Tag Archives: cake

How To Tip: Cutting A Parchment Circle

30 Nov

Lining a cake pan with kitchen parchment is always a great idea when making cakes as it makes it much easier to release the cake from the pan and prevents leaving part of the cake stuck to the bottom of the pan.  I used to trace an outline of the pan onto the parchment with a pen or pencil and then cut the circle out… ugh.  You know, school can come in handy on occasion, and sometimes to just point out the obvious.  As a matter of  fact this tip isn’t from cooking school, but more from making paper snowflakes in kindergarten.

Begin by folding the parchment in half, then in half again…

At the closed corner, fold the longer edge to the shorter edge…

Keep folding the sides together until you really can’t fold any longer…

Line of the tip with the center of the pan…

Give a snip, unfold… et voilà!

A perfect circle to line your pan!  Simple I know, but I’m not always clued in to spot the obvious.  Oh, if the urge comes to take a couple decorative snips, go on ahead and do it… it is snowflake season afterall!

Peace – J

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Cranberry-Orange Upside Down Cake

29 Nov

As most cooks will say, the winter holidays are the best for no-holds-barred cooking.  We get to bake, eat carbs (and lot’s of them), and cook with abandon using cream, butter, sugar, and love. YUM!  This time of year, I am always looking to come up with dishes and desserts that can be added to a holiday buffet spread.  While I love having free-reign over sugar this time of year, I do not enjoy overly sweet desserts – which was a big consideration for this cake.

The inspiration for this dessert was an extra bag of fresh cranberries that had gone unused at Thanksgiving.  I love cranberries cooked in orange juice, brown sugar, and spices with finely chopped pecans stirred in at the end and wanted to incorporate those flavors into the topping of this cake.  Revisiting some vintage upside-down cake recipes in my mom’s 1958 Mary Margaret McBride Encyclopedia of Cooking, I found the actual cake recipes themselves to be fairly incidental to the topping; usually a simple sponge used as a delivery vehicle for the topping.  Flavored with fresh orange juice and scented with green cardamom, I wanted this cake to enhance what was going on in the topping and to become a perfect compliment.

Cranberry-Orange Upside Down Cake

Adapted from Mary Margaret McBride Encyclopedia of Cooking

For Topping:
1 large orange
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
3/4 cup light brown sugar
1/2 cup finely chopped pecans
12 ounces fresh cranberries

For Cake:
1 1/2 cups sifted caked flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
15 green cardamom pods*
1 large orange
1/2 cup unsalted butter (1 stick), at room temperature
3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large eggs, at room temperature
1/4 cup milk

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Butter a 9-inch round cake pan (preferably with a removable bottom). Cut a circle of parchment 1/2-inch larger than the diameter of the pan and line the bottom of the pan; butter the parchment and set aside.

With a fine grater, zest the orange. Then with a sharp paring knife supreme the orange (cut away the peel and pith then remove the segments); cut each segment in to thirds and set aside.  In a small saucepan over medium heat, melt together the butter and brown sugar, stirring until sugar has dissolved.  Remove from heat and stir in the orange zest and finely chopped pecans.  Spread this mixture evenly over the bottom of prepared cake pan.  Layer in the cranberries and evenly distribute the orange segments.

In a small mixing bowl, combine sifted caked flour, baking powder, and salt. With a mortar and pestle, crack open the cardamom pods and empty the black seeds and papery husks back into the bowl and grind to a fine powder; for about 1 teaspoon.  Add ground cardamom to the flour mixture and give a quick whisk to incorporate the ingredients; set aside.  Remove zest from orange and then squeeze enough juice for 1/4 cup.

In a larger mixing bowl, cream together the butter and sugar for 3 minutes until light and fluffy.  Scrape down the sides of the bowl and beat in the orange zest and vanilla extract.  Beat in eggs one at a time until just incorporated.  Combine the 1/4 cup of orange juice and milk (it’s okay if it curdles a little).  In three batches, alternately beat in the flour and liquids; scraping down the sides of the bowl between batches.

Spread mixture evenly over the cranberries and tap pan on counter a few times so everything settles.  Bake in preheated oven for 45 to 55 minutes, or until golden brown and a tester inserted into the middle of the cake come away clean.

Remove from oven, loosen the sides of the cake, and immediately invert onto a serving plate.  Carefully remove pan and parchment.  Let cool completely before slicing.  Delicious on it’s own or with a dollop of lightly sweetened whipped cream.

*If using store-bought ground cardamom, use 1 1/2 teaspoons as commercial ground cardamom has the hard shell ground into the powder as well.

Serves 8.

This awesomely delicious cake will look fantastic on your holiday table or buffet.  It is fantastic with my mid-morning coffee beak or afternoon tea. So invite some friends over and enjoy!

Peace – J

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How To Tip: Bag Striping Icing Effect

8 Nov

This is (or at least should be) a quick posting that I have been meaning to get up for, oh, about 3 weeks now.  I had many requests since posting the Tie-Dyed Cake for Chloe as to how to get the color effect on the icing.  The technique I used is called bag striping. Bag striping can be accomplished a couple different ways. One is to use a spatula to place a couple similarly toned colored icings along the sides of a pastry bag.  This is best used with subtle color differences when piping flowers.  For vivid multiple color differences, like on Chloe’s cake, I used a brush striping technique.  The colors are more intense because the color is brushed into pastry bag.

When I did Chloe’s cake, I used a vinyl pastry bag and paste icing colors. The color stayed fairly intense while I piped the top of the cake and didn’t really start to fade until I got to the edge of the cake.  For this demo, I made a dozen cupcakes for Halloween using orange concentrated paste icing color and black gel paste color.  The gel color (black) faded quicker than the concentrated paste color (orange).  Also, I used disposable plastic piping bags so you could see the color.  However, the slickness of the plastic bags didn’t seem to hold the color as well the vinyl bag did.  Fine by me — I don’t like to use the disposable bags anyway because they hurt my hands after awhile plus, they’re not so great for the landfill.

brush striped color in pastry bag

Apply one or more stripes of the icing color with a small paint or decorating brush. In this case, I alternated three black stripes with three orange stripes. Fill the bag with white icing and as the icing is squeezed past the color(s), whatever you are piping will come out striped.

bag-striped effect on cupcakes

Okay, so it’s not the prettiest piping I’ve ever done… but you get the point!

Peace – J

Tie-Dyed Cake for Chloe

14 Oct

Lately I have had a few requests for birthday cakes.  I LOVE to bake, have taken numerous cake decorating classes, and actually went to cooking school with the idea of becoming a pastry chef. SIDE NOTE: Contrary to Top Chef: Just Desserts, not all pastry chefs are an emotional train wreck… but I digress.  A couple weeks ago, best gal-pal Sarah asked if I would make a birthday cake for her daughter Chloe’s second birthday. Sure! Happy to! The kicker… chocolate cake and the theme of the party is tie-dye. Hmmmm….

Tie-dye. How in the hell am I gonna make a tie-dyed cake? A couple friends, including Sara, said just make the cake, put it on a colorful plate and call it a day. Since many of you don’t know me that well, those who do will tell you that that is not how I roll.

The cake itself wasn’t the issue. White cake or yellow cake sure, easy. Just color the cake batter different colors and spoon it into the pans, bake it off, et voilà multi-colored cake! Although an easy out, I couldn’t bring myself to do that to her. You see, I had a traumatic experience with colored cakes as a kid.  My mom had purchased cake pan inserts to make a checkerboard cake for my birthday. She asked what kind of cake I wanted and thinking out of the box, I said a blue and yellow cake — I must have been a Cub Scout. However, when the cake was sliced at my party, there was no way in hell that I was going to eat it. What kind of unnatural thing is a blue and yellow cake?!

I Googled images for “tie-dye decorated cake” (go ahead, try it) and found a bunch of seriously ugly cakes worthy of the blog Cake Wrecks.  The cakes that I liked had used an airbrush for the effect and I don’t own an airbrush or know how to use one.  There was also a lot of chatter on the interweb about an episode of Cake Boss where he created a tie-dyed cake using fondant. All I could find was a paragraph on the TLC website that explained how he did it, but no images of the final product. I love you Chloe, but I ain’t spendin’ $30 on a tub of fondant, which btw tastes nasty, to try and figure it out.

Using different colored icings wouldn’t do for two reasons: 1) the colors look flat and more like a jigsaw puzzle, and 2) if you’re not really careful the colors become muddy when they start to blend. The cool thing about tie-dye, if tie-dye were to be cool, is the visual texture.  That texture happens because of gradation of color and the white showing through (where the rubber band was, duh).

A couple days later I remembered an icing technique called brush striping where instead of coloring the icing, the food coloring is painted in stripes top-to-bottom inside the pastry bag. (Sorry, I forgot to take pictures.) This technique only works with gel paste food coloring and not the liquid coloring from the grocery store.  So I painted a single stripe of each color: blue, purple, hot pink,  orange, yellow, and green on the inside of my pastry bag and loaded it up with white butter cream and started piping swirls on the cake.

tie-dye1

All-in-all, I was pretty happy with the way the cake turned out. Sarah was happy, Chloe was happy, and the cake was delicious! Mission accomplished. Oh yeah, Chloe’s cake was double dark chocolate with peanut butter and chocolate ganache fillings, YUM.

Peace – J

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