October 30, 2009

Black Forest Rum Cake

Filed under: alcohol, bake, cakes, chocolate, fruit — saehee @ 6:19 pm

IMG_3096

IMG_3091

IMG_3088

IMG_3082

I recently bought a large amount of dried sour cherries and immediately thought of black forest flavors: dark chocolate, cherries, and coffee.  I adapted a recipe from Joy The Baker for a mocha rum cake and just added the cherries.  I made a rum icing but I have to admit, the rum was a bit overly present.  I think I might opt for a vanilla icing next time, or maybe a chocolate ganache.  But the cake itself?  Quite good.

Ingredients:

3 cups all purpose flour

12 oz bittersweet chocolate (use good chocolate, at least 60% cacao–my favorite is Valhrona)

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

3/4 teaspoon salt

1 cup rum

3 sticks of butter

1 1/3 cup freshly brewed coffee

2 large eggs, room temp

2 teaspoons vanilla

2 1/4 cups granulated sugar

1. preheat oven to 300

2. grease and dust the a bundt pan with cocoa powder

3. melt the chocolate  and butter in a double broiler under very low heat, stirring often

4. add in rum, coffee, vanilla, and sugar

5. sift together flour, baking soda and salt and stir gradually into chocolate mixture

6. beat eggs slightly and add to batter

7. pour into bundt pan and bake until toothpick comes out cleanly, about 1 hour

October 28, 2009

Bourbon Pecan Banana Bread

Filed under: baked goods, bananas, bread, breakfast, catering — saehee @ 3:35 pm

IMG_3106

IMG_0596

IMG_0606

IMG_3103

IMG_4569

IMG_4550

a variation on the banana bread I made over the weekend.  I replaced the rum with bourbon (smells phenomenal), used 1/4 cup less of banana and replaced it with 1/4 cup sour cream. Also I used regular granulated sugar instead of brown sugar and added 2 tablespoons of maple syrup.

oh! and mini loaves!

Vegan Peanut Butter Pistachio Rice Crispies Treats

Filed under: baked goods, vegan — saehee @ 3:23 pm

IMG_3090

IMG_3095

IMG_3086

Rice Crispie treat are possibly the most boring dessert.  They’re just very unappealing.  But add peanut butter and maple syrup and cranberries and pistachios, and well, you have have a different thing altogether.  Oh, and these are vegan–no marshmellows! Ta Da!

Gelatin is weird. Agar-agar is a worth while investment.  Recipe adapted from Here. (more…)

October 24, 2009

Rum Pecan Banana Bread

Filed under: baked goods, bananas, bread, breakfast — saehee @ 3:57 pm

IMG_0583

IMG_0580

Banana bread is one of those things that are incredibly adaptable, baker friendly, and almost fool-proof.  I don’t think I’ve ever tasted a truly bad banana bread.

This recipe is exceptionally easy–one mixing bowl.  And feel free to add in any interesting mix ins according to your preferences.  You can easily switch out the rum for bourbon and the pecans for walnuts.  Add dried cranberries, or golden raisins, or even dried cherries. Consider this recipe a template and start experimenting, it’s that forgiving.

Ingredients

1 ripe large bananas

1 1/2 cups of all purpose flour

pinch of salt

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 egg

1/3 cup butter, melted

2 tablespoons of rum

1/2  cup semi-sweet chocolate chips

1/3 cup chopped pecans

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1 cup light brown sugar

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1. preheat oven to 350, grease and flour a parchment lined loaf pan

2. mash the ripe bananas

3. add melted butter and mix until the butter is absorbed into the bananas

4. mix in rum, vanilla, egg and brown sugar

5. add cinnamon, nutmeg, baking soda, and salt

6. gradually fold in the flour

7. pour into a loaf pan and bake for 1 hour and 15 minutes

8. let cool in pan for 10 minutes and then invert

Nutella Pound Cake, revisited

Filed under: baked goods, catering, loaf cakes, nutella, pound cake — saehee @ 2:22 pm

IMG_0577

I have never once met a person who doesn’t like Nutella.  Here is something interesting: when buying Nutella try to buy the kind with the “Import” label.  This means it is the Italian variety.  If you look closely the regular Nutella sold in most stores is made in Canada and has less hazelnut flavor.

I made my Nutella pound cake and brought it to school last Thursday.  I think this is going to be a regular Thursday thing for a few reasons:

1. promotion–I’m following the model of having to give things away for free in order to generate interest

2. by Thursdays my brain feels a little wobbly and there’s something really pleasing about waking up early on Thursday morning and baking–as a sort of relaxation method.  I think I’ve mentioned this before but I really love what baking does to my brain.  It’s meditative.

October 17, 2009

Christina’s Birthday >Chocolate Orange Bundt Cake>and other nostalgias

Filed under: baked goods, birthday celebrations, cake, chocolate, friends, fruit — saehee @ 11:21 pm

IMG_3094

IMG_3090

IMG_3101

IMG_3107

IMG_3092

Today was wonderful Christina Wood’s birthday.  Felipe planned a surprise birthday party for her where we were to gather in San Diego and be waiting to surprise her at a screening of “Where The Wild Things Are” and then all have lunch together.  The whole event was really very sweet and it was really soothing in a way to see friends and even just be in San Diego.  I’m not even sure why because the city of San Diego itself doesn’t have any sort of strong gravitational pull for me but once in a while I really love visiting.

I’m sentimental, there’s no doubting that and driving down there today made me all nostalgic and warm and happy.  There’s this amazing stretch of beach about 10 miles north of Oceanside that I can never believe when I’ve driving on the freeway, like these sort of views should be impossible while driving. It’s surprising each time.  And it’s especially great in the mornings.

While I was passing that bit of ocean I thought about the last time I had seen Prayer and Albert.  It was a few days before I was moving to Los Angeles, Prayer to Bangkok, and Albert back to Barcelona and we were drinking a bottle of red wine at a a wine bar in downtown and it felt like we were mimicking the feeling of an end without really processing the end.  I knew I wouldn’t see them for a while but for some reason I couldn’t really access the real feeling of that.  I just knew we had to say our goodbyes.  And now more than a year and a half later I am feeling it, and sort of really lamenting the days of San Diego and Wilson Ave and the “dance floor” in the room that Joseph and I shared, and seal beach, and Salk Institute, and Nancy on the futon, and making summery tomato basil pasta with Thomas.

I think I want to go back more often, if nothing else just to visit the lovely friends that live there.  I thought about it today, and there’s nothing even mildly objectionable about Felipe or Christina, which is kind of amazing.  How are people so well adjusted?!  And how do they find each other and become a super couple of super adjustedness?

Oh and the cake?  It’s a marbled chocolate orange cake.  I emailed Felipe listing several very specific cake options for Christina and he responded that she was a “fruit or chocolate girl” which struck me as vague and funny.  So I decided to fulfill both sides of Christina and use fruit and chocolate in the same cake.  And also, as Thomas pointed out, it seemed like appropriately lighter “lunch cake.”

Chocolate Orange Cake (recipe adapted from Joy The Baker)

3 1/2 cups of cake flour

2 cups of sugar

1 tablespoon baking powder

3/4 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

4 tablespoons of cocoa powder (I think I’d up this to 5 for next time)

1/2 cup chocolate chips

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1/2 teaspoon orange extract

zest of one orange

4 large eggs

2 sticks of butter

2 cups of sour cream

1. preheat oven to 350

2. grease a bundt pan

3. sift together flour, baking powder and soda, and salt–set aside

4. cream the butter and sugar together

5. add the eggs one at a time

5. add the vanilla

6. add the sour cream

7. fold in the flour mixture in three separate additions

8. divide the batter in half

9. in one half of the batter, add the orange extract and zest

10. in the other half add the cocoa and chocolate chips

11. drop alternate spoonfuls of batter in the bundt pan and every once in a while swirl gently with a butter knife

12. tap the cake pan on a hard surface to get rid of air bubbles

13. bake for 5o minutes or until a toothpick comes out cleanly and the cake springs back

October 11, 2009

Walnut Persimmon Coffee Cakettes

Filed under: baby cakes, baked goods, cakes, farmers market, fruit — saehee @ 6:34 pm

IMG_3097

IMG_3092

IMG_3095

IMG_3083

IMG_3080

Are persimmons a commonly eaten fruit?  I know that Koreans eat them religiously during the Fall and Winter but outside of that context, I’m not so sure.  In any case, those who haven’t tried persimmons are greatly missing out.  Persimmons are barely coming into season and I was on it!  I picked up a couple pounds of persimmons at the farmers market this weekend and have been plotting how to best utilize them.  I decided to make an upside down persimmon coffee cake, and because things are just more adorable in small form I made them into what I am calling cakettes.  I can make things up.  I give myself permission for this.

Calartians, in a shameless attempt at promoting Sprout & Bean I plan on making these on Thursday and leaving them in Marjorie’s office again.

Apple Dulce De Leche Pie

Filed under: Uncategorized — Saeyoung @ 12:14 pm

DSC01932Adventures in Pie. I’ve only made a pie one other time and I found that it was fairly easy. Another sorority, Sigma Kappa, was hosting a cook-off in which the girls from other sororities would submit pies and guys from other fraternities would submit chilli (I know… a bit gender bias). I seriously considered just making a chili to submit in protest, but let’s face it, I’d rather make pie. And I couldn’t pass up on the opportunity for a pun… Alpha Delta Pi = apple dulce de leche pie. My friend Caitlin (an excellent cook) and I got together to create a prize-winning pie.

DSC01929

8 Gala Apples peeled and sliced

8 Granny Smith peeled and sliced

½ cup brown sugar

1/3 cup granulated sugar

1/3 cup cornstarch

¼ teaspoon cinnamon

¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg

pinch of salt

1/2 can of condensed milk

2 Tablespoons apple cider

½ teaspoon vanilla extract

double crust for 9-inch pie (purchased or homemade)

egg white mixed with 1 teaspoon of water

coarse sugar for top, optional

1. Slice and peel apples. Mix with all the wet ingredients except condensed milk

2. Mix dry ingrediants.

3. Double boil condensed milk until syrupy. We added a little caramel sauce in too.

4. Add condensed milk to apples, toss.

5. Add dry ingredients.

6. Fill the pie. Top it. Make a cut out. Brush with egg white and sprinkle coarse sugar. (We accidentally used the yolk, not white)

7. Bake at 450 for 30 minutes.

Recipe adapted from: http://www.recipegirl.com/2007/10/04/deep-dish-dulce-de-leche-apple-pie/

DSC01934

DSC01930

So I’m sure you are wondering, did we win? The answer is we didn’t. But we get an A for effort. It was a fun endeavor nonetheless! But Pie stresses me out, I think i’ll avoid them for a little while.

Tapas Dinner

Filed under: appetizers, dinner, family, figs, savory, tapas — saehee @ 1:52 am

IMG_3094

anchovies and clams from basque country in spain

IMG_3101

IMG_3090

jamon and chorizo from barcelona

IMG_3085

thyme roasted fingerlings

IMG_3091

cheese from paris, cured salmon roe from spain

IMG_3093

figs and concord grapes

IMG_3098

My mother and her husband recently returned from a to Spain and France and of course brought as many food items as they were legally able.  They brought back the most amazing anchovies and incredibly creamy French cheese, some fleur de sel for me, black truffles, and jamon.  We had our own version of a tapas dinner the other night and it felt exciting and like we were pretending we were in Spain, drinking rioja.  I think tapas dining suits me well.  I like to graze and sample and share.  oh and wine is not a bad thing.

Kabocha Squash

Filed under: Japanese, savory, squash — saehee @ 1:28 am

IMG_3086

IMG_3082

IMG_3081

I ate stewed kabocha squash the other day at Honda-Ya and thought I’d try my hand at replicating the dish. Surprisingly easy.  My mother says kabocha is amazingly healthy, but then again she says this about many things.  I’m inclined to believe her in this case though and even if it weren’t true it really wouldn’t matter.  Also, I like that the rind is edible.  Eating rind makes me feel kind of monstrous in the best way possible.

Stewed Kabocha Squash

1 pound kabocha squash thoroughly washed and cubed, rinds still on

1 cup fish instant dashi

1/4 cup mirin

3 tablespoon soy sauce

3 tablespoons brown sugar

2 pieces of dried seaweed

* to make vegan, replace fish dashi with soy sauce and instead of 3 tablespoons of brown sugar, use 5 tablespoons

1. place the cut up squash in a large pan, rind side down

2. in a separate bowl mix all other ingredients

3. pour the sauce ingredients over the squash and bring to a boil over high heat

4. once the mixture has reached a boil, cover it and boil for about 15 minutes (on until fork tender depending on the size of your kabocha cubes)over medium heat

5. refrigerate until cold and serve with a sprinkling of toasted sesame seeds

Older Posts »