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Entries from August 1, 2012 - August 31, 2012

Monday
Aug062012

Baked Good of the Day: Cereal Killer Sundae, Minnesota State Fair

Photo: MN State FairWhat is it? Soft ice cream that tastes just like the milk left at the bottom of your breakfast cereal bowl. Featuring two flavors — one sweet and chocolatey and one honey and nutty. It’s served in a bowl with a little milk creeping up the sides and topped with dry cereal. Two fruit toppings available: banana caramel and strawberry balsamic.

Find it at Blue Moon Dine-In Theater located on the corner of Chambers St. and Carnes Ave. For all the new foods available at the Minnesotat State Fair, visit this website.

Saturday
Aug042012

A Baker's Dozen of Inspiration Prompts

Sometimes, motivation and inspiration are hard to come by. And I don't know about you, but for me, when these times hit, visiting Facebook or Pinterest can be dangerous territory. Seeing gorgeous pictures (better than I could take) on pinterest or reading about other people's successes, marriages, and book deals on facebook can make me feel like a loser. 

But how to regain that sense of inspiration? Here are a series of prompts that I have found are very motivating in terms of getting the creative flow going again. Keep in mind, of course, that I am a writer/illustrator/baker. While you can see how some of the prompts directly relate to my chosen combo-profession, I nonetheless think that they will work for anyone--or perhaps kick off a spinoff idea of your own! 

sweet1.29

  1. Chalk it Up. I am a frequent, enthusiastic sidewalk-chalker. I love to augment my surroundings with it, whether it's drawing a heart on the sidewalk or something like finding a serendipitously-shaped piece of art or crack in the sidewalk which I can turn into the likeness of cake. Not only can i delight in my own cleverness after doing something like this, but the fact that it will make others smile makes me inspired and happy.
  2. Grilled Cheesecake Sandwich
  3. Bake Something that Looks Like Something Else. I love trompe l'oeil foods, and I find it fun and inspiring to make foods (especially sweets) that resemble other foods. For instance: cupcakes that look like burgers, a cake that looks like steak, watermelon cake, doughnuts that look like bagels with cream cheese. What else could you dream up? Sandwich cookies that look like baguettes? Cakes that look like flowers? It's a fun challenge.
  4. Draw Something Together. Grab a friend. Decide who is who: friend 1 and friend 2. Each write down a list of two words, any words. Don't look at one another's lists. Friend 1 has to illustrate the first word on each list, and friend 2 has to illustrate the second word on each list (so each person has one of their own words and one from the other person). So, say you get "enchanting" and "elephant"; your friend gets "soap doughnut". You each have to create an illustration combining your two words! 
  5. Shake it Up, Figuratively. Challenge yourself in a small way. Do you always order red wine? Dare yourself to try white. Is everything in your closet black? Try wearing something blue. Take a different route home from work. Go shopping at a different grocery store. Try your sandwich with swiss instead of cheddar. Though small, sometimes these small actions can help get you out of a rut. 
  6. Red Velvet Cake Shake
  7. Shake it up, Literally: I don't know why, exactly, but for some reason, taking an unexpected sweet food and mashing it into a milkshake ALWAYS puts me in a good mood. And they've made for some sweet posts on my site: Pumpkin Pie Shake, Red Velvet Cake Shake, Cupcake Shakes, Crumb Cake Shake, Nanaimo Bar Shake, Shamrock Shake, and Girl Scout Cookie Shakes are just a few of my "trying to feel inspired" successes.
  8. Watermelon cake
  9. Play a word game. Take a longish word--for instance, "watermelon". Now, make a list of all the smaller words that can be spelled using the letters from this word. For instance: "raw"; "lone"; "water"; "lemon". See how many you can find! It is a great game to while away time while waiting in line, but it also gets your mind whirring. 
  10. Eat it the Wrong Way. Literally or figuratively. You can take a slice of pie and turn it backwards and eat crust to tip; you can turn a meal on its head by eating dessert, following it by dinner, and finishing with an appetizer. Doing this makes me feel zany, creative, slightly bohemian, and feisty. You? 
  11. Review past successes. I know I said stay away from the internet, but really, I didn't mean it all the way. Recently I was going through the archives of this site, and while reviewing posts from 2007-8, I found myself thinking, "these are really great!". They inspired me to try out some of the things I was doing more in that period, namely baking experiments and posts about the history of baked goods. Sometimes, it's good to remind yourself of good things you've done--you just might inspire yourself!
  12. Kid Around. Sometimes, as cheesy as it may sound, I like to do child-friendly crafts because they make me feel happy and talented. Shrinky dinks? Putting rocks in the oven and then "painting" them with crayon for a handmade paperweight? Making a pasta necklace? It's actually kind of fun and helps you recapture a youthful enthusiasm. 
  13. Bake Using a new Ingredient. Sometimes when I am uninspired the idea of tackling an ambitious cake I have never made before is just too much, but trying a new ingredient is not so bad. So, say it's lavendar. Maybe try it in shortbread! Or lemongrass...perhaps it would be nice in a whoopie pie? Or what might taste good with saffron? Googling recipes based on an ingredient is easy, and it expands your repertoire and gives you a sense of accomplishment.
  14. Write a friend a letter. Recently, I wrote a friend a letter, and I wrote on the outside, "save for a low self esteem day". The letter itself was short. It was actually a list called "Five Things I think Are Great About You". And it listed 5 things. My friend said that I couldn't even know how good it made him feel ... which in turn made me feel pretty fantastic. So why not give it a try? 
  15. Unicorn
  16. Buy a unicorn. When I feel bad, sometimes I go to a dollar store or a toy store or a salvation army and ask if they have any unicorns. Sometimes they have a good one that I buy. Sometimes they have a crappy one which I don't buy. Sometimes they have none at all. But the clerk usually smiles when I ask. So what could you seek out that might create some good energy in the world?
  17. Taking it to the Sweet
  18. Take on a feel good project. When I did this cupcake street art installation, it made me feel great as well as the people who found them. This in turn made me feel confident in the fact that I do things that make people feel good. What could you do to make the world a happier place?

Got a sweet inspiration prompt to share? Leave a comment! 

Sidewalk chalk

 

Saturday
Aug042012

Cake Byte: CupcakeCamp DC Coming Up!

Cupcake Camp DC

Totally sweet: Mark your calendars for CupcakeCampDC 2012! It will be September 8th at 4pm at Continental Modern Pool Lounge. Registration is not open yet, but we'll let you know when it's ready!
(Note: must be 21+ to attend)

Continental Modern Pool Lounge is a nifty space located right by the Rosslyn Metro, next to the Key Bridge which leads to Georgetown. They have board games, shuffle board, darts, skee ball, ping pong, pool, hoops, wii games, arcade games, as well as yummy bites and drinks such as macaroni & cheese triangles and wings.

View the CupcakeCampDC website here!

Friday
Aug032012

Sweet House: Coolhaus Ice Cream Sandwiches

Coolhaus

Did you know that yesterday was National Ice Cream Sandwich Day? That's very good timing, because I am always a little late (hence the day after business), and who wouldn't want to make this day last a little longer? And it just so happens that I was just thinking that I wanted to tell you about my delicious experience with this very treat from Coolhaus, a mobile ice cream truck which operates in a few different cities.

Coolhaus is, well, pretty cool. They combine a love of sweets and architecture. Here's the 411 on them, from their website:

 


[1] Bauhaus, an influential modernist design movement of the 1920′s and 30′s. 

[2] Rem Koolhaas, the famous Dutch Architect and Theorist who challenged the mantra "Form follows function" 

[3] "Cool house," isn't that what you're eating – an ice cream sandwich deconstructed into a cookie roof and floor slab with ice cream walls?
Natasha and Freya started baking cookies and making ice cream in Freya's mom's kitchen in the Fall of 2008. They named the flavor combinations after architects and architectural movements they were inspired by and started experimenting with recipes and testing them on friends. It seemed like a fun art project with "farchitecture" in mind ie food + architecture. 

One day it occurred to Freya and Natasha that an ice cream truck would be a perfect way to disseminate their ice cream sandwiches (and architecture dialogue) around the city of LA. The truck would be a nod to the past tradition of the Good Humor man selling ice cream novelties around neighborhoods, but with a modern twist – not to mention the long-withstanding popularity of taco trucks around LA and the rapidly growing infatuation with "gourmet" food trucks. The timing seemed perfect, now all Freya and Natasha needed was a truck! 

They found a postal truck on Craigslist and were able to afford it with money they had saved from their other jobs. They prepared the truck and their product for their launch at Coachella Valley Music Festival in April of 2009 where the product was very well received – and when they came back to LA, they had generated a strong buzz and following. 

Today, they have a fleet of 4 trucks in LA, 2 trucks and 1 cart in NY, 2 trucks in Austin, 2 trucks in Miami, a newly launched storefront in Culver City, CA and even have their ice cream sandwiches at Southern California Whole Foods Markets. They hope to continue to expand to other cities nationally, and maybe even globally (doesn't hurt to dream, right?)!

 

Coolhaus

So when SpyMom and I walked by their truck in New York City, you must know that we pretty much HAD to stop for a sweet sandwich.

You build your own sandwich by choosing your cookies and then choosing the ice cream with which to fill it. SpyMom chose the double chocolate cookies with bananas foster ice cream; I got the potato chip skor cookies with bananas foster ice cream.

What can I say other than "Damn, that was a fine ice cream sandwich?". The salty-sweet cookies combined with the mellow-sweet banana ice cream with a caramelly taste finish was pretty much perfect. So perfect, in fact, that I may or may not have licked the napkin clean (they give you an edible wafer for a napkin - so it was totally normal for me to lick it). SpyMom said she thought my cookies tasted better, but she was still extremely pleased with her sweetwich as well.

The sandwiches are kind of spendy - our total for two was over $10 when combined - but for the experience and the novelty of finding this cool business right on the street we were walking down, and for the deliciousness of the sweets we purchased, I'd day that it is certainly worth it for a special treat. You deserve it!

Find out more about Coolhaus, including where you can find them, on their website. 

Thursday
Aug022012

Baker's Dozen: A Batch of Sweet Links

 

I need to eat this thing.

One of my favorite things in the world to eat: Seven Layer Bars.

Delicious: brownstone front cake.

Love how you love me, Baking Style Diary!

Delicious: homemade Do-si-dos.

Destination-worthy: Hoffman's Ice Cream in New Jersey.

5 Ingredient Chocolate Cake.

Awesome: Golden Girls Cupcakes print.

Wait. What? Dessert quesadillas!?

Mmm: Lava cookies.

Caramel eggnog: I need a little Christmas, right this very minute!

Bakery I truly wanna visit: Paradox Pastry.

Another bakery I wanna visit: Omaha Cheesecake Bakery.

Golly: buy my book.

Thursday
Aug022012

CakeSpy Speaking at BlogHer! 

That's right. I am speaking at BlogHer. But you know what? My co-panelist Shalini (of Reading & Chickens) put it so much better than I ever could.

I AM GOING TO BLOGHER AND I CANNOT STOP WRITING IN ALL CAPS. I feel a tiny, tidgy bit nervous about this situation. You see, I am not just GOING, I am on a panel. Where I will have to…panel? It’s a bit unclear.

Here is what I will be paneling, hopefully in a nice large wallpaper print that would be featured on Young House Love.

And I will be paneling with Jessie Oleson

Thanks for putting it so well, Shalini! Here's more info on the conference. See you there!

Wednesday
Aug012012

Baked Good of the Day: Ice Cream Monkey Bread

Wednesday
Aug012012

The Story of Carrot Cake

Photo c/o K. Morales, Carrot Cake from Hiroki

Although it would be a stretch to call this homespun favorite a fashion plate of a dessert, carrot cake--a lumpy and slightly frumpy but incredibly moist and flavorful carrot-flecked light brown-hued spice cake, frequently studded with either pineapple or plump raisins, nuts and finished with a thick coat of tangy cream cheese frosting--has enjoyed several moments of vogue over the years.

Believe it or not, the idea of using carrots in desserts actually dates back to Medieval times, when carrot pudding was enjoyed as a sweet at banquets. This was probably borne out of necessity, making use of the carrots’ natural sweetness; while a pudding would have been a steamed and vaguely cakelike affair, there was still much adaptation which would occur, because as much as you search for it, you're not going to find any mention of medieval cream cheese frosting.

Faceoff: Bunnies v. Carrot Cake

Carrots were imported to America by European settlers, and so was, apparently, the pudding; there are bushels of recipes for the stuff from this era on show at the Carrot Museum. The reason again is the carrot's natural sweetness: they contain more sugar than any other vegetable besides the sugar beet, and were much easier to come by during this time.

A big development in the world of carrot cake came in the early 1900s, when the pudding began to be baked in loaf pans, more like a quick bread. Carrots were used as an agent of moisture and sweetness in cakes, when luxury foods were rationed during the first and second world wars. It's possible, too, that the government became carrot-pushers: in England, recipes were distributed to promote the carrot as a nutrient-dense ingredient.

Carrot Cakes, Europa Cafe, Penn Station

By mid-century, the carrot cake had hopped over to America, where it would make dessert history. Most likely, the recipe was imported to the states following the second world war, where it caught on in cafeterias and restaurants. However, there is a delightful story which indicates that following WWII there was a glut of canned carrots in the U.S; an enterprising businessman named George C. Page hired bakers to find uses for the cans of carrots to create a demand for the product, and the solution was carrot cake, which he then sold through the company Mission Pak, a large purveyor gourmet foods.

At first a novelty, carrot cake nonetheless proved popular enough to stick around on menus. But it really caught on in a big way in the health-conscious 1970s, when carrot cake was perceived as being “healthy." And really, the idea isn't too far-flung: after all, carrots are vegetables, and raisins and nuts are pretty much health food, right?

Carrot Cakes

Of course, the thing that really separates carrot cake from being equivalent to eating a salad is the thick slather of cream cheese, butter, confectioners’ sugar and cream that became the frosting of choice in the 1960s, a time during which Philadelphia Cream Cheese released many recipe pamphlets; possibly it is during this time that the carrot cake and cream cheese frosting really became a bonded pair.

Dangling a Carrot

And if we're truthful, what's ultimately kept the cake going isn't necessarily carrots, it's the full spectrum of flavors in the package. Those pretty little flecks of orange are not the dominant flavor of the cake: carrot cakes often taste like spice cake, with the sweetness of raisins or pineapple or even apples, paired with cream cheese frosting, is generally what we look for in a carrot cake. 

Carrot Cake, Baker Boys, Asbury Park, NJ

Speaking of which, the additions can be the subject of some argument. While raisins are undoubtedly the oldest complement to carrots, many modern palates prefer pineapple, apples or applesauce; sometimes walnuts, sometimes pecans, sometimes no nuts at all. These add-ins are the choice of the baker and the preference of the eater. The cake's mild but distinct flavor have made the cake an enduring favorite: while few would think of it as fashionable, it's considered a timeless classic that never goes out of style.

Here's a carrot cake that would please palates from yesterday and today. Go ahead and think of it as health food as you like; I won't stop you.

Carrot Cake

 Makes 1 cake

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 1/4 cups vegetable oil
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup light brown sugar, packed
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 3 cups grated carrots
  • 1 cup chopped pecans, plus 1/2 cup unchopped pecans, for garnish
  • 1 batch cream cheese frosting (recipe follows)

 Procedure

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease and flour two 8 or 9-inch pans, and line the bottoms of the pans with parchment paper.
  2. In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and cinnamon. Set aside.
  3. In the bowl of a stand mixer, combine the eggs, oil, two sugars, and vanilla. Beat on low speed for about 30 seconds, and then turn up the speed to medium for about 2 to 3 minutes, or until combined and lightly frothy.
  4. Reduce the speed to low, and add the flour mixture in 2 to 3 increments, pausing to scrape down the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula with each addition.
  5. Stir in carrots, mixing until combined. Fold in the pecans.
  6. Pour an even amount of batter into each of the prepared pans.
  7. Bake in the preheated oven for 40 to 50 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Let the cakes cool in pan for 10 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack, remove the parchment paper, and cool completely.
  8. Once cooled, place one cake layer, flat side up, on a serving platter, and spread [f]1/2 to [f]3/4 cup of frosting on top. Leave a half-inch margin all around, as the weight of the second cake layer will spread the frosting to the edges. Place the second cake layer, flat side up, on top of the frosted layer. Frost the top and sides. 

Cream Cheese Frosting

  • 1/2 cup butter, softened
  • 8 ounces cream cheese, softened
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 4 cups confectioners' sugar

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the cream cheese, butter, and vanilla. Beat at medium-high speed until the mixture has a very smooth consistency; pause to scrape the bowl as needed. Add the confectioners' sugar cup by cup, mixing after each addition, until it is smooth and spreadable.

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