Showing posts with label Dorie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dorie. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Sunday, March 24, 2013
How to get to Carnegie Hall
I was reminded last weekend that my skill in the kitchen didn't develop overnight. Sunday night I made dough for rolls and stuck it in the fridge. (It's the recipe for Hoagie Rolls from Artisan Breads Every Day--a really lovely dough to work with, which I forget when I haven't made them in a while.) Monday morning, I got up early and portioned the dough and formed the rolls. I managed to get them baked before I had to go to work. Boy, did the house smell good when I left. =) At one time, I never would have had the confidence that I could pull that off, but in the past 5 years of baking and blogging, my baking skills have improved tremendously. How? Through repetition, of course. And also good teachers--Dorie Greenspan, Peter Reinhart, and lots of others.
Yet I still get frustrated when things don't turn out quite the way I wanted to--when they aren't perfect. The demons of perfectionism and I-don't-have-enough-time have been really getting to me lately, which is a lot of the reason why I haven't been posting much. I get hung up on the idea that if I don't have anything new and exciting to post, I shouldn't even bother. But there's beauty in sharing the things that have gotten better with practice, and in writing just to express what's on my mind.
Labels:
Artisan Breads Every Day,
Dorie,
Peter Reinhart,
rolls,
yoga
Monday, January 28, 2013
The darkest hour
Today, it was getting up to make a batch of Swiss meringue buttercream. (Dorie's recipe from BFMHTY.) I've made it so many times now, I could practically do it in my sleep. =) It helps that I had leftover egg whites in my fridge. I made the cupcakes last night--the Ultimate Chocolate Cupcakes from Cook's Illustrated, minus the ganache filling--and this way they had plenty of time to cool completely. B surprised me by saying that if she had to pick just one frosting flavor, it would be vanilla. (She originally wanted me to do a chocolate/vanilla swirl.) She picked the wrappers, and we decided pink edible glitter would coordinate nicely.
It's so fluffy!!!
Labels:
birthdays,
buttercream,
chocolate,
Cook's Illustrated,
cupcakes,
Dorie,
kids,
meringue
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Peace on earth, and in cookies
Happy blogiversary to me! 5 years and 485 posts later, I'm still here. =) I'd hoped to be closer to 500, but it's been a busy month. I've been on vacation for the past few days and have finally had time to do some holiday stuff. We finally put up the Christmas tree last weekend, and finished putting ornaments on it today. Yes, it's been that kind of week. On Wednesday I baked lots of cookies to take to G's kindergarten holiday party. The kids had fun decorating the cookies (and eating lots of the decorations straight up, since I brought stuff like chocolate chips and m&m's). B's party was Thursday, and at her request I made brownies for her to take. Then on Friday I made a batch of caramel snack mix to bag up for my employees. Right now I'm working on chocolate sponge cake that will be one component of a chocolate mousse cake (G's request for a holiday dessert). Tomorrow I should finally get to cookies for us--and Santa Claus--now that I've finally gotten my hands on Hershey's kisses after looking at three different stores.
Along with all the other baking, I wanted to make something for teacher gifts. The girls were in favor of something chocolate. I wanted something without nuts, since there are allergy issues at the schools. I also wanted a dough that was easy to make ahead if necessary and bake off as needed. I've never been a big fan of slice & bake cookies, but I may have changed my mind this year, after settling on Dorie's World Peace Cookies as the recipe to make. I've made them before, of course, but not in as large a quantity as I did this year. To make them more festive, I substituted peppermint crunch baking bits for part of the chopped chocolate, and used mini chocolate chips for the rest.
The verdict? I've made three batches so far, and will make at least one more to ship, since these should be sturdy enough to travel. I got a couple of notes from the teachers, saying that they really liked the chocolate & peppermint combo. I've stashed away several bags of the mint baking bits so I'll be able to make a bunch more of these if we want. I've also passed out the recipe to several people, and I hope they'll give them a try for themselves. If you'd like to, you can find the recipe online at Bon Appetit.
I've really enjoyed sharing both my baked goods and my life with all of you over the past 5 years--I've made lots of great friends, which is without a doubt one of the best things about blogging. Here's to many more wonderful years!

Labels:
chocolate,
chocolate chips,
cocoa powder,
cookies,
Dorie,
gifts,
peppermint
Sunday, December 16, 2012
With a corncob pipe and a "button" nose
When I got my December issue of Bon Appetit, the pretty cookies on the cover definitely caught my eye. Then I spyed the small print near the bottom that proclaimed them to be Dorie Greenspan's Speculoos Buttons, p. 96. I immediately knew that I'd have to make them. After all, I know I can rely on Dorie. =) I realized also that these would be perfect for my virtual cookie exchange.
The dough is easy to mix up. You cream butter with regular and brown sugars as well as a little molasses. Next in are an egg and some vanilla. Then you add the dry ingredients--flour, salt and spices (cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and a bit of cloves). The dough is formed into logs and chilled for several hours. Before baking, the logs of dough are brushed with egg white and coated in sparkling sugar. This was a great chance for me to use the pretty pearlized sugar that I picked up a couple weeks ago. The recipe calls for adding a glaze and additional decorations to the cookies after they're baked, but I didn't get that far.
The verdict? I really liked these cookies--they have a good level of spice and aren't too sweet. Brianna tried one and didn't really like it. Gillian wouldn't even taste one. So I took most of them to work, and found several people who were more than happy to take them off my hands. I will definitely be making these again--the dough is easy to mix up and stash in the freezer for cookie emergencies. =) Next time I'll have to add the glaze and play around more with the decorations. Maybe if the girls get to decorate them, they'll reconsider eating them. Lol.
If you'd like to try these for yourself, you can find the recipe here. Be sure to check back in a few days so see what other tasty cookies my friends have come up with for our cookie exchange!

Labels:
blog event,
cookies,
Dorie,
spices,
sprinkles,
Virtual Cookie Exchange
Sunday, August 19, 2012
'Tis the season...almost
I used a scoop (a #16 disher) to put the batter into the muffin pan. The muffins baked at 400ºF, and for us they took 20 minutes. We let them cool in the pan for about 5 minutes, then put them on a rack and let them cool just a bit longer before digging in.
Chocolate Chip Pumpkin Muffins
(adapted from Dorie Greenspan's Baking From My Home to Yours)
1 cup (135 grams) all-purpose flour
1 cup (135 grams) white whole wheat flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon table salt
3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
pinch allspice
8 tablespoons (1 stick/115 grams) unsalted butter
1/2 cup (100 grams) granulated sugar
1/4 cup (50 grams) light brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large eggs, at room temperature
3/4 cup (170 grams) canned pumpkin puree (not pumpkin pie filling!)
1/3 cup (75 grams) plain yogurt
1 cup (170 grams) chocolate chips (or nuts or dried fruit--any mix you like)
Make sure your rack is in the center of the oven and preheat the oven to 400ºF. Line a standard 12-cup muffin pan with paper muffin cups (I use grease-proof ones like these) or spray the molds with baking spray.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the flours, baking powder, baking soda, salt and spices. Set aside.
Using a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or with a hand mixer in a large bowl, beat the butter until soft. Add the sugars and beat until light and smooth, then mix in the vanilla. Next, beat in the eggs one at a time. Continue to beat the mixture for about a minute after the eggs are in, then mix in the pumpkin and yogurt. Stop the mixer and scrape down the sides of the bowl. Then, with the mixer on low, gradually add the dry ingredients, mixing only until they disappear. Remove the bowl from the mixer, and fold in the chocolate chips with a spatula, making sure that all the ingredients are completely blended. (I find that some of the butter/sugar mixture sits in the bottom of the bowl and doesn't get thoroughly mixed in with the paddle.)
Divide the batter between the prepared muffin cups. Bake the muffins for 20-25 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean and the tops of the muffins are lightly browned. Allow the muffins to cool in the pan for 5 minutes, then remove them from the pan and put them on a rack to finish cooling.
Labels:
breakfast,
chocolate chips,
Dorie,
kids,
muffins,
pumpkin,
whole wheat,
yogurt
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Some assembly required
I've decided that I like this whole wrap-around vacation thing that I did this time. I was off starting on the 4th, and went back to work yesterday. It was long enough for a good rest, and I got to have two short work weeks! I can definitely see myself doing this again, especially since we don't usually go anywhere when I'm off--I'm just making sure that I use my vacation time so I don't lose it.
It's amazing how getting somewhat caught up on sleep can improve your whole outlook on life. As I mentioned in my last post, I was totally stressed out by everything that was going on in my life. I was having a great Twitter conversation with my friends Rebecca & Abby on Tuesday (before I went back to work) about the fact that I was mostly in need of an attitude adjustment. Work is what it is, and I need to pay the bills. Heck, I actually mostly like what I do, and I'm darn good at it. But I need to learn to leave work at work. I don't mean that I actually bring stuff home, since my job isn't the sort where I can really do that. I mean that I need to do a better job of shifting gears mentally so that I don't bring the stress home with me. Easier said than done, I'm sure, but I have to start somewhere.
One of the things that I've been doing this summer is participating in an online course that focuses on bringing more play, rest and kindness into our lives on a daily basis. I realized that my worrying about work so much was interfering with my rest for sure, and meant that I was seldom in the mood for any play. And I need to be kinder to myself. One of the messages from earlier this week was, "You are enough. (it's true)" Too often, I feel like I'm not at all close to being enough. But if I keep telling myself that I am, maybe I'll start to believe it.
So what does the dessert pictured here have to do with all this? Well, it was part of my attempt to "play" more. I bake for a couple of reasons. For one, I really enjoy making things for others--I like seeing them happy, and enjoy the compliments I receive, too. =) But I also bake because I like to "play around," as Dorie Greenspan says. I like to see what will happen if I change things up a bit with a recipe, or take components from different places and put them together in new ways.
I have to admit, the mini parfait idea was inspired by a show on (I think) Cooking Channel. They profiled a bakery called Vanilla Bakeshop that does these in a variety of flavors. My first thought was that it was a cool idea. My second was, "I can do that!" I treated myself to a visit to Crate & Barrel while I was on vacation, and among other things, I came home with several 3-oz shot glasses. So then I just had to figure out what to put in them. I could have used crumbled cookies or bits of cake, but then I remembered these Cocoa Crumbs that Dorie posted about recently. Naturally, I had to experiment--I did two half-batches, one with Valrhona dutch-processed cocoa, and one with Scharffen Berger natural cocoa. For the pudding-y part, I turned to Dorie again, this time pulling out my copy of Baking, which has a recipe for creamy chocolate pastry cream in the back of the book. I whipped up some cream, and started layering. (A pastry bag & piping tip make it much easier to get the pastry cream and whipped cream neatly into the tall, skinny containers.) At the last minute, I also drizzled in some raspberry sauce, since I love the combination of raspberry with chocolate.
The verdict? Mmm, we really enjoyed these delightful desserts. The small size is just enough to get a good taste of everything without feeling like you're overindulging. The crumbs made with the Dutch-processed cocoa are very reminiscent of Oreos, which isn't a bad thing, but I really enjoyed the ones with natural cocoa, too. They had a more interesting character. I hope you'll experiment for yourself to see which you like better. I'll be making more of these soon--I can't wait to try different flavor combinations.
Labels:
chocolate,
cocoa powder,
cream,
Dorie,
Mondo Beyondo,
pastry cream,
raspberry,
Scharffen Berger
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Good things come in small packages
I have no idea how it can possibly be the end of May and the end of the school year. Brianna's last day was last Thursday. Being a worrier, I don't think she was completely convinced that she had been promoted to 4th grade until she saw it in writing on her report card. Then last night we had Gillian's graduation from pre-K. (She'll still be at the daycare for the summer, but they had the ceremony at the end of the traditional school year so that no one would miss out because of vacations, etc.) It wasn't a very long program, since 4 and 5-year-olds don't have very long attention spans, but it was certainly entertaining.
One of the things I like to do at various times including the end of the year is make little gifts for the teachers. I don't usually do anything big, but I try to make sure that it's something special. For Teacher Appreciation Week in early May, I made World Peace Cookies. What teachers wouldn't welcome a little more peace in their lives? =) Since I went with chocolate for that occasion, I wanted something different for the end of the year thank-yous. Something...vanilla.
Over the past couple of weeks Central Market did a focus on France, with lots of interesting French products and ingredients. I picked up some salted butter, so I had to find something to make with it. Naturally, I turned to Dorie. I remembered seeing a cookie recipe of hers in a recent issue of one of my cooking magazines. I had to do a bit of searching through the stack by my computer, but I found it. Vanilla Bean Sablés--French butter cookies.
The recipe calls for unsalted butter and sea salt, so I used my salted butter and skipped the additional salt. Rather than two vanilla beans, I used one and some of my vanilla sugar. I love rubbing the vanilla seeds into the sugar--it always makes my fingers smell good. (And after I scraped the seeds from the pod, I stuck the pieces into my container of vanilla sugar to make more!) The rest of the ingredient list is simple, just some powdered sugar, flour, and an egg yolk. The dough mixes up quickly in a stand mixer, and gets formed into a couple of logs. Once the dough is chilled, it's rolled in coarse sparkling sugar, then sliced and baked. I did skip the step of brushing the dough logs with egg wash before coating with sugar; I just pressed the sugar into the dough. The cookies bake for about 20 minutes, and you can smell when they're done.
The verdict? I totally love these cookies. The flavors of butter and vanilla play so well together, especially when the bottoms of the cookies turn such a lovely golden brown. The cookies have a great texture, short and crumbly and with the contrast of crunchy sparkling sugar on the edges. They're great paired with a mug of tea. I hope the teachers enjoyed them as much as I did.
If you'd like to try these cookies for yourself, you can find the recipe in the April/May issue of Fine Cooking, or here online.
Ready for kindergarten!
Labels:
butter,
cookies,
Dorie,
Fine Cooking,
salt,
vanilla,
vanilla beans
Monday, May 21, 2012
One of those days (Cooking the Books)
I've been having one of those days. Except that it's not the usual one of those days. It started with me getting up at 5 because I was scheduled to work all day today. That schedule usually means that I have to drop the girls at school and daycare before I go to work at 8:15 or so. But things didn't go as planned. Brianna was still complaining of a really sore throat when I went to wake her up. She'd been telling me the same thing for most of the weekend. I checked, and it was red. But it didn't look that bad, and since she hadn't been running a fever I figured that she was suffering from a virus and not strep. I could tell she wasn't quite herself, though, since she napped for about 3 hours on Sunday afternoon.
So I had the always fun parenting dilemma... B didn't seem that sick, but sending her to school probably wasn't a good idea. At the same time, I was worried about leaving my coworkers shorthanded. Jamie had already left for work, and it was doubtful that he'd be able to come home early to stay with B. I just love it when the parenting guilt wars with the work guilt--nothing like having an unexpected day off that you can't really enjoy because you feel like you're supposed to be somewhere else. I did get to take a nap, but it wasn't a very good one. I ended up feeling sort of restless and out-of-sorts all day. I did get some reading time in, but couldn't really settle on anything. And writing was right out. I've been trying to get this post done for my Cooking the Books event for two days, and just haven't been able to figure out what to write, which is why you're getting my sad story. =)
Maybe some dessert would make me feel better. We had Brianna's favorite soup for dinner, this chicken chowder from Cook's Country. Naturally, since B loves it, Gillian hates it. (I decided not to fight that battle tonight, and just made G a sandwich for dinner.) I like it just fine, and soup is nice because it generally leaves room for dessert. This particular one was inspired by the new book J got me for Mother's Day--Alice Medrich's new Sinfully Easy Delicious Desserts. The idea is that you can make lots of great desserts from simple, tasty components. What I came up with first was sort of a mini ice cream tart/sundae.
The base was a simple butter cookie. Central Market has an event going on called Passport France, and they've had a lot of great French products and ingredients available. I bought some Breton salted butter, and turned to Dorie's Around My French Table to figure out what to do with it. Naturally, she didn't let me down, and I found a recipe for Sablé Breton. I didn't want to do a full-size tart, but there was a Bonne Idée for making slice and bake cookies with a variation on the dough, so I went with those. I didn't add any salt, since my butter was nicely salty, with noticeable crunchy crystals in it. I did roll the log of dough in a combination of sparkling sugar and a bit of fleur de sel before slicing it up for baking.
Besides the great butter, I also picked up a package of dark muscovado sugar on my shopping trip. My new Medrich book has several caramel-type sauces in it. One is a simple mixture of muscovado sugar, cream, a bit of salt, and a splash of rum. It was really easy to make. For the final component of my dessert, I wanted something that would provide a contrast to the richness of the cookie and sauce. I found what I was looking for in one of my earlier Medrich books, Pure Dessert--sour cream ice cream. It's a non-custard ice cream, which really allows the sour cream flavor to shine through. The technique for making it is similar to the one in my Jeni's ice cream book, and I tweaked the procedure just slightly to make it even closer (I added a bit of corn syrup to the milk/sugar mixture, and boiled it for several minutes before adding the cornstarch in a slurry).
For the final dessert, I started with a cookie, topped it with a scoop of ice cream, and drizzled warm tropical sugar sauce over the top. The verdict? Yum! All of the components are really tasty, and work well together. There's a great contrast of sweet and salty, cold and warm, soft and chewy/crisp. The cookies are also great with a cup of tea. My favorite part was the ice cream. We also ate some of it topped with fresh strawberries--the cold tartness of the ice cream is a great foil for fruit. I can't wait to try it with peaches, too.
I definitely encourage you to check out all of the books that I mentioned. Your local library might even have them! To get you started, you can find the ice cream recipe here. This is my contribution to our spring Cooking the Books blog event; you can find links to the other contributors in this main post. If you'd like to join in, submissions are welcome anytime this week. If you'd like to be notified of future events, send me an email at diskitchennotebook at gmail dot com and I'll add you to the list!
Labels:
Alice Medrich,
butter,
cookies,
Dorie,
ice cream,
muscovado sugar,
salt,
sour cream
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Have your cake and ice cream, too
Well, it's back to work for me tomorrow. On Friday, I stopped by work briefly, and several people asked me what I'd been doing with my time off. The answer? Absolutely nothing. =) Or at least, pretty darn closed to that. I did get to spend a couple days with Gillian (while Brianna was at school), which was nice. At her request, we did a little shopping on Thursday. Ah, to be 4-going-on-5 again--the days when all it takes to make you happy is some new socks and leggings and a 99¢ plastic pencil box. Maybe it was the youthful company, but I did a little shopping for myself, and walked out of Office Depot with over a dozen colorful Sharpies. I try to stay out of there, since I lack willpower when it comes to office supplies... =)
I also did lots of baking over the past week. The most involved creation for the week was also one that would easily win the heart of any 4-year-old, not to mention most big kids. I've mentioned before that I'm a DBCB. The reason I went into work on my vacation is that Friday was the birthday of one of my employees, and another has a birthday tomorrow. Fortunately, they're both old enough not too complain too much about having to share. But just in case, I found a good solution--I made everyone a cake of his or her own. My employee A has been nagging me incessantly about making peanut butter ice cream for her ever since I brought some to work for another event. She even suggested that I make ice cream cake. Normally that would be too hard too pull off, but since I was off, I could bring the dessert in at lunch time so it wouldn't have time to melt. So I made a bunch of mini ice cream cakes!
The first thing to decide on was the cake. I knew I wanted chocolate, and a cake that would be good cold. One of the first recipes to come to mind was one from Dorie Greenspan's Baking From My Home to Yours. If you're familiar with the book, you'll remember the fabulous cake on the cover. In the headnote for the recipe, Dorie says, "Freshly made or at room temperature, they [the layers] are moist and a little fluffy; chilled, they're still moist, but denser and firmer, very much like a super-fudgy brownie." That sounded like just what I wanted. Since I wanted thin layers, I used my quarter-sheet pans in place of the 8" rounds called for in the recipe. (The bake time was 20 minutes, and I lined the pans with parchment to make it easy to remove the layers once cooled.) For the ice cream layer, I used one of the same pans, and right after churning the ice cream, I spread it in the parchment lined pan and froze it until it was very firm.
For the assembly, I used a 2 1/2" biscuit cutter (from this set) to cut out rounds. I got 14 from each layer. I stacked the layers--cake, then ice cream, then cake--and stuck the cakes into the freezer overnight to make sure they were completely frozen before I covered them in chocolate. I debated what to use for a coating, but decided to go with the Chocolate Bombe Shell from my copy of Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams at Home. (The peanut butter ice cream was also from that book.) I put the cakes on a rack placed over a sheet pan lined with non-stick foil and spooned the chocolate mixture over them. I did three at a time, keeping the rest in the freezer until I was ready for them. Also, if you work fast, you can put sprinkles on top before the shell completely hardens so they stick well. The nice thing about the chocolate shell mixture is that you can stick the sheet pan in the freezer for a few minutes and the chocolate will harden so that you can easily peel it off the foil. Then you can just break it up and remelt it.
The verdict? Well, this is now the newest "best thing that you have -ever- made!" according to my co-workers. It was a big hit here at home, too. I'm already thinking of different flavors that I can put together, especially since Gillian wasn't a huge fan of the peanut butter ice cream. I have lots of cake scraps left, too, so they may end up in some sort of trifle, unless I manage to just eat them all.
If you'd like to try these little cakes for yourself, here's where you can find recipes for the components I used. Or you can just have fun experimenting for yourself. Enjoy!
Jeni's The Buckeye State ice cream (I left out the chocolate bits & used Golden Syrup instead of honey)
Chocolate Bombe Shell (I doubled the amounts listed in this post)
Saturday, June 4, 2011
How I spent my summer vacation
Okay, my summer vacation only consists of a week (and is technically before summer actually starts), but it's been a fun week. Not that you could tell by Gillian's face. =) Not the best picture ever, but it has the virtue of being taken somewhere other than here. The where was Columbus, Ohio, at my aunt's house. The who was my mom's brothers and sisters, along with their spouses and most of their kids and the three grandkids (my girls and my cousin's new baby). We even had some honorary family join us all the way from The Netherlands! We did what we usually do--we talked, and shopped, and ate and drank. Generally there was just lots of relaxing going on, and passing the baby around...
B with her second cousin Penny
We got to Ohio on Saturday, and since Brianna was done with school last Friday, we didn't have to rush home. Most of the family headed home Monday or early Tuesday, but we didn't fly out until Wednesday. That meant that we had Tuesday available to see someone other than family. A couple of friends from college live in Columbus, so we went to their house for dinner Tuesday night. I think that G really enjoyed that, since their daughter is just a bit older than G, and their little boy isn't that much younger. After dinner, we went for a walk and got to sample some of the yummy flavors at Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams.
Earlier on Tuesday, we drove a ways north of Columbus (up toward Cleveland, though not all the way there) to meet up with another friend. I love that Jamie doesn't think it at all odd that I would do that to visit with someone that I've never actually met in person. But hey, I had already gone all the way to Ohio, so what was a little more traveling? We were able to have lunch with my blogging friend Phyl and his wife, Juanita. And did we talk about food? No, we mostly talked about our kids, since mine were along for the ride.
Phyl, Juanita, Jamie and me
The picture above was taken by Brianna, who will probably spend the rest of the summer asking to use my camera. She apparently also managed to take some amusing video while trying to take pictures with Phyl's phone.
Once we were home, I still had a few days of time away from work to enjoy. The girls and I stayed home on Thursday, because I didn't feel like driving back and forth to the daycare. We went to the library (and I got my haircut) and that was about it. Friday was my running around day. I dropped the girls off and then headed to Starbucks to wait for 10am, when Costco and the other places I need to visit would be open. I was reading stuff online, and ran across this great article (which includes the recipe for Dorie's delicious sablés), which reminded me that Dorie was in town, giving away cookies! So I set off to find her, and them. I found the cookies. I saw Dorie, but she was running around doing stuff. I did get to have a nice conversation with her lovely husband, though. =) And I'm looking forward to trying out her new iPad app when it comes out this summer.
And I have to leave you with a picture of me with my sisters. Whenever we get together, we have to take a "smushed face" self-portrait. (selves-portrait?)
Thursday, February 24, 2011
The big one (well, one of them, anyway)
About a week ago, I was having a conversation with (my 4yo daughter) Gillian as we were in the car on the way to the daycare. I asked her if she knew that she was going to get to stay home with me on Monday (Presidents Day, the 21st). "Yes! That's my day off!" "Do you know what else it is?" "Is it your birthday?" "Yes, it is. How old do you think I'm going to be?" "100?" Thanks, kid. =)
So yes, this past Monday was my birthday. While I'm not quite 100, it was one of those birthdays with a zero at the end. When I told Gillian which one, she insisted that we count from 1 to 40, just because she could. Again, thanks. =) I didn't really have any special plans for the day, in part because I knew Gillian would be home with me all day. We went to Costco (and G was very disappointed in the lack of samples on weekdays), and did some baking.
I was thrilled to get lots of wonderful birthday wishes from family and friends. My family knows me well--my in-laws sent a baking-themed card, my sister Kate & her husband Jeff sent a gift card to King Arthur Flour, and my Dad and Judy sent a gift card to Sur la Table. Time for some shopping! =) (I already have my eye on this pullman pan. Though I still don't understand why they don't just sell the lid with it...) The big question everyone kept asking, though, was who was making my birthday cake?
There are two answers to that. The Friday before my birthday, one of my bankers made a cake for me and brought it to work. It was one of my all-time favorites, yellow cake with chocolate frosting. She was a little worried that I wouldn't like cake from a box mix. My thoughts on that? Any cake that someone else makes for me is awesome! Plus, who doesn't like box yellow cake? =) It was fantastic.
I also made cake for myself on Monday. Gillian helped a bit with stirring and licking beaters. =) Unlike the rest of my immediate family, I prefer vanilla cake with my chocolate frosting. Since I was in the mood for raspberry filling, I decided to make white cake, since I think it works better than yellow for that. My go-to recipe for white cake is in one of the first baking books I ever got, The Cake Bible. It's the White Velvet Butter Cake. One of the great things about making white cake instead of yellow is that I got to get some of the egg whites out of my freezer. =) For the filling, I got to use more egg whites, since I made my favorite Swiss meringue buttercream, flavored with raspberry. And I went the easy route for the frosting--I can probably make the sour cream-chocolate frosting in my sleep, I've made it so many times now. I like lots of layers, so I sliced each of the 9" layers in half so I had four layers of cake with filling between them. I didn't want to mess with decorating, so I just swirled the chocolate frosting on the top. Brianna and Gillian insisted it needed something more, so we added some multicolored non-pareil sprinkles.
The verdict? Well, that's kind of a silly question, since I made it with flavors that are my favorites. Honestly, though, I might change the frosting next time. The raspberry buttercream was fantastic with the texture of the cake. The chocolate frosting was a bit heavy for the whole thing. I might have to try it with chocolate buttercream for the outside next time, or maybe a milk chocolate ganache glaze. It was still very tasty, though, and was eagerly eaten by everyone here.
If you'd like to try making the White Velvet Butter Cake, you can find the recipe here. The Sour Cream-Chocolate Frosting is in this post of mine. And the Swiss Meringue Buttercream is in my post on Dorie's Perfect Party Cake. (I added about 1/4 to 1/3 cup of raspberry fruit butter to the buttercream to flavor it. Raspberry jam should work as well.)
Labels:
birthdays,
buttercream,
cake,
chocolate,
Dorie,
Fine Cooking,
raspberry,
Rose Levy Beranbaum,
sour cream,
vanilla
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