Chocolate Toffee Butter Cookies - made dough June 8, 2012, baked at various times from Cook's Country Chocolate Desserts
I had written this blog post earlier and it seems a bit frivolous to me now. Because it's with a heavy heart that I write that my friend Maria's daughter, Zoe, who I had made the Naked Twix bars for in my previous post, passed away last night. Rest in peace, Zoe, and be with God and His angels - you're one of them now and always have been.
Original post: Last Christmas, my cousin Christine gave me the magazine booklet this recipe came from. She also went one step better and actually made one of the recipes from it as part of my present - gotta love that. So I already know these cookies are good but I had to make them for myself. These are perfect make-ahead cookies since they're essentially slice-n-bake. Just make the dough ahead of time, roll into logs, wrap logs in wax paper, put in freezer bags and freeze until you're ready to bake them. You'll notice my cookies don't have the chocolate part of the title in them. That's because I left off the last step of melting chocolate and drizzling them over the cookies. I included the original directions below but feel free to skip the chocolate as well. I left it off mostly because, with hotter summer temps, it's hard to keep the chocolate from melting after it's drizzled over the cookie and sets plus I actually preferred the toffee flavor without it.
This is one of those cookies where I puzzled over the baking time. When I followed the directions and only bake them for 10-12 minutes, the edges get a little crisp but not much and the middle is soft. Which is okay but not what I look for in a thinly sliced slice-n-bake cookie. I prefer a bit more crunch throughout the whole cookie. I accidentally discovered that if you bake them long enough (without burning them of course), the whole cookie crisps up and becomes exactly the crispy texture I was looking for. I say accidentally because I was baking a batch to take to Zoe's party and after I had checked on them, I turned the oven off but left the sheet in the oven as I decided the cookies needed one more minute. Then I went off to do something else and yup, totally forgot about the cookies until 10 minutes later. Fortunately since the oven was already turned off, the cookies didn't burn. But they did come out more brown than I had intended. I let them cool and tried one later. Success! The extra baking time was perfect to get them crunchy without being dry. So, depending on your texture preference, try baking them a little longer if you want the crunch. I also think it would be better to add toasted pecans to the cookie dough itself for a bit more crunch and taste to cut the sweetness of the toffee. However, if you leave off the pecans and bake until the cookies are crunchy, the taste and texture are similar to Biscoff cookies. It doesn't have the spice taste of a Biscoff cookie but the brown sugar and toffee flavors are great substitutes.
2 1/3 cups (11 2/3 ounces) all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
16 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
1 cup packed (7 ounces) light brown sugar (I used dark brown sugar)
1 large egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup Heath Toffee Bits (without chocolate coating)
1 ½ cups (9 ounces) semisweet chocolate chips
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
2/3 cup chopped pecans, toasted and chopped fine (you can add some directly to the dough if you wish)
1. Whisk flour, baking powder, and salt together in medium bowl. In stand mixer fitted with paddle, beat butter and brown sugar on medium speed until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Add egg and vanilla and beat until combined, about 30 seconds. Reduce speed to low, add to flour mixture in 2 additions, and mix until incorporated. Stir in toffee bits. Divide dough in half and roll each piece into log about 9 inches long and 1 ½ inches in diameter. Flatten logs into 2 ½”-wide rectangles. Wrap rectangles in plastic wrap and refrigerate until firm, about 1 ½ hours.
2. Adjust oven racks to upper-middle and lower-middle positions and heat oven to 350°F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.
3. Using chef’s knife, cut dough into ¼”-thick slices; transfer slices to parchment-lined sheets, spacing 1 inch apart. Bake until just browned around edges, 10 to 12 minutes, switching and rotating sheets halfway through baking. (For a more crunchy texture, bake 15-20 minutes.) Let cookies cool completely on baking sheets. Use remaining dough to make second batch of cookies.
4. Transfer baked cookies to wire rack set in baking sheet. Heat chocolate chips in heatproof bowl set over pot of barely simmering water, stirring occasionally, until melted. Add oil to chocolate and mix until smooth. Dip part of each cookie into melted chocolate or drizzle chocolate over cookies with soup spoon. Sprinkle pecans over chocolate-coated cookies. Allow chocolate to set about 1 hour before serving cookies.
Linked to Sweet Treats Thursday
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
"Naked" Twix brownie bars for a Sweet 16
Grandma Lilly's Brownies - made June 30, 2012, recipe adapted into homemade Twix bars from A Country Baking Treasury by Lisa Yockelson
Last weekend, I went to a Sweet 16 party of a remarkable young woman named Zoe. Zoe is the daughter of Maria, one of my oldest friends from high school (ahem, that "old" refers to the age of our friendship, not my or my friend's age - just sayin'). Despite her young age, Zoe has shone the remarkable fortitude and courage of people more than twice, three and four times her age. You see, last year, Zoe was diagnosed with stage 4 bone cancer and in the past 10 months, she has gone through more than most of us can conceive of in our lifetime. Even more importantly, she has gone through it all with grace, courage and faith - the kind that you don't know you're capable of until you have to come up with the inner fortitude to take what's thrown at you, even when it's a one-two punch with Life's brass knuckles.
It hasn't been easy and her challenging journey isn't over yet but in true awe-inspiring fashion, she met a recent bleak medical prognosis determined to "spend the summer happy, not sad". Part of that happiness was celebrating her Sweet 16 milestone and that we did. When I asked Maria what I could bring to the party (because you know I'm incapable of showing up anywhere empty-handed - it's just not Filipino), I was glad to hear Zoe's favorite candy was Twix bars. Because when I had first made homemade Twix brownie bars, I had sent a care package of them to Maria and her family and it sounded like they went over well. So I went back to that confection to bring to the party.
I did mix it up a bit though and while I used the same shortbread base and same recipe for the caramel layer, I tried out this new brownie recipe. The original recipe is enough for a 9 x 13 pan but I was only making an 8-inch pan so I cut the ingredients in half. Taste-wise and texture-wise, I liked this brownie recipe better than the one I used earlier. However, it made a thicker brownie than the other recipe so it made for bigger "Twix" bars. Not that that's necessarily a bad thing but enrobing in melted chocolate was a bit more problematic as not all of the rectangular pieces wanted to behave and remain upright while being enrobed. It didn't help that it was warm in my kitchen, almost too warm to work successfully with chocolate. I ended up enrobing only a few pieces to chill and set in the fridge and let the others remain naked. Not just because the chocolate was a pain to work with in warm weather but also because I was running late for church and ran out of time to enrobe them all.
I ended up bringing both enrobed and "naked" versions to the party along with two kinds of butter toffee cookies. A friend captured the shot at one of the dessert tables. But that was before Zoe's dad, Randy, snuck the plate of enrobed Twix bars to tuck away for later. That plate was for Zoe and her immediate family so it was a good call on his part, especially when the cookie platter emptied out minutes later. It was a great party and all I can wish for a special 16-year-old are prayers that she wins this battle and celebrates many more birthdays ahead.
1/4 pound (1 stick) unsalted butter, cut into chunks
Last weekend, I went to a Sweet 16 party of a remarkable young woman named Zoe. Zoe is the daughter of Maria, one of my oldest friends from high school (ahem, that "old" refers to the age of our friendship, not my or my friend's age - just sayin'). Despite her young age, Zoe has shone the remarkable fortitude and courage of people more than twice, three and four times her age. You see, last year, Zoe was diagnosed with stage 4 bone cancer and in the past 10 months, she has gone through more than most of us can conceive of in our lifetime. Even more importantly, she has gone through it all with grace, courage and faith - the kind that you don't know you're capable of until you have to come up with the inner fortitude to take what's thrown at you, even when it's a one-two punch with Life's brass knuckles.
It hasn't been easy and her challenging journey isn't over yet but in true awe-inspiring fashion, she met a recent bleak medical prognosis determined to "spend the summer happy, not sad". Part of that happiness was celebrating her Sweet 16 milestone and that we did. When I asked Maria what I could bring to the party (because you know I'm incapable of showing up anywhere empty-handed - it's just not Filipino), I was glad to hear Zoe's favorite candy was Twix bars. Because when I had first made homemade Twix brownie bars, I had sent a care package of them to Maria and her family and it sounded like they went over well. So I went back to that confection to bring to the party.
Top row: Naked Twix Bars
Middle row, left: Toffee Cookies (later blog post coming shortly)
Bottom row, right: Buttery Toffee Cookies
I did mix it up a bit though and while I used the same shortbread base and same recipe for the caramel layer, I tried out this new brownie recipe. The original recipe is enough for a 9 x 13 pan but I was only making an 8-inch pan so I cut the ingredients in half. Taste-wise and texture-wise, I liked this brownie recipe better than the one I used earlier. However, it made a thicker brownie than the other recipe so it made for bigger "Twix" bars. Not that that's necessarily a bad thing but enrobing in melted chocolate was a bit more problematic as not all of the rectangular pieces wanted to behave and remain upright while being enrobed. It didn't help that it was warm in my kitchen, almost too warm to work successfully with chocolate. I ended up enrobing only a few pieces to chill and set in the fridge and let the others remain naked. Not just because the chocolate was a pain to work with in warm weather but also because I was running late for church and ran out of time to enrobe them all.
The enrobed version |
One of the dessert tables |
2 ounces unsweetened chocolate, chopped
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 extra-large eggs, at room temperature
1 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1.
Line an 8-inch pan with foil and lightly spray with nonstick cookie spray. Preheat the oven to 350˚F. Make the shortbread layer and bake for 20 minutes until golden.
2. For the brownies: melt
the butter and chocolate in a heavy saucepan over very low heat; stir well and
set aside to cool.
3. Whisk the flour with the baking powder and salt.
4.
Pour
the melted chocolate-butter mixture into a large mixing bowl. Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Blend in the sugar and vanilla. Stir in the sifted mixture, mixing just until
the particles of flour have been absorbed.
5.
Pour
and scrape the batter over the hot shortbread crust.
6.
Bake
the brownies on the middle-level rack of the oven for 25 minutes (for a very
fudgy brownie, bake for 20 minutes).
7.
Cool
the brownie cake in the pan on a rack until it reached room temperature, about
2 hours. Cover with the caramel layer and let set. Cut into small-ish, thin rectangles. Enrobe in melted milk chocolate.
Monday, July 2, 2012
Chocolate Cupcakes with Salted Caramel Filling
Chocolate Sour Cream Cupcakes - made June 29, 2012 from Cupcakes! by Elinor Klivans
I'm still channeling my fascination for Cupcake Wars and still kibbitzing over my cupcake corer. Seriously, I love this thing. If I was still 5 years old, it'd be the equivalent of a new Barbie. This time I remembered to buy regular cupcake liners so my cupcakes wouldn't be too big and the corer would work as it's supposed to. And it did - plunge, twist and lift up. You're left with a perfect round hole in the cupcake and a little cylinder of cupcake in the corer which you could pop out and sample *cough* over and over again *cough* as many times as you have cupcakes.
Besides pastry cream with vanilla cupcakes, my other safe flavor combination is chocolate with caramel. So I made these chocolate sour cream cupcakes and filled them with salted caramel before frosting with chocolate buttercream. That was the plan anyway. After I had filled the first 3 cupcakes, I got concerned that the caramel filling would just seep into the cupcake and make it too moist. I wasn't giving the cupcakes away until the next morning and I didn't know how the cupcakes would fare overnight. So for the rest of the cupcakes, I ended up mixing the chocolate buttercream frosting with some of the salted caramel and used that as the filling instead.
I also ended up modifying the buttercream recipe to suit my taste. The original recipe by Elinor Klivans called for 3 sticks of butter. While I've used that much butter in 1 recipe without blinking, having that much in a frosting recipe did give me pause. I don't really care for traditional buttercream because the texture always seems a bit greasy to me. So I cut back on the butter, omitted the heavy cream from the original recipe and came up with my own frosting. Frosting measurements are never that precise because you have to play with the dry and liquid ingredients to get the flavor and consistency you want and there's no one right answer. Just be sure you let your butter come to room temperature (but not too soft) and let your melted chocolate cool properly before adding it or it'll melt the butter.
Did I mention these cupcakes were to die for? They're scrumptious on their own, unfilled and unfrosted with the perfect taste and cakey texture that's fluffy, not too dense or too rich. If you like the bells and whistles on your cupcake, adding the filling and frosting will send you into orbit. I also sprinkled fleur de sel over the frosting to top off the sweet-salty combination.
I'm still channeling my fascination for Cupcake Wars and still kibbitzing over my cupcake corer. Seriously, I love this thing. If I was still 5 years old, it'd be the equivalent of a new Barbie. This time I remembered to buy regular cupcake liners so my cupcakes wouldn't be too big and the corer would work as it's supposed to. And it did - plunge, twist and lift up. You're left with a perfect round hole in the cupcake and a little cylinder of cupcake in the corer which you could pop out and sample *cough* over and over again *cough* as many times as you have cupcakes.
Besides pastry cream with vanilla cupcakes, my other safe flavor combination is chocolate with caramel. So I made these chocolate sour cream cupcakes and filled them with salted caramel before frosting with chocolate buttercream. That was the plan anyway. After I had filled the first 3 cupcakes, I got concerned that the caramel filling would just seep into the cupcake and make it too moist. I wasn't giving the cupcakes away until the next morning and I didn't know how the cupcakes would fare overnight. So for the rest of the cupcakes, I ended up mixing the chocolate buttercream frosting with some of the salted caramel and used that as the filling instead.
I also ended up modifying the buttercream recipe to suit my taste. The original recipe by Elinor Klivans called for 3 sticks of butter. While I've used that much butter in 1 recipe without blinking, having that much in a frosting recipe did give me pause. I don't really care for traditional buttercream because the texture always seems a bit greasy to me. So I cut back on the butter, omitted the heavy cream from the original recipe and came up with my own frosting. Frosting measurements are never that precise because you have to play with the dry and liquid ingredients to get the flavor and consistency you want and there's no one right answer. Just be sure you let your butter come to room temperature (but not too soft) and let your melted chocolate cool properly before adding it or it'll melt the butter.
Did I mention these cupcakes were to die for? They're scrumptious on their own, unfilled and unfrosted with the perfect taste and cakey texture that's fluffy, not too dense or too rich. If you like the bells and whistles on your cupcake, adding the filling and frosting will send you into orbit. I also sprinkled fleur de sel over the frosting to top off the sweet-salty combination.
3 ounces unsweetened chocolate
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon salt
½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 ¼ cups sugar
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
½ cup sour cream
½ cup water
1. Preheat
oven to 350°F. Line 18 muffins tins with cupcake liners.
2. Melt
the chocolate in the top half of a double boiler set over hot water, stirring
until smooth.
3. Sift
the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.
4. Cream
the butter and sugar together in the bowl of an electric mixer until well
blended and creamy, about 2 minutes. Mix
in the melted chocolate until incorporated.
Add the eggs, one at a time, beating after each addition until
blended. Add the vanilla and beat for 1
minute. Mix in the sour cream until no
white streaks remain. Add half of the
dry ingredients and beat on low speed until just incorporated. Add the water. Add the remaining dry ingredients, mixing
until just incorporated. Do not
overmix.
5. Distribute
evenly amongst cupcake liners and bake until a toothpick inserted in the center
of one comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs, about 15-20 minutes. Cool completely before filling and frosting.
Chocolate Frosting
3 ounces unsweetened chocolate, chopped
2 ½ cups powdered sugar
1 ½ tablespoons unsweetened Dutch process cocoa powder
1 cup unsalted butter, room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1. Melt
the chocolate in the top half of a double boiler set over hot water. Stir until smooth and set aside to cool
slightly.
2. Beat
the butter until creamy. Sift the
powdered sugar and cocoa together into a large mixing bowl. Add to the butter and, using an electric
mixer on low speed, beat until smoothly blended. Beat in the melted chocolate. Add the vanilla, mixing to incorporate.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Coconut Cream Pie
Coconut Cream Pie - made June 24, 2012 from the Culinary Institute of America's Baking & Pastry Arts certification program
I never used to think I would like coconut cream pie, partly because I don't ordinarily like custard-y desserts but mostly because all the coconut cream pies I had seen had mile-high whipped cream topping and I don't do whipped cream, aka flavored air with calories. Then when I was in culinary school, we made coconut cream pie and once I tasted it, my reaction was "where have you been all my life??" What helped me get over my unwarranted prejudice is by then I had already gotten hooked on the CIA's pastry cream recipe and this coconut cream pie recipe was very similar in how the pastry cream was made; the main difference was the addition of coconut. I also tried the pie without whipped cream and I was hooked.
The recipe below is straight from my CIA recipe binder so the directions are sparse and this is enough to make a full-size pie (at least an 8-9" pie). If you end up with more filling than you need, separate out what you need for the pie before you add the coconut and use the leftover as regular pastry cream. Or you can do what I did and bake it as mini pies, as many as you have crusts and filling for.
20 ounces milk
I never used to think I would like coconut cream pie, partly because I don't ordinarily like custard-y desserts but mostly because all the coconut cream pies I had seen had mile-high whipped cream topping and I don't do whipped cream, aka flavored air with calories. Then when I was in culinary school, we made coconut cream pie and once I tasted it, my reaction was "where have you been all my life??" What helped me get over my unwarranted prejudice is by then I had already gotten hooked on the CIA's pastry cream recipe and this coconut cream pie recipe was very similar in how the pastry cream was made; the main difference was the addition of coconut. I also tried the pie without whipped cream and I was hooked.
The recipe below is straight from my CIA recipe binder so the directions are sparse and this is enough to make a full-size pie (at least an 8-9" pie). If you end up with more filling than you need, separate out what you need for the pie before you add the coconut and use the leftover as regular pastry cream. Or you can do what I did and bake it as mini pies, as many as you have crusts and filling for.
20 ounces milk
2
ounces sugar
1.5
ounces egg (1)
1
ounce egg yolk (2)
5
tablespoons cornstarch
2
ounces sugar
1
ounce butter
1
½ teaspoons vanilla
¾
cup shredded coconut
Unbaked
pie crust(s)
1.
Line pie pan(s) with pie dough, prick the bottom, line with parchment paper and beans or pie weights and
prebake. Let cool.
2.
Combine
eggs, cornstarch, sugar and a little of the milk to make a paste.
3.
Boil
the milk with the sugar, temper the starch and bring back to a boil.
4.
Add
butter, vanilla and coconut.
5.
Pour
custard into pie pans and put into refrigerator.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Banana "Napoleons"
Banana "Napoleons" - made June 23, 2012
I can't claim these as real napoleons since they technically only had 1 layer of puff pastry and napoleons are supposed to have multiple layers. I originally started out with the intention of creating a napoleon with 3 layers of pastry, 2 layers of pastry cream and 2 layers of bananas. Alas, I didn't take into account the puff pastry, well, puffing up quite so much. They literally went airborne and it would've been impractical to try to mush them into 3 layers or else I'd end up with a crumbly mess. Puff pastry doesn't take kindly to being mushed down. Instead, I cut one piece through the middle, filled it with pastry cream and bananas and called it a dessert.
This is a simple one to make for those summer days when you'd rather be outside than in the kitchen. It only requires about 15 minutes of baking time and you can prep the pastry cream ahead of time. I cheated on the puff pastry by buying the ready-made kind by Pepperidge Farm. I know, I know, I'm supposed to be more snobby than that but in this rare instance, the store-bought version was just fine, especially since I didn't have the time or materials to make puff pastry from scratch.
After you thaw the puff pastry according to the package directions, slice it with a pizza cutter (for straight cuts) in the size you want to make your dessert. I sliced one sheet into thirds lengthwise, then each strip into thirds again to make rectangles. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar to taste and bake according to the package directions. Bake until golden brown then let cool for about 5 minutes before slicing in half and layering with pastry cream and sliced bananas. Serve immediately.
The advantage of this type of simple dessert is you only have your oven on for a short period of time, as opposed to longer baking times for cakes or pies or multiple cookie sheets, which may be a factor during hot summer months. You can also make the pastry cream a day ahead and keep it in your refrigerator until you're ready to use it.
Now, another take on the same dessert is, before baking the puff pastry, you slice it in the size you want for each individual dessert, cover all but the edges with pastry cream, layer sliced bananas on top of the pastry cream and bake until the pastry is golden brown. Because it's weighed down by the pastry cream and bananas, it won't get the same rise so it's a bit more manageable. The bananas will also roast for more flavor. Once they're baked, sprinkle the bananas with granulated sugar, brulee them then top with ice cream. Serve immediately. I have to confess, I liked the second way better because of the taste of the baked bananas and the puff pastry being easier to eat without crumbling.
Linked to Sweet Treats Thursday
I can't claim these as real napoleons since they technically only had 1 layer of puff pastry and napoleons are supposed to have multiple layers. I originally started out with the intention of creating a napoleon with 3 layers of pastry, 2 layers of pastry cream and 2 layers of bananas. Alas, I didn't take into account the puff pastry, well, puffing up quite so much. They literally went airborne and it would've been impractical to try to mush them into 3 layers or else I'd end up with a crumbly mess. Puff pastry doesn't take kindly to being mushed down. Instead, I cut one piece through the middle, filled it with pastry cream and bananas and called it a dessert.
This is a simple one to make for those summer days when you'd rather be outside than in the kitchen. It only requires about 15 minutes of baking time and you can prep the pastry cream ahead of time. I cheated on the puff pastry by buying the ready-made kind by Pepperidge Farm. I know, I know, I'm supposed to be more snobby than that but in this rare instance, the store-bought version was just fine, especially since I didn't have the time or materials to make puff pastry from scratch.
After you thaw the puff pastry according to the package directions, slice it with a pizza cutter (for straight cuts) in the size you want to make your dessert. I sliced one sheet into thirds lengthwise, then each strip into thirds again to make rectangles. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar to taste and bake according to the package directions. Bake until golden brown then let cool for about 5 minutes before slicing in half and layering with pastry cream and sliced bananas. Serve immediately.
Now, another take on the same dessert is, before baking the puff pastry, you slice it in the size you want for each individual dessert, cover all but the edges with pastry cream, layer sliced bananas on top of the pastry cream and bake until the pastry is golden brown. Because it's weighed down by the pastry cream and bananas, it won't get the same rise so it's a bit more manageable. The bananas will also roast for more flavor. Once they're baked, sprinkle the bananas with granulated sugar, brulee them then top with ice cream. Serve immediately. I have to confess, I liked the second way better because of the taste of the baked bananas and the puff pastry being easier to eat without crumbling.
Linked to Sweet Treats Thursday
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Golden Orange Buttermilk Cake
Golden Orange Buttermilk Cake - made June 23, 2012, recipe adapted from Cakes to Die For by Bev Shaffer
My orange tree is still valiantly trying to grow oranges. I counted 3 little ones that have made it just barely past the tiny little bud/blossom-I-might-become-an-orange-someday stage. So I wait with bated breath to see how they play out. In the meantime, I've got to buy the oranges I eat and use for baking. Although oranges are available year round (if you're fortunate), I tend to associate them with summer and bake with them more often in the warmer months.
This is another I-have-to-use-up-my-buttermilk baking recipe I dusted off from my "Still Need to Make" recipe folder. I amass recipes and dump them in that folder on my computer for baking someday. I classify this one under picnic cakes that'll withstand summer temps because it's easy to make in a bundt pan, slice and serve without worrying about a thick frosting melting off of it or it getting stale too quickly. Overall this was a good basic pound cake. The cake itself was more of a vanilla butter pound cake than a true orange cake so for more orange flavor, I made some adjustments (modifications below) to the original recipe as to what I would do the next time I make this cake.
I'm still on the lookout for a cakey orange cake with a fluffy texture rather than a dense pound cake texture though. This wasn't it so the search continues.
1/4 cup granulated sugar
My orange tree is still valiantly trying to grow oranges. I counted 3 little ones that have made it just barely past the tiny little bud/blossom-I-might-become-an-orange-someday stage. So I wait with bated breath to see how they play out. In the meantime, I've got to buy the oranges I eat and use for baking. Although oranges are available year round (if you're fortunate), I tend to associate them with summer and bake with them more often in the warmer months.
This is another I-have-to-use-up-my-buttermilk baking recipe I dusted off from my "Still Need to Make" recipe folder. I amass recipes and dump them in that folder on my computer for baking someday. I classify this one under picnic cakes that'll withstand summer temps because it's easy to make in a bundt pan, slice and serve without worrying about a thick frosting melting off of it or it getting stale too quickly. Overall this was a good basic pound cake. The cake itself was more of a vanilla butter pound cake than a true orange cake so for more orange flavor, I made some adjustments (modifications below) to the original recipe as to what I would do the next time I make this cake.
I'm still on the lookout for a cakey orange cake with a fluffy texture rather than a dense pound cake texture though. This wasn't it so the search continues.
½
teaspoon baking powder
½
teaspoon baking soda
½
teaspoon salt
2 cups
granulated sugar
1 cup
unsalted butter, room temperature, cut into pieces
4 large
eggs
¾ cup
buttermilk
1
tablespoon freshly grated orange zest (more if desired for more orange flavor)
1
tablespoon fresh orange juice
Orange soaking syrup
1/4 cup - 1/3 cup fresh orange juice1/4 cup granulated sugar
Glaze
1 ¼ cups
confectioners’ sugar, sifted
2
teaspoons fresh orange juice, pulp free
1 to 2
tablespoons water or additional fresh orange juice
1 tablespoon orange zest, optional but recommended for more orange flavor
1 tablespoon orange zest, optional but recommended for more orange flavor
1. Heat the oven to 325⁰F. Grease and flour a 10” tube pan or 12-cup
Bundt pan, tapping out excess flour.
2. In a medium bowl, whisk
together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.
3. In a large bowl of an
electric mixer, beat the sugar and butter until light and fluffy.
4. Beat in the eggs, one at a
time, until blended. With mixer on low,
gradually add flour mixture alternately with the buttermilk until well
mixed. Scrape bowl. Stir in the orange zest and orange juice
until combined.
5. Spread batter into
prepared pan. Bake for 50 to 66 minutes
or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. While the cake is baking, heat the ingredients for the soaking syrup, stirring constantly until the sugar has dissolved completely.
6. Cool cake in pan on a wire rack
for 10 minutes. Then run a small spatula around
the inside edge of the pan and carefully remove the cake by inverting on a wire rack lined with wax paper. Brush with the soaking syrup until all syrup has been absorbed. Cool completely.
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Vanilla Cupcakes for Vanilla King
Yellow Butter Cake - made June 22, 2012, recipe adapted from Martha Stewart's Baking Handbook and made into cupcakes
One of my favorite shows on TV is Cupcake Wars on Food Network. Every Sunday night, you can find me in front of my TV, stressing out with the cupcake bakers on how to pass the taste challenge (Round 1), the taste and presentation challenge (Round 2) and creating a display and baking 1000 cupcakes in 2 hours (Round 3) with 4 baking assistants and a bearded carpenter clad in plaid. When I first started watching the show, it stressed me out so much I almost couldn't watch it. It reminded me too much of culinary school and the daily stress of making desserts in time for the lunch deadline (you don't sit down and eat lunch until the desserts are done, plated, on display and your station is clean). I've since gotten used to the show so now I can actually distance myself enough to enjoy the cupcakes they're making rather than cringing in empathic sympathy for what the contestants are going through.
What fascinates me about the show is all the flavor combinations they put together. My idea of the perfect cupcake is a well-made, moist, plain (i.e. non-filled) cupcake topped with the thinnest layer of frosting and no decorations that I would otherwise only pluck off and never eat. Cupcake Wars goes to the opposite end of the spectrum and the most exotic (or sometimes just plain weird) flavors are baked into the cupcakes, they're filled with "stuff", thickly topped with frosting and decorated in all sorts of ways. Most of them are probably cupcakes I wouldn't eat but some of them sure look pretty. And some do put together flavor combinations I would probably like.
Despite
my aversion to fillings in cupcakes, I decided I'd try it out - namely
because I found a cool new baking gadget to play with - the cupcake corer.
Granted, a small knife or the large-enough end of a decorating tip
could accomplish the same thing: making a hole in the cupcake,
extracting the bit of cupcake and leaving a hole or well in the center
to be filled with filling. But for $4.99, no tax and free shipping, I
felt I could indulge in a new baking gadget.
I was meeting my cousin and her son, Vanilla King, for dinner and I needed something befitting his moniker - I gave it to him, after all, since he's the only kid I know who not only prefers vanilla but actually doesn't like chocolate. Doesn't like chocolate. Had to repeat that because my brain can't comprehend it. In any case, what better cupcake for Vanilla King than a vanilla cupcake filled with vanilla pastry cream and topped with vanilla icing? I used Martha Stewart's recipe for Yellow Butter Cake and made a half recipe into cupcakes. Turns out I didn't have regular cupcake liners on hand so I used the mini panettone molds instead. They made for a bigger, taller cupcake than I intended but oh well.
The cupcake corer actually worked but because of the size of my cupcakes, it couldn't make a very deep hole before the lip of the corer ran into the top of the cupcake. I thought it would be okay without my enlarging the holes manually with a knife but it turns out I should have because there ended up not being very much filling in the cupcakes. With regular cupcake liners, I think it would've been okay. I used the CIA recipe for pastry cream because it's my favorite. If you're only making 1 batch of cupcakes, a half recipe of the pastry cream would be more than enough.
The recipe for the cake was pretty good. I still have an underbaking problem so they probably turned out a little heavier than Martha intended but the taste was nice and buttery. Next time I would bake it a minute or two longer and use more filling. Good thing there's no possibility of my appearing on Cupcake Wars any time soon. Or ever.
2 sticks (1 cup) unsalted butter, room temperature
One of my favorite shows on TV is Cupcake Wars on Food Network. Every Sunday night, you can find me in front of my TV, stressing out with the cupcake bakers on how to pass the taste challenge (Round 1), the taste and presentation challenge (Round 2) and creating a display and baking 1000 cupcakes in 2 hours (Round 3) with 4 baking assistants and a bearded carpenter clad in plaid. When I first started watching the show, it stressed me out so much I almost couldn't watch it. It reminded me too much of culinary school and the daily stress of making desserts in time for the lunch deadline (you don't sit down and eat lunch until the desserts are done, plated, on display and your station is clean). I've since gotten used to the show so now I can actually distance myself enough to enjoy the cupcakes they're making rather than cringing in empathic sympathy for what the contestants are going through.
What fascinates me about the show is all the flavor combinations they put together. My idea of the perfect cupcake is a well-made, moist, plain (i.e. non-filled) cupcake topped with the thinnest layer of frosting and no decorations that I would otherwise only pluck off and never eat. Cupcake Wars goes to the opposite end of the spectrum and the most exotic (or sometimes just plain weird) flavors are baked into the cupcakes, they're filled with "stuff", thickly topped with frosting and decorated in all sorts of ways. Most of them are probably cupcakes I wouldn't eat but some of them sure look pretty. And some do put together flavor combinations I would probably like.
The cupcake corer |
I was meeting my cousin and her son, Vanilla King, for dinner and I needed something befitting his moniker - I gave it to him, after all, since he's the only kid I know who not only prefers vanilla but actually doesn't like chocolate. Doesn't like chocolate. Had to repeat that because my brain can't comprehend it. In any case, what better cupcake for Vanilla King than a vanilla cupcake filled with vanilla pastry cream and topped with vanilla icing? I used Martha Stewart's recipe for Yellow Butter Cake and made a half recipe into cupcakes. Turns out I didn't have regular cupcake liners on hand so I used the mini panettone molds instead. They made for a bigger, taller cupcake than I intended but oh well.
Filled with pastry cream |
The recipe for the cake was pretty good. I still have an underbaking problem so they probably turned out a little heavier than Martha intended but the taste was nice and buttery. Next time I would bake it a minute or two longer and use more filling. Good thing there's no possibility of my appearing on Cupcake Wars any time soon. Or ever.
Because Vanilla King is 7 years old, I had to add sprinkles to his cupcakes |
Needs more filling |
1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
1 ½ cups cake flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
1 ¾ cups sugar
4 large eggs
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1 ¼ cups milk
1. Preheat
oven to 350°F. Butter two 9” round cake pans; line the
bottoms with parchment paper.
2. In
a medium bowl, sift together flours, baking powder and salt; set aside.
3. In
the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the
butter and sugar until light and fluffy, 3 to 4 minutes, scraping down the
sides of the bowl as necessary. Beat in
eggs, one at a time, then beat in the vanilla.
With the mixer on low speed, add the flour mixture in three parts,
alternating with the milk and beginning and ending with the flour mixture. Beat until combined after each addition.
4. Divide
the batter evenly between the cake pans and smooth with an offset metal
spatula. Bake, rotating the pans halfway
through, until cakes are golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the centers
come out clean, 30 to 35 minutes (20-25 minutes or less if you’re baking as
cupcakes). Transfer pans to a wire rack
to cool for 20 minutes. Invert cakes
onto rack, peel off parchment and reinvert.
Let cool completely before frosting.
Vanilla Frosting
1 cup unsalted butter, room temperature
1/2 pound confectioners’ sugar, sifted (more or less,
depending on the consistency you want your frosting)
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1-2 tablespoons milk, adjust with confectioners’ sugar
for desired consistency
1. With
an electric mixer, beat butter on medium high speed until pale and creamy,
about 2 minutes.
2. Reduce
speed to medium. Add the confectioners’
sugar, ½ cup at a time, beating well after each addition and scraping down
sides of bowl as needed; after every two additions, raise speed to high and
beat 10 seconds to aerate frosting, then return to medium.
3. Add
vanilla and milk, and beat until frosting is smooth. If not using immediately, frosting can be
refrigerated up to 10 days in an airtight container. Before using, bring to room temperature and
beat on low speed until smooth again, about 5 minutes.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
Cocoa Fudge Cake with Chocolate Nutella Frosting
Cocoa Fudge Cake with Chocolate Nutella Frosting - made June 17, 2012 from Yummy Healthy Easy blog
I was in the mood for chocolate last weekend and although it was sweltering hot, I sucked it up to make this easy chocolate cake recipe. I knew just from looking at the ingredients with its high proportion of liquid ingredients that the batter would be thin and the cake would be moist. And I was right. As advertised on the original blog, (click on the recipe title to get the cake recipe), this cake was very moist and deliciously fudgy. Don't underbake it as it'll turn out too gummy but bake until the toothpick comes out clean or with a few moist (but not wet) crumbs. The quality of the taste however will largely depend on the quality of your cocoa so use the good stuff (do I still need to say that?). A dark cocoa works best to give it full flavor.
I skipped the icing recipe though to do my usual fast, no-fail frosting. I melted some chocolate chips with nutella, blended smooth and spread on the cake. I didn't measure how much of each but you can play with it according to taste and texture preference. If you want the frosting to remain somewhat soft and fluid, use more nutella. If you want it to set slightly, almost like a soft fudge, use more chocolate chips. There's really no getting it wrong. However, given how moist this cake is, it's best not to slice it until you're ready to serve or else wrap completely in plastic, preferably directly wrapping the cake in plastic so there's no air trapped between plastic and cake. Otherwise the cut ends will dry out faster and you'll lose the goodness of the moist texture.
2 cups sugar
1/2 cup cocoa
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 cup oil
1 cup buttermilk
2 eggs
1 cup hot water
Icing
1 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup cocoa
1/4 cup milk
1/2 cup butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
I was in the mood for chocolate last weekend and although it was sweltering hot, I sucked it up to make this easy chocolate cake recipe. I knew just from looking at the ingredients with its high proportion of liquid ingredients that the batter would be thin and the cake would be moist. And I was right. As advertised on the original blog, (click on the recipe title to get the cake recipe), this cake was very moist and deliciously fudgy. Don't underbake it as it'll turn out too gummy but bake until the toothpick comes out clean or with a few moist (but not wet) crumbs. The quality of the taste however will largely depend on the quality of your cocoa so use the good stuff (do I still need to say that?). A dark cocoa works best to give it full flavor.
I skipped the icing recipe though to do my usual fast, no-fail frosting. I melted some chocolate chips with nutella, blended smooth and spread on the cake. I didn't measure how much of each but you can play with it according to taste and texture preference. If you want the frosting to remain somewhat soft and fluid, use more nutella. If you want it to set slightly, almost like a soft fudge, use more chocolate chips. There's really no getting it wrong. However, given how moist this cake is, it's best not to slice it until you're ready to serve or else wrap completely in plastic, preferably directly wrapping the cake in plastic so there's no air trapped between plastic and cake. Otherwise the cut ends will dry out faster and you'll lose the goodness of the moist texture.
2 cups sugar
1/2 cup cocoa
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 cup oil
1 cup buttermilk
2 eggs
1 cup hot water
Icing
1 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup cocoa
1/4 cup milk
1/2 cup butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
- Combine cocoa, sugar, salt, flour and soda.
- Add the oil, buttermilk and eggs. Mix well, then add the water.
- Pour into a greased and floured Bundt pan. Bake at 350 degrees for about 40 minutes. Remove cake from pan while warm, not hot.
- For the icing: boil the sugar, cocoa, milk and butter in a saucepan on the stove for 1 to 2 minutes. Add the vanilla. Stir until cool or thick enough to adhere to the cake. Pour quickly before it sets.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Brown Butter Coconut Dessert Shells
Banana Split in a Brown Butter Coconut Dessert Shell - made June 17, 2012, recipe adapted from Baking From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan
I adapted this coconut dessert shell from a Dorie Greenspan recipe. It was 100 degrees last weekend and I don't fare well in sweltering temperatures so I wanted a no-bake option, something I rarely do because I like baking. But I also like not sweating buckets while I'm in the kitchen so I tried this out. The original recipe called for making the coconut crust in a pie pan, blending some pureed bananas with chocolate ice cream and using that as the filling for the "pie". I was not up to being that grandiose about it since I was just looking for an excuse to eat ice cream and justify it as "I need a new post for my blog". So I went with dessert shells.
I have to admit though, this didn't turn out as well as I wanted. While I'm a rabid fan of coconut, this was too much coconut and dominated the crust. Taste-wise I still liked it but I think it would've been better to have more of a coconut cookie crust rather than an almost pure coconut crust. Less is more. Next time I'd make coconut wafer-type cookies, pulverize them into crumbs, add some melted butter and form them into the shells. Or else still use this recipe, let it cool and set, then crumble and use as a topping instead. Oh well, at least I got to eat some ice cream.
1 stick (1/2 cup, 4 ounces) butter
2 cups coconut
1/2 cup crushed butter cookie crumbs (I used Pepperidge Farm Chessman cookies)
I adapted this coconut dessert shell from a Dorie Greenspan recipe. It was 100 degrees last weekend and I don't fare well in sweltering temperatures so I wanted a no-bake option, something I rarely do because I like baking. But I also like not sweating buckets while I'm in the kitchen so I tried this out. The original recipe called for making the coconut crust in a pie pan, blending some pureed bananas with chocolate ice cream and using that as the filling for the "pie". I was not up to being that grandiose about it since I was just looking for an excuse to eat ice cream and justify it as "I need a new post for my blog". So I went with dessert shells.
Set of 4 shells |
Close up |
1 stick (1/2 cup, 4 ounces) butter
2 cups coconut
1/2 cup crushed butter cookie crumbs (I used Pepperidge Farm Chessman cookies)
- Melt the butter in a heavy saucepan over medium heat, stirring constantly until the butter browns and emits a nutty aroma. Don't let it burn - you want browned flecks at the bottom, not black. Add coconut and cook, stirring over low heat, for 1 minute.
- Remove from heat and add cookie crumbs. Pat into dessert shell pan or shape as shells in a muffin tin. Let cool completely.
- Slice a firm ripe banana and place in the bottom of the shells. Top with ice cream and drizzle with hot fudge or caramel sauce. Garnish with toasted chopped peanuts or almonds.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Chocolate Chocolate Chip Black & White Cookies
Chocolate Chocolate Black & White Cookies - made dough June 3, 2012 from Chocolatier magazine, Spring 2007 edition
Still on a baking rampage. I've always wanted to make Black and White Cookies which are normally cakey vanilla butter cookies that are glazed half with vanilla icing and half with chocolate icing. This recipe goes one step further on the chocolate scale and glazes over a chocolate chocolate chip cookie. Seemed like a good trial run for Black and Whites.
Unfortunately, this isn't an easy dough to do my usual process: make the dough, scoop into dough balls, freeze, bake later. The dough came out too soft, more like a stiff batter than a typical cookie dough. So I had to chill the batter for an hour before they became firm enough to even scoop, freeze the dough balls then put them in freezer bags. And even then, I could only put them in a single layer or else they would soften and stick to each other. Even when frozen, they didn't get that hard. That was only strike one against these cookies. The glaze was strike two. It wasn't hard to make but the white icing was just a bit too runny so once it was on the cookie, it became more opaque rather than staying white. Plus, let's face it, I'm not the best icer in the world and my black and whites didn't turn out perfectly iced.
But here's the kicker - these cookies are amazing. As in, really, really good. Had-more-than-1-cookie good. They were more like little cakes in cookie form, not too sweet, not too rich but just right. I think I baked the first baked to just done but the second batch which I underbaked was even better. So shave a minute off the baking time in your oven and take them off the hot cookie sheet as soon as possible so they don't continue baking. I liked them best when the edges were baked and the middles were just barely past raw-looking. If you bake them long enough for the middles to puff and look done, they might be overbaked. If you don't want to bother with the glazes, the cookies are perfectly fine eaten plain.
Still on a baking rampage. I've always wanted to make Black and White Cookies which are normally cakey vanilla butter cookies that are glazed half with vanilla icing and half with chocolate icing. This recipe goes one step further on the chocolate scale and glazes over a chocolate chocolate chip cookie. Seemed like a good trial run for Black and Whites.
Unfortunately, this isn't an easy dough to do my usual process: make the dough, scoop into dough balls, freeze, bake later. The dough came out too soft, more like a stiff batter than a typical cookie dough. So I had to chill the batter for an hour before they became firm enough to even scoop, freeze the dough balls then put them in freezer bags. And even then, I could only put them in a single layer or else they would soften and stick to each other. Even when frozen, they didn't get that hard. That was only strike one against these cookies. The glaze was strike two. It wasn't hard to make but the white icing was just a bit too runny so once it was on the cookie, it became more opaque rather than staying white. Plus, let's face it, I'm not the best icer in the world and my black and whites didn't turn out perfectly iced.
But here's the kicker - these cookies are amazing. As in, really, really good. Had-more-than-1-cookie good. They were more like little cakes in cookie form, not too sweet, not too rich but just right. I think I baked the first baked to just done but the second batch which I underbaked was even better. So shave a minute off the baking time in your oven and take them off the hot cookie sheet as soon as possible so they don't continue baking. I liked them best when the edges were baked and the middles were just barely past raw-looking. If you bake them long enough for the middles to puff and look done, they might be overbaked. If you don't want to bother with the glazes, the cookies are perfectly fine eaten plain.
Chocolate-chocolate chip cookies
2
¼ cups all-purpose flour
6
tablespoons unsweetened Dutch-processed cocoa powder
1
teaspoon baking soda
1
teaspoon salt
2/3
cup (10 2/3 tablespoons) unsalted butter, at room temperature
1
1/3 cups granulated sugar
2
large eggs, room temperature
2/3
cup buttermilk, room temperature
1
teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1
¼ cups (about 8 ounces) premium semisweet chocolate chips
Vanilla and cocoa glazes
4
½ cups confectioners’ sugar, sifted
¾
teaspoon cream of tartar
4
½ tablespoons light corn syrup
10
tablespoons hot water, divided
1
– 1 ½ teaspoons pure almond extract, to taste
¾
cup unsweetened Dutch Process cocoa powder, sifted
1.
Make
chocolate-chocolate chip cookies: Position rack in center of oven and preheat
oven to 350˚F. Line 2 cookie sheets with
parchment paper and set aside.
2.
Combine
flour, cocoa powder, baking soda and salt in large bowl. Mix well. Set aside.
3.
Place
softened butter in bowl of electric mixer fitted with paddle attachment. Beat on medium to medium-high speed just
until butter is smooth and creamy.
Gradually add sugar, continuing to beat until mixture is light and
fluffy, about 2-3 minutes. Add eggs, one
at a time, beating well after each addition and scraping down sides of bowl as
needed.
4.
Turn
mixer to low speed. Add reserved flour
mixture alternately with buttermilk, beginning and ending with flour. Mix just until each addition is incorporated,
as over-mixing can lead to a rubbery cookie.
Stir in vanilla extract and chocolate chips.
5.
Using
1-ounce (2 tablespoon) scoop, place level scoop of dough about 1 ½” apart on
prepared cookie sheets. Bake about 15 to
17 minutes, or until cookie bottoms are lightly browned and tops are dull (I found the best baking time in my oven was ~12-13 minutes). Transfer immediately to racks to cool. Cool completely. Store in airtight containers at room
temperature until ready to glaze.
6.
Prepare
plain glaze: (Note: If made too far in advance, glaze can partially set up,
making it difficult to smoothly ice cookies.) Prepare glaze only after cookies
are cool and when you are sure to have time to complete the icing task. Combine confectioners’ sugar, cream of
tartar, corn syrup and enough hot water (about 5 tablespoons) to make thick,
but easily spreadable glaze. Whisk well
to remove any sugar lumps. (Whisking
will also make glaze appear whiter and more opaque.)
7.
Flavor
glazes: Stir in almond extract and then divide glaze into two equal
portions. Add sifted cocoa powder to one
half and whisk again to break apart any cocoa lumps. Gradually add hot water (about 5 tablespoons)
to cocoa mixture until it is same consistency as plain glaze. To keep glazes from drying out, cover them
flush with plastic wrap whenever they’re not in use.
8.
Decorate
cookies: Fill one parchment paper cone halfway with plain glaze and another
with cocoa glaze. Cut small (less than
1/8” diameter) hole in tip of each cone.
Reserve rest of glaze for cookie base-coats. Working with one cookie at a time, use small
offset spatula to paint thin base-coat of cocoa (or plain) glaze over entire
cookie bottom (flat side). Before glaze
sets up, pipe contrasting plain (or cocoa) glaze in spiral on top of base-coat. To create a marbled pattern, immediately draw
a toothpick or trussing needle through two glazes.
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