Tuesdays with Dorie: Fresh Ginger and Chocolate Gingerbread

January 27, 2009 at 1:46 am | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, simple cakes, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 57 Comments

fresh ginger and chocolate gingerbread

I’ve had my eye on this recipe for quite awhile, and I was pretty happy when Heather of Sherry Trifle picked it for this week’s TWD.  My mum made gingerbread cookies with us every year at Christmastime, but gingerbread in cake form is one of those “newer discoveries” that I wish I hadn’t missed out on for so long.

With the addition of chocolate and icing (yay, icing!), Dorie’s version takes the classic gingerbread cake and shakes it up a bit.  I have been a little cacao-deprived as of late, so I really liked the little flecks of chocolate speckled throughout the cake.  And the chocolate icing..my gosh, the icing.  I used a shot of espresso from the coffee shop to make it, so the coffee kick was quite noticeable, and quite tasty.  The chocolate and coffee worked really well with the cake’s spicy ginger trifecta (fresh, ground and candied). 

I made two-thirds of a recipe and baked it in an eight-inch sqaure pan.  I did this before I even saw Dorie’s note, so I gave myself a pat on the back for that one.  Dorie’s serving size suggestion was a bit…ummm…gigantic.  I was actually able to get nine pieces (instead of six) out of my smaller cake.  This was four nights worth of dessert for us, so we paired it with vanilla ice cream one night, whipped cream the next, and enjoyed it plain-Jane with tea another.  Every which way, it was delicious, and stayed nice and moist the whole time. 

For the recipe, read Sherry Trifle or see Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan (she also has it here on Serious Eats).  Don’t forget to check out the TWD Blogroll.

Tuesdays with Dorie: Dimply Peach Cake

September 23, 2008 at 5:49 am | Posted in breakfast things, cakes & tortes, groups, simple cakes, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 49 Comments

dimply peach cake

Michelle of Bake-En selected Dorie’s Dimply Plum Cake for this week’s TWD.  I’ve read about this little breakfast cake all over the place, so I was really looking forward to trying it.  Unfortunately, stone fruits are not in season just yet here in Australia.  I had to take what I could get on this one, and what I could get were a couple of rock-hard peaches.  I stuck ’em in a paper bag and crossed my fingers that they’d ripen after a few days.

Well, they didn’t really ripen at all, and frankly I was surprised that I could even get the pits out, but I charged ahead with my out of season fruit anyway.  I went with one of Dorie’s “playing around” suggestions and added a few shredded basil leaves instead of citrus zest to the cake batter.  I kept in the cardamom, which is a spice I love, and added a pinch of cinnamon, too.  To try and help the crunchy peaches along a bit, I sprinkled each exposed half with sugar just before putting the cake in the oven, and then a couple more times during the baking process as well.

 dimply peach cake

Such a cute cake– I loved the fruity dimples, and the peach halves looked almost like hearts!  What I’ve hidden from you in these photos, though, is a little patch of raw batter left under each peach half.  Drat– I couldn’t get that part to cook through for the life of me!  In a flash of genius while taking these photos, I thought that if I flipped the individual slices upside-down on a baking sheet and stuck them under the broiler for a minute, I cook get the raw bits to firm up.  And it worked!  (That technique might get a little messy with a whole large cake.)  There was no time to take extra pics, however, as the coffee was good to go, and R was grumbling that breakfast was already taking too long.  

I made half a recipe and baked it in a standard-sized loaf pan.  Leftovers weren’t a problem, as R and I polished off the whole thing in one sitting!  The peaches did sweeten and soften nicely in the oven (I do think the sugar sprinklings helped), and I loved the warm, spicy cardamom flavor.  Although R was initially suspicious, the basil was a really nice touch, too…I should bake with herbs more often.

dimply peach cake

For the recipe, look in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan (she also has it on Serious Eats) or read Bake-En.  Don’t forget to check out the TWD Blogroll to see what over 250 other people had to say!

Tuesdays with Dorie: Black-and-White Banana Loaf

August 5, 2008 at 5:32 am | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, simple cakes, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 54 Comments

black-and-white banana loaf

I love a making loaf cakes (and Bundts, too…wink, wink, nudge, nudge), so I was glad to see that Ashlee of A Year In The Kitchen chose Dorie’s Black-and-White Banana Loaf for TWD this week.  Loaf cakes are basically throw together no-brainers, although this one has the extra steps of melting chocolate, mashing a banana and marbling.  Still no-brainers, but with a few more bowls to wash at the end.

I also love stuff baked with bananas.  I do find this odd, since I don’t like raw bananas at all–ick!  But they smell so good baking in the oven, and make for super-moist cakes, breads and muffins.  You’ll hear no complaints from me on this cake (it tastes just like you’d expect), although perhaps I could work on my marbling skills…what I did just looks like blobs.  Dorie said to make this more white than black, but I paid that no mind and went more black than white.

black-and-white banana loaf

Did I tell you I found a half-size loaf pan a couple months ago?  Really, I don’t even know why I have larger baking pans anymore…they rarely see the light of day.  The little guy’s almost as deep as a normal loaf, though, so it doesn’t really shave anything off the baking time.

black-and-white banana loaf

Look in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan or read Ashlee’s post to find the recipe.  Don’t forget to check out the TWD Blogroll to see what over 200 other people had to say!

P.S.: I’m still out of town…back in a couple days!

TWD Rewind: Perfection Pound Cake

June 4, 2008 at 6:57 pm | Posted in cakes & tortes, groups, simple cakes, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 22 Comments

perfection pound cake

Sydney is one grey and wet city right now.  We’re in the midst of what’s supposed to be a week of non-stop rain, so to pass the time indoors, I decided to play TWD catch-up with Dorie’s Perfection Pound Cake.  To give my pound cake an extra element of sunshine, I chopped up a little candied lemon and orange zest that I had leftover from my meyer lemon bombe plate garnish and threw that into the mix.

What did I think?  Well, to tell you the truth, I thought the cake was just a tad dry (and after reading other blog posts about this same cake, I found that it was not an uncommon reaction).  But I took a little of the simple syrup I’d been storing the candied zest in, brushed the cut sides of the cake with it, and then it was perfection!  With some whipped cream and a quick sauce from frozen raspberries, it definitely chased the clouds away.

perfection pound cake

TWD leader Laurie picked this recipe (back when there were only four members and she could actually get a couple choices of her own!), and you can find it on her site or in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan.

Tuesdays with Dorie: Traditional Madeleines

May 20, 2008 at 3:37 am | Posted in cakes & tortes, cookies & bars, groups, simple cakes, sweet things, tuesdays with dorie | 55 Comments

madeleines

I’d been crossing my fingers that Tara of Smells Like Home would choose a cookie for this week’s Tuesdays with Dorie recipe.  Then Tara picked Dorie’s Traditional Madeleines–score!  I know that a madeleine is really cake in cookie’s clothing, but after all the hard-core desserting I’ve been doing (and still have left to do this month), I was happy to have something that’s just a sweet bite.

I have fond voluntary (as opposed to Proustian-ha!) memories of these little scalloped-shaped cuties.  Actually my memories are quite recent, as we made madeleines as part of the petits fours plate at the restaurant I last worked for.  That recipe uses browned butter and almond flour, and we made a variety of flavors, from lavender to lemon-thyme, depending on what we felt like or what we had available.

madeleines

Dorie’s recipe is flavored with lemon zest, and even though she doesn’t instruct you to brown the melted butter, I went ahead and did it anyway.  Browned butter just has such a beautiful flavor,  I used my non-stick mini madeleine pan (which is the only one I have, and trust me, you still need to grease it well) to bake them off, and made half of Dorie’s recipe.  Rather than sprinkling them with powdered sugar before serving, I tossed the still-warm madeleines in some finely ground vanilla sugar.

I will say that these make very good little lemony tea cakes.  They are soft and light and tasty (do bake them right when you are ready to eat them though, as they stale quickly).  But I have one gripe.  If we are talking about “tradition” here, then madeleines are supposed to have a bump on their backsides.  We learned in culinary school that the bump is desirable, and our instructor said that madeleines are often presented with their bums in the air (rather than scalloped side up) to show them off.  Dorie calls for chilling the batter for at least three hours to help form this bump.  The same day I made the batter, I baked up half of it after letting it chill for several hours.  No bump.  The next day, I baked up the remaining batter (it had now been chilling overnight).  Two madeleines had the bump…the rest didn’t.  Ah well…after conferring with other TWDers, this seemed to happen to most everyone.  And as Ulrike pointed out, even the Traditional Madeleines pictured in Dorie’s book don’t have bumps!

madeleines

If you’d like to try your hand at baking madeleines (and see if you get the coveted golden bump!), you can find the recipe here on Smells Like Home or in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan.  Don’t forget to check out the TWD Blogroll!

SHF#43: Lemon Yogurt Cake with Marmalade Glaze

May 18, 2008 at 7:57 pm | Posted in cakes & tortes, events, simple cakes, sweet things | 28 Comments

lemon yogurt cake with marmalade glaze 

Do you ever find yourself with one or more of the following things in your refrigerator?:

  1. An extra lemon that you bought a week ago, and is now just rolling back and forth every time you move something around it
  2. A huge tub of plain yogurt (because the plain only comes in huge tubs, but that’s what you like to eat on your granola) that you don’t know if you’ll be able to finish before it turns icky
  3. A jar of grapefruit marmalade that looked so beautiful, you had to buy it at the farmers’ market, but now it’s been open forever because it’s actually too thick-cut to be enjoyable on your toast or PB&J

Well, today I realized I had all three and I needed to do something about it.  That something was to bake a lemon yogurt cake with marmalade glaze.  Yogurt cake is a cousin to pound cake…the cousin you call on when you don’t quite need all those pounds, if ya know what I mean.  The yogurt keeps it tender and a little oil keeps it moist.  It has a light texture that’s a bit spongier than pound cake.

This is particular recpie is one that my friend P photocopied for me from Bon Appétit magazine a few years ago.  I only have the recipe itself, and not the article associated with it, but I noticed that it bears a striking similarity to a recipe I’ve seen in Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan.  After a little Internet research, I found that it is in fact a Dorie recipe– a slightly altered version of what’s in her book.  While I’ve made another lemon yogurt cake here before, I’ve actually baked this one a few times, too, with assorted maramalades on top, making my own small tweaks along the way.  I prefer to cut down a bit on the oil in the original version and ramp up the lemon. I’ve made those changes in the recipe below, but I link to the original as well.

This cake is happy and sunny; sweet but with a little pucker from the marmalade.  And loaf cakes are easy to make, giving you the sugar high you’re after with minimal effort.  Speaking of which, I’m sending this over to Tartelette who’s hosting a sweet-tart, citrusy version of Sugar High Friday (started by Jennifer The Domestic Goddess) this month!

lemon yogurt cake with marmalade glaze

Yogurt Cake with Marmalade Glaze– makes one loaf pan
modified from a recipe in Bon Appétit by Dorie Greenspan, February 2005

For the cake:
1 1/2 c all-purpose flour
2 t baking powder
1/4 t salt
1 c plain yogurt (whole-milk or low fat)
1 c sugar
3 large eggs
finely grated peel from 1 lemon
juice of half a lemon
1/3 c vegetable oil

For the glaze:
1/4 c lemon, orange, or grapefruit marmalade
1 t water

-Position rack in center of oven and preheat to 350°F.  Generously butter 8 1/2×4 1/2×2 1/2-inch metal loaf pan.

-Sift flour, baking powder, and salt into medium bowl.

-Combine yogurt, sugar, eggs, lemon peel and lemon juice in large bowl; whisk until well blended. Gradually whisk in dry ingredients. Using rubber spatula, fold in oil.

-Transfer batter to prepared loaf pan.  Place cake on baking sheet in oven and bake until cake begins to pull away from sides of pan and tester inserted into center comes out clean, about 50 minutes.

-Cool cake in pan on rack 5 minutes. Cut around pan sides to loosen cake. Turn cake out onto rack. Turn cake upright on rack and cool completely. (Can be made 1 day ahead. Wrap and store at room temperature.)

-Stir marmalade and 1 teaspoon water in small saucepan over medium heat until marmalade melts. Brush hot mixture over top of cake. Let glaze cool and set before cutting.

Mom’s Banana Apple Bread

April 20, 2008 at 5:35 pm | Posted in book review, breakfast things, cakes & tortes, events, muffins/quick breads, simple cakes, sweet things | 58 Comments

banana apple bread

Well, not my mom’s.  I’m guessing Melissa Murphy’s mom’s, since it’s in her new cookbook The Sweet Melissa Baking Book.  You know, I really don’t like bananas in their raw form (not even in smoothies), but once they are baked into something sweet, it’s a whole ‘nother story.  R does like to have bananas in his cereal, but sometimes he buys more than he can eat.  When that happens, I wrap them up and stash them in the freezer…after I’ve accumulated a few, it’s time for banana bread, cake or muffins!

What makes this particular banana bread extra-special are the bits of caramelized apple throughout.  Most banana bread has a pretty good shelf life and can even get better after a day of so.  This one is no exception, as the sweet apples just meld more into the spiced bread.

I was so happy with this, that I’m entering it into Sydneysider Not Quite Nigella’s Banana Bread Bakeoff event.  If you have a favorite banana bread recipe, go check out her bakeoff, too.

banana apple bread

Mom’s Banana Apple Bread– makes one 1 1/2-quart loaf pan
from The Sweet Melissa Baking Book by Melissa Murphy. All rights reserved. Copyright © Melissa Murphy, 2008

For the apples:
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
3 tablespoons firmly packed dark brown sugar
2 Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored, and cut into 1/2-inch pieces
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract

For the banana bread:
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
¼ teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
½ teaspoon kosher salt
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter
1 cup granulated sugar
2 large eggs
¼ cup fresh orange juice
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 ¼ cups very ripe mashed bananas (2 to 3)

Before you start:
Position a rack in the center of your oven and preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly butter and flour a 1 1/2-quart loaf pan.

To make the apples:
Preheat a medium skillet over medium-high heat. Add the butter and brown sugar and heat until bubbling. Add the apples and cinnamon and sauté until golden and tender, about 5 minutes. Stir in the vanilla. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool.

To make the banana bread:
-In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and salt.

-In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy, 1 to 2 minutes. Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Scrape down the sides of the bowl.

-In a small bowl, combine the orange juice and vanilla.

-Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture in three batches, alternating with the orange juice mixture, mixing well after each addition. Scrape down the sides of the bowl after each flour addition. Stir in the mashed bananas until combined. Then stir in the reserved apples.

-Pour the batter into the prepared loaf pan. Bake for 55 to 60 minutes, or until a wooden skewer inserted into the center comes out clean. Remove to a wire rack to cool for 20 minutes before unmolding onto the rack to cool further.

*Serve slightly warm or at room temperature. The banana bread keeps well wrapped in plastic wrap at room temperature for up to 3 days. For longer storage, freeze well wrapped in plastic wrap and then aluminum foil for up to 3 weeks. Defrost (still wrapped) at room temperature.

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!

WCC#17: Lemon Polenta Cake

June 7, 2007 at 4:58 pm | Posted in cakes & tortes, events, simple cakes, sweet things | 50 Comments

lemon polenta cakes

For me, Foodie Chickie Ani couldn’t have come up with a more timely theme for the latest Weekend Cookbook Challenge.  After taking that cooking class with Rachel Grisewood a couple of weeks ago, I’ve been sampling more of Manna From Heaven’s products when I see them about town.  One of Manna’s most popular little treats is a little, iced lemon polenta cake.  Manna’s website has a great picture and describes them as “gluten free cakes made with polenta, coconut and ground almonds.” When I saw that Ani had chosen “cornmeal” for the throwdown, I knew instantly that I wanted to try to make these little guys at home.

I scoured some of my baking books for a recipe I could adapt, but had no luck on my bookshelf.  So I decided to use the internet as my cookbook (hopefully this is within the Challenge rules!), and found something that sounded pretty spot on.  Using almond meal and cornmeal instead of flour, this recipe also has lots of coconut, lemon zest and juice in the batter. 

Rather than bake one large cake, as instructed in the recipe, I made individual ones using my friand tin (with a shorter cooking time, of course).  I made half a recipe and got nine friands.  Also, I heated up the lemon glaze, which is really a syrup that gets poured over the warm cakes before icing, in order to disolve the sugar in the juice.

lemon polenta cakes

My cakes came out great– a very good knock-off!  They were moist and tasty, and the shreds of coconut gave them a little chew.  Suggestions for next time…maybe I’d add in just a drop of almond extract.  

Lemon Polenta Cake– makes eight servings
modified from a recipe by Roger Bayley

 For the cake:
130 g ground almonds (or almond flour)
130 g shredded coconut
130 g fine polenta (or yellow cornmeal)
1 t baking powder
grated rind of 3 lemons
270 g soft butter
270 g caster sugar
4 eggs (55 g each)
juice of 2 lemons

For the lemon glaze:
juice of 2 lemons
sugar to taste

For the lemon icing:
250 g icing sugar
juice of ½ lemon, approximately

-Combine ground almonds, coconut, polenta, baking powder and lemon rind, and set aside. Using electric mixer beat butter and sugar until pale and fluffy.

-Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each. Fold in dry ingredients and lemon juice until just combined. Pour mix into greased and lined 9-inch/24-centimeter round cake tin (not springform) and bake at 325°F/160°C for one hour or until golden and just coming away from the side of the tin.

-Meanwhile, make the lemon glaze by heating the lemon juice and sugar gently, until the sugar is just dissolved.

-Remove from the oven and cool in the tin. Run a knife around the edge of the cake to loosen. Pour on lemon glaze while cake is still warm.

-Allow to cool completely in tin before turning on to a plate, as the cake falls apart easily while warm.

-Spread the lemon icing over the cake when cooled completely. (You can make the icing more like a loose glaze by slightly reducing the amount of icing sugar.)

WCC#15: Lemon Yogurt Cake

April 10, 2007 at 2:09 pm | Posted in cakes & tortes, events, simple cakes, sweet things | 7 Comments

lemon yogurt cake

We’re in the middle of autumn here in the Southern Hemisphere, but a fall day in Sydney feels a lot like a typical spring day in New York to me.  The weather is cool and comfortable, and it’s perfect for baking.  I’m hoping to just sneak in under deadline for the Weekend Cookbook Challenge (Easter/springtime food is the theme), hosted this month by Marta from An Italian in the US, with the dessert I whipped up for Easter.  

Ina Garten’s Barefoot Contessa at Home is a book that I bought shortly before moving to Sydney.  And in the chaos that accompanies a move, I didn’t have any time to make anything from it.  Flipping through it recently, I saw a recipe for lemon yogurt loaf cake– no mixer required!  Lemon, to me, is a  flavor that matches the snappy, sunny weather outside. 

lemons and zest

What I like best about this cake is that not only is it glazed (and who doesn’t love glaze?!), but it’s also soaked with a lemon simple syrup.  The syrup and the yogurt/vegetable oil combo keep it moist for a couple of days, which is good when you’re cooking for two.  It’s perfect before bed with a cup of chamomile tea.

lemon yogurt cake

I see that this recipe is also on Food Network’s website.  Rather than me retyping it, you can print a copy here if you don’t have the book.

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