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Thursday, January 25, 2024

Six Inch Cakes

 

my hubby's 58th birthday cake

Since I am going to become a grandma this year, I figure I need to level up my cake making game.   It's just that unless you are serving 12 people, a layer cake is just way too much for us.  After reading a blog post on Sally's Baking Addiction about making 6" cakes,  I determined this might be the solution to the problem.   

I needed to invest in a trio of 6" baking pans, so I followed Sally's suggestion of the Fat Daddio brand, and I tried to buy them locally at Swift's Hardware, which has an excellent cooking section, but they only had 1 pan in stock, and I needed 3.  So, Amazon to the rescue!    Sally's tip is that any recipe that is scaled for 12-14 cupcakes will work for 3 6" cake layers, so I opted for her chocolate cupcake recipe, except I didn't use natural cocoa, I used the cocoa powder I had.   I was halfway through the dry ingredients when I discovered I was out of baking soda!  I had forgotten when I cleaned out my pantry, I threw away the ancient box I had here which I think was here from when my son was still in college, (he graduated in 2019) but forgot to restock.  Off to the store I went!  I prepared the pans by cutting out parchment circles for the bottoms of the pans, and then I used Bake Klean ZT spray to coat the pans and then the parchment after it was placed.  It worked very well, the cakes were easy to get out of the pans. 

I knew I wanted to make ermine frosting, which is a super light buttercream that isn't too sweet.  I had made it before using a different recipe, probably the NYT one, but this time, I opted for Stella Park's version.  It is different as she has you add the sugar to the cooked milk and flour mixture, and I also like how she has troubleshooting tips, which I needed to use.   My butter was not at room temperature, so the frosting wouldn't whip right.  I followed her tip to set the mixing bowl over some hot water and that fixed it fine.  I like her approach that it's not a "fail" if this happens.  She says, "However precise a recipe may be in terms of target temperatures (for both the ingredients and the finished product), the ideal working temperature of a buttercream can vary from batch to batch, depending on environmental conditions and the time of year, as well as variations in equipment and ingredients.  So, rather than rely on a thermometer alone, evaluate the texture and consistency of the frosting. If it's heavy and dense, if it has a greasy texture, or if it seems curdled, it will need to be warmed and re-whipped. If it's too soft or loose to hang from a spoon without dropping, it will need to be cooled and re-whipped. These are routine adjustments, not a sign of failure." 

I love Stella's great cookbook BraveTart: Iconic American Desserts that she wrote with Kenji Lopez-Alt.  I need to make some recipes from that book - I bought it back in 2017 when I was doing a lot of work in Kentucky and she used to work at many Lexington area restaurants early in her career.   One I really love is the Wallace Station.  It's way out in the bluegrass horse country of Versailles (in KY, you pronounce that Ver-SELLS).  Their pimento cheese is tres bien!  I moved that cookbook from our old house in Ann Arbor to our rental house to our lake house.  It survived my great cookbook purge.  But I have yet to make anything from it, or the other sweets cookbook I have that survived the move north, the Zingerman's Bakehouse Cookbook.  I am going to have to dust these off if I am going to be the grandma that always has baked goods on hand.  

I wasn't sure how much frosting I was going to need, and I had this grand plan of making a rose cake piping on the sides with sprinkles on top.  Alas, one batch of Stella's ermine was not enough, so I made another and that wasn't enough to do all the roses I wanted so I just did some on the top.  Next time, I'd recommend tripling this recipe to make enough frosting for rose cake decor on a 6" cake.   Sally recommends you need 2.5 - 3 cups frosting for a 6 inch cake.  Stella's ermine recipe makes 2 cups.   The roses use a lot of frosting, so I'd triple it next time.  

I am looking forward to making more cakes this year.   Stay tuned! 







Sunday, January 07, 2024

New Year, New Baby

 


We had a baby shower for my daughter in law Olivia yesterday.   My first grandbaby!  The food was delicious, many of the ladies brought yummy food to pass.  I made some mini cheese balls (shown above) from my favorite cheeseball recipe formed in half inch balls that  I rolled in ground pecans.   This is so much more convenient than a whole cheeseball for a large crowd.  I made a great recipe for Mediterranean Turkey Pinwheels I found on the interwebs that was delicious and easy.   I made them a day ahead and wrapped them in waxed paper tightly.   I cut them with a serrated knife and secured them with a toothpick.   I also made an old favorite appetizer recipe for mini pasties that my friend Leah reminded me about.   Years ago, I clipped this recipe out of the late great Ann Arbor News Food section, but I misplaced it.  She shared it in our fb group.  I tweaked it a little to match our tastebuds, but it was just as good as I remembered. 

Little Pasties

Dough

1 cup butter
8 oz cream cheese
¼ cup evaporated milk
2 ½ cups flour
1 t salt

In a stand mixer, cream butter and cream cheese and beat in milk. Add flour and salt. Chill dough well.

Filling

2 lbs ground beef
1 large onion, diced very fine
2 t thyme
2 T Tabasco sauce
3 slices bread
1/4 c. evaporated milk

Egg wash
1 egg
1 t. water. 

Brown meat and onion, breaking meat into small crumbles and drain excess fat. Soak bread slices in milk, gently squeeze out excess water and then add to meat. Add thyme and Tabasco. Mix well (best to use a potato masher to blend in the bread into the meat). Set aside to cool.

Roll out dough to 1/8” thick and cut out 2” or 2 ½” circles using a biscuit cutter. Mix 1 egg with 1 t water and use wash on edge of dough circles, add meat mixture and use a fork to seal edges. Brush finished pasty with egg wash.

Freeze uncooked. Bake at 400F for 20 minutes or until golden brown.

It was a delicious spread!  I am looking forward to more cooking in the New Year!