Currently viewing the category: "Cakes"

Been too busy to post for a bit, but enjoy these lovely works of confectionery art while I start sorting through my massive pile of links to share!

 

Give a hoot about these…okay no. No more bad owl puns in this post, I promise. Just awesome confection tutorials!

 

Still recovering from gummy class and Day of Sharing so apologies for the lack of posts. Here are some cool things I’ve found recently:

 

Today on Quick Bites, peach recipes!

Got another peach recipe? Post it in the comments! Meanwhile, pardon me while I go out back and water my old show cake.

 

In case you haven’t heard, there’s some kind of movie coming out today. Something about a hirsute boy wizard with a thing for ceramics and fermented dairy products. Wait, I’m confused…

In other words, today’s Quick Bites are all about the butterbeer, snitches, chocolate frogs, and other Potter goodies!

Late addition! I spied Bake at 350′s very own Butterbeer Cookies and since she passed on Sugarcrafter’s link above, wanted to make sure to include her own awesome cookies as well!

 

Our lovely and talented baker members have graciously shared the following recipes for food they donated to our annual Day of Sharing last weekend:


BANANA CAKE
CAPITAL CONFECTIONERS DOS 2011
CHRISTINE CANTRELL (based on Earlene Moore’s recipe)

1 Duncan Heinz banana cake mix
10 oz sour cream
3 large eggs
½ cup vegetable oil (Canola )
2 teaspoons banana extract (Silver Cloud)
1 -2 TBSP banana icing fruit ( Albert User Banana Compound)
¼ cup Home Brew ( simple syrup + vodka + vanilla extract – see Earlene’s website for Home Brew recipe) or omit alcohol and just use equivalent of simple syrup or water

Mix all ingredients in Kitchenaid 30 seconds to combine, then beat medium speed for 3 minutes.
Pour batter into prepared pans. Bake 325 about 50-60 minutes depending on size of pan.



COCONUT RASPBERRY BARS
By Christine Cantrell

Note: any fruit preserve would work well in this recipe. I like to use the fruit filling that you buy in 2lb tubes (All in One Bakery / Country Kitchen Sweetart).

Note: instead of making the cookie dough in this recipe, buying Pillsbury sugar cookie dough in rolls at the grocery store work very well.

Note: If you put the finished bars in the fridge or freezer to firm up before cutting into squares they will cut much cleaner.

Preheat: 350
Pan: 9 x 13 size

Dough:
¾ cup (1 ½ sticks) butter or margarine, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
1 egg
½ tsp. vanilla extract
2 cups all purpose flour
¼ tsp. baking powder

2 cups sweetened flaked coconut, DIVIDED
½ cup chopped nuts
1 12oz jar raspberry preserves
1 cup white chocolate chips

Method:
In a mixing bowl, cream butter and sugar. Beat in egg and vanilla. In a separate bowl, combine flour and baking powder, gradually add this to creamed mixture.
Stir in 1 ¼ cups of coconut and all the nuts.

Assembly:
Press ¾ of the dough into a greased 9 x 13 baking pan. Spread with preserves. Sprinkle with white chocolate chips and remaining coconut. Crumble remaining dough over the tip; press lightly.

Bake at 350 for 30-35 minutes or until golden brown. Cool on a wire rack. Cut into squares.



STUFFED FRENCH TOAST CASSEROLE
From Christine Cantrell

Ingredients:

12 slices raisin bread ( or cinnamon swirl if you do not prefer raisins)
8 oz cream cheese
1 dozen eggs
2 cups milk
1 ½ teaspoons cinnamon
½ teaspoon nutmeg
¾ cup sugar
maple syrup (optional)

Method:

1.Cut bread slices into cubes.
2. Cover bottom of 9 x 13 dish with half the bread
3.Dot bread with cream cheese then cover with remaining bread.
4.In a separate bowl, beat eggs, milk, cinnamon, nutmeg, and sugar until well blended.
5.Pour egg mixture over bread and cream cheese.
6.Cover and refrigerate overnight.
7.Bake at 375 for 45 minutes or until set.
8.Serve with warm maple syrup or without depending on taste.



Sausage Balls by Paula Deen
(Kyla Myers provided the link)



Also from Kyla Myers, her husband Chip’s Macaron recipe:

Hazelnut Chocolate Macaroons
from Macaroons: 30 Recipes for Perfect Bite-size Treats

1/2 cup ground almonds
1/4 cup finely ground hazelnuts, plus 1tblsp chopped, to decorate
1 cup confectioners sugar
2 extra large egg whites
1/4 cup superfine sugar
generous 1/2 cup hazelnut chocolate spread

Place the ground almonds, ground hazelnuts, and confectioners sugar in a
food processor and process for 15 seconds. Sift the mixture into a bowl.
Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

Place the egg whites in a large bowl and whip until holding soft peaks.
Gradually beat in the superfine sugar to make a firm, glossy meringue.

Using a spatula, fold the almond mixture into the meringue one-third at a
time. When all the dry ingredients are thoroughly incorporated, continue to
cut and fold the mixture until it forms a shiny batter with a thick,
robbonlike consistency.

Pour the batter into a pastry bag fitted with a 1/2-inch/12-cm plain tip.
Pipe 32 small circles onto the prepared baking sheets. Tap the baking sheets
firmly onto a work surface to remove the air bubbles. Sprinkle over the
chopped hazelnuts. Let stand at room temperature for 30 minutes. Preheat the
oven to 35kF/160C.

Bake in the preheated oven for 10-15 minutes. Cool for 10 minutes. Carefully
peel the macaroons off the parchment paper and cool completely.

Sandwich pairs of macaroons together with the hazelnut and chocolate spread.



Leslie Shkolnik brought some Homemade Samoas and provided the recipe from the Toffee Cheese Cake she brought last year:

Toffee Cheese Cake

Crust:
9 oz Plain chocolate wafer cookies (Nabisco Famous preferred) or graham crackers
1T + 1 tsp. Sugar
5 T Warm melted butter

Filling:
10 oz Toffee candy bars, chilled (Heath bar and/or SKOR)
24 oz Cream cheese, room temperature
1 cup + 2T Sugar
¾ cup Whipping cream
½ cup Sour Cream
1T Vanilla
2T Lemon Juice
4 Eggs

Lightly coat 8-inch springform pan with softened butter. Set pan aside.

Insert metal blade into processor. Break up cookies and process with 1 Tablespoon plus 1 tsp. sugar until fine. Add melted butter, process until mixture is moist. If mixture is not sticking, add a little more butter. Press the mixture evenly onto bottom and sides of spring form pan. (Don’t wash processor container yet.) Freeze 10 minutes. Bake at 350 for 5 minutes and cool to room temperature before filling.

Return processor container and blade to base. Break up candy bars and pulse until coarsely chopped. Set chopped candy aside in large mixing bowl. Or candy can be broken up by hand for bigger pieces. I usually use mini heath bars and cut them into larger pieces with kitchen shears. Rinse out processor container.

Cut cream cheese into chunks and place in processor with 1 cup plus 2 Tablespoons sugar, whipping cream, source cream, vanilla and lemon juice. Process, pushing mixture down onto blades, until pureed mixture moves in a whirlpool.

Lightly beat eggs in measuring cup. With motor running, quickly pour beaten eggs through food chute, then immediately stop processing. Sweep container side with spatula to dislodge any small chunks of cream cheese, and pulse into batter once or twice.

Pour cheesecake batter into bowl and mix thoroughly with candy. Ladle batter into crust and bake at 350 for 1 hour 15 minutes or until center of cake is just set (up to 15 minutes longer.) Carefully remove cake from oven, cool to room temperature on wire rack, then refrigerate 4 hours or overnight before slicing. Makes 6 to 8 servings.

Los Angeles Times
Thursday, August 1988

 

Capital Confectioners’ volunteers are still busy wrapping up Day of Sharing details and already on to planning for 2012′s That Takes the Cake! Show, and I’m plugging away at a booklet and other details for my Gummy class in a week and a half, so there’s no time for a themed post right now. So here are some fun links I found today in no particular order:

PS With peaches in season, I’ve been gathering a list of peach recipes. If you’ve got one, email me or post a comment here and it might get featured on a later post! Friday’s post will feature recipes from Day of Sharing, so if you donated a dessert and want to share your recipe, send it to me at press AT capitalconfectioners dot com.

 

Chris Cantrell and I were very busy ladies today, working on the showcake for Day of Sharing on Sunday.

Chris and Kim working on the DoS cake

Now what could we be up to in this photo?

We worked so hard for so many hours, we began to imagine that we heard voices.

Monkey 1

"Oh my goodness! What are those crazy cake ladies doing down there?"

Monkey 2

"I'm not sure, but I think I smell bananas!"

Want to see more? Come to Capital Confectioners’ Day of Sharing!

 

Not much time for online stuff as we volunteers prep for Day of Sharing, but I happened upon these great links today so I’ll throw ‘em together and call it a post!

And a correction: on the first 4th of July post I wrongfully attributed the cake ball flag arrangement based on where I’d seen it posted. That has now been corrected on the post to give proper credit to My Juice Cup. My apologies.

 

The amazing Chris Cantrell and I are collaborating on a big showpiece cake that will be served at Day of Sharing. Here’s a teaser pic I just posted to my own food/cake blog in a post about how you can evoke emotion with googly eyes on fondant figures:

Monkey Teasers

Partially completed fondant monkeys.

If you want to see the completed monkeys, their friends, and the rest of the awesome cake in person, be sure to register for Day of Sharing right away! For those who are coming, I’ll be giving the monkeys away so bring a small container if you’d like to try to snag one to take home. There will only be 16, although there’ll be plenty of cake for everybody.

 
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