Sunday, October 27, 2019

Adventures in Gluten Free

I have been making cakes for my friend's little boy since his baby shower. Since he is only 2 that makes three cakes now. For the shower, since his name would be Jonah, a whale was requested. I did the whale topper in chocolate modeling clay with an isomalt spout. The parents liked it so much they froze the topper and used it for his first birthday cake. Making the spout was fun and challenging since I had never worked with isomalt before. I followed directions on the package and, after couple of near burns to my hand, poured the isomalt into a shape I had made in cornstarch. I think it was a success.  


An organic cake was requested. Around here  it is not hard to find organic ingredients. The frosting was made with organic food colors but they are not the vibrant colors that come with the Wilton fondant and melts. The paneling was the fake stuff, easily removed for the faint of heart. 

For his first birthday he got a smash cake in vanilla and it was gluten free. It got good reviews from the grown ups. King Arthur makes a good gluten free flour blend  and a great baking mix and I used their recipe for his smash cake. 

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease an 8" square or 9" round pan; or line 12 muffin cups with cupcake papers, and spray the insides of the papers.

  2. To make the batter, beat the soft butter and sugar until thoroughly combined and somewhat lightened in color.

  3. Add the eggs one at a time, mixing until just incorporated.

  4. Combine the milk and vanilla.

  5. Stir one-third of the baking mix into the mixture; stir in half the milk, another third of the baking mix, the remaining milk, then the remaining mix. Scrape the bowl occasionally throughout this process.

  6. Spread the batter into the prepared pan. For cupcakes, scoop the batter by level 1/4-cupfuls into the prepared muffin tins; a muffin scoop works well here.

  7. Bake the cake until a cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean, and the middle springs back when pressed lightly — 30 to 35 minutes for a layer, or 20 to 22 minutes for cupcakes.

  8. Remove from the oven. Serve warm; or cool completely, then spread with the frosting of your choice


The recipe refers to gluten free vanilla extract! That surprised me and upon further research I found out vanilla extract has always been gluten free. Some brands have gotten on the gluten free bandwagon and started labeling their vanilla as "gluten free". 
This was his first birthday cake (organic chocolate) with the little gluten free smash cake behind it. As you can see the whale survived but the spout emerged slightly diminished. The colors were not the organic kind this time around. 

Monday, October 21, 2019

Perfecting My Chocolate Cake

A few years back I made a big ol' chocolate cake.



It is a dark intense chocolate and got lots of good reviews. I love it when I hear "This is the best chocolate cake I have ever had!" Over the years I have tweaked the recipe a bit and added a fudgy chocolate frosting. This cake is for true chocolate lovers and always gets rave reviews. It is my most requested cake.

This month I made it for two birthday boys. One was 2 and one was...not 2. 
The first cake was for the grown up and he loves Sees candy. I picked up all shapes and sizes of Sees, along with my free sample. I also bought, and ate too many, Pepperidge Farm Pirouettes for height. 

I thought of trying to hand write "Happy Birthday" in chocolate but thought better of it. I found this lovely fondant cutter that will definitely be used again:
Thank you (again) Amazon.
My first stab at the sign was done with chocolate modeling clay and a bit of tylose powder for stiffness.
Nope. After two days it was still a tad limp and both broke easily. Not what I want to deal with when I set up a cake on site. Not to mention it was a pain to get out of the cutter and some of the letters got funky as a result. As you can see I made them yellow to help with the eventual gilding. 
Onward to the next attempt. Fondant with gumpaste mix. I added some of the gilding to the mixture. Speckles. Whatever. It will be covered up with gold and disco dust anyway. This was my first time using Amerigold for the gilding. I usually mix luster dust with vodka. This worked so much better.
Success! The sign dried up nice and hard and was easy to put right in the cake. I painted it with the gold sheen then dusted it with gold disco dust.  No skewers needed. I also cut some letters for the name. 

I am told everyone loved the cake and of course were clamoring for the Sees on top.

Everyone's Favorite Chocolate Cake
This makes enough for two 10 inch cake layers each 1 3/4 inches tall.
3 oz Dark chocolate. I use Trader Joe's Dark Chocolate. 
1 ½ cups hot brewed coffee
3 cups sugar
2 ½ cups flour
1 cups unsweetened cocoa powder
½  cup Hershey's Special Dark Cocoa Powder
2 tsp baking soda
¾ tsp baking powder
1 ¼ tsp salt
3 large eggs (room temperature)
¾ cup canola oil
1 ½ cups well-shaken buttermilk
1 tsp pure vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. If you’re making cupcakes, line the wells of your pans with fluted paper liners, or grease and dust them with flour or cocoa. If you’re making larger cakes, grease pans and line bottoms with rounds of parchment.

Finely chop chocolate and in a bowl combine with hot coffee. Let mixture stand, stirring occasionally, until chocolate is melted and mixture is smooth.

Into a large bowl sift together sugar, flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. In another (very) large bowl, beat eggs with an electric mixer until thickened slightly and lemon-colored (about 3 minutes with a standing mixer or 5 minutes with a hand-held mixer). Slowly add oil, buttermilk, vanilla, and melted chocolate mixture to eggs, beating until combined well. Add sugar mixture and beat on medium speed, until just combined well.

Flour and  butter all the pans and cut a circle of parchment for the bottom. Every time I do this I remember my mom teaching me this trick. Use the Wilton Bake-even Cake Strips on every pan. These work great. I yell at the screen when I see bakers cut off domes and waste cake (I am looking at you Man About Cake!)  No domes with bake strips. Putting a rose nail in the center of each layer while baking also helps them bake evenly
Bake in middle of oven for 50 minutes. One crucial thing I do is keep an eagle eye on my cakes and test as soon as I think they may be done, taking them out just as soon as the toothpick comes out clean.

My current go-to frosting is a combination of Hershey's recipe from the back of the container, and a David Lebovitz ganache glaze he uses on his German chocolate cake. It is very rich but chocoholics love it.

Ultimate Chocolate Frosting
Ganache
8 ounces dark chocolate. Sometimes I mix milk and dark. I use Trader Joe's
1 cup heavy cream
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
1 1/2 ounces butter

Chop 8 ounces of chocolate in a bowl with the corn syrup and 1 ½ ounces of butter.

Heat the cream until it just begins to boil. I put it in the microwave for a minute or two. Place the 8 ounces of chopped chocolate in a bowl with the cream. Let stand one minute, then stir until smooth. Add the corn syrup and butter. Let sit until room temperature.

1/2 cup (1 stick) butter
2/3 cup Cocoa
3 cups powdered sugar
1/3 cup half and half
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Melt butter. Stir in cocoa. Alternately add powdered sugar and milk, beating to spreading consistency.
Add small amount additional milk, if needed. Stir in vanilla. Add the ganache mixture and mix until smooth. If you would like a fluffier frosting. Cool for an hour in the fridge then beat in stand mixer for 3-4 minutes. About 2 1/2 cups frosting.
Double the recipe for the 10" cake.

For the drips I made a ganache with one to one ration of chocolate to heavy cream. Heat 1 cup cream in microwave for 1-2 minutes. Add 8 oz chopped dark chocolate to the cream. Let sit for 5 minutes then whisk until smooth. Let cool until it is of proper dripping consistency. If it is too hot it will melt your frosting. You may need to add some cream, water or half and half to get it to drip but not run. I am calling the drips on my latest cake "baroque candle drips."








Sunday, August 03, 2014

Big Birthday Planning - and a Sparkling Cake

My best friend of 50 years turned 60 in June. We had the best time planning her party and especially the cake that would adorn the festivities. She has a sparkly personality and loves all things that glitter.
One of the touches that she added to the party was personalized wine glasses. Each person would have an etched wine glass with their name on it instead of a place card. I had so much fun with my handy Cricut and vinyl. This method works great when you want to etch on glass.

We wanted sparkles on the cake so we purchased a rhinestone cake topper with her first initial along with a rhinestone wrap for a middle fake cake layer. I got to work on making a bunch of little flowers for a hydrangea topper. It was my first attempt at this flower. I put 5 flowers to a bunch and made each floret up of three bunches. They were inserted into a fondant covered topper. The frosting was a very light pink on the bottom and white on the top, smoothed to within and inch of its life.  I think the cake came out they way she wanted it to.



The party was a resounding success! We even had a star sighting when Mila Kunis peeked into the private room looking for her party. Happy 60th to my BFF. Can't believe it's been 50 years since we met as next door neighbors.


Saturday, April 26, 2014

A Garden's Worth of Gerberas

I made a cake for a friend's mother's 80th birthday this month. She loves chocolate and loves bright colors. A two tiered cake with lots of red yellow and orange gerberas was ordered.


I figured each flower takes me about 15 minutes. That's once I figured out how to do them. I added a wire on the back because the flowers wound up very heavy. There seems to be much debate about whether it's OK to put wires in your cake. I think the Wilton wires are made to put in a cake but I saw a tip about wrapping the wires in Press and Seal. I love that stuff so of course I have it on hand and went ahead and wrapped the wires for the flowers. Another thing I did was use some sliced up pool noodles to hold the flowers.

Since the birthday girl likes dark chocolate I went on a quest for a nice dark chocolate cake.  One recipe I found called for King Arthur Black Cocoa Powder! I suppose I could have ordered it online but my friend recently introduced me to Hershey's Special Dark Cocoa Powder. That's what I used. When I tested Ina Garten's recipe for Beatty's Chocolate Cake adding the dark cocoa made the cake a bit bitter. I was going to put ganache on each layer but it was so rich it really didn't need it. Here's the recipe I used, adapted from
http://orangette.blogspot.com/2004/09/on-not-getting-killed-learning-to-be.html. The recipe was doubled and made two 8 inch and two 10 inch layers.

3 oz dark chocolate, I use Trader Joe's 72% Cacao
1 ½ cups hot brewed coffee
3 cups sugar
2 ½ cups cake flour
1 cups unsweetened cocoa powder
½  cup Hershey's Special Dark Cocoa Powder
2 tsp baking soda
¾ tsp baking powder
1 ¼ tsp salt
3 large eggs
¾ cup canola oil
1 ½ cups well-shaken buttermilk
¾ tsp pure vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 300 degrees. If you’re making cupcakes, line the wells of your pans with fluted paper liners, or grease and dust them with flour or cocoa. If you’re making larger cakes, grease pans and line bottoms with rounds of wax paper. Grease paper.

Finely chop chocolate and in a bowl combine with hot coffee. Let mixture stand, stirring occasionally, until chocolate is melted and mixture is smooth.

Into a large bowl sift together sugar, flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. In another (very) large bowl, beat eggs with an electric mixer until thickened slightly and lemon-colored (about 3 minutes with a standing mixer or 5 minutes with a hand-held mixer). Slowly add oil, buttermilk, vanilla, and melted chocolate mixture to eggs, beating until combined well. Add sugar mixture and beat on medium speed, until just combined well.

Flour and  butter all the pans and cut a circle of parchment or wax paper for the bottom. Every time I do this I remember my mom teaching me this trick. Use the Wilton Bake-even Cake Strips on every pan. My significant other is used to getting the trimmings from the domed cakes and was disappointed when the layers came out nice and flat and needed no trimming. Bake in middle of oven for 50-70 minutes. One crucial thing I do is keep an eagle eye on my cakes and test as soon as I think they may be done, taking them out just as soon as the toothpick comes out clean.

The plan was to use the Viva method to smooth the frosting so I was looking for a nicely crusting frosting. When it came to doing the smoothing the colors of the chocolate looked blotchy so I just used a bench scraper to make it as smooth as possible. Super smooth frosting was not one of the requests and there were so many flowers it didn't really need to be that smooth. In the process of looking for how to smooth a cake I found this little nugget. http://sweetnessandbite.com/2013/10/perfect-buttercream-stripes-part-one/which employs a level and flipping the cake to make it perfect. I tested three frostings and wound up using the not crusty and more ganachy one for the filling and the crustier one for the outside. Below are the frosting recipes I used.

Filling:

3 cups salted butter
3 TB milk                      
2 tsp vanilla 
                
½ cup Hershey's Special Dark cocoa powder    

12 oz Trader Joe's 72% Dark Chocolate     
2 lbs powdered sugar   

Mix Butter, milk, vanilla, and cocoa powder in your mixer until thoroughly combined and smooth. Melt your chocolate chips in the microwave on 30 second intervals stirring between heatings. Then pour into the mixer a little at a time mixing as you go. After the chocolate has been added to the other ingredients and you have a smooth consistency, add in the confectioners sugar.

Frosting adapted from this recipe

1 cup salted sweet cream butter, softened (2 sticks)
1 cup Crisco All Vegetable Shortening
3 t. Pure Vanilla extract
2 lbs. (8 cups) sifted powdered sugar, divided
1 cup sifted Hershey's Cocoa
1 TB Meringue Powder
8-9 TB heavy whipping cream, divided

Instructions

Cream butter and shortening, add vanilla, cream until smooth.
Sift together powdered sugar and Hershey's Cocoa.
Add Meringue Powder.
Add 1/3 of the powdered sugar mixture, beating well on medium speed until blended (keep bowl covered with damp towel while beating to keep powdered sugar in bowl).
Add 1/3 of the heavy whipping cream, mixing until blended.
Add 1/3 more of the powdered sugar mixture, beating well on medium speed until blended.
Add 1/3 more of the heavy whipping cream, mixing until blended.
Add remaining powdered sugar mixture and remaining heavy whipping cream. Beat on medium speed until light and fluffy.

The plaque for the Happy Birthday was stenciled.




Thursday, April 03, 2014

Margarita Cupcakes with Tequila Lime Buttercream

I have been doing quiet a few catering gigs this month, two of which involved a Mexican menu.  One hostess decided to have cupcake party favors and I created these for the project by mixing in some actual margaritas.

These little babies came in really handy by allowing me to add in some extra flavor. You don't really taste the alcohol and I think lime juice or margarita mix would work just as well.
I also sugared up some lime slices to put on the top. I wanted to keep the green color in the peel so I didn't want to boil them in simple sugar. Just covering them in sugar for a few days worked perfectly by drawing out some of the moisture into the sugar. It also makes some very limey sugar. Putting cute little green paper straws or an umbrella could work too.
Cupcakes
1 box lemon cake mix                                                              
1 cup Jose Cuervo Margarita   (one mini bottle)                                                                 
1/2 cup vegetable oil                                                                                                  
2 TB lime juice                                                                                                            
2 teaspoons grated lime peel
3 eggs
2 TB  lime-flavored gelatin 

1/4 cup mayonaise
Margarita Frosting
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
5 to 6 cups powdered sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice, freshly squeezed
1 tablespoon Jose Cuervo
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon lime zest
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line muffin pan with baking cup liners.
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment mix together all cake ingredients. Mix on medium about 3 minutes.
 
I also took 1/8 cup margarita and added it to 1/8 cup simple syrup and brushed that mixture on the cupcakes to add a little more flavor and moisture. It gave the top a bit of a crust.
A size 24 disher is the perfect size for cupcakes. Use one to add batter to cupcake papers in cupcake pan. Bake for 18-22 minutes. Take out cupcakes as soon as toothpick comes out clean. Brush with margarita syrup while still warm.
Cream butter for frosting until lighter in color using paddle blade. Add everything except the powdered sugar and mix until combined. Add the powdered sugar one cup at a time until everything is smooth.

Use the sugared lime slices for garnish, if desired
For the Tequila Lime Buttercream Frosting:
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
5 to 6 cups powdered sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice, freshly squeezed
1 tablespoon tequila
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon lime zest
small lime slices for garnish, if desired
Read more at http://sweetpeaskitchen.com/2011/05/margarita-cupcakes-with-tequila-lime-buttercream-frosting/#2jK3KAwB7Odc1FOQ.99
For the Tequila Lime Buttercream Frosting:
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
5 to 6 cups powdered sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice, freshly squeezed
1 tablespoon tequila
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon lime zest
small lime slices for garnish, if desired
Read more at http://sweetpeaskitchen.com/2011/05/margarita-cupcakes-with-tequila-lime-buttercream-frosting/#2jK3KAwB7Odc1FOQ.99
Tequila Lime Buttercream Frosting:
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
5 to 6 cups powdered sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice, freshly squeezed
1 tablespoon tequila
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon lime zest
small lime slices for garnish, if desired
Read more at http://sweetpeaskitchen.com/2011/05/margarita-cupcakes-with-tequila-lime-buttercream-frosting/#2jK3KAwB7Odc1FOQ.99
Tequila Lime Buttercream Frosting:
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
5 to 6 cups powdered sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice, freshly squeezed
1 tablespoon tequila
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon lime zest
small lime slices for garnish, if desired
Read more at http://sweetpeaskitchen.com/2011/05/margarita-cupcakes-with-tequila-lime-buttercream-frosting/#2jK3KAwB7Odc1FOQ.99
Tequila Lime Buttercream Frosting:
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
5 to 6 cups powdered sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice, freshly squeezed
1 tablespoon tequila
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon lime zest
small lime slices for garnish, if desired
Read more at http://sweetpeaskitchen.com/2011/05/margarita-cupcakes-with-tequila-lime-buttercream-frosting/#2jK3KAwB7Odc1FOQ.99