Monday, March 5, 2012
Bake the Book: Simple Cakes
In addition to taking part in the Tuesdays With Dorie project of baking our way through Baking With Julia, I've decided to embark on my own "bake the book" project with Christie Matheson's Simple Cakes. Henceforth, when you see a post starting with BTB, it'll refer to this project. Let's see how long it takes me to get through Simple Cakes!
Friday, February 24, 2012
Banana Bread
According to a Facebook post from the fine folks at King Arthur Flour, yesterday was National Banana Bread Day. (Who thinks of these things, anyway?) Since I'd just purchased some dented and dinged bananas, I was ready to roll and made this recipe, which I found at the King Arthur website. I didn't have apricot jam or orange marmalade on hand, so I used pineapple preserves instead. Also, rather than walnuts, I used sliced almonds and some milk chocolate chips. All in all, a nice loaf of banana bread.
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Tuesdays With Dorie: Chocolate Truffle Tartlets
For recipe No. 2 in the Tuesdays With Dorie exploration of Baking With Julia, we got to make Chocolate Truffle Tartlets. These small pastries have a chocolate crust containing with a rich filling of egg yolks, melted bittersweet chocolate, chocolate chunks (milk and white), and biscotti chunks.
For me, these tartlets started with -- yay! -- a trip to the restaurant-supply store as I didn't have the tartlet rings I needed to make this recipe. (Or, even better, I probably do have the tartlet rings and just couldn't find them.)
Apologies in advance for not having properly documented the process in photos. I started off by making the crust. The recipe offers options for making the crust by hand or by food processor. Since my short, stubby Eastern European fingers lack the elegance and cool to prepare short crusts by hand, I knew I'd use a machine. Instead of the food processor, though, I used the KitchenAid mixer. It actually does a great job of blending together cold butter and dry ingredients.
After I added the liquid to the dry crust ingredients, I felt skeptical, especially as I faced a chocolatey-brown mound of crumbs on my marble pastry board. I gently worked the crumbs into a firm rectangle of dough, bound it in plastic wrap, and put it in the fridge.
Meanwhile, I prepped the filling ingredients and got them ready to roll. Given the number of egg yolks that the filling required, I foresee an angel-food cake in my future.
After a couple of hours, I got the crust out, let it warm slightly, then cut it into six pieces. The first one was a little fussy to work with, and I used too much flour when rolling it out. After that, though, the rolling went pretty well, and I had my six tartlet pans lined with dough.
The crusts are baked for a bit, which gave me time to put together the filling.
I think I ended up putting a bit more filling in each tartlet shell than the recipe called for, but that seemed to be OK ...
... As nothing baked over while they were in the oven.
The recipe indicates that they're ready to eat after cooling slightly after they come out of the oven. Also, the recipe indicates that they're best eaten soon after they're baked. I assume that has to do with the slightly crunchy texture the biscotti chunks give the tartlet filling. We shared one tartlet warm. While they declared it rich, Karen and Claire really liked it. I actually felt sort of meh about it. Then I tried one the next day at room temperature and loved it. It's so rich that it needs some whipped cream (possibly even a little vanilla ice cream) to balance the blast of chocolate. Also, I think that one-half of a tartlet is the perfect portion.
Still, this is a really nice dessert, one that would be a great conclusion to an elegant meal of, oh, maybe broth and crackers because these tarts are so rich, I don't know what else would be light enough to consume beforehand. I've been thinking that the crusts would be good filled with a layer of ganache topped with some raspberries. I feel like it's been forever since I've made a pie-crust-style dough, and this was a good exercise in getting back to using those skills.
For me, these tartlets started with -- yay! -- a trip to the restaurant-supply store as I didn't have the tartlet rings I needed to make this recipe. (Or, even better, I probably do have the tartlet rings and just couldn't find them.)
Apologies in advance for not having properly documented the process in photos. I started off by making the crust. The recipe offers options for making the crust by hand or by food processor. Since my short, stubby Eastern European fingers lack the elegance and cool to prepare short crusts by hand, I knew I'd use a machine. Instead of the food processor, though, I used the KitchenAid mixer. It actually does a great job of blending together cold butter and dry ingredients.
After I added the liquid to the dry crust ingredients, I felt skeptical, especially as I faced a chocolatey-brown mound of crumbs on my marble pastry board. I gently worked the crumbs into a firm rectangle of dough, bound it in plastic wrap, and put it in the fridge.
Meanwhile, I prepped the filling ingredients and got them ready to roll. Given the number of egg yolks that the filling required, I foresee an angel-food cake in my future.
After a couple of hours, I got the crust out, let it warm slightly, then cut it into six pieces. The first one was a little fussy to work with, and I used too much flour when rolling it out. After that, though, the rolling went pretty well, and I had my six tartlet pans lined with dough.
The crusts are baked for a bit, which gave me time to put together the filling.
I think I ended up putting a bit more filling in each tartlet shell than the recipe called for, but that seemed to be OK ...
... As nothing baked over while they were in the oven.
The recipe indicates that they're ready to eat after cooling slightly after they come out of the oven. Also, the recipe indicates that they're best eaten soon after they're baked. I assume that has to do with the slightly crunchy texture the biscotti chunks give the tartlet filling. We shared one tartlet warm. While they declared it rich, Karen and Claire really liked it. I actually felt sort of meh about it. Then I tried one the next day at room temperature and loved it. It's so rich that it needs some whipped cream (possibly even a little vanilla ice cream) to balance the blast of chocolate. Also, I think that one-half of a tartlet is the perfect portion.
Still, this is a really nice dessert, one that would be a great conclusion to an elegant meal of, oh, maybe broth and crackers because these tarts are so rich, I don't know what else would be light enough to consume beforehand. I've been thinking that the crusts would be good filled with a layer of ganache topped with some raspberries. I feel like it's been forever since I've made a pie-crust-style dough, and this was a good exercise in getting back to using those skills.
Friday, February 17, 2012
Lemon Pound Cake
This week's PLTI snack offering, a lemon pound cake. The recipe made two loaves, so I had one to share with PLTI and one to share at work. I made the glaze with 1 cup of powdered sugar and 2 tablespoons of lemon juice.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Birthday Cake
Last Saturday was Karen's birthday. Chocolate cake was required, so I relied on a tried-and-true favorite recipe from Lora Brody's Chocolate American Style. I'm dismayed by my sloppy frosting job here!
Valentine's Day
A variety of treats for Valentine's Day. The sugar cookies are from a recipe in Dede Wilson's Baker's Field Guide to Christmas Cookies. (That book is far too good to reserve for holiday-season use only.) The Nutella truffles and chocolate-chip cookie dough cheesecake bars are from the blog My Baking Addiction.
Friday, February 10, 2012
Brownies
I thought I had a favorite brownie recipe ever. (That one, by the way, is also available in a nifty smart-phone app that lets you customize the brownie in a multitude of ways.) Then a friend emailed me this link, which was intriguing enough for me to test right away. I tried the new recipe with toasted pecans and really like the undertone that the ground pecans give the brownie. I'm now thinking how much fun it will be to try the recipe with different nut varieties (even with ground salted nuts to increase the salty-sweet contrast).
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