bananas foster bundt cake
I made a bunch of cake for my birthday back at the end of January, and to my mind, the winner was the bananas foster pound cake – a banana bundt cake with rum in both the cake and the glaze. Since then, I’ve […]
I made a bunch of cake for my birthday back at the end of January, and to my mind, the winner was the bananas foster pound cake – a banana bundt cake with rum in both the cake and the glaze. Since then, I’ve […]
This will be shocking to you, but I don’t always seek out the most complicated recipes I can get my hands on! Sometimes I like to get something in the oven as fast as I can, and this recipe is one that fits the bill. […]
Having mentioned my favorite chocolate wafer recipe, I figured that I should also put it up! Of all of the chocolate-and-fruit pairings, I love chocolate and lemon the best – the richness of the chocolate pairs well with the acidity and floral flavor of the lemon. It’s a pairing that is less sweet than chocolate and raspberry, and more unexpected than chocolate and orange. I also find that the lemon stands up to the chocolate, whereas raspberry and orange are meeker pairings. For those of you who don’t want your chocolate adulterated with fruit, well, I’ll just tell you that you’re missing out. All of this, however, is just a preamble to say that I make these chocolate wafers primarily to make icebox cakes.
Specifically, an icebox cake made from layers of wafers and lemon mascarpone cream. The lemon mascarpone cream is something I’ve used in the past to both fill and frost a cake, so if you’re looking for a cake frosting, this one is excellent. It has a bit more body from the mascarpone cream, which helps it keep its shape better than a whipped cream frosting (the healthy dose of gelatin also helps). I made it for a cake that I brought to work a while back, and only used about half of it; the rest of it got made into icebox cake with Anna’s brand gingersnaps (my favorite for making cheesecake crusts). The wonder of icebox cakes is osmosis: you take something very dry, combine it with something relatively wet, and you end up with something that tastes like a cross between cake and pudding. Many icebox cakes are made with storebought wafers and whipped cream, and are popular in the summer, when turning on the oven is anathema. (more…)
I’ve seen a lot of recipes for oreos over the past year or so, as it has become increasingly trendy to make classic American treats at home (twinkies, hostess cupcakes, oreos, ketchup, etc). I usually pass them by, thinking that while homemade hostess cupcakes […]
I had my parents over for Christmas Eve dinner, and wanted to make something special for them. Those of you who know me well, also know that I really love adding extra steps to recipes, to maximize depth of flavor. My co-worker had been talking […]
Smitten Kitchen’s apple cider caramels are one of the recipes that went into this year’s cookie boxes, and seem to have been a hit, so I wanted to share the recipe for anyone who wants to make them! I love unadulterated, classic caramels, so I usually eschew any of the trendy add-ins: cayenne pepper, gingerbread spices, etc. These cider caramels are interesting as caramel recipes go, though – typically you combine everything in a pot and boil the whole mixture until it reaches the right temperature (somewhere around 250F). This recipe involves making a boiling syrup out of apple cider, then you add everything and boil it to the right temperature. Although reducing the cider to syrup takes a while, it requires very little attention, allowing you to do other things as it boils away. The boiling syrup then accelerates the caramel-boiling time, so the amount of active time seems much shorter than usual. The syrup also helps to prevent the caramel mixture from crystallizing as you stir it. Toffee, for example, can crystallize if you stir too much, because it gets cooked to a higher temperature and thus doesn’t have corn syrup or any other syrup in it to help avoid crystallization. Butter and cream have the same effect, but to a lesser degree than sugar syrups.
Flavorwise, the sharpness of the cider balances nicely with the buttery caramel. A truly good caramel won’t taste too sweet – real caramels get their flavor from milk proteins and sugars that have caramelized, rather than from corn syrup and added flavors – but for those who think that even the best caramel is too sweet, these should hit the spot. (The ingredients are pretty much the same as in the original recipe, but I’ve reduced the salt and re-written the instructions with more detail.) (more…)
I have an ice cream machine; summer is the peak season for ice cream – these are two known facts. I bought the machine in the summer of 2011, fully knowing that it would spend the summer in storage, while I camped out in a […]
I’ve been thinking about what I want to put into my xmas cookie boxes this year. Certain cookies are standards – the gingersnaps, the cocoa nib shortbread – but everything else is up in the air. I’m definitely going to swap out the world peace […]
Hello! I know it’s been a while – life often finds ways to lead the best intentions astray. I’ve been cooking, but can attest to the hard truth that eating one’s food is much easier than writing about it after the fact. I will have something for you soon – a writeup and fairly extensive list of ice creams and popsicles, based on a solid month of almost daily ice cream making.
those of you who have cooked with me, or had dinner with me on a friday night, know that i am generally incapable of making dinner in less than an hour. in fact, usually i choose whatever preparation is most involved. well, not “most involved” […]