My offering for the 2023 Friendsgiving Extravaganza! I love my pals, This cake got devoured! I served it with Bourbon Butterscotch Ice Cream which was a real crowd pleaser. Daniel Roberts (aka deep sea dan) hosted us and his house (his mom's house) is the coolest. It was a wonderful evening of awesome friends, awesome food, and a whole lot to be grateful for. As always! Apple Upside-Down CakeRecipe slightly adapted from Rose Levy Beranbaum Caramelized Apple Top:
Meanwhile, prepare you cake pan! Spray a 9" pan with cooking spray and line the bottom with a parchment round. In a small heavy saucepan, melt the butter. Use about 1 tbsp to coat the parchment lined bottom and sides of the cake pan. To the remaining melted butter in the pan, add the reserved liquid and remaining brown sugar. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly with a spatula. Once boiling, stop stirring and leave to bubble and cook for about 3 minutes until thick and deep amber in colour. Pour this mixture (Rose says "do not scrape") into the prepared cake pan, tilting the pan to coat the entire bottom. The mixture will probably harden, don't worry. It will melt back during baking and become all lovely and soft and hug the apples in a nice caramel coat. Place the apple slices in a decorative pattern, slightly overlapping, over the bottom of the pan. I like to start in the middle and work outwards. Whatever you place first will be what you see on top of the cake. Keep this in mind when arranging the apples. Set the pan aside. Cake Batter:
Cream the butter with the granulated sugar. Beat in the yolks and the vanilla. In a separate bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients (flour, powder, soda, salt). Add half of the dry ingredients to the mixer and blend until barely combined, then add the sour cream, blend until barely combined, then add the remaining dry ingredients and gently mix/fold until everything is mixed but do not over-work the batter. Spoon the batter over the apples and gently spread with an offset spatula, ensuring the apples stay in place. Bake for 35-40 minutes or until the top springs back when gently pressed, and a skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean. Run an offset spatula around the outsides of the cake pan and invert the pan onto a cake stand or other serving platter. Allow the pan to sit on top for a minute or two before lifting off. If any apple slices remain in the pan, just gently remove them and place them back on the cake where they are missing. Serve warm or at room temperature, with toasted walnuts (Spread 2/3 cup (66g) walnuts onto a tray and bake for about 7-9 minutes, stirring once to ensure even toasting) and Bourbon Whipped cream:
Happy Thanksgiving :) ~Lari 2023
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A delicate cousin to the classic rich and fluffy cinnamon roll, these are sweet without being overly tooth achingly so, and a lovely hint of cardamom to welcome fall baking into our kitchens. I've put off making these for so long because I wanted to get Pearl Sugar to top them with... the classic European/scandinavian garnish for many sweet bread products. But then I realized that I had the resources to fabricate my own... I took some very large chunky white sprinkles that are pretty much inedible in their natural state due to the fact they are just huge lumps of hard white tooth-breakers. I wasn't using them. Suddenly I realized, if I just bash these up into smaller pieces... I have pearl sugar! Boom. I truly adore marzipan, I am now making a vow to use more marzipan. To make ground cardamom, simply buy whole green cardamom pods and whiz them up in a high powered blender. This will be far fresher and superior than buying pre-ground cardamom at the grocery store. Cardamom Marzipan Cinnamon Rollsrecipe from the Ikea FIKA cookbook makes about 20 buns for best results, all ingredients should be at room temperature For the Dough:
How To:
Crumble the yeast into the bowl of a mixer. Pour over the milk (either have the milk at room temp, or gently heated to lukewarm, about 37˚C or 100˚F) Start mixing or stir until the yeast has dissolved. Add the flour, the butter in pieces, sugar, eggs, salt and cardamom. Work the dough until it is very smooth and elastic, takes up to 10 minutes or so! If you live in a humid climate you may need to add more flour. I live in Alberta, where it is dryer than dry, so I do not need any additional flour than this suggested amount. Round the dough into a ball and allow it to rise in an oiled bowl, covered with a damp towel. I like to place the bowl in my oven (that is turned off) because it is a nice quiet and peaceful and draft free zone, and potentially less dry than sitting out on my counter. Let it rest and rise for at least 30 minutes, or until it has doubled in size. Meanwhile, make the filling: break up the marzipan into chunks and combine with the sugar, breadcrumbs, water and cinnamon. Blitz in a food processor. Melt the butter, and process the butter in too. Place the dough onto a clean work surface dusted with a bit of flour. Roll out into a rectangle. Spread with the filling. Roll up the dough from the long side of the rectangle and cut into buns about 1 inch. Place into a baking pan lined with parchment, leaving room to allow them to expand. Cover and let rise until they are doubled in size, about 30 minutes. You can also leave them in your fridge overnight, and then take out the next morning and let them proof for an hour before baking, then breakfast is ready! Meanwhile preheat your oven to 375˚F Whisk together the egg, salt and water and brush the egg wash over the risen buns. Sprinkle with pearl sugar. Bake in preheated oven for about 20 minutes. Happy September, happy fall. |
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