudge Cookies
White Chocolate Chip Fudge Cookies - made January 19, 2011 from Chocolate Passion by Tish Boyle & Timothy Moriarty (book #42)
Like many chocoholics, I have a prejudice against white chocolate since it's not really chocolate as it contains no cocoa solids. But there are two particular types of baked goods I like them in - macadamia white chocolate cookies and in fudge cookies. In the first, they're more of a complement to the macadamia nuts (and they must be macadamia nuts, other nuts are just not the same) and in the second, they're a sweet contrast against real chocolate.
Note there's a difference between white chocolate and vanilla chips. Don't expect vanilla chips to be white chocolate in chip form. Not only do vanilla chips have more vegetable fat to help keep their chippy shape and melting point but I suspect there's far less cocoa solids (if any) in them. Which means I don't want to know what actually is in them but it ain't chocolate. If you do like white chocolate (or even if you don't but use them anyway), go for the best quality white chocolate you can find. Trader Joe's used to sell Ghirardelli white chocolate in blocks but I haven't seen them recently. For this recipe I used Callebaut white chocolate chunks - bought on sale at Williams Sonoma last week. I love a bargain, especially on the good stuff.
As a triple fudge cookie, this was pretty good. The edges were crisp but the middles were moist and chewy. Flavor-wise, I really liked the richness of the chocolate offset by the sweetness of the white chocolate chunks. Don't overbake them as nothing tastes worse than a dry cookie and nothing tastes better than a slightly underbaked chocolate cookie that sets once it cools and has a fudgy interior. Time these carefully - you can also judge when they're done once the middles are set and don't look wet. If the white chocolate starts to brown, it's time to take the cookies out.
Like many chocoholics, I have a prejudice against white chocolate since it's not really chocolate as it contains no cocoa solids. But there are two particular types of baked goods I like them in - macadamia white chocolate cookies and in fudge cookies. In the first, they're more of a complement to the macadamia nuts (and they must be macadamia nuts, other nuts are just not the same) and in the second, they're a sweet contrast against real chocolate.
Note there's a difference between white chocolate and vanilla chips. Don't expect vanilla chips to be white chocolate in chip form. Not only do vanilla chips have more vegetable fat to help keep their chippy shape and melting point but I suspect there's far less cocoa solids (if any) in them. Which means I don't want to know what actually is in them but it ain't chocolate. If you do like white chocolate (or even if you don't but use them anyway), go for the best quality white chocolate you can find. Trader Joe's used to sell Ghirardelli white chocolate in blocks but I haven't seen them recently. For this recipe I used Callebaut white chocolate chunks - bought on sale at Williams Sonoma last week. I love a bargain, especially on the good stuff.
As a triple fudge cookie, this was pretty good. The edges were crisp but the middles were moist and chewy. Flavor-wise, I really liked the richness of the chocolate offset by the sweetness of the white chocolate chunks. Don't overbake them as nothing tastes worse than a dry cookie and nothing tastes better than a slightly underbaked chocolate cookie that sets once it cools and has a fudgy interior. Time these carefully - you can also judge when they're done once the middles are set and don't look wet. If the white chocolate starts to brown, it's time to take the cookies out.
Prep time: 25 minutes plus baking and cooling times
2 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
3 ounces unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
11 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 cup firmly packed light brown sugar
¾ cup plus 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 tablespoon unsulphured (mild) molasses
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
2 large eggs, at room temperature
½ cup unsweetened nonalkalized cocoa powder (I used Pernigotti cocoa)
Three 3-ounce Lindt white chocolate bars, cut into ¼” chunks
1. Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 350˚F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.
2. Melt the semisweet and unsweetened chocolates together in the top half of a double boiler over hot, not boiling, water.
3. In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda and salt; set aside.
4. In a 4 ½-quart bowl of a heavy-duty electric mixer using the paddle attachment, beat the butter until soft, about 1 minute. Gradually beat in the brown sugar and granulated sugar and continue to beat for 1 minute, scraping down the side of the bowl as necessary. Beat in the molasses and vanilla extract.
5. One at a time, beat in the eggs. Sift the cocoa powder and add it to the mixer bowl. Beat until combined. Add the melted chocolates and mix. Decrease the speed to low and blend in half of the flour mixture, scraping the bowl as necessary.
6. Remove the bowl from the mixer and, using a wooden spoon, fold in the remaining flour with the white chocolate chunks. Do not overmix. (Work quickly at this step as once the melted chocolate is added and the first half of the flour is mixed in, the batter cools considerably and it's more difficult to add the remaining flour before the dough stiffens up.)
7. Drop the dough onto the baking sheets in walnut-sized mounds; flatten each mound slightly. Bake the cookies until the tops are puffed and cracked, about 12 minutes. Do not overbake or the cookies will be dry. Cool the cookies on the baking sheets for 3 to 5 minutes, then transfer them to wire racks to cool completely.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Peanut Butter-Filled Chocolate Cupcakes
Peanut Butter-Filled Chocolate Cupcakes - made January 19, 2010 from Martha Stewart's Cupcakes (book #41)
I have several baking books by Martha Stewart and I'm irresistibly drawn to the pictures of the recipes. They always look so good. I've tried a number of her recipes and they've almost always come out. So then I wonder why I don't use her recipe books more often. But once I flip through them in their entirety, I realize I'm only up to making maybe half of the recipes. The other half is too fancy and involved. Very Martha in looks but few people have that kind of time to make gorgeous concoctions. And even if I had the time, to be honest, I don't think I'd go to the bother. I tend to err on the side of simplicity and taste. One more reason why I'm more of a brownie or cookie baker rather than a wedding cake decorator.
In any case, this recipe couldn't have been simpler to make. I mixed the chocolate batter by hand and used a hand mixer to blend the peanut butter filling ingredients. For the filling, make sure your butter is softened to room temperature and mix it well with the peanut butter so they end up well blended and the same creamy texture with no lumps. I ended up with enough batter to make fill 12 muffin cups and 1 ramekin. Don't try to force them into 12 muffin cups if you have too much batter or they might overflow.
I discovered the hard way that you need to marbleize or swirl these so that you have more of the chocolate covering the peanut butter on top. Otherwise the peanut butter batter will puff up and spill over the top of the cupcake liner. When you take them out of the oven, they deflate and look sloppy, especially when you try taking them out out of the muffin cavity. Mine don't look close to Martha's version - sigh. So cover the peanut butter batter with the chocolate and only allow a small part of the peanut butter batter to show through the top. Once you get past the sloppy appearace, taste-wise, these are like eating a Reese's peanut butter cup in cupcake form. Judge the baking time on whether the chocolate part is done (with a few moist crumbs clinging to a tester) and not when the peanut butter part is "done" because the peanut butter batter isn't going to bake like the chocolate batter. It'll stay creamy and it's supposed to. Don't overbake or the chocolate cupcake part will be dry and not fudgy,
I have several baking books by Martha Stewart and I'm irresistibly drawn to the pictures of the recipes. They always look so good. I've tried a number of her recipes and they've almost always come out. So then I wonder why I don't use her recipe books more often. But once I flip through them in their entirety, I realize I'm only up to making maybe half of the recipes. The other half is too fancy and involved. Very Martha in looks but few people have that kind of time to make gorgeous concoctions. And even if I had the time, to be honest, I don't think I'd go to the bother. I tend to err on the side of simplicity and taste. One more reason why I'm more of a brownie or cookie baker rather than a wedding cake decorator.
In any case, this recipe couldn't have been simpler to make. I mixed the chocolate batter by hand and used a hand mixer to blend the peanut butter filling ingredients. For the filling, make sure your butter is softened to room temperature and mix it well with the peanut butter so they end up well blended and the same creamy texture with no lumps. I ended up with enough batter to make fill 12 muffin cups and 1 ramekin. Don't try to force them into 12 muffin cups if you have too much batter or they might overflow.
I discovered the hard way that you need to marbleize or swirl these so that you have more of the chocolate covering the peanut butter on top. Otherwise the peanut butter batter will puff up and spill over the top of the cupcake liner. When you take them out of the oven, they deflate and look sloppy, especially when you try taking them out out of the muffin cavity. Mine don't look close to Martha's version - sigh. So cover the peanut butter batter with the chocolate and only allow a small part of the peanut butter batter to show through the top. Once you get past the sloppy appearace, taste-wise, these are like eating a Reese's peanut butter cup in cupcake form. Judge the baking time on whether the chocolate part is done (with a few moist crumbs clinging to a tester) and not when the peanut butter part is "done" because the peanut butter batter isn't going to bake like the chocolate batter. It'll stay creamy and it's supposed to. Don't overbake or the chocolate cupcake part will be dry and not fudgy,
2/3 cup all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon salt
½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
4 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
2 ounces unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped
¾ cup granulated sugar
3 large eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Peanut Butter Filling
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
½ cup confectioners’ sugar, sifted
¾ cup smooth peanut butter
¼ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
1. Preheat oven to 325⁰F. Line a muffin tin with paper liners. Whisk together flour, baking powder and salt. Put butter and chocolate in the top half of a double boiler over hot, simmering water; stir until melted. Remove from heat and let cool slightly.
2. Whisk granulated sugar into cooled chocolate mixture. Add eggs and whisk until mixture is smooth. Stir in vanilla. Add flour mixture; stir until well incorporated.
3. Make the peanut butter filling: stir together all filling ingredients until smooth.
4. Spoon 2 tablespoons chocolate batter into each lined cup, followed by 1 tablespoon peanut butter filling. Repeat with additional tablespoon batter and top with 1 teaspoon filling. Swirl top of cupcake batter and filling with a wooden skewer or toothpick.
5. Bake, rotating halfway through, until a cake tester inserted in the centers comes out with only a few moist crumbs attached, about 40 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely before removing cupcakes.
Cupcakes can be stored up to 3 days at room temperature in airtight containers.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Potato Refrigerator Rolls
Potato Refrigerator Rolls - made January 19. 2011 from Betty Crocker's All-Time Favorites (book #40)
This little paperback book has been in our family for as long as I can remember. It's pretty worn by now and across the top of the front cover are the words "Compliments of American Savings". So I suspect this is a freebie my parents got from their bank when I was a kid. If so, it was a pretty good deal. Back in the day, Betty Crocker was the trusted brand for the American housewife and cook. It's this book that provided the potato bread recipe of my childhood not to mention simple recipes that I cut my baking teeth on. This is the book that provided me with my first recipes for snickerdoodles and orange chiffon cake. This was also back in the day when I didn't have recipe ADD and the need to acquire multiple baking books. Life was simpler then.
When my mom made this recipe (rising and kneading it the old-fashioned way), she used Idaho instant mashed potatoes because I think it gave her more uniform consistency for the bread. Or else we weren't really big potato connoisseurs (as Asians, it was about rice, not potatoes) and didn't mind instant mashed potatoes to use up the leftover box when she was done making the bread. I used a real potato to try this recipe. 1 medium-sized potato is more than enough to make 1 cup of mashed potatoes. You can always fry the leftover potato into a potato cake.
When my mom made this bread as rolls instead of loaves, my job was to roll the dough into little balls and drop 3 dough balls in a "cloverleaf" in each cavity of a muffin tin. When the rolls were baked, you could split apart the cloverleaf into 3 bite-size pieces of bread and spread butter on the insides. The only thing better was the same potato bread baked as a loaf, sliced thickly and spread with butter. Never forget the butter when it comes to piping hot bread.
I tried letting the dough hook of my Kitchen Aid do all the work of kneading but even after I had added up to 7 1/4 cups flour, the dough was still sticky and didn't look like it was coming together even after I let the mixer/dough hook beat the dough for 5 minutes. So I tipped the dough out onto a floured surface and kneaded it by hand. It wasn't hard and the dough seemed smooth enough so I didn't need to knead it for very long. Despite the original directions, I didn't put the dough to refrigerate since I wanted fresh bread now. Instead, I put the dough to a first rising then after it had doubled in size (about an hour), I shaped it into 1 regular loaf, 1 mini loaf and a 12-cup muffin tin of cloverleaf rolls, let them rise a second time and baked them.
About 20 minutes into baking, everything looked browned and done but I knew the loaves couldn't possibly be cooked yet since they were bigger than the rolls and needed more baking time. Not wanting to get them too brown, I lowered the oven temp to 375 and baked them a little longer (maybe 10 minutes more). It got a little too brown but was still okay. The inside could have baked a few minutes more so next time I would just start it out at 375 degrees or else cover the top loosely with foil to prevent it from browning too quickly. What I love about this bread is the flavor. The sugar makes it a little sweet but not overly so and the potato gives it a better texture than I found with the buttermilk bread I made earlier. It's way too easy to eat too much of this so be warned!
1 package active dry yeast
1 1/2 cups warm water (105 to 115 degrees)
2/3 cup sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
2/3 cup shortening
2 eggs
1 cup lukewarm mashed potatoes
7 to 7 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
soft butter
This little paperback book has been in our family for as long as I can remember. It's pretty worn by now and across the top of the front cover are the words "Compliments of American Savings". So I suspect this is a freebie my parents got from their bank when I was a kid. If so, it was a pretty good deal. Back in the day, Betty Crocker was the trusted brand for the American housewife and cook. It's this book that provided the potato bread recipe of my childhood not to mention simple recipes that I cut my baking teeth on. This is the book that provided me with my first recipes for snickerdoodles and orange chiffon cake. This was also back in the day when I didn't have recipe ADD and the need to acquire multiple baking books. Life was simpler then.
When my mom made this recipe (rising and kneading it the old-fashioned way), she used Idaho instant mashed potatoes because I think it gave her more uniform consistency for the bread. Or else we weren't really big potato connoisseurs (as Asians, it was about rice, not potatoes) and didn't mind instant mashed potatoes to use up the leftover box when she was done making the bread. I used a real potato to try this recipe. 1 medium-sized potato is more than enough to make 1 cup of mashed potatoes. You can always fry the leftover potato into a potato cake.
When my mom made this bread as rolls instead of loaves, my job was to roll the dough into little balls and drop 3 dough balls in a "cloverleaf" in each cavity of a muffin tin. When the rolls were baked, you could split apart the cloverleaf into 3 bite-size pieces of bread and spread butter on the insides. The only thing better was the same potato bread baked as a loaf, sliced thickly and spread with butter. Never forget the butter when it comes to piping hot bread.
I tried letting the dough hook of my Kitchen Aid do all the work of kneading but even after I had added up to 7 1/4 cups flour, the dough was still sticky and didn't look like it was coming together even after I let the mixer/dough hook beat the dough for 5 minutes. So I tipped the dough out onto a floured surface and kneaded it by hand. It wasn't hard and the dough seemed smooth enough so I didn't need to knead it for very long. Despite the original directions, I didn't put the dough to refrigerate since I wanted fresh bread now. Instead, I put the dough to a first rising then after it had doubled in size (about an hour), I shaped it into 1 regular loaf, 1 mini loaf and a 12-cup muffin tin of cloverleaf rolls, let them rise a second time and baked them.
About 20 minutes into baking, everything looked browned and done but I knew the loaves couldn't possibly be cooked yet since they were bigger than the rolls and needed more baking time. Not wanting to get them too brown, I lowered the oven temp to 375 and baked them a little longer (maybe 10 minutes more). It got a little too brown but was still okay. The inside could have baked a few minutes more so next time I would just start it out at 375 degrees or else cover the top loosely with foil to prevent it from browning too quickly. What I love about this bread is the flavor. The sugar makes it a little sweet but not overly so and the potato gives it a better texture than I found with the buttermilk bread I made earlier. It's way too easy to eat too much of this so be warned!
1 package active dry yeast
1 1/2 cups warm water (105 to 115 degrees)
2/3 cup sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
2/3 cup shortening
2 eggs
1 cup lukewarm mashed potatoes
7 to 7 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
soft butter
- Dissolve yeast in warm water. Stir in sugar, salt, shortening, eggs, potatoes, and 4 cups of the flour. Beat until smooth. Mix in enough of the remaining flour to make the dough easy to handle.
- Turn the dough onto a lightly floured board and knead until smooth and elastic, about 5 minutes. Place in a greased bowl, turn the greased side up. Cover bowl tightly and refrigerate until ready to use. (The dough can be refrigerated at 45 degrees or below for up to 5 days. Keep covered.) If the dough rises, punch it down occasionally.
- When you want to make fresh rolls, punch down the dough and cut off the amount needed. For cloverleaf rolls, shape bits of dough into 1-inch balls. Place 3 balls in each greased medium muffin cop. Brush with butter. Cover and let rise in a warm place until double, about 1 1/2 hours.
- Heat oven to 400 degrees. Bake rolls for 15 to 25 minutes. If you're baking as loaves, bake until risen and golden brown.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Pizza Rustica
Pizza Rustica - made January 17, 2011 from Baking with Julia by Dorie Greenspan (already tried as book #6)
I like this book although a good portion of it covers a lot of breads which I don't usually make as it tends to take up quite a bit of time and bread has such short shelf life. There are also your typical sweet baked goods in this book too but I'm challenging myself not to fall back on the usual cookies, brownies and cakes that I invariably always make. So I went with this recipe instead. According to the book, Pizza Rustica is commonly served in Italy as an appetizer. This may not look like the "pizza" I'm familiar with but I like it as a savory pie.
This is exactly the sort of dish that's up my alley - a sweet dough pie crust with a savory filling. I normally hate using my food processor as it's a pain to clean but it worked well to make the dough for this recipe. The dough really did gather into a ball around the blade once you added the eggs. It was a bit sticky and fragile to work with though so I had to add a little more flour when I was rolling out the bottom and top (lattice) crust. Even then, I had to do a patchwork job on the bottom crust but no one's really going to see that part so it didn't really matter. Not going for perfection here. Which is just as well since I didn't do such a great job with the lattice work either. It's hard to cut perfectly even strips of dough in the same width unless you're really, really good at it. I'm not. But I'm a home chef so that's fine with me. It all tastes the same :).
I really liked this combination of sweet pie crust and savory filling, more than I thought I would since I tend to prefer savory with savory. But this was a good combo. The pie crust came out crisp but not too sweet and was a nice base for the ricotta filling. The recipe doesn't call for brushing an egg wash over the crust but I recommend it anyway. It'll brown better with the egg wash.
I like this book although a good portion of it covers a lot of breads which I don't usually make as it tends to take up quite a bit of time and bread has such short shelf life. There are also your typical sweet baked goods in this book too but I'm challenging myself not to fall back on the usual cookies, brownies and cakes that I invariably always make. So I went with this recipe instead. According to the book, Pizza Rustica is commonly served in Italy as an appetizer. This may not look like the "pizza" I'm familiar with but I like it as a savory pie.
This is exactly the sort of dish that's up my alley - a sweet dough pie crust with a savory filling. I normally hate using my food processor as it's a pain to clean but it worked well to make the dough for this recipe. The dough really did gather into a ball around the blade once you added the eggs. It was a bit sticky and fragile to work with though so I had to add a little more flour when I was rolling out the bottom and top (lattice) crust. Even then, I had to do a patchwork job on the bottom crust but no one's really going to see that part so it didn't really matter. Not going for perfection here. Which is just as well since I didn't do such a great job with the lattice work either. It's hard to cut perfectly even strips of dough in the same width unless you're really, really good at it. I'm not. But I'm a home chef so that's fine with me. It all tastes the same :).
I really liked this combination of sweet pie crust and savory filling, more than I thought I would since I tend to prefer savory with savory. But this was a good combo. The pie crust came out crisp but not too sweet and was a nice base for the ricotta filling. The recipe doesn't call for brushing an egg wash over the crust but I recommend it anyway. It'll brown better with the egg wash.
The Dough
2 cups all-purpose flour
1/3 cup sugar
½ teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon salt
1 stick (4 ounces) cold unsalted butter
2 large eggs, slightly beaten
1. Put the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt into the work bowl of a food processor fitted with the metal blade; pulse a few times just to mix the ingredients.
2. Add the butter and pulse 15 to 20 times or until the mixture resembles fine cornmeal. With the machine running, add the eggs and process until the dough forms a ball on the blade, about a minute or so.
3. Remove the dough from the processor and knead it, folding it over on itself, until it is smooth, 1 to 2 minutes. Wrap the dough in plastic and set aside until needed. Dough can be wrapped and refrigerated for up to 3 days.
The Filling
1 pound whole milk ricotta
3 large eggs
¼ cup freshly grated Pecorino Romano cheese
¼ pound mozzarella cheese, grated
¼ pound thinly sliced prosciutto, shredded
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1. Scoop the ricotta into a medium bowl and stir until smooth with a rubber spatula. Add the rest of the filling ingredients, one at a time, stirring until each addition is incorporated and the mixture is well blended.
2. Position a rack in the lower third of the oven and preheat the oven to 350⁰F. Butter a 9” glass pie plate. If using a metal pie plate, increase the oven temp to 375⁰F.
3. Divide the dough into two pieces, one twice as large as the other. Working with the large piece, knead t into a disk and roll it out on a lightly floured work surface into a 12-inch circle.
4. Transfer the dough to the pie plate and press it gently against the bottom and up the sides of the plates. Use the dull side of a knife to trim the excess dough even with the rim.
5. Scrape the filling into the pie shell and smooth the top.
6. Knead and shape the remaining piece of dough into a block and roll it into a 9” square. Using a pizza or pastry cutter or a thin, sharp knife, cut the dough into 12 even strips. To form the lattice top, lay 6 of the strips across the pie at 1 ¼” intervals, then crisscross the strips, placing the remaining strips diagonally across the first. Trim the ends of the strips even with the edge of the pan and pinch to seal. Brush with a beaten egg slightly thinned with water (you won't use all of the egg wash.)
7. Bake for 35 to 40 minutes, or until the crust is golden and the filling is firm and slightly puffed. Transfer the pie to a rack and cool completely before serving.
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