Showing posts with label Holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holiday. Show all posts

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Pink Lady Cake, Bunnified


Living so close to an amazing city like New York certainly requires a bit of a lifestyle change when adjusting from a car-centric, more suburban existence.  In theory, you are in no better place in the world to be for shopping, dining, and culture.  In practice, you're SOL if you want to make a quick trip to a large one-stop shop to stock up on toiletries, home goods, or pantry staples, spend less than $20, and be able to schlep everything home without your arms falling off (I'm getting increasingly close to picking up one of these Nana carts - it's only a matter of time).  And with our tiny city apartments, stocking up to any significant degree is unwise.  The result of this is a lifestyle where you're more inclined to support small local businesses and shop sustainably for as little as possible.

On a day-to-day basis this is obviously a positive thing, however, this means that the infrequent trips to big box stores are marked by an excitement and desperation more typical of, say, running of the brides.  Wanting to take advantage of the key trifecta of car access, the spacious shopping experience, and the perhaps false impression that I'm getting a good deal, I've been known to impulse purchase my way to owning a fog machine, a full kg of guava paste, and a ruffled dress from Avril Lavigne's clothing line.  No, I do not have any business wearing anything with ruffles, or anything produced by the same person responsible for this.

For the first time ever, though, one of these impulse purchases has truly improved my life instead of just cluttering up my closet and inducing guilt.  A $10 investment in a Wilton starter cupcake-decorating set that I picked up at Target awhile back has infused me with a confidence for baking that is starkly disproportionate to my actual experience or abilities.


My cookie career spans almost two decades at this point, but there is something about the high stakes world of cakery that has always made me hesitant to dive in.  If you overshoot your baking time with a batch of cookies, you still have a 75% chance of fixing the problem and having an edible product at the end of your efforts, but cakes!  There are just so many ways for it all to go horribly wrong, as I have personally demonstrated for you at least twice.

So I'm trying to remedy this situation now, and in the process become a more popular friend, family member, and coworker who can be relied upon for a celebratory showstopper if the occasion calls for it.  This Pink Lady Cake is a great starting point; a subtle fruit flavor and glorious girly pink with a recipe that is nearly impossible to mess up.  Of the two cake iterations that I've tried in the past few weeks, I like my adaptations below much better than the original Smitten Kitchen recipe that I used for cupcakes.  Separating out the liquid/dry ingredients until the last minute makes for a much lighter cake that is also easier to mix.

The only other advice I would impart is to make sure your butter, strawberries, milk, AND egg whites are at room temperature, otherwise the butter will chunk up and leave some steam holes in the final cake.  Fortunately, covering the entire cake in a tangy cream cheese frosting and shaping it into an Easter rabbit can make up for a lot.


Pink Lady Cake
Adapted from Smitten Kitchen


Serves 8-10
Total time: 75 min plus cooling and decorating time (Active time: 45 min)
  • 1/2 pound (230g) unsalted butter, softened*
  • 2 cups (400g) sugar  
  • 1 cup (240mL) pureed strawberries (fresh or frozen and thawed), about one box 
  • 5 egg whites at room temperature (about 1 cup [240mL] if you use the boxed stuff)
  • 1/2 cup (120mL) milk
  • 1-2 drops red food coloring (optional)
  • 3 cups (115g) cake flour (see here to make your own using AP, corn starch, and a little legwork)
  • 3 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 (8 ounce) packages cream cheese, softened*
  • 1/4 pound unsalted butter (115g), softened* 
  • 2 cups (200g) sifted confectioners’ sugar
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • assorted things for decorating (e.g. shredded coconut, food coloring, chocolate chips, jelly beans, strawberries, julienned carrots, twizzlers, m&ms... the possibilities are endless)
For the cake:  Preheat oven to 350F (180C).  Butter two 9" rounds, parchment paper, and butter the paper.**  Cream butter and sugar with electric mixer on low speed for a few minutes.  Add strawberry puree, egg whites, milk, and food coloring, mixing well after each addition.

In a separate bowl, combine cake flour, baking powder, and salt.  Add the dry ingredients to the wet bowl in three additions, mixing until just combined.  Divide the batter into the two prepared pans.  Bake for 30-35 minutes until a tester inserted in the center comes out clean.

Cool for 10-15 minutes in the pans.  Invert onto wire racks and peel off paper liners.  Cool completely before frosting and assembling cake.

For the frosting and bunnification process:  mix cream cheese and butter with an electric mixer until well-combined.  Add vanilla and gradually blend in powdered sugar.  Set about 1/4 aside if you want to add a few drops of food coloring for decorating.  Keep in the fridge until ready to use (it is much easier to work with after being chilled for 30-60 minutes). 

Arrange one of your cake rounds in the center of a large pan.  Carefully cut out the ears (the sides of the second round) from the bow-tie (the center).  You may have to make further adjustments to make it look symmetrical; this means more cake for you to snack on.  Arrange your ears and bow-tie, and cover the entire thing in cream cheese frosting.  I won't infringe upon your personal creativity, so you should decorate this however you want.  But do take a note from some of the more frightening examples out there.

* Successful, mildly healthier substitutions I have tried:  swap half of the butter (in the cake and frosting) for a light cholesterol-free veg oil spread, and use reduced fat cream cheese for the frosting.  You cannot tell the difference.  Now, if there was only some way to get the sugar down..


**I tried to cut corners here and not use the parchment paper, and was left with a good amount of cake stuck in the pan.  Do not cut corners.  Alternately, you could make cupcakes which take about 20 minutes in the oven, give or take.

Friday, December 30, 2011

Dead Easy Coconut Macaroons

These three-ingredient cookies are the easiest in my repertoire and come together in under two minutes for all of your late night "wait, the holiday party is tomorrow?" moments. With one important caveat:  do NOT attempt these without lining your cookie sheets with parchment paper.  I've got many memories from days of yore pre-parchment proliferation, and my poor mother chiseling caramel-colored pools of cemented condensed milk off of her baking sheets, only to find the dog had eaten the several dozen fruits of her labor by the next afternoon.  Don't let this happen to you.

The sweetened condensed milk in this recipe also gives the coconut a toasted nutty flavor, while still keeping the cookies sweet and chewy.  So it's not "all-natural" (what does that mean, anyway?), but you won't have to whip egg whites which I consider a procedural win.  Use non-stick paper, train your dog better, and enjoy.



Quick and Easy Coconut Macaroons
Recipe from my Mom

Makes 4-5 dozen cookies
Total time: one hour (Active time <5 minutes)
  • 16oz (450g) grated coconut (sweetened or unsweetened)
  • 14oz (400g) sweetened condensed milk 
  • 2 teaspoons almond extract (or vanilla in a pinch)
Preheat oven to 350F (180C).  Add all ingredients to a bowl and stir until well-mixed.  Drop by teaspoonfuls onto greased parchment paper-lined baking sheets.  Bake for 10-12 minutes, until lightly browned.

Move the parchment paper onto a wire rack to cool.  Store on waxed paper in airtight containers, or freeze.  Good for several weeks, if they last that long.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Spicy Cranberry Chutney

 
Controversial statement: the best character on Friends is Chandler Bing, but only between seasons 1 and 4.  During the first part of the show's run, he was a Woody Allen-esque hyper self-critical schmuck, hapless but ultimately good-natured.  Once he starts dating Monica, I guess the producers decided that he was best served as a man-accessory and all significant character development is removed.  Because what else do you do when characters get married and boring to maintain viewership?  Have everyone get crazy!  And thus they become exaggerated caricatures (OCD! Smoking! Baby crazy! Dog hating!) of the lovable poor decision-making fools they once were.

So in very last Thanksgiving episode of Friends ("The One with the Late Thanksgiving"), Chandler's story arch centers around the flaccid unitask that his wife allowed him to contribute - the cranberry sauce.  He rises and falls by the cranberry sauce, traditionally the lamest of the Thanksgiving condiments, since there's nothing else for him to do.  And that was me this past Thanksgiving.


As I mentioned before, I arrived very very late on Thanksgiving Eve and was set to be exhaustingly busy on Thanksgiving morning, so the cranberry sauce was my only contribution.  And it needed to sing!  So we have spicy cranberry chutney - a tart and peppery sauce to cut through and enhance your sweet and mushy holiday sides.  I've since added it to eggs, turkey and ham sandwiches, burritos, and I'm told the leftovers were also incorporated into a baked brie.  Because if you only have one thing to offer, it better go the distance.  Assuming of course, it doesn't get used up in a gratuitous physical gag.



Spicy Cranberry Chutney
Adapted from Cook's Illustrated (via The Bitten Word for those without a subscription like myself)

Makes 3 cups (750mL)
Total time: 90 minutes (Active time 10 minutes)
  • 2 teaspoons vegetable oil
  • 1 shallot, minced
  • 1 red bell pepper, chopped
  • 2 jalapeno peppers, minced (one with seeds and one without)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2/3 cup (160 mL) water
  • 1/4 cup (60 mL) cider vinegar
  • 1 cup (220g) packed brown sugar
  • 12 oz (340g) fresh or frozen cranberries
  • 1 green or yellow apple, shredded on a box grater and peels removed
Heat oil in medium pan over medium heat.  Add shallot, salt, red bell pepper, and jalapenos; cook, stirring occasionally, for 5 minutes.

Add water, vinegar, and sugar.  Increase heat to high and bring to simmer, stirring to dissolve sugar. Add half of the cranberries and the grated apple and return to a simmer.  Reduce heat to medium-low and simmer, stirring occasionally, until cranberries have almost completely broken down and mixture has thickened, about 15-20 minutes.

Add remaining cranberries and continue to simmer, stirring occasionally, until just beginning to burst, 5 to 7 minutes.  Remove from the heat and cool for at least 1 hour before serving.  Keeps just fine refrigerated for several weeks.  Travels well.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Turkey Day 2011: Reflections and Recipe Rundown

Part one of the spread from Thanksgiving 2009
Thanksgiving is less than a week away, and I'm giddy with excitement the way that children look forward to Christmas morning.  I believe with steadfast resolve that Thanksgiving is the best American holiday of the year.  Worldwide, I think it might be either tied or a close second to Guy Fawkes Day, but if we're talking strictly non-pyrotechnic food-centric holidays, Thanksgiving is tops.

Why?  Because despite it's dubious beginnings, Thanksgiving these days is about celebrating time spent with your loved ones and preparing a fantastic meal together, and there is really nothing that can top that.   Unlike other feast days, there aren't any religious overtones, pressure for perfect gift-purchasing, and every family can make up it's own traditions.  No family that you can visit? Thanksgiving spent with friends is an equally special experience.

My parents live in Boston, and since Thanksgiving Eve is notoriously the worst travel day of the year, I usually like to go up early Thursday morning and have my own personal cook-off at home for my dishes the night before.  This year, my sister has goaded me into participating in a gratuitous athletic display on Thanksgiving morning.  Since I also have a zero vacation balance, I will braving the masses on Wednesday evening, sweating/panting Thursday morning, and going to be completely deprived of cooking time

But I'm not going to leave you gentle Trash Salad readers high and dry.  I've prepared a rundown of my favorite dishes that I've made over the years.  As a parting pro-tip: do not waste your cooking time or valuable stomach space on soups and breads.  You've got all of winter ahead of you for that.

Thanksgiving 2009's stuffing-heavy spread.  Courtesy of my sister for these photos, but Trash Salad worthy nonetheless.

Tried and true traditional flavors:
AllRecipes Yummy Sweet Potato Casserole
Serious Eats Classic Sage and Sausage Stuffing (I'm actually supremely fussy about my stuffing, but this is the recipe that comes closest to what I usually do, though eggs are completely unnecessary. Stuffing post forthcoming.)
Simply Recipes Perfect Mashed Potatoes
Gourmet Cranberry Sauce 
Cambell's Green Bean Casserole (My Mom's version has lots of cheese, completely canned ingredients, and is absolutely amazing.)
Martha's Roasted Brussels Sprouts
Tyler Florence Oven Roasted Turkey with Sage Butter
Libby's Famous Pumpkin Pie
Jell-o Chocolate Pudding Pie (Another family favorite!)


A little something different:*
My Coconut and Ginger Sweet Potato Casserole
Bon Appetit Lemon Roast Potatoes
My Kale Salad
Williams-Sonoma Spiced Cranberry Chutney
Dave Lieberman Tangy Almond Green Beans
101 Cookbooks Shredded Brussels Sprouts and Apples
Giada de Laurentis Turkey with Herbes de Provence and Citrus
Oprah's Pumpkin Gingersnap Pie with Sugared Cranberries (I know. But it's really good!)
Alison Kave's Blue Ribbon Ginger Bourbon Pecan Pie

*Having tried many stuffing variations including cornbread and wild rice, this is the only place where I will say do NOT mess with the classic.