Tuesdays with Dorie: Peanut Butter Torte

May 6, 2008 at 4:27 am | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 65 Comments

peanut butter torte

There are a few recipes in Baking: From My Home to Yours whose pictures and titles are so alluring, I’ve been surprised no one’s chosen them for TWD yet.  Well, the time has finally come for one of these, as Elizabeth of Ugg Smell Food has picked Dorie’s Peanut Butter Torte as our recipe of the week!  Kind of like the Snickery Squares, I think Dorie has played candy bar dress-up here, except this time the candy in question is a Reece’s cup.  I don’t mean to sound like a buzzkill, but the ingredient list is a little frightening, I have to tell you…Oreos, peanut butter, cream cheese, heavy cream, chocolate and peanuts.  April was my busiest posting month to date, so that means it was also a very busy eating month.  If I didn’t want to feel my heart racing (in a bad way) with each bite, I knew I had to tweak this torte a bit. 

It was a given that was not going to make a full-sized torte.  I rarely make a full-sized anything for the two of us.  My six-inch springform would be prefect for a half recipe, and I’d still get six pieces out of it, but even a half batch seemed like so much cream and peanut butter.  After some intense volume calculations (not really), I decided that I could still use my six-inch pan and get away with just a quarter recipe of the filling.  Sure, it wouldn’t be as high as the one in Dorie’s picture, but I didn’t mind if my torte looked more like a tart.

I am a peanut butter fanatic, and I love the sugary, salty, junky stuff.  I am sorry to say though that I don’t think the Aussie peanut butter is very good…it’s pale and doesn’t have peanuty specks in it.  That may explain why, according to an informal poll taken by yours truly, it doesn’t seem to be a popular food item here (I was even told by someone that my favorite lunch, PB&J, is gross!).  No matter–I’ve been “importing” my own peanut butter since my first trip back to the States.  My current PB of choice is reduced fat Jif (smooth, never crunchy) so that’s what I decided to go with in this torte. 

peanut butter torte

Back in the US, I wouldn’t think twice about swapping full fat cream cheese for the light Philly they label “Neufchâtel.”  Here, though, the light Philly doesn’t have the same consistency at all…it tastes good, but even straight out of the fridge, it’s incredibly soft.  Further inspection of the package says that it’s a blend of cream cheese and cottage cheese, so I guess that’s why.  I didn’t think my filling would set up properly if I used it, so I went with the light version of a New Zealand brand called Mainland.

I also decided that rather than using Oreos to make my crust, I’d save a few more fat grams and use some almond cookie crumbs that I had in the freezer already.  Adding cocoa powder turned them into chocolate crumbs. 

peanut butter torte

I’m happy to report that my filling set up nicely after several hours in the fridge, and although I can imagine how wonderful the full blown PB torte would be, the skimpy version was still great!  I loved the chocolate-peanut crunchy bits throughout the filling.  Now you know my tricks, but you can find the original version of this recipe in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan, and on Elizabeth’s site.  Don’t forget to go check out the TWD Blogroll!

Tuesdays with Dorie: Fluted Polenta and Ricotta Cake

April 29, 2008 at 4:18 am | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 45 Comments

polenta

This cake reminds me of the kind of thing my Italian nonna would make, if I had an Italian nonna.  No wonder my husband, who is half Italian, scarfed this up!  Caitlin of Engineer Baker chose this, Dorie’s Fluted Polenta and Ricotta Cake, as our TWD recipe of the week.

Polenta in this case is just another name for yellow cornmeal, so the cake had sort of a sweet cornbread feel to it, but combined with ricotta and honey, it was quite moist.  And you can’t tell from the outside, but hidden in the cake are…dried figs!  Normally, I am not a fan of dried figs (a lasting side effect of my childhood aversion to Newtons), but they work really well here.  Their little seeds give a pleasant crunch to the cake.  I did use a couple less than the recipe called for, though, and I chopped them into quarters so I could more evenly scatter them throughout the batter.

fluted polenta and ricotta cake 

I wanted to follow Dorie’s suggestion to put a few thyme leaves into the batter, but then of course I forgot!  So I made thyme whipped cream instead, by rubbing thyme leaves into the sugar that sweetened it.  Please, no judgements about the massive amount of cream in that photo–I know I went a little overboard!

This was a lovely cake…simple and homey and good for breakfast (maybe without the mountain of whipped cream).  I made a half batch, which fit perfectly into my 7 1/2-inch tart pan.  Early reports from some other TWDers were that the cake was a bit too sweet.  I went a little skimpy on the measurements for both the sugar and honey, and it came out just right.  The only thing that left me scratching my head was the extra little hunk of butter that gets dotted on top of the cake before it goes into the oven.  It didn’t seen to do much but make some pale colored spots on top…I think I’ll leave it out if I make the cake again.

You can find this recipe in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan, and on Caitlin’s site.  Now go check out the TWD Blogroll!

Tuesdays with Dorie: Bill’s Big Carrot Cake

April 22, 2008 at 5:08 am | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, layer cakes, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 47 Comments

bill's big carrot cake

Carrot cake with cream cheese frosting…I probably don’t need to say much more than that.

But of course I will.  Carrot cake is a favorite here, but not made nearly enough, so I was glad when Amanda of slow like honey gave me the excuse I needed to get grating, by choosing Bill’s Big Carrot Cake as this week’s TWD recipe.  This one is *big* and loaded with carrots (of course), coconut, walnuts and dried cherries.

As per usual, I set out to do a half recipe of this cake, only to realize that I don’t have three 6-inch cake pans.  Crud.  I thought about making two larger layers and possibly splitting them into four, or using my 6-inch springform as the third pan, but I decided that this amount would probably fit perfectly into my quarter-sized sheet pan (my favorite and most useful sheet pan).  So instead of a round cake, I baked a sheet cake that I cut into three strips (the baking time was reduced, of course).  Once layered up with icing, it made a rectangular cake that I could cut into thin slices or chubby squares.

bill's big carrot cake

Armed with some tips from a great post by Joy, I made a gorgeous cream cheese frosting.  I flavored mine with vanilla bean paste and orange zest, rather than the lemon juice that Dorie uses.  This cake is tall, and moist and delicious…a winner of a carrot cake.  And since I just did a half recipe, I made the whole thing, cake and frosting, easily by hand.

You can find this recipe in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan, and on slow like honey.  Thanks Amanda, and of course thanks Bill!   Now go check out the TWD Blogroll!

Tuesdays with Dorie: Marshmallows

April 15, 2008 at 5:31 am | Posted in groups, other sweet, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 53 Comments

cappuccino marshmallows

The word of the day is althaiophobia: a fear of marshmallows.  And no, I didn’t make that up.

I’m kinda afraid of marshmallows.  Not really the marshmallows themselves, but the gelatin inside them.  When I saw that Judy of Judy’s Gross Eats had chosen marshmallows as this week’s Tuesdays with Dorie recipe, I was a little frightened.  I really wanted to participate, but I really didn’t want to use gelatin, and after the agar-agar disaster of ’07, I wasn’t too excited to try that again either.  Luckily, this time of year the Kosher section of the supermarket is pretty well-stocked, and I was able to pick up a box of fish gelatin.  I’d never used it before, and wasn’t sure how to (the package labeling is in Hebrew, so it didn’t help me out a lot).  It’s a little more granular than regular gelatin, but I decided to treat it the same way, since I didn’t have any better ideas. 

I went with Dorie’s ‘Playing Around’ instructions for cappuccino marshmallows, and based on some advice from other TWDers, just stirred in the cappuccino mixture at the very end to keep the marshmallows from deflating.  I set them in a glass baking dish rather than a baking sheet, which just seemed easier to me, and made them nice and tall.  I wasn’t sure if they would set up or not with that gelatin, so as soon as I tipped the mix into the dish, I immediately left the house and went to the movies (if you haven’t seen ‘Lars and the Real Girl,’ you should!).  If there’s one bad kitchen habit I have, it’s that I must endlessly poke and inspect things that I should just leave alone.

I was really pleased with how they turned out!  They were soft and squishy and high.  Now here’s the cake plate shot, à la Dorie.

cappuccino marshmallows

You can find this recipe on Judy’s Gross Eats— thanks Judy!  It’s also in  Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan.  Now go check out the TWD Blogroll!

TWD Rewind: Gooey Chocolate Cakes

April 11, 2008 at 12:55 pm | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 11 Comments

gooey chocolate cakes

This cake was not too photogenic, but it sure was delicious.  While I was away, the Tuesdays with Dorie gang, led this time by Leigh of Lemon Tartlet, made Dorie Greenspan’s Gooey Chocolate Cakes.  I knew I wanted to whip them up myself as soon as I was back home.  And poor R hadn’t had a homemade dessert in weeks, so a little chocolate gooeyness seemed like a good place to start.

In her opening description, Dorie notes that these cakes are fairly ubiquitous at this point.  In fact, at one restaurant where I used to work, we had a very similar molten cake on our menu for private parties.  We’d do up giant batches (sometimes over 100, depending on the size of the party) of individual ones, also using disposable aluminum cups as Dorie suggests.  Here, quantities were a bit more manageable…I only made two!

If you’d like to make up these little ultra-chocolatey cakes yourself (and it’s easy, I promise!), the recipe is on Lemon Tartlet and in the book Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan.

Tuesdays with Dorie: Caramel-Topped Flan

March 25, 2008 at 2:10 am | Posted in groups, pudding/mousse, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 40 Comments

caramel-topped flan

I may be out of town right now, but I wasn’t about to miss out on my chance to choose the recipe for this week’s Tuesdays with Dorie meet-up– at the rate the group is growing, I probably won’t get another pick!  I decided to venture into the “spoon desserts” section near the back of the book, and go with Dorie’s Caramel-Topped Flan.

Flan is simple to prepare…it’s a no-fuss custard that gets baked in a waterbath.  What makes it really special is the gorgeous amber-glass layer of caramel that adheres to the custard when you turn it out of the pan.  I love the combination of the cold wiggly custard and the bittersweet caramel.

I scaled back the recipe and made a couple of individual flans in ramekins, rather than one large one.  I also did the “playing around” variation, using coconut milk instead of heavy cream.  I put a little twist on it by infusing the milks with lime zest and using rum instead of vanilla extract.

The recipe is, of course, in  Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan, but I also include it below.  Don’t forget to check out Tuesdays with Dorie to visit all of this week’s posts.

Caramel-Topped Flan makes one 8″x2″ flan
adapted from Dorie Greenspan’s Baking: From My Home to Yours

Note: You can make individual servings by using six 6-oz or seven or eight 4-oz ramekins or containers instead of the larger cake pan.

For the caramel:
1/3 cup sugar
3 tablespoons water
squirt of fresh lemon juice

For the flan:
1 1/2 cups heavy cream
1 1/4 cups whole milk
3 large eggs
2 large egg yolks
1/2 cup sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Getting ready:
-Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 350ºF. Line a roasting pan or 9″x13″ baking pan with a double thickness of paper towels. Fill a teakettle with water and put it on to boil; when the water boils, turn off heat.

-Put a metal 8″x2″ round cake pan– not a nonstick one– in the oven to heat while you prepare the caramel. (If you are using individual molds or ramekins, then skip this step.)

To Make the Caramel:
-Stir the sugar, water and lemon juice together in a small heavy-bottomed saucepan. Put the pan over medium-high heat and cook until the sugar becomes an amber-colored caramel, about 5 minutes-remove the pan from the heat at the first whiff of smoke.

-Remove the cake pan from the oven and, working with oven mitts, pour the caramel into the pan and immediately tilt the pan to spread the caramel evenly over the bottom; set the pan aside.

To Make the Flan:
-Bring the milk and heavy cream just to a boil.

-Meanwhile, in a 2-quart glass measuring cup or in a bowl, whisk together the eggs, yolks and sugar. Whisk vigorously for a minute or two, and then stir in the vanilla. Still whisking, drizzle in about one quarter of the hot liquid-this will temper, or warm, the eggs so they won’t curdle. Whisking all the while, slowly pour in the remainder of the hot cream and milk. Using a large spoon, skim off the bubbles and foam that you worked up.

-Put the caramel-lined cake pan in the roasting pan. Pour the custard into the cake pan and slide the setup into the oven. Very carefully pour enough hot water from the kettle into the roasting pan to come halfway up the sides of the cake pan. (Don’t worry if this sets the cake pan afloat.) Bake the flan for about 35 minutes, or until the top puffs a bit and is golden here and there. A knife inserted into the center of the flan should come out clean. (Small, individual molds will take less time– start checking for doneness around the 25-minute mark).

-Remove the roasting pan from the oven, transfer the cake pan to a cooking rack and run a knife between the flan and the sides of the pan to loosen it. Let the flan cool to room temperature on the rack, then loosely cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours.

-When ready to serve, once more, run a knife between the flan and the pan. Choose a rimmed serving platter, place the platter over the cake pan, quickly flip the platter and pan over and remove the cake pan–the flan will shimmy out and the caramel sauce will coat the custard.

Storing: Covered with plastic wrap in its baking pan, the flan will keep in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. However, once unmolded, its best to enjoy it the same day.

Serving: Bring the flan to the table and cut into wedges. Spoon some of the syrup onto each plate.

Playing Around– Caramel-topped coconut flan: For a more tropical flan with a somewhat lighter texture, replace the heavy cream with a 15-oz can of unsweetened coconut milk and reduce the amount of milk to 1 cup.

Tuesdays with Dorie: Brioche Raisin Snails

March 18, 2008 at 2:48 am | Posted in breakfast things, groups, sweet things, sweet yeast breads, tuesdays with dorie | 32 Comments

brioche snails

Ah yes, it’s that day of the week again, and Peabody has chosen Dorie’s Brioche Raisin Snails as the recipe for this round of TWD.  I imagine this would be an ideal breakfast treat, but R & I moved faster than a speeding snail and ate them for dessert just a few hours after I made them. 

Actually this recipe is a few recipes in one, beginning with brioche dough.  It’s not hard to make (especially if you have a stand mixer to do the dirty-work for you), but requires a some time and patience, as it needs to spend a night in the fridge before it’s ready to shape.  I strayed from Dorie’s advice in her opener for Golden Brioche Loaves (which is the base for the snails) and did half a recipe…it came out just fine.  Once the brioche dough has had its beauty sleep, it’s rolled out and smeared with pastry cream (I don’t think I’ve ever baked pastry cream before!) and rum-flamed raisins.  I said last time that I am not a raisin fan, so here I used dried cherries in lieu, as I knew they’d be nice with the rum.  Then it gets rolled up and sliced into rounds– hence the whole “snail” thing.

brioche snails 

Like I said, we ate these the day they were made, and they were really nice…soft and slightly boozy.  Of course I glazed them, which Dorie says is optional (but in my books is mandatory).  I only turned a portion of my dough into snails…I froze the rest as Pecan Honey Sticky Buns for another time.  Yum!

You can find the recipe on Peabody’s site (her version includes a few yummy-looking modifications to the original) or in the book Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan.  And head over to the Tuesdays with Dorie space to see all the other snails crawling around the blogosphere.

P.S.: I’ll be on vacation by the time you see this.  I’m not sure about the internet situation, as I’ll be a tourist in lands unknown to me…so if I can’t comment on your posts for a few weeks, please forgive me!

Tuesdays with Dorie: Russian Grandmothers’ Apple Pie-Cake

March 11, 2008 at 12:02 am | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, pies & tarts, simple cakes, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 43 Comments

russian grandmother's apple pie-cake

Natalie from Burned Bits chose Russian Grandmothers’ Apple Pie-Cake as our Tuesdays with Dorie recipe of the week.  I love apple pie and I love cake, so this one sounded great, even though I didn’t really know what to expect from it.  Made from dough like a pie, but bakes up like a cake– huh??  Dorie doesn’t have a photo in her book to help me out (although she does have a nice story about the recipe), so I’d just have to see this paradox for myself.

It wasn’t hard to make– two layers of crust sandwich a cinnamony apple filling. When the “pie” bakes, the crusts poof up, and it really does become cake-like. It’s a really rustic dessert–all lumpy and bumpy and browned on top.  And it’s really good…tonight I will be dreaming about eating it for breakfast!

russian grandmother's apple pie-cake

I did make a couple of changes. Dorie uses raisins in her recipe, but I’m not too fond of them so I substituted dried cranberries instead. Also, I wanted to make half a recipe, which is a more manageable amount for us, and my 8-inch square glass pan worked perfectly.

You can find the recipe in Baking: From My Home to Yours or on Burned Bits.  And check out the posts from the other Tuesdays with Dorie members!

Tuesdays with Dorie: Snickery Squares

March 4, 2008 at 8:22 pm | Posted in cookies & bars, groups, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 34 Comments

snickery squares

Erin of Dinner and Dessert was at the controls for this week’s Tuesdays with Dorie recipe.  She chose Dorie Greenspan’s Snickery Squares from the book Baking: From My Home to Yours.  Dorie calls these “classy Snickers.”  Shortbread, dulce de leche, candied peanuts and chocolate glaze…okay, there’s no nougat, but we won’t get too technical here!  They still sounded candybar-licious to me!

I can’t say that I’ve noticed store-bought dulce de leche at my local grocery store in Sydney, so I made my own from a can of sweetened condensed milk .  I threw caution to the wind and did it they way they all say not to…I boiled it in the can for three hours.  Luckily there were no horrific explosions, and when I opened up the tin a few days later (I went away for the weekend and stashed it in the fridge), I had a can of beautifully thick caramel goo.

snickery squares

My bars look a little more oozy than they probably should.  I just made them this afternoon, and had to shortcut the chilling time before their photo-session, as my daylight was fleeting!  These are rich…super-rich.  I’d maybe prefer a thinner layer of bittersweet chocolate topping, but besides that, no complaints here!

You can find the recipe for Snickery Squares in Baking: From My Home to Yours or on Dinner and Dessert.  And don’t forget to check out the posts from the other Tuesdays with Dorie members!

Tuesdays with Dorie: Pecan Sour Cream Biscuits

February 26, 2008 at 7:06 am | Posted in biscuits/scones, breakfast things, groups, tuesdays with dorie | 30 Comments

pecan sour cream biscuits

Ashley of eat me, delicious lured us out of the realm of cakes and into the world of breakfast treats by choosing Pecan Sour Cream Biscuits as this week’s Tuesdays with Dorie recipe. 

I will fess up and tell you off the bat that I made these twice.  The first time around, they were truly delicious, but they didn’t come out the way I thought they were meant to.  Dorie described them as ‘high’ and ‘flaky,’ but mine didn’t rise much at all (surprising, given the large amount of leavener in the recipe), and while very tender, I wouldn’t have said they were flaky.  Also, my photos of that batch were so blah-looking, I didn’t want to put them up.  I still don’t like this photo either.  What can I say…I am a perfectionist who never attains perfection.  How frustrating to be me!!

The second time around, I followed a good suggestion made by Lemon Tartlet Leigh to grate my butter into the dry ingredients rather than try to cut in larger pieces.  Then you can just toss the grated bits to coat and don’t run the risk of over-working the dough.  I am usually pretty sensitive to over-working, but maybe I did on my first attempt, who knows.  I’d say the second batch did rise a bit higher than the first, but I was expecting them to double in height or something, and they certainly didn’t.  The only way I can put it is that they seemed more like scones than biscuits.  That being said, they made darn fine scones (pecans and brown sugar are a great combo), and I’d certainly make them again, again…if that makes sense. 

If you read the recipe in the book Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan, or here on eat me, delicious, you’ll notice that Dorie calls for cutting the biscuits into two-inch rounds.  I cut mine into larger squares, so there was no waste.  Also two inches is tiny…I could eat like five of those.  And if you’re wondering what that crazy red stuff is on my scones, it’s cranberry honey, which I received in the last go-round of Blogging by Mail

Did anyone achieve high and mighty pecan sour cream biscuits this week?  I dunno.  Join me at the Tuesdays with Dorie site to view the blogroll!

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