Monday, August 22, 2011

Lemon Cake with Blueberry Filling Second Attempt

Since I had enough buttercream and filling left to make another cake, I decided to do that. This time I used a different cake recipe from the same book, The Professional Pastry Chef by Bo Friberg. Seriously, this book is my bible.

Lemon Chiffon Cake

1) Line cake pans with baking paper. Do not grease sides.
2) Whip until just combined:
  • 2/3c Vegetable Oil
  • 8 egg yolks
Stir in:
  • 1/2c lemon juice
  • 1/2c water
  • lemon zest
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
3) Sift together
  • 3&3/4c cake flour
  • 2/3c sugar
  • 4 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp salt
Stir this mixture into the egg yolk mixture, whip at high speed for 1 minute, Reserve.
4) Whip 8 egg whites into a foam. Gradually add 1&1/2c sugar and continue whipping until stiff peaks form. Carefully fold meringue into reserved batter. Divide batter between prepared pans.
5) Bake at 375 degrees for about 25-30 mins or until cakes spring back when pressed lightly in center and/or a toothpick comes out clean.
6) Invert the pans on a rack and allow to cool in pans before unmolding.

The Process

In case you were wondering how I do it, here's a load of pics of me putting together the layers of cake!










Start with the top.


Have your boyfriend take a blurry picture of you
applying thick swaths of buttercream to the sides of the cake.
Thanks Andris! (^.^)

Smooth the sides carefully.


I keep a rag damp with hot water nearby to wipe my spatula between swaths and keep the spatula warm. It helps smooth the buttercream by slightly melting it as you make your path.
Leave a lip of frosting licking up over the plateau.

Pull the ridge of overlap toward the center
of the cake with the frosting tool either flat or slightly angled
against the plane of the top of the cake.


Now would be a good time to put your cake in the fridge before finishing off the decoration so that the buttercream is hard. When you make a mistake you can easily slip it off the top of the set surface.







Can you find the difference between these two photos?



Reflect on your work for just a moment before you devour it.

(Actually, refrigerate it first for at least an hour before cutting so the filling and frosting have time to set.)
(Could have let it set a bit longer...)

Perfect paired with watermelon sorbet!


It turned out great. This recipe was fluffy and moist and lemony and sweet! Much better than the pound cake recipe. This chiffon cake recipe will definitely be going into the rotation along with the Swiss Method buttercream recipe from the previous post.

Good night!


Sunday, August 14, 2011

Lemon Cake with Blueberry Filling

It's been a dreadfully long time since I baked and decorated a cake, but after doing a 10-day juice fast inspired by the movie Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead, I decided on a sweet reward. I baked a Lemon Buttermilk Poundcake two days in advance. We ate the tops, which I cut off to level the cake blanks, for dessert on the night of our celebratory dinner. We celebrated a successful juice fast by eating hand-made linguini and home-made pesto with herbs from our garden. I made some whipped cream to accompany the lemon cake tops for dessert that night.
Lemon Buttercream
The following day I worked on the buttercream and filling. I used the Swiss Method of making buttercream which involves adding soft butter to Swiss Meringue. I found this method to be very easy compared to other buttercream methods and the result was perfect, even on a humid summer day. Here's the recipe, which came from my best pastry baking book, The Professional Pastry Chef by Bo Friberg.

Swiss Meringue
2c egg whites
1lb 4oz granulated sugar

Combine the sugar and egg whites in a mixing bowl and place over simmering water. Whisk continuously to keep the egg whites from cooking, heat until 140 degrees Fahrenheit. This pasteurizes the egg whites. Remove from heat and either keep stirring or transfer to a cool bowl (in my case the mixing bowl to my kitchen-aid). Whip on high until completely cool.
I added a quarter teaspoon meringue powder to stabilize.

Swiss Buttercream
One recipe Swiss Meringue
2 lbs soft butter
10 oz soft vegetable margarine
(I always use Earth Balance Buttery Spread.)
2 tsp vanilla extract
(I substituted lemon extract.)

Add the butter a bit at a time, keep the mixer speed on medium high, letting each chunk incorporate before adding another. Since it is summer I added 1 lb completely soft, room temperature butter first, then the earth balance, also room temperature, however, the second lb of butter was soft, but still a touch cool. This did well to compensate for the overly soft room temperature state of butter in the summertime.

Before ConstructionFor the blueberry filling I used fresh organic blueberries and a standard filling recipe. I let the blueberry filling set for another day until it was time to pull out the separate parts and construct. I started by shaving off the brown bits and rounding out the cake blanks. Then I brushed a bit of lemon flavored simple syrup on the blanks to moisten them. I piped a border to hold the filling inside and then plopped the top layer on and iced the outside of the cake.
Constructed
I was excited to finish, so I just went ahead with decorating the top of the cake without refrigerating first, so my mistakes were harder to cover up. It's so much easier to decorate a cake if the initial buttercream coating is refrigerated first, so it hardens up. You can literally just pick off a mislaid blob of pastry bag spooge without ruining your meticulously smooth canvas. I wanted to use more of the blueberry filling, so I tried to come up with a creative way to put it on top of the cake.
Piping Blueberry Filling
There I am in all my pajama-ed splendor! I literally jumped out of bed and started cake decorating. The blueberry filling was hard to pipe without making a mess, and they certainly aren't perfect circles, but Andris said they look like blueberries, so I guess it worked out. All I need now is a cake stand. I am just using a plastic lazy susan to turn the cake, but I don't like how I have to hunch over to see what I'm doing. For anyone looking for a good birthday or christmas present idea, this Ateco Cake Stand would be nice! (I'm not even expecting anyone to actually read this far. Hopefully luring you in with these pictures is working.)
Finished Product
In case you were wondering, no, we didn't have cake for breakfast. We had fried egg sandwiches on honey wheat whole grain bread with lettuce, spinach and tomato. (Important clarification: Andris did not have the tomato because he doesn't like tomatoes.) (How can people NOT LIKE tomatoes?) (I mean, they are so delicous!) (Especially when they were picked from your very own organic yard garden!) We also ate a half of a granny smith apple each and drank some water. We watched a few episodes from season one of Spongebob Squarepants while letting the cake set in the fridge, even though it seemed like Andris was disappointed to have to wait! (>.<)
cut cake
The cutting of a cake is always a momentous occasion whether on a wedding day or not. It seems kind of silly that I put three days worth of effort into perfecting the various mixtures of butter, egg and sugar to have them all end up in the same place eventually. (The toilet?) I wonder how "bad for you" cake really is. There is a ton of fat and calories, and enough sugar to fuel a Boeing 747 at least from LA to NY. I mean, it can't be that bad, right? Which poses the question to us, how are we going to change our lifestyle and eating habits in the wake of a juice fast? It's a predicament. We definitely love to bake and create things in the kitchen.
andris tasting cake
We are enjoying the discoveries we have made with our vitamix about how to incorporate raw veggies and fruits into our dinners and lunches. The juice fast helped to retrain our tastebuds. We crave our veggies now, too. Just as we crave our sweets. We decided to continue to eat lots of raw veggies and treat ourselves to richer foods in much more strict moderation. Look at how happy we look eating our slices of cake! You know what both of us did after eating that cake? Fell asleep. That's right! Fell right asleep. And I can tell you I can still feel that buttercream slithering through my digestive system.
liberty tasting cake
When we were on the juice fast, the last few days, we wanted to start introducing whole foods back in, to ease the transition. Instead of drinking dinner, we made some raw meals using only fruits and veggies, including a curry made of vegetable puree with curry spice. Those raw veg dinners never made me fall asleep, in fact, I felt energized, light on my feet and ready to tackle another project before bed. The amount of caloric energy in that piece of cake I ate today could probably heat an igloo for a week. I definitely won't need to eat much else to keep me on my toes today, except maybe for some cruciferous vegetables to help boost my metabolism and cleanse my colon! Well, enough of this, I'm off to weed the garden and plant some spinach! Cheers!

Friday, February 5, 2010

La Patisserie 2009 in Review!


















Obviously blogging has not been a priority for the last six months, so this is my attempt to make up for it. Here's an overview of our amateur home pastry highlights from last year! How fitting that I should start with last February's Valentine's Day, since it is coming upon us again soon. Last year was Andris and my first V.D. as a couple. We had syphilis... uhh, I mean I made heart-shaped red velvet cupcakes with a raspberry filling and cream cheese frosting. And sprinkles! I used a fairly simple red velvet cake recipe from the food network , which turned out great. I did not make the meringue topping suggested in the recipe, but instead went with a traditional cream cheese frosting made with whipped butter, whipped cream cheese, powdered sugar and madagascar vanilla. I wanted to get extra fancy, so I used an all-natural raspberry preserves for the filling, because I liked the idea of a bleeding heart.



Then, it was Andris' high school chum, Kerry's birthday, and she hosted a party at her apartment in Minneapolis where she goes to school. We made her a carrot cake because it sounds like her name. Her nickname is Ker, or at times it may also be Ker-Bear. The carrot cake recipe is a Devine original, Andris' dad's recipe in fact, with ground carrots and walnuts for texture, whole wheat flour for nutrition and heartiness, and cinnamon for flavor. I used the cream cheese frosting again, and toasted off some sweet coconut and pecans which were pressed into the sides. Cream cheese frosting doesn't hold up as well as buttercream, so it's hard to get a smooth smear. Using the coconut mixture alleviates this problem altogether. The cake was two layers with cream cheese frosting as filling in the center.



Here's a little shameless self-promotion. I was pretty ding-dang proud of the birthday card I drew for her, which turned out to be a three paneled comic, kind of.



Carrot gives Bear cake.




Bear is not interested in cake. Carrot is sad.




Bear eats Carrot instead. Carrot is dead.



The bear is kind of a rip-off of Gloomy Bear,

but I drew this thing in the car on the way to MPLS, so I just went with something quick and easy.

The next birthday cake was in May, and it was the 81st birthday of Andris' Grandmother. She's Latvian, so she is called "Uma" in Latvian, but her name is really Dzidra. Andris's mom asked us to do this cake. Uma likes very dark chocolate and black raspberries, so I used Hershey's dark cocoa powder in the chocolate cake batter, and black raspberry jam for the filling. It is constructed with chocolate buttercream frosting, and then coated in dark chocolate ganache with fresh raspberries and white chocolate for embellishments. I gave the fresh raspberries chocolate buttercream leaves, but they kind of got lost on the dark ganache background. Although she is very hard to please, she seemed to like the cake very much.



I forget when exactly this next cake was made, but it was a "just for fun" cake. I was experimenting with yellow cake recipes and vanilla buttercream recipes. I was also experimenting with copious amounts of text and flowers, as you can see.






I had some pumpkin puree from the previous year's Thanksgiving pies, so in an effort to use it up I made pumpkin cream cheese muffins. The cream cheese filling turned out really well, but the muffin batter was not the greatest. It was a little too slimy? for me. Perhaps because I used too much pumpkin puree, or the humidity of summertime, or both factors contributed to the muffins going bad very quickly. I may try experimenting with pumpkin bread batter again for tea bread this year during Thanksgiving instead of doing pumpkin pies.




Time for another birthday cake! For Andris' birthday in July we went to American Player's Theater to see A Winter's Tale. Part of the fun of APT is the outdoor venue, and most people picnic before the play, which typically starts just before sundown. I made a beef tenderloin dinner, followed by Andris' favorite dessert, cheesecake. He also really loves bright colors, so I did a rainbow, and flavored it with tutti frutti candy flavoring. The topping was straight up whipped cream sweetened with powdered sugar.







As I mentioned already, Andris looooooves cheesecake, so we really delved into cheesecake making in 2009. We started with traditional graham cracker crust and plain cheesecake and worked our way up. We tried all kinds of variations, primarily relying on the Junior's method, since we purchased this book. Junior's basic cheesecake uses a cake batter crust made with eggs and flour, and a waterbath method for baking. We found out quickly that the waterbath really helps regulate the heat in the oven and the cheesecake bakes more evenly, however, we are still battling with the foil wrap on the springform pan so that it doesn't leak and leave the crust soggy.



At first, Andris was the "crust man" and he played with all kinds of ideas, including using cookie dough batters for crusts. We discovered that in some cases it helps to bake the crust before adding filling, but in other cases you don't have to. We also discovered that the hardest part of baking a cheesecake is waiting for it to set before digging in! Andris made some major investments in our little "business," too, last year, including this wonderful piece of equipment:



The Kitchenaid Mixer! He got the 6 quart professional model, and of course, in true Andris style, ALL the attachments. Dough hook, meat grinder, juicer, ice cream bowl, pasta making attachments, the whole she-bang. We have had so much fun with it so far, and it will continue to inspire our home cooking and baking for years to come!! In addition, Andris went all out at Vanilla Bean, our go-to pastry supply store in Madison and bought an array of professional food color and candy flavorings which make our cheesecake ideas fun and crazy! (As referenced in the tutti-frutti rainbow birthday cheesecake.) If you know Andris, you know how much he likes things that are fun and crazy, and sugary, and bright-colored, and decadent.



The cheesecake above is blueberry flavored with strawberry swirl in the top, using a strawberry sauce we made from fresh strawberry puree, which is also drizzled on top of the whipped cream. Andris created some really great cheesecakes that I don't have pictures of (boo!), like the cherry cordial heart-shaped cheesecake which he surprised me with for one of our month-a-versaries! He bought a huge heart-shaped springform pan, made a chocolate cookie crust and a red cherry-flavored cheesecake, and then covered it in ganache, hence the cordial reference. Oh my me, this was a delicious cheesecake. Another one he did was hot pink and watermelon flavored. He has been experimenting with building layers of cake, fudge and cheesecake into a skyscraper but it is going to take some trial and error. I'm thinking Andris' parents have some pictures of these cakes, since they are our guinea pig taste testers, so if they send some photos my way, I'll be sure to post them. Andris is very adventurous, and I love how my traditionalism and desire to learn foundation baking techniques blend with his inventiveness to create some really fun and delicious creations. Our biggest cheesecake hit of the year, I think was the chocolate peanut butter layer cheesecake you see here:



It is as delicious as it looks! We also experimented with different sized cheesecakes to make some individual servings and minis. The first time we did minis we didn't use liner cups and we had to eat them out of the pan with a spoon, but we tried a whole variety of different crust and batter combinations. We used leftover filling that didn't fit in our layer cheesecakes.



The second time we did minis we used some cute mini muffin liners and a water bath. They turned out perfectly.



We also tried making 3 inch cheesecakes. These were with a graham cracker crust which turned out really well. Everyone who tried them was impressed! We are really starting to feel like we are perfecting our cheesecake making abilities! It is so much fun to please people with cheesecake!




You may have noticed the 3 inch cherry lattice pies in the picture above?



This brings me to another major event of the year: cherry picking in Door County.



We hand- picked, and hand-pitted our cherries using this little guy:





And of course we made cherry pie-filling with it. We were trying to research ways to make the cherry-pie filling without using corn starch, and we found some info on agar agar, but we decided to go ahead and use corn starch and a little almond extract to mask the corn starch flavor after getting some advice from a clerk at U-Bake, another of our favorite Madison baking outlets. We still want to experiment with agar agar, but the almond extract helped make our cherry pie filling taste super delicious! It smelled so good while boiling the cherries in sugar water, and when the pies were coming out of the oven. Of course, we made our pie crust from scratch. I like to use Paula Dean's pie crust recipe. It turns out perfect every time, (despite the fact that I over-baked the pie you see below and the edges are burnt), and the dough is fairly easy to work with for pie crust. I could use a little more practice on the lattice technique, however!!



And of course, we couldn't resist making a cherry cheesecake. We put the filling in the bottom, but it tastes good smothered on top of the cheesecake too. I decided we should definitely do a graham cracker crust for this one, and I even put some graham cracker crust mix up on the sides of the cake. I love that flavor combo of the cherry filling, the cheesecake filling and the sugary crunchy graham cracker crust. Classic.





One of many things missing from this 2009 rundown is Christmas Cookies! And, I think I will save that for the next post. We wouldn't want to over-stimulate those tastebuds!! Hopefully that post will come sooner than six months from now, right! Well, thanks for tuning in, and I hope you enjoyed La Patisserie 2009! Stay tuned for Christmas Cookies next!