Sunday, May 07, 2017
Tart Lemon Cake with Fresh Lemon Frosting
I have been a part of a great online community on facebook called Michigan Tech Parents because my son is a student there. Everyone is so supportive and I have made some new friends on the list. Last weekend, the students came home for the summer, and parents were talking about the food they were planning on making. One mom said she was making a lemon cake and I adore lemon, so I asked her for the recipe. She kindly posted pictures of her handwritten recipe for me to try. It was delicious. I tweaked a few things, and here is how I did it:
Tart Lemon Cake
1 c. (2 sticks) butter, softened
2 c. granulated sugar
4 c. all purpose flour
1.5 t. baking soda
1 t. granulated salt
6 lemons
4 eggs
1 c. milk
Preheat oven to 350 F. Using a stand mixer, cream the butter and sugar. In another bowl, mix together the flour, salt and soda with a fork. Using a lemon zester (I love my Microplane) zest the lemons until you have 4 tablespoons. then juice the lemons. I like to use a lemon squeezer for this.....you should have 1/2 cup. If not, add water to make a half cup. Divide the zest and juice in half and reserve the remaining for the frosting. In a small bowl. whisk the eggs until the whites and yolks are well mixed, add 1/4 cup lemon juice, 2 T. zest and the milk and mix well.
Add half the dry mixture and half the liquid to the the mixer bowl with the creamed sugar and butter, and mix well. Scrape down the sides and add remaining dry mixture and and lquid. Mix until well incorporated. The mixture will be thick.
Grease and flour 2 9" cake pans. Using a spatula, divide the batter into both pans and vigorously tap the pans on the counter until level. Bake for 30-35 minutes or until toothpick comes out clean. Cool in the pan on a wire rack 15 minutes, then remove from pans and continue cooling on wire rack.
Fresh Lemon Frosting
(you will need to make 2 batches)
2/3 c. softened butter
9 c. powdered sugar
half of reserved lemon juice mixture
half of the reserved lemon zest
1 1/2 t. vanilla
1/4 c. milk (approximately)
In a stand mixer bowl, cream butter and sugar. Add lemon juice and zest and mix until creamy. Add enough milk to make a softer icing for piping, Make up second batch. Frost using a Wilton 1M tip as described in my other blog post. It really is pretty easy.....I'm not a great cake decorator but the big tip doesn't require much precision.
I really liked this recipe....I think next time I make it, I'll make it with the cream cheese frosting in my other post. Thank you fellow MTU parent Cindy for the inspiration! My family loved this cake.
Labels:
Dessert
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Rhubarb Custard Pie
This is my second year of donating a "Pie of the Month" to my church's annual silent auction. For this month, I tried a new recipe for rhubarb custard pie. I really enjoyed Beth Howard's book Making Piece: love, life and pie and her cookbook Ms. American Pie. I've always fantasized about opening some kind of pie emporium like Linda Hundt and her Sweetie-Licious Pie Cafe in DeWitt. But the fact is, when I retire, I really don't want to be responsible for anything. Making a pie once a month is good enough for me.
I'm usually a rhubarb purist......no strawberry in my rhubarb, thanks. But Beth Howard's rhubarb custard pie sounded really good to me today, so I made 2 pies.....one for us and one for the Pie of the Month Club winner Liz. Here's how I made it:
Rhubarb Custard Pie
For the crust: one double crust Vodka Pie Crust recipe
For the filling
1.5 c. sugar
1/4 c. flour
1 t cinnamon
3 eggs
5 cups (or thereabouts) fresh rhubarb, chopped in 1/4 inch slices
1 beaten egg, to brush on top of crust
Prepare the pie crust. To make the filling, combine sugar, flour and cinnamon in a large bowl. Beat eggs and mix with dry ingredients. Add rhubarb and pour into crush. Cover with top crust and brush with beaten egg. Bake at 425F for 20 minutes and then turn down temp to 375 and bake for 30 minutes longer.
Happy spring! Enjoy!!!
Labels:
pie
Monday, April 24, 2017
Yellow Owl Workshop's Make It Yours
My New Year's resolution for 2017 was to make a craft every month. I've been having some decent success with my endeavor....so much so that I started an Etsy store to sell my work...
I also have reviewed cookbooks for an outfit called "Blogging for Books", and when they asked me to review a craft book, I jumped at the chance. They provided me a copy of one of the latest books:
It is written by an artist named Christine Schmidt who is the founder of a California based paper goods company known for its "sophisticated and playful aesthetic" (or so says the jacket cover). Upon receiving the book, I can see what they meant by "playful aesthetic" because most the stamp and stencil projects all look like something a kid would make. Try as I might, I didn't find much to inspire me. Maybe it will inspire you? So, the end result it is is not really my thing, but it does describe the stamping and stenciling techniques well, which I hope to apply to projects that actually match my aesthetic, whatever that might be...perhaps it is best described as "vintage geek"?
Bottom line: Solid techniques, not really my style
Labels:
Crafts
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)