Posts tagged ‘cake’

March 15, 2013

Grapefruit and Earl Grey-Infused Brown Butter Pound Cake…

by Patricia

Grapefruit Brown Butter Pound Cake

Grapefruit Brown Butter Pound Cake Prep

It’s a mouthful to say, but these are the ingredients.

It’s a pound cake with grapefruit zest and brown butter infused with earl grey tea leaves. It doesn’t need any icing, none of that please. (There’s quite a bit of sugar in the cake anyway.) I wanted to call it a Russian Earl Grey Pound Cake, because Russian Earl Grey teas will usually have citrus peels alongside bergamot, but I didn’t want to confuse anyone. So, Grapefruit and Earl Grey-Infused Brown Butter Pound Cake it is.

Brown butter gives the cake a nutty flavour, but the earl grey is almost imperceptible after baking (it is there if you strain your palette hard enough, think of it as finely layered addition), while the grapefruit zest brightens up the cake quite a bit. Depending on how sweet you like your treats to be, unsweetened tea or coffee is the way to go.

If you’re not sure how to infuse tea into butter, read all about it here. Do note that because you’re browning the butter, it’s safest to add your tea leaves towards the end of the process. Additionally, the tea will tint your butter, so don’t panic when your butter gets considerably darker.

Grapefruit Brown Butter Pound Cake 3

Grapefruit Brown Butter Pound Cake 2

Brown Butter Pound Cake

slighty adapted from Poire et Chocolat

200g unsalted butter if infused with tea / 185g unsalted butter if plain
200g caster sugar
pinch of fine sea salt
3 eggs, cold from the fridge
200g plain flour
1 and 1/4 tsp baking powder
165ml whole milk
1 tsp vanilla paste (or extract)

Optional
2 tbsp loose leaf earl grey tea
Zest of 1 grapefruit

Place the butter into a big pan and set over medium heat. Keep heating as the butter crackles and foams. Stir occasionally until the butter starts to darken. Be careful not to heat it for too long, burnt butter will have a bitter taste. Pull the pan off the heat once the butter achieves a desirable tan colour. Pour into a bowl and leave to cool – it needs to be room temperature.

If you’re infusing the butter with earl grey or any other teas, you will always need more butter than what the original recipe calls for. In this case, I added 15g extra. I opted to add my tea leaves about 1 minute before pulling the pan off the heat and let it infuse for 5 minutes before straining it into a bowl. The brown butter will be quite fragrant.

Preheat the oven to 180C/350F. Either line a loaf tin (around 9″/23cm long) or carefully grease a round/decorated tin. Scrape the cooled butter into a stand mixer bowl and add the sugar and salt. Beat together until creamy, then add the eggs one by one, beating in between. If it curdles, don’t worry – that’s normal. Beat on medium-high for 5 minutes until pale and thick.

Sieve the flour and baking powder together. Tip a third into the mix and stir together on low. Slowly add half of the milk and briefly beat. Add the rest of the flour and milk, combining in between. Add the vanilla and beat together one last time. Scoop into the tin and spread out.

Bake for 45-50 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean and the cake is a deep brown. Leave to cool in the tin for 5 minutes then turn out onto a rack.

Enjoy!

For more Earl Grey goodness:

December 16, 2012

Garam Masala Cake

by Patricia

BHH Blog | Garam Masala Cake

A pack of Duncan Hines or Betty Crocker cake mix can go for as little as 97 cents. The most I have ever paid for one was $1.50. While I usually like them just fine on their own, on occasions when I want to be fancy I like to throw in special ingredients like a mix of brown sugar and cinnamon with ground nuts for a coffee cake.

The idea of using Garam Masala came from my mom. I was a tad skeptical at first, but google proved her right once again.

Duncan Hines has their own recipe for a Garam Masala Pound Cake, but it needs apple butter and their spiced cake mix. I flavoured a regular white cake mix with loads of cinnamon, nutmeg and ground cinnamon, and replaced the apple butter with sour cream. The problem with cake mix flavours is that they’re already overpowering and quite sweet, so, I put more garam masala than suggested. Like a lot more.

The cake went well with a cup of strong coffee. I’m thinking of adding some dried apricots next time.

Other variants: LCBO’s Persimmon Garam Masala Upside Down Cake, and a Teaspoon of Turmeric’s Holiday Garam Masala Spiced Cake.

March 26, 2012

A simple yoghurt cake to beat the Mondays

by Patricia

Now and then it’s nice to make yourself a list of things that have made you happy. In no particular order, here’s mine from this weekend:

My rainbow gingham tea towel from the dollar store
Finding a new favourite Korean restaurant (a mom and pop on Baldwin street)
A new summer blazer that will quickly be unfashionable
Spending time with Leo (sapppppy, I know) – we watched movies, biked, shopped, and baked together
Being on the verge to finalizing a fantasy trip
Another thrifted Japanese plate!
The first Italian Soda of the year – lime and raspberry from Second Cup
Finishing a roll of film
Aaaaand…this  simple yoghurt cake, made on a whim

No glaze, no buttercream frosting, not even a dusting of icing sugar, just a plain and basic yoghurt cake with a nice crust and a spongy texture. I ate it on Sunday afternoon with a glass of cold milk and now have thoughts of whipping up a jar of milk jam to just spread on top of a slice alongside a cup of tea. I was in a mood for sharing that day and quickly halved the cake to make sure Leo and his family would get to try it.

Hope you all had a wonderful weekend!  The rainbow gingham is really making me smile right now. Is it summer yet?

Yoghurt Cake

Recipe adapted from Vishinka via Nigella.com

1 cup of yoghurt

1.25 cups of sugar

3 cups of cake flour

1/2 cup of oil

3 eggs

1 1/2 tsp of baking powder

Pinch of salt

1 tbsp of vanilla extract

Mix together all ingredients in a large bowl.

Preheat the oven to 180° C (350° F), line the bottom of a round 25-cm (10-inch) cake pan with parchment paper and grease the sides.

Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan, and bake for 30 to 35 minutes, until the top is golden brown. Cake is ready when a tester comes out clear.

July 18, 2011

Happy Monday!

by Patricia

Don’t you wish you could spend every Monday morning eating freshly baked bread with a warm spread of butter and delicately layered chocolate cakes? San Francisco’s Tartine Bakery and Miette are on my list of places to go to if ever get to chance to visit San Francisco. The city has been my favourite ever since I watched The Princess Diaries and saw those cute trolleys/streetcars and steep hills. Leo has family there…so…there’s hope one day I will get to go!? *hint*

Miette: A Video from San Francisco’s Most Charming Pastry Shop from 4SP Films on Vimeo.

Tartine Bread from 4SP Films on Vimeo.

March 18, 2011

Let them eat cake

by Patricia

…from the Let Them Eat Cake series by Paul Ferney.

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