Showing posts with label Citrus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Citrus. Show all posts

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Mexican coffee

I don't have the proper ingredients for the real thing. I don't even have a clay pot.

In a [preferably CLAY] pot, boil 4 cups of water over medium-high heat. Once it comes to a boil, add--

Orange peel
5 cloves
couple of cinnamon sticks
1/2 cup ground dark roast coffee
4oz piloncillo (raw sugar)

Them's the PROPER ingredients. My sister's made it a habit of always keeping oranges in the fridge, so that worked out fine--I shaved the peel in strips and not with a grater (make sure you avoid the white bits). I only have ground clove, so I did about 7 quick dashes of that. Likewise for the cinnamon, a few good dashes. I don't have my coffee maker anymore and all I have is instant coffee.... yeah, yeah, I know. I now also know that 1/2 cup non-instant coffee does not equal 1/2 cup instant coffee. Wheeee, I'm wired. Also, since it's instant--I added it towards the end and not at the beginning.
Annnnnnnnd I don't have piloncillo. Went with 1/2 cup light brown sugar, instead. This is the reason this entry is tagged under "abomination"--any real Mexican will tell you that there IS no substitute for piloncillo. My sister did, because, as Asian as she is, she is much, MUCH more Mexican than I am.
Simmer for 5 minutes, add a cup of cold water, cover and remove from heat.
Let it rest for 5 minutes. Strain before serving.

A long time to wait to enjoy a cup of coffee, but it's worth it.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Pumpkin citrus cake

All this pumpkin's gotta get used somehow.

Streusel center
All measurements here are approximate
4 Tbsp all-purpose flour
4-5 Tbsp white sugar
1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
Chopped pecans
3 Tbsp cold butter

Mix all dry ingredients, crumble butter in, set aside.

Pumpkin Citrus Cake
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
2 cups white sugar
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp salt
Dash of ground nutmeg and clove
2 eggs, room temperature
1 1/3 cup pumpkin puree
1/3 cup melted butter
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp orange extract
Dried cranberries (Aldi sells these fantastic orange-flavored cranberries that were PERFECT for this)

Preheat oven to 350F

Soak dried cranberries in Very Hot Water, just enough to cover them. Leave 'em soaking while you make the cake.

Sift flour, sugar, baking powder, spices and salt together. Add pumpkin, butter, extracts and eggs - beat until smooth.

Drain cranberries (save the water) and place at the bottom of a well-greased pan. I used a Bundt pan, but there's no reason why you shouldn't be able to make an upside down cake with other fruits, maybe some candied orange peel or ginger (I love me some ginger), whatever you're into.

Pour about 2/3-3/4 of the batter on top of the cranberries--that streusel stuff has a way of going for the bottom of the pan like it's a race. Sprinkle the streusel center over this batter and spoon the remaining batter carefully over the streusel.

Bake for, I kid you not, about an hour. I've been experimenting with this recipe a few times and I'm yet to find an exact time. Baking it at 375F turns the edges too brown too quickly before the rest of the cake is done, and it's also a little hard to gauge because the streusel center stays rather moist and sticking a knife in to check for doneness is a bit misleading because of this. Whooooo, that was a busy sentence. If you make this, keep an eye on it after 45-50 minutes, make sure it's not getting burned, do the knife/toothpick thing if you must--some sticky on the knife is okay (the streusel), as long as you're not seeing blatant raw batter. And if you figure out a more accurate baking time, LET ME KNOWWWWWW, PLZ, THX.

It doesn't help that my oven's temperature likes to fluctuate any way it pleases.

Whenever it finally does come out of the oven, cool for about 20 minutes and flip onto a serving plate.

Glaze
(approximate)
3/4 cup confectioner's sugar
1/4 tsp orange extract
Water from the cranberry-soaking business earlier--strain any stray seeds

Combine sugar and orange, and then add the water, a few drops at a time, until easily stirred. You don't want it too runny, but not quite spread-like consistency. It's a GLAZE, you know what that's supposed to look like, right? Drizzle it over cake while the cake is still warm so it drips nicely.


Once the cake is cooled COMPLETELY, sprinkle about 1/2 a teaspoon of confectioner's sugar over it using a fine mesh sieve. This is just for added pretty (and added sugar), it's technically completely unnecessary.

This cake is awesome with coffee.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Chicken and Rice v2.0

Yeah, I got nothing on Kroger's baked chicken.

I made a different version of that other chicken and rice, in which I actually purchased uncooked chicken and marinated it and did my experimenting around with it for a while.

Let's see, what's in here... some red onion, parsley, ginger, garlic, lemon zest... added after the picture was taken - balsamic vinagrette, honey, lime juice, mustard, thyme, ponzu sauce... I don't know, I just raided my fridge and made it up as I went.

I left that in the fridge for a few hours, baked it, cubed it, decided I had used perhaps Way Too Much Onion and ended up making a very plain cream sauce (as opposed to the onion cream sauce in the post linked above). It was good, I guess. I mean, I'm glad I liked it, because I ended up making obscene amounts of it and have pretty much been eating nothing but for the last 4 days, but I'll take crispy, roasted chicken skin over skinless any day.

Reason/excuse = I actually made this for the pot luck at work and I wanted something that could easily and quickly be ladled onto a plate with minimum fuss. Thus the lack of bone and skin.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

White chocolate cake with raspberry/almond filling and marshmallow fondant

For my 6th wedding anniversary this year I decided I had to recreate our actual wedding cake - Something white chocolate something something, raspberry/amaretto filling, something else.
That sounded about right and easy enough, but I also decided I wanted to experiment with fondant.
It was going to be glorious and I had big plans for this fondant involving black food coloring and skull sculpting (my anniversary's on Halloween), but I used liquid food coloring and at best that fondant turned a dark slate GRAY that wasn't doing the trick.
I ended up going in a completely different direction, white on white, using some fondant cutters my sister had acquired on a whim.


It turned out pretty, I guess. Not what I wanted or was going for visually, but flavor-wise it was actually pretty awesome. Unfortunately, my skull was not very photogenic.

Now, I don't drink anymore. Like, AT ALL. Amaretto was out of the question, but that doesn't mean YOU can't use Amaretto. Also, fair warning, this is The Most Elaborate thing I've EVER done in my kitchen.

White Chocolate Cake
1 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
~1/2 cup white chocolate chips
3/4 cup half & half (or milk, if you must)
1/3 cup butter, softened (if you plan on using margerine or shortening, get the hell out of my blog)
1 cup white sugar
1 tsp almond extract
4 eggs, separate whites from yolks (room temperature)

When baking cakes, I tend to add just a tiny bit more butter and sugar. It's a moisture issue. Don't add too much, or leave it alone altogether if you don't know what you're doing.

Preheat oven to 350F.

Sift together flour, baking powder and salt, set aside.

Melt chocolate and 1/4 cup of H&H--you can use a double boiler or the microwave, in 30 second intervals, until fully melted and smooth. As a general rule I sneer in the direction of microwaves, but honestly, it's just more effective at the white chocolate melting thing. Add remaining H&H, set aside to cool.

Beat butter on medium-high until softened and a little fluffy. Add sugar and almond extract, mix well.

Add egg yolks, one at a time, beating until combined after each one.

"I love dipshit cooking instructions like "add eggs, one at a time." Alright. How many hands do YOU have?"


Alternate adding the flour mix and the melted chocolate, beating on medium-low after each addition until just combined.

Beat the egg whites until stiff peaks form, and fold into cake batter.

Bake for 25-30 minutes or so, give or take.

***


I baked this in 2 8in. round pans, cooled them for 10 min. on a rack, then unmolded them to level them with a serrated knife. Once completely cooled, to prevent the raspberry filling from seeping and bleeding, I covered the top of what would be the bottom half and the bottom of the top half with a thin layer of buttercream icing, and made a sort of... what, well? Barrier? I'm sure there's an actual name for this--a border of the same icing all around the outer edge, to keep said filling from spilling out the sides once you put the other half of the cake on top. Does that even make sense? I should have taken pictures of the process.

Spoon filling inside "well," place other half of cake on top, and spread the entire thing with buttercream frosting--just a thin layer. This is a crumb layer and it doesn't have to look perfect, the name should give you a clue as to how it will look. Refrigerate for about an hour, and then you can give it a healthier layer of buttercream.

You could decorate the cake at this point, most people prefer buttercream anyway. If you want to continue on to fondant, let this thicker layer of buttercream set in the refrigerator for about an hour as well.

Raspberry filling
6 oz fresh raspberries (average store package)
2/3 cup water (I used juuuuust under this measurement, because I was going to add... almond extract. Or Amaretto, if that's your thing)
1 Tbsp lemon juice (I also used a pinch grated lemon peel, orange peel would be nice, too)
3 Tbsp cornstarch dissolved in 1/2 cup of water

Combine raspberries, water, sugar, and lemon juice/peel in a saucepan and bring to a boil; simmer for about 15-20 minutes.

Remove from heat, strain, and return to simmering.

Whisk the dissolved cornstarch into the mixture, bring back to a boil, and simmer for another 5 or so minutes, stirring every now and then.

Remove from heat, add almond extract, and cool completely, giving it an occasional stir until it thickens to an almost jelly-like consistency. You'll probably have more than you need, but that's a good thing.

Buttercream frosting
1/4 cup butter
1/4 cup vegetable shortening.... look, I know what I said, but shortening helps buttercream stand higher temperatures, and besides, this frosting was only going to be used as a primer here. Stop looking at me that way.
1/2 tsp almond extract (you can use vanilla, but I wanted to stay with the theme)
2 cups sifted confectioner's sugar
1 Tbsp milk

Cream butter and abomination together, add almond extract, and gradually add the sugar, about 1/2 cup at a time. It's okay if it looks a little on the dry side--once it's all mixed, add the milk and then beat until fluffy. Keep it covered with a damp towel until use or it will crust.

And then.......... the fondant.

Tara has a FANTASTIC tutorial on this here, complete with recipe, pictures and techniques.

I've never actually tasted regular rolled fondant, but I know it's got a bad rep. This stuff is actually kind of delicious, if a little sweet. I added almond extract here again--honestly, you'd think it would be overpowering at some point, but it really wasn't.

It's also worth noting that I made the fondant the night before, because they say it's easier to work with if it's had time to rest. I have to say this was one of the most FUN substances I've ever worked with in the kitchen. This recipe made more than twice what I needed to cover this cake, by the way.



Enjoy.