Tag: Desserts

Giving Thanks for  Carrot, Banana and Cardamom Cake

Giving Thanks for Carrot, Banana and Cardamom Cake

It’s the season for gift giving.  Here’s an idea: Gift a snacking cake.  Your gift will be as unique as it will be delicious. This recipe is adapted from a recipe in Chetna Masan’s great cookbook, The Cardamom Trail. You can find the book at…

Ube Ice Cream: Purple Yams in Your Ice Cream?

Ube Ice Cream: Purple Yams in Your Ice Cream?

Ube, aka purple yam, is a tuber native to the Philippines. It is closely related to the sweet potato. Starchy and sweet, the purple yam is widely used in desserts in the Philippines and elsewhere in Asia, but it can also be served as a…

Vanilla Bliss! Vanilla Raspberry Cake Bars

Vanilla Bliss! Vanilla Raspberry Cake Bars

This is a beautiful little cake cookie whatever–delicious, white chocolatey, and just a wee bit cookie textured.

This recipe is an adapted version of the Lemon Vanilla Dream Bars recipe from the great little book Pure Vanilla by Shauna Sever (Amazon).  You will find recipe after recipe after recipe (80! of them) for all the vanilla treats you crave in her book. There are vanilla drinks, vanilla cakes, vanilla breakfasts. There also are cogent essays about the history and fraught present of vanilla production.

Sever’s recipe calls for swirling a generous dollop of lemon curd through the cake batter. There was no lemon curd to be found in my pantry, so I switched things out to use a British-made Wilkin and Sons Tiptree Raspberry Jam  I had in my refrigerator. (I got carried away and bought a 32 ounce jar of the imported jam at Costco. What does one person do with 32 ounces of raspberry jam?) The raspberry jam changed the whole character of the little cake but I kind of think it was for the better. The red swirls on the top of the cake are beautiful and the bites of treacly jam dispersed throughout the cake were a delightful surprise in each bite.

(Incidentally, Ina Garten has a recipe and video showing how to make your own vanilla extract. It’s fun! Here is a link to that video: Ina’s Vanilla.

Here is my take on the Vanilla Raspberry Cake bars: 

Vanilla Raspberry Dream Bars

September 17, 2021
Ingredients
  • 10 oz. white chocolate (chopped and divided)
  • 6 T. unsalted butter (cut into cubes)
  • 1/4 C. granulated sugar
  • 1/2 t. salt
  • 2 large eggs (at room temperature)
  • 1 t. vanilla extract
  • 1 t. vanilla bean paste
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour (sifted)
  • 1/2 C. raspberry jam
Directions
  • Step 1 Here is how I put this recipe together.
  • Step 2 Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. and prepare an 8 inch by 8 inch pan by coating it with cooking spray and lining it with parchment paper. To make it easier to remove your cake from the pan once it is baked, cut the parchment larger than the pan and leave two ends of the paper hanging over the side of the pan to use as handles.
  • Step 3 Put 8 ounces of the white chocolate in a glass bowl along with the butter and melt it over a pan of simmering water stirring occasionally. Take the bowl off the heat and stir in the sugar and the salt.
  • Step 4 Whisk the eggs into the chocolate mixture–one egg at a time. In a separate bowl, combine the vanilla with the vanilla bean paste using a whisk. After the vanillas are combined, fold in the flour and the remaining two ounces of white chocolate. Scoop this batter into your prepared pan and smooth the top.
  • Step 5 Spoon the jam onto the top of the batter in about five portions. Swirl the jam into the batter using a thin tool like a knife until you have a decorative pattern.
  • Step 6 Bake the bars for about 25-30 minutes. When the cake is done, a toothpick inserted in the middle of the cake should come out clean. Remove the cake from the oven and let it cool on a wire rack. When the cake is cool, lift it out of the baking pan and cut it into bars.

 

 

 

Apricot Upside-Down Cake

Apricot Upside-Down Cake

I’m pretty sure that Marie Antoinette had THIS Apricot Upside-Down Cake in mind when she said “Let them eat cake.” It’s to die for.   Here’s the recipe:   This recipe is adapted from a Vallery Lomas recipe in The New York Times. You can…

Apricot Crumble Tart

Apricot Crumble Tart

Stone fruits! I’m pretty sure I could eat my weight in plums. Don’t even get me started on nectarines. And apricots! What velvety beauties they are! The Greeks called apricots “the golden eggs of the sun.” How pretty is that? They’re all in season right…

Small Acts of Kindness and Gateau Nantais

Small Acts of Kindness and Gateau Nantais

 

How about a hug?

Some days you just need a hug or a little cake in your life. This is a year full of those needy days. 

Norwegian statesman Jens Stoltenberg said it well: “When autumn darkness falls, what we will remember are the small acts of kindness: a cake, a hug, an invitation to talk, and every single rose. These are all expressions of a nation coming together and caring about its people.”

This beautiful French Gateau Nantais may just be the cake you need to buoy your own spirits and to reach out to a friend as we begin to maneuver our way back into a semblance of life-before-Covid.

Better hold off on the hug for a while, though. 

Gateau Nantais

May 10, 2021
Ingredients
  • For The Cake
  • 16 T. salted butter plus more for the pan (room temperature)
  • 6 large eggs
  • 1 1/3 C. white sugar
  • 2 T. grated lemon zest
  • 2 1/2 C. almond flour
  • 1/4 t. salt
  • 1/2 C. plus 2 T. all-purpose flour
  • 6 T. dark Rum
  • For The Rum Syrup
  • 3 T. white sugar
  • 1/3 C. water
  • 1 T. whole allspice
  • 1 t. black peppercorns
  • 1/2 C. dark rum
  • For The Lemon Glaze and Garnish
  • 1 1/2 C. powdered sugar
  • 1/4 t. salt
  • 3 T lemon juice (or more as needed)
  • 1/2 C. sliced almonds (toasted)
Directions
  • Step 1 Butter a 9-inch round baking pan and line the bottom with a round of parchment. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place the rack in the middle position in your oven.
  • Step 2 Beat eggs in a small bowl. Set aside.
  • Step 3 Set up your stand mixer with the paddle attachment. Beat butter, sugar and lemon zest at medium speed for 2 or 3 minutes until the mixture is light and fluffy. Add almond flour and salt and beat for about 30 seconds until the almond flour is incorporated into the butter mixture. Gradually add the eggs to the mixture. Scrape the bowl as needed while you beat the mixture for about 3 minutes. You want this mixture to be light and fluffy when properly beaten. Leave your mixer on low speed and gradually add the all-purpose flour. Mix until the flour is incorporated. Add the rum and mix to combine. At this point you will need to be careful that there are no pockets of raw flour in your mixture. Scrape the bowl a few times to check for pockets of flour. Scrape the batter into the prepared cake pan and smooth the top of the batter. Bake at 350 degrees F. for 50 to 55 minutes. When your cake is done it will be a pretty brown on top and the center will spring back when gently pressed. You can check your cake for doneness by inserting a wooden skewer into the center of the cake. The skewer should come out clean.
  • Step 4 To make the rum syrup, add sugar, water, allspice and peppercorns together in a saucepan. Boil this mixture over medium-high heat for about 3 minutes, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the rum. Put the mixture back on the heat and simmer for about 2 minutes to thicken it a bit. Remove from heat and strain the mixture into a bowl through a fine mesh strainer. Set aside.
  • Step 5 Remove the cake from the oven and let it cool on a wire rack for about 5 minutes before you invert it on a second wire rack. While the cake is still a bit warm, brush the top and sides of the cake with the rum syrup. Now, completely cool the cake to room temperature. This will take about 1 hour. Transfer the cake to a serving platter.
  • Step 6 Prepare the lemon glaze. Whisk the powdered sugar and salt together in a bowl. Gradually whisk in the lemon juice and continue to whisk until your glaze is thick and smooth–about the consistency of yogurt. You can add additional lemon juice (1/2 t. at a time) until you have the proper consistency. Pour the glaze over the top of your cool cake using an offset spatula to spread the glaze. Sprinkle the top of the cake with the toasted almonds. Let the glaze set for about an hour before cutting and serving.

 

This recipe is adapted from one that appears on the Milk Street site. You can see the original recipe here. 

 

It’s What’s For Breakfast: Strawberry Vanilla Snacking Cake

It’s What’s For Breakfast: Strawberry Vanilla Snacking Cake

    OK.  So I had cake for breakfast. Strawberry Snacking Cake, actually. My customary breakfast of oatmeal and flax seeds was getting old. And…why shouldn’t I have cake for breakfast? Aren’t muffins cake?  (I rest my case.)   In any event, I’ve always subscribed to…

A Party On Your Plate: Chocolate and Almond Torte

A Party On Your Plate: Chocolate and Almond Torte

A lot of people have had a lot to say about cake. There was, of course Marie “Let them eat cake” Antoinette. Julia Child famously quipped “A party without a cake is really just a meeting.” British PM Boris Johnson stated his position on cake:…

Exquisite Palate? Balsamic Strawberry Ice Cream

Exquisite Palate? Balsamic Strawberry Ice Cream

With the advent of fall, those fresh, plump, sweet strawberries that graced market displays mid-summer are hard to come by. So, if you haven’t already gotten your strawberry fix for the year, here is an idea: Roast your strawberries. The roasting deepens the flavor of even second-tier berries.

For an added pop of flavor, drizzle a bit of your best balsamic vinegar over the strawberries before you roast them. The syrupy balsamic sweetens the berries.

Balsamic, by the way, has been made for about a thousand years, although the term balsamic vinegar wasn’t widely used until the 18th Century. Originating in the Modena and Reggio Emilia regions of Italy, early balsamics were the product of very limited craft production. Their cost and scarcity kept the vinegar mostly on the tables of the nobility where it was valued as a specialty vinegar suitable only for those rarefied nobles with exquisite palates. At the time, the vinegar was known as Noble’s Vinegar to distinguish it from the Commoner’s Vinegar that was consumed by the rest of the region’s population. Interestingly, it was Napoleon’s armies who changed that dynamic when they invaded Modena in 1796 and subsequently pillaged the estates of the region’s nobles. In the process, precious kegs of Noble’s Vinegar were “liberated” and sold, thus spreading awareness of the vinegar across Europe.

What makes balsamic vinegar so special? The production process is lengthy and the amount of balsamic produced is relatively small. Balsamic is made from grape pressings that are boiled and reduced to a syrup. The syrup is then aged (and its volume reduced) for at least twelve years (more for the really good stuff) in a succession of wooden kegs–chestnut, cherry wood, ash, mulberry and juniper–with each wooden keg adding a bit of distinctive flavor.

Here is an interesting short video that describes the process of making balsamic: How Balsamic Is Made. If you are a curious foodie (and who isn’t?), this video is worth your time to watch.

Why are some balsamics so expensive? The price of balsamic reflects the length of time that the balsamic has been aged. Amazon is offering a bottle of Giusti 100 for a whopping $975.93. The Giusti has been aged for at least 100 years and the label is engraved in 24-carat gold. (The Giuseppe Giusti Company is the oldest vinegar producer in the world. They opened their doors in 1603.) It’s a 3.4 fluid ounce bottle. That’s $287 per fluid ounce. Wow!  That’s a bargain, by the way. Another site is selling the same bottle for $1199.99.

 

Here is an excellent Balsamic Roasted Strawberry Ice Cream recipe.

Balsamic Roasted Strawberry Ice Cream
Save RecipeSave Recipe

Ingredients

    For the Strawberries
  • 1 pound fresh strawberries
  • 4 T. balsamic vinegar
  • 4 T. sugar
  • For the Vanilla Base
  • 1/2 to 3/4 C. granulated sugar
  • 2 C. cream
  • 1 C. half and half or 2% milk
  • 1 t. pure vanilla extract or vanilla paste

Instructions

  1. Pepare your fresh strawberries by washing the berries, removing the green stems, and drying the berries. Toss the berries with the sugar and balsamic vinegar and place the berries on a cookie sheet in a single layer. Bake at 300 degrees F. for 30 minutes. Remove the berries from the oven and cool.
  2. Once the berries have cooled, blend them until you they are smooth (or coarsely chop them). Be sure to scrape any remaining balsamic glaze into the berries. Put this berries in your refrigerator overnight to allow the flavors to bloom.
  3. The next day, stir sugar, cream, and half and half (or milk) together with the vanilla. Add the strawberries to the cream mixture. Process in your ice cream maker according to the directions for your machine. (As an alternative, you can stir some sliced or chopped fresh strawberries into the batter before your process your ice cream.)

Nutrition

Calories

2646 cal

Fat

74 g

Carbs

371 g

Protein

27 g

Click Here For Full Nutrition, Exchanges, and My Plate Info

7.8.1.2
214

https://bluecayenne.com/exquisite-palate-balsamic-strawberry-ice-cream

 

This ice cream recipe was adapted from one that appears on the Barbara Bakes site. You can find it here:Barbara Bakes.

Love and Ginger Cake

  During the Middle Ages, rich European ladies slipped their favorite knights a bit of gingerbread before an important tournament. Sweet, aromatic, crumbly, swoon-worthy gingerbread. How utterly romantic is that!? If you need proof, the painting below portrays a lady and her knight. Theirs was…