Feb.
28

The end of another month which means it’s time to reveal the Daring Bakers Challenge! It is no wonder that February, the month for honoring love on St. Valentine’s Day, is best represented first by the heart and then by chocolate or… better yet… a chocolate heart. This month’s inspiration was Malaysia’s “most flamboyant food ambassador”, Chef Wan and the chosen recipe comes from his book Sweet Treats by Chef Wan. 

The February 2009 challenge is hosted by Wendy of WMPE’s blog and Dharm of Dad ~ Baker & Chef. We have chosen a Chocolate Valentino cake by Chef Wan; a Vanilla Ice Cream recipe from Dharm and a Vanilla Ice Cream recipe from Wendy as the challenge.  

To be honest that’s a pretty funny statement there since really the actual requirement was to use Chef Wan’s flourless chocolate cake recipe and make our own ice cream using any recipe we wished (not required to use either Dharm or Wendy’s ice cream recipe which I was happy about since I’ve made ice cream many times and have my own favorites!!).  The recipe for Chef Wan’s fourless chocolate cake contains only three very simple ingredients… chocolate… butter… and eggs.  As a baker, it’s how you interpret these ingredients that is the challenge.  

I chose to make both a 4″ heart shaped cake and a 6″ square cake… along with both vanilla whipped cream and vanilla-bean mint chocolate-chip ice cream.  The combination of mint and chocolate really appeals to me. Having never in my life made (or even eaten!) a flourless chocolate cake I had absolutely no idea of what to expect. I can truthfully say this was one of my favorite Daring Bakers challenges and I’m crossing my fingers that you read on as I tell you why and show you more pictures of this decadent goodness!  {continue}

When I told my lemon-loving colleague about the concept of a flourless chocolate cake, a strange look came over his face.  One might call the look “puzzled” or “confused” as he just couldn’t wrap his mind around a cake that contained no flour.  Being unsure myself of how this would actually turn out I could say little more than “if it works, I’ll bring you a slice”.  

Part of the role that flour plays in baking cakes is to work with other ingredients and produce tiny air bubbles that give rise or lift.  Many people use all-purpose flour which pretty much contains an intermediate amount of gluten.  There’s nothing wrong with that and I consider all-purpose flour to be a “compromise flour” since it works well is most things. Keep in mind though that too little gluten in a flour and things don’t hold their shape (yuck!)… but… too much gluten makes things tough and uber-chewy (ugh!).  Bread flour has a high gluten content making it great for bagels and breads!  Cake flour has a lower gluten content, is typically softer and more finely milled, and is great for giving cakes a finer texture.  But wait… if we’re making a chocolate cake with no flour, how in the world is it going to hold together and not result in a puddle of steaming chocolate goo? In this recipe, the answer lies in the incorporation of stiffly whipped egg whites! Oh sure, I could show you a picture of them but believe me they’re not very interesting. You can trust me on that :)

This recipe for flourless chocolate cake calls for 16 oz of chocolate, a little more than 1/2cup of butter and 5 eggs.  That’s it.  Be sure to use the best quality chocolate you can keeping in mind how the chocolate tastes is exactly what your cake will taste like.  Maybe you love a deep dark bittersweet chocolate with a high cacao percentage… or think there’s nothing better than a sweet milk chocolate… or believe the absolute best is a chocolate that falls somewhere in between such as semi-sweet.  My personal favorite is dark bittersweet chocolate and the kids of course love milk chocolate and DH just loves chocolate, period, so as a sort of compromise what I did was use 11 ounces of bittersweet (60%) and 5 ounces of semi-sweet :)  This recipe is flexible so use the kind of chocolate or the combination of different chocolates that makes you happy.  

A word of caution however against using white chocolate.  Technically white chocolate contains no cacao, just cocoa butter, so it is definitely not suitable for this recipe.  Having made that bold statement I am supremely confident that some Daring Bakers probably figured out a way to successfully use white chocolate here so check out the blogroll to find out.

The baking instructions for this recipe call for 25 minutes at 375° but a lot of early birds reported their cakes to be underdone in the middle.  I checked my cakes at 20 minutes, 25 minutes and 30 minutes and felt they were not fully baked.  While I didn’t want dry, crumbly edges, I didn’t want a soggy pudding center!!  Finally at about 45 minutes I chanced it and removed them from the oven.  10 minutes on the cooling rack and then I removed them from the pan pleased with how they came out :)

For plating, I dusted the heart cake with powdered sugar and added three dollops of freshly made whipped cream from scratch and dusted them with cocoa powder.  For the vanilla-bean mint chocolate-chip ice cream, the recipe can be found here on my blog from when I first made it last May.  The only modification I made was using a whole scraped vanilla bean instead of vanilla extract.

The cake was tremendous success as DH and the kids scarfed it down quickly, making lots of nom-nom-nom noises along the way!  Of course they loved the vanilla-bean mint chocolate-chip ice cream… almost as much as I love making ice cream.  I have the KitchenAid Ice Cream Maker attachment and it was worth every single penny.  So easy to use and it takes up no additional precious real estate on my counter!  I simply store the bowl in the deep freezer out in the garage and it’s ready to go anytime I want.  If you have a KitchenAid stand mixer, I highly recommend this attachment!!  Once you learn to make a basic vanilla ice cream or frozen custard (my favorite recipe was posted here on my blog) you can have loads of fun branching out and experimenting with other flavors. 

Thank you Dharm and Wendy for choosing a great flourless chocolate cake recipe for this month’s challenge. I really loved that it came together quickly, easily and I could do the whole thing (including home made ice cream) in a single day.  As a busy working woman, I thoroughly appreciate that!

Have a delicious day!

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Jun.
19


If baking is something you want to do… often… and well… it’s essential to find your “go to” recipes. Having them in your repertoire is the first step to making your baking life easier and less time consuming. Never underestimate the power of a good basic cake recipe… and a good basic frosting recipe too :)

For me, the recipe for Dorie’s Perfect Party Cake (DPPC) has proven time and time again to be the best basic cake recipe I have in my baking arsenal. I’ve shared it with you guys in in this post and I’ve heard from so many of you that it is indeed the perfect basic cake recipe.

I used it here for lemon cupcakes that I topped with cream cheese icing

I used it for the orange cupcakes and raspberry cupcakes pictured below (as well as the first/cover photo)…

But it started here when I baked it as the recipe was written for one of our Daring Bakers challenges (the pic is from when I re-did the recipe, not the original time)

The recipe itself is so incredibly versatile that I recommend it every time I get asked if I have a good basic cake recipe. I’ve made it more often than I can count and I don’t have pictures of each time. DJ’s son “graduated” from 5th grade yesterday and I’m going to use the recipe again for the cake I’m making for his party this weekend. Some of you have read the recipe and told me “but I don’t want to make a *lemon* cake”. Okay fine… omit the lemon zest in the batter and you have a basic white cake… a VERY GOOD basic white cake :) The point is that by having a good basic cake recipe, you can add extracts/flavorings and colors (like I did with the orange cupcakes and raspberry cupcakes posted a couple of times above) and play around with it and customize it to your liking. Heck, add chocolate chips or pistachios if they float your boat. As long as you have a good solid consistently performing basic cake reicpe, you’ve opened up a world of possibilities!

Dorie also has a really great Cocoa Buttermilk cake recipe too… it’s in her book Baking From My Home To Yours (available thru Amazon.com at an amazing STEAL of a price!). I used it to make these cupcakes pictured below…

And I’ve already pointed you guys to my absolute favorite buttercream icing in this tutorial of how to make it. I wish I could take credit for creating that recipe… but it’s just something I came across one time and found it to be so perfect that I recommend it anytime someone asks “do you have a good buttercream icing recipe”. Same rule applies here about having a good basic recipe and being able to add to it. I’ve added lemon zest to it (paired it with the DPPC recipe) and created these…

… paired it with the DPPC recipe and just colored the icing to create these…

… added cocoa powder to it and created chocolate buttercream… added peanut butter to it and created peanut butter buttercream… added mint extract and icing color to it and made mint buttercream as well


But these are my no-brainer, go-to, consistent performers. You probably have others in your toolkit that are perfect for you. I’ve found that if you don’t have great basic recipes, you end up in a never-ending-cycle of time-consuming experiments… sometimes at the expense of your guests taste buds.

I recently made three dozen cupcakes for a pot-luck dinner and instead of using my tried and true DPPC recipe, I decided to try something new. In a word… no good. They were dry and lacked flavor – redeemed solely by the beauty of the frosting. But beautiful and delicious frosting can only hide so much and more than half the cupcakes were untouched. Sure didn’t make me feel very good but I learned a valuable lesson… to trust what had proven itself worthy of being called my go-to white cake recipe… to trust in Dorie’s Perfect Party Cake :)

If you’re going to invest the time and money (hey, ingredients aren’t cheap! LOL) to make something from scratch, you owe it to yourself (and your guests) to make it look **and** taste good too. So invest the time and find your great basic recipes… then trust them :)

Have a delicious day!

May.
27

Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream


What better way to complete a holiday BBQ dinner than with some homemade ice cream! If you’ve got an ice cream maker, it doesn’t get any easier than this :)

I remember when I was a kid sometimes my parents would have people over for cookouts and end the meal by making homemade ice cream. It was a rather involved process in which my father would buy a big bag of rock salt, dig the ice-cream maker out of the garage and everyone would sit around trying to hold a conversation while dad continuously checked on things and kept adding rock salt along the way to ensure the ice cream maker worked it’s magic. It was always vanilla… it was always “soupy”… and truth be told I was never impressed! LOL

Oh how times have changed!

When I decided to buy a stand mixer last December, one of the big reasons I chose KitchenAid was the fact there are so many attachments. When the thought to buy an ice cream maker began ruminating in my mind a few weeks ago, I was torn between buying a stand-alone Cuisinart model or the ice cream maker attachment for my KA stand mixer. I went back and forth… and forth and back… finally deciding on the KA attachment and though admittedly I’ve only used it once, I’m very pleased with it!

I looked thru oodles and oodles of recipes both online and in print. Most sounded fantastic, especially Alton Brown’s ice cream recipes, but started with a custard base that included eggs and needed to be cooked. I think I may have mentioned a time or two that I’m extremely LAZY so none of those recipes would work. I mean, it’s bad enough the ice cream maker bowl needs to be in the freezer for 15 hours before the magic can begin … that’s enough “fore thought” for me! LOL. I didn’t begin searching for recipes until the bowl had been frozen for 18 hours so any recipe that **then** required me to cook ingredients and let them cool for 4hrs, well, let’s just say that wasn’t about to happen! LOL

I came across a recipe on AllRecipes.com that was right up my alley. Just a handful of ingredients and nothing that required cooking :) DJ and the kids are big chocolate fans so I went for Mint Chocolate Chip to initiate our new gadget. Next week, though, it’ll be lemon sorbet… all for me :)

If you’ve got an ice cream maker this is something you really should try. Here’s a link to the recipe for Easy Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream

Okay so think about making some ice cream… or at least eating some ice cream… cuz if there’s one thing I know for sure it’s that there’s always room for ice cream :)

PS… this entry has been submitted in Mike’s You Scream, I Scream, We All Scream for Frozen Desserts blog event

Have a delicious day!

May.
09

Chocolate Mint Bars


While I may not be a huge fan of chocolate, pair it with the freshness of mint and I’m instantly drawn in :) I came across this recipe a few months ago and it’s been nagging at the corners of my mind ever since.

Are you familiar with a candy called Ande’s Mints? A thin, light layer of mint paired with a small slice of chocolate. I consider a small slice of yum! Here’s a picture. It’s one of the few chocolate candies that I can eat one after another after another.

Chocolate Mint Bars are like a layer of chocolate brownies on the bottom… with a layer of mint… and then a thin layer of chocolate to top it all off. If you like chocolate and you like mint, I guarantee you’ll like these. In fact, I’m so sure you’ll like them I’ll offer you a money back guarantee! Considering that reading my blog is free, I’m not too worried ;-)

Chocolate Mint Bars
Adapted from Cooking Light magazine
March 2008 issue

Bottom Layer
1 cup all purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup granulated sugar
4 eggs
1/4 cup melted butter
2 tablespoons water
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 (16oz) can chocolate syrup

Mint Layer
(note: this is the recipe as written… when I make this again I plan to make about 50% more of the mint layer so that it really shows up against the chocolate — but use your own judgment on this)
2 cups powdered sugar
1/4 cup melted butter
2 tablespoons milk
1/2 teaspoon peppermint extract
2 drops green food coloring

Chocolate Glaze Topping
3/4 cups semisweet chocolate chips
3 tablespoons butter

DIRECTIONS
Preheat oven to 350F
Generously coat a 13″x9″ pan with cooking spray

For the bottom layer:
Combine granulated sugar, eggs, 1/4 cup melted butter, 2 tablespoons water, vanilla extract and chocolate syrup… stir until smooth. Add flour and salt to the chocolate mixture and stir until blended. Pour into the prepared pan and bake for 35 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out almost clean. Cool completely in the pan on a wire rack.

For the mint layer:
Combine powdered sugar, 1/4 cup melted butter, milk, peppermint extract and food coloring – beat with a mixer until smooth. Spread this mixture evenly over the cooled bottom layer. Note: this is the recipe however the next time I make this I will make 50% more of the mint layer.

For the glaze topping:
Once the mint layer has set (about 20 minutes)… combine the chocolate chips and 3 tablespoons butter in a microwave safe bowl. Microwave on HIGH for 1 minute or until the chocolate is melted. Stir well until smooth and then let it stand for 2-3 minutes. Spread the chocolate evenly over the mint layer. KEEP REFRIGERATED until ready to serve then slice into desired-size pieces and enjoy.

Feb.
05

Peppermint Bark

Ever had Peppermint Bark? It’s insanely good… and insanely easy to make.


When making Peppermint Bark, this is my favorite candy base and this is my favorite peppermint candy. Don’t worry that the base says “almond” because it doesn’t taste like almond… in fact, it tastes like vanilla. And don’t worry that the mints say “soft” because they’re not… in fact, they’re pretty hard but unlike traditional candy canes these are more like melt-always. So the “almond” bark tastes like vanilla and the soft peppermints are hard. Eh, go figure… just find your zen-like space and go with the flow baby… I promise you, it’ll be worth it once you taste the bark.
Anyway, all you need is the bark, a microwave, a piece of wax paper on a cookie sheet and the soft peppermints.

Crush up some of the peppermint sticks… and set aside for now. Melt some of the bark in the microwave (specific directions are on the package – I just use the MELT setting on my microwave) and add a good amount of the crushed peppermints to it. Now mix it all up, pour it out on the piece of wax paper on the cookie sheet and use a spatula to spread it out. Top with more crushed peppermints.

Now at this point, I stick it in the fridge to set since I’m a rather impatient kind of repressed pastry chef .

Once it’s set, use your hands to break it up, pop a piece in your mouth and shout WOOHOO knowing that you just made Peppermint Bark!

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