What are you baking? January 2024

Yes, “cream” as a verb, not a noun.

1 Like

These are Caramel Slices from Scandinavian from Scratch. These really


deliver what they promise. Crisp and crackly on the outside with a chewy texture and caramel taste. Dough does contain light corn syrup. Sliced while warm. I had one with tea so delicious.

17 Likes

Tigerkaka.

I used an an almagamation of recipes from True North Kitchen (here) and Alice Medrich (here).

My cake contains olive oil (Medrich) and buttermilk (TNK). I split the batter 55/45 between the vanilla and the chocolate. If anything, I might try a 60/40 split next attempt, as I had a little extra of the chocolate batter at the end.

I made a half-recipe (TNK volumes) in an 8”x4” Fat Daddio loaf pan, baking it for 60 minutes at 325.

The moisture level, flavor and texture came out great, and I’m looking forward to tomorrow’s taste, as I suspect a good thing will be yet improved overnight.

19 Likes

That is a work of art!!

5 Likes

Thank you! It was so easy - no need to marble the batter, just layer it. Tasty, too!

3 Likes

I made my first marble cake today too, but it’s not gorgeous like yours!

6 Likes

Yours looks delicious, though!

1 Like

Bah, if I’d seen the tiger cake batter layering I would have saved myself the “dolloping” :rofl:

2 Likes

I’m not sure of the science behind the “self marbling” tiger cake. Maybe the chocolate batter is denser than the vanilla, and thus sinks a bit as the other rises more quickly?

3 Likes

My batter was already dense, so when the cocoa was added, it got even thicker. (I actually thinned it with a bit of coffee liquor.)

1 Like

I also wonder whether the deeper pan (the loaf pan you used or the tube pan Medrich calls for, for a larger cake) is a factor.

2 Likes

Love it!

2 Likes

That blueberry buttermilk cake sounded right up my alley. So it’s what I baked and it didn’t disappoint. Should have taken a pic before I ate it LOL but was hard to wait. I did bake it in way too large of a pan but still tasted great.

16 Likes

So glad you enjoyed it. It’ll be even better in the next few days :slight_smile:

I had a pound piece of almond paste languishing in the cupboard and remembered this cake I made from TheGreens Cookbook from the late 80s. A bundt cake that used a pound of almond paste - half creamed into the batter and the other half diced and folded in. Delicious but wish I had fresh berries to go with it!

12 Likes

Milk bread from Mooncakes and Milk Bread. I’ve made this before and found it too sweet. With the sugar cut in half, it’s quite nice. Very squishy, soft sandwich bread.

10 Likes

A 7-inch sour cherry pie. Out-of-season, but made with cherries I picked from our trees last summer and froze.

FYI the sweet Rainier cherries I put up last summer did not fare well in the freezer. Even with application of Fruit Fresh (citric acid) they turned brown in the freezer after a couple of months. I ended up feeding those to the local deer. In contrast, the Montmorency cherries used here maintained their brilliant red, as good as fresh.

Will serve tonight after dinner with David L.'s Philly vanilly ice cream.

16 Likes

Beautiful!

You used dried tart cherries?

1 Like

Thank you!

No dried cherries this go-round. I’ve made cherry pies in the past with a mix of canned and dried cherries (pandemic pie!), which worked really well, but this one is 100% from frozen cherries.

Looking to use some dried apples, I found this recipe on Leite’s Culinaria. I’ve since learned it was reviewed also by Smitten Kitchen, and originally written by Bill Yosses and Melissa Clark in The Perfect Finish. The recipe calls for roasting fresh apples, but I used 100 g. dried. For cheese – still using up the WSU Cougar Gold (sharp white cheddar).

The recipe has you dump everything in a stand mixer and mix on low until it comes together. I mixed by hand, in the order and way one would traditionally make a scone. I did have to almost double the ¼-c. cream called for, and perhaps this was because of my choice of apples.

In any case, both salty and sweet, these are delicious and different. Will make again.

12 Likes