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    Entries in not all cakes are equal (13)

    Friday
    Feb012013

    It's Our Birthday Today, and We're This Many!

    That’s right, we’re turning 2 today!  Can you believe it?  And of course with birthdays, come cakes!  As you know, here at Author’s Kitchen, we rarely follow tradition, so it shouldn’t come as a surprise that I decided to steer clear of the usual layer cake covered in frosting.  Instead, I opted for pineapple upside down cake, and even better, for little individual cakes.  Well, you know, two year olds aren’t very good at sharing. 

    Here’s what you’ll need:

    • 3 Tablespoons butter
    • ⅔ cup sugar
    • 1 teaspoon molasses
    • 6 pineapple slices
    • ½ cup butter, softened
    • 1 ½ cups granulated sugar
    • 1 Tablespoon vanilla
    • 3 eggs
    • 1 teaspoon baking powder
    • 1 teaspoon baking soda
    • 2 cups flour
    • ¼ teaspoon salt
    • ⅓ cup pineapple juice (from the canned pineapple)
    • ⅔ cup buttermilk

    The first thing you want to do is butter the sides of your baking dishes.  For this I used 14 ounce ramekins.  That’s what I have, and it was a good size for the pineapple slices.  Use whatever size you have, or even put it all into one 9x13 pan.  Just keep in mind that you might need to adjust the baking time slightly. 

    In a pan over medium-low heat, melt 3 Tablespoons of butter. When it’s about melted go ahead and add the sugar and molasses.  (If you don’t have molasses, but do have brown sugar, go ahead and substitute brown sugar for the sugar and molasses.  I just don’t keep brown sugar on hand because I always end up with a useless brown brick.)

    Stir until everything comes together, then remove it from the heat. 

    Scoop out a level tablespoon. 

    And drop two of those into each dish. 

    Tap it down, spreading it to the edges of the dish.  Place a slice a pineapple right on top and repeat until you’ve done all 6 ramekins. 

    Now onto the cake part.  First, go ahead and preheat your oven to 350°.  (After 2 years, we’re finally starting to get the hang of the preheating thing.)  Place your softened butter into your mixing bowl.  (If you forgot to get all of your ingredients to room temperature, see how to do it quickly here.)  Give it a quick stir just to make sure it’s nice and soft. 

    Add the sugar and beat those together for about 2 minutes. 

    Scrape everything down and add the vanilla. 

    Once that’s mixed in, add the first egg. 

    Wait until that one is completely incorporated before adding the next one. 

    Once all three of them are in, it should look something like this. 

    In a separate bowl, mix together the flour, soda, powder, and salt. 

    Add about ⅓ of the dry mixture to the bowl. 

    Stir that in and add half of the wet mixture.  I did tell you to mix the buttermilk and pineapple juice together in a measuring cup, right?  No?  Well, go ahead and do it now, then pour half of it into the mixing bowl. 

    Continue alternating with the remaining dry, then wet, then dry, until you have a gorgeous cake batter. 

    Scoop ⅔ cup of the batter into each ramekin, and place them all onto a sheet pan.   

    Level them out on top, then into the oven for 35 – 40 minutes.  A toothpick inserted into the center of the cake should come out clean, and they should be a beautiful golden brown on top.

    Allow the cakes to cool for 7 minutes.  Yes, I know 7 minutes sounds picky, but trust me.  Invert each cake onto a plate and behold the fabulousness it’s been hiding below.  Look at that sumptuous, caramel, pineapple, sticky, cakey goodness.  (Pardon me while I wipe the drool away.)  

    Eat just as it is, or garnish with whipped cream or a scoop of really good vanilla ice cream.  Who says birthday cakes need frosting? 

    These are a bit big to really be called individual servings, but whatever, it’s our birthday and we don’t want to share.  


     

    Tuesday
    Sep252012

    ice cream flavoured cake

    would be even better with ice cream.

    But I was out of ice cream, which is why I made the cake. Well, that and I'd managed to make it around the sun one more time.

    So, you've seen me make mint chocolate chip ice cream. Definitely one of my favourites. Last weekend was the time of year for cake, and so I made a mint chocolate chip cake. And since I have trained my offspring to be aware of food additives, he insisted that we make it without artificial colors or flavours. Which apparently meant I was not allowed to use mint extract either. Had to be mint-mint.

    Okay.

    I can do that.

    Mint Chocolate Chip Cake

    What you need:

    • about 2 c mint
    • 2/3 c milk
    • 1/3 c butter
    • 3/4 c sugar
    • more mint (about 1 tbsp once it's all chopped)
    • 1 egg
    • 1 tsp vanilla (which was allowed for some reason)
    • 2 tsp baking powder
    • 1/4 tsp salt
    • 1 generous cup of flour
    • 1 c mini chocolate chips (they're in the other pictures)

    What you gotta do:

    Don't preheat your oven yet. We've got an extra step at the beginning here. Since I wasn't allowed to use a mint extract, even a non-artificial one, I had to make one of my own.

    So, I took a step from the ice cream recipe. Trim and rinse the mint, and put it in a pot with the milk.

    You will barely be able to see the milk under all the mint. Don't worry, it's still there. And the mint will cook down like all leafy green things.

    Bring this just barely to a simmer, stir it, cover it, and leave it alone for about half an hour.

    Set the butter and egg on the counter to warm up to room temperature while the mint milk is steeping.

    Once you've strained and squeezed the mint out, the milk will be just barely green.

    Not quite green enough to colour a cake. Which is where the other bit of mint comes in. Chiffonade and then cut that up a bit more.

    Cream the butter, sugar, and minced mint together.

    I was hoping that creaming the mint in with the sugar would mash it up a bit more and spread it around (using the coarseness of the sugar to macerate it) but that didn't quite go as I'd hoped. Oh well.

    Add the egg and vanilla to your speckled butter.

    Now, we do the three bowl method for the cake. In the big bowl, the creamed butter mixture. In a smaller bowl (the one I started in and then decided was too small) the flour, salt, and baking powder. And in a bowl shaped like a measuring cup, the mint milk.

    First, we add about 1/3 of the flour to the creamed butter. Mix this in well.

    Now, about half the milk. Also mix in well.

    And then about half of what remains of the flour. Mix again.

    And the rest of the milk. Mix!

    And finally the last of the flour. Don't mix. Kidding! Mix it.

    Oh. Um. You should have preheated the oven just before the mixing started.

    Now, the chocolate chips. The Boy insisted on chips rather than chopped chocolate. And he was calling the shots with this one; I guess that's his version of making me a cake.  

    Butter and flour a cake pan. I had a 9 inch pan, which turns out was too big. You'll see why in a minute. If you have an 8 inch round pan, or an 8 inch square pan that would work fine. I'm going to use the 8 inch square pan next time.

    You can also line the pan with a bit of parchment paper.

    I would show you how to cut a round piece, but I know I'm going to need a tip to post in a few weeks during midterms and I think that sounds like a good one. Until then, you can leave the parchment out if you'd like.

    Bake the cake at 350 for about 30 minutes. You can test after 25 if you'd like but mine took almost exactly 30. Let it cool in the pan for about 20 minutes, and then on a rack until it's room temp.

    You see that flat bit in the middle?

    That's what I mean about the wrong pan size. There wasn't enough leavening in the mixture to keep everything together enough to lift that far from the edge. Another egg, or a bit more baking powder would work. Or, I could use a smaller pan so I don't have to go messing with recipe proportions.

    But, it was still cooked through, and it smelled minty. Tasted minty too, but it wasn't as green as The Boy was hoping. Still, he was glad it didn't have fake colour in it. I doubt I could convince him to use spinach juice though, like Taneasha did with her colourful cookies.

    There are definitely flecks of green in there though.

    This is a very moist moist cake, with a crumbly, delicate crumb. And the texture kinda reminded me of those "snack cakes" that my mom used to make from a box in the 80s. Quick cakes, never frosted, and always done in a square pan. So, I skipped the frosting step on this one.

    A bit of vanilla ice cream on the side would have been nice though.