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Entries from January 1, 2012 - January 31, 2012

Sunday
Jan222012

Sweetness by the Pound: A Pound Cake Recipe from Street Treats

Batter

CakeSpy Note: Street Treats, a mobile dessert truck in Seattle, recently sent this interesting story and recipe via their newsletter--very fun to see the process behind their recipe development! This was written by the Street Treats team:

We are often asked: How do you find recipes? We are constantly coming up with ideas and testing. We search for recipes from a variety of sources. We make those recipes as written. Then, 99.9% of the time, we make many modifications to the original recipe to decide on the perfect taste.

Recently, we had some of our wholesale clients asking for quick breads or pound cake. I found this pound cake recipe from my grandmother. My grandmother was a great cook! I can still smell her cooking as I write this. She had a real sweet tooth, like myself.

 Nana's pound cake recipe

Ingredients

  • 2 1/4 cup flour
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 t baking soda
  • 1 t lemon rind *optional
  • 1 t vanilla
  • 1 cup margarine *butter is best
  • 8 oz pineapple or mandarin yogurt or sour cream
  • 3 eggs

Procedure

Combine all ingredients blend on low speed, then on medium speed for three minutes.  Pour into 12 cup bundt pan or tube pan. 325 degrees for 60-70 minutes.

For more information about Street Treats or to follow them around Seattle, visit their website!

Saturday
Jan212012

Sweet Discovery: Trenary Toast from Michigan's Upper Peninsula

Image: Trenary Toast website

Have you ever heard of Trenary Toast?

It's sort of like a cross between biscotti and cinnamon toast, and it's a specialty of Michigan's Upper Peninsula. I learned of it on The Splendid Table and nearly broke everything in my path to google the stuff.

To learn a little more about the sweet itself, I'll give you the description from the Trenary House Bakery website:

Our toast is made from a sweet white bread, baked fresh daily. To create our cinnamon toast, we paint the bread with a wash and hand coat each piece with a tantalizing cinnamon and sugar mixture. It is then baked again to acheive that delicious crispy crunch for dunking into your favorite beverage.

As Jane and Michael Stern echo, "Like biscotti and zwieback, Trenary Toast is a brittle breadstuff eminently suitable for dunking."

Seems that this has been a specialty of the area since the 1930s, when the bakery was built; even through the time the bakery (with living quarters) was changed to a boarding house, and then back to a bakery (which it is now), the toast has been a mainstay. 

You can order online, or as they urge on the site,

Come and visit us in Trenary in the heart of Michigan's beautiful Upper Peninsula and try some of our delicious Trenary Toast in the familiar brown bag, have a cup of coffee and freshly baked Cinnamon Roll. Take yourself back in time when everything was fresh and sweet to the taste. A simplier time, hand crafted by people who care.

Sounds good to me. Find out more at the Trenary Home Bakery website!

Friday
Jan202012

Baker's Dozen: A Batch of Sweet Links

The Starbucks Effect: interesting to see the effect of Starbucks canceling a contract with a commercial bakery.

...and another account, different bakery, similar story.

Jubilee! Cherries Jubilee from Whipped the Blog.

Sweet history: Many interesting stories about sweets in History on a Plate by Eric Stanway

Why I bake my own birthday cake: a sweet recipe and essay on The Kitchn.

Dessert Wontons? I can dig it.

Watch your cupcake! TSA Cupcake Crackdown.

Slow but steady: Turtle Cake worth waiting for.

Whoopie! Whoopie pies find a sweet spot in Arizona.

Bread with chocolate and olive oil. Yum!

OMG! Sparkly rainbow Unicorn Poop cookies. Funny!

Bakery I wanna visit: Oh So Sweet Sugar Boutique in Surrey, BC

Interesting: The importance of Salt in sweets.

Trompe l'oeil cakes for the ages - thanks to Maggie of Serious Eats for sharing!

Monday
Jan162012

So You Wanna Be a CakeSpy? Contest Finalists

All I have to say is: O.M.G.

The entries (hundreds!!) for the "So You Wanna Be a CakeSpy?" contest were simply out of this world insane!

To narrow it down to a winner is going to be nearly impossible. Even with a crew of cake experts, who judged entries based on creativity, cuteness, OM NOM NOM factor and overall awesomeness, thus far we have only been able to narrow it down to these thirty entries. 

The winners stand to win some fantastic prizes: The Grand Prize, provided in partnership with Sasquatch Books, is a trip for two to CakeSpy headquarters in Seattle and a visit to one of MY favorite bakeries for an afternoon of sweet treats. Other prizes include original signed CakeSpy artwork, CakeSpy goodies such as unicorn socks, and signed copies of CakeSpy Presents.

Want to participate? Weigh in, either in the comments section, on Flickr, or on Facebook, and let us know which is your favorite! We will take your comments, flickr and facebook "likes" on each photo into account! Help us deliberate! Here are the finalists, listed in the order that they were received:

Finalist 1: Neapolitan Blondie Bars

Finalist 1: Neapolitan Blondie Bars by Molly A.

By combining three sweet flavors, Neapolitan Blondie Bars were born. A bar consisting of three layers: Strawberry Blondie, Vanilla Blondie, and Chocolate Brownie.  Here you have my recipe, topped with Hundreds and Thousands (sprinkles) for a nice Ice Cream Shop feel. These treats do have to be made in steps, as they consist of three layers, but it is more than worth it. The strawberry layer provides moisture for the whole treat, and the mixture of flavors actually makes it taste like the ever popular creamy Neapolitan ice cream we all know and love. Link to the recipe here on cakefyi.com

 

Finalist 2: Chocolate Truffle Funfetti Cupcakes

Finalist 2: Funfetti Truffle Chocolate Cupcakes by Erin V.

Funfetti truffle chocolate cupcakes are the ultimate cupcakes! These chocolate cupcakes are stuffed with funfetti cake batter truffles, which are baked right into them. But it didn’t stop there with the cake batter/funfetti-ness, oh no sir, I just HAD to top it all off with green cake batter cream cheese frosting! I didn’t think it got any better than cream cheese frosting. Of course that was then followed by sprinkles. Cannot have a funfetti cupcake without sprinkles now can we? Link here.

Finalist 3: Oreo Brownies with Peanut Butter Cream Cheese Swirl

Finalist 3: Oreo Brownies with Peanut Butter Cream Cheese Swirl by Emily S.

My name is Emily and I am the writer/dessert enthusiast for EmLoves. My entry for the "So You Wanna Be A Cakespy?" contest is my Oreo Brownies with a Peanut Butter Cream Cheese Swirl. I eat A LOT of dessert, but these brownies (oh these brownies) are easily one of my favorite creations. It's THE BEST brownie you will ever have, topped and swirled with peanut butter cheesecake, and then covered with copious amounts of Oreo chunks. It really cannot get any better. Here is my blog post for the entry!

Finalist 4: Batter Belly Dough Cake

Finalist 4: Batter Belly Dough Cake by Lauren E.

Batters’ Up! This mile high mini cake is sure to please any batter-licking soul. The hip hugging delight starts with a chocolate chip cookie layer, and then is topped with cookie dough filling. Bring on the brownie with a chocolate fudge variety which is blanketed under a plump layer of brownie batter filling. Lastly, a moist funfetti layer sends this cake into doughy harmony. Laced with a cake batter frosting and topped with mini baked treats, this dessert is no dream, it’s an unbaked ecstasy. Dough you want to try it?

Finalist 5: Smoretrooper

Finalist 5: S'moretroopers by Jenn F.

I love Star Wars and it especially influences my dessert making! I wanted to do a riff on a traditional smores, but in cupcake form. A chocolate cupcake filled with marshmallow fluff, topped with a decadent chocolate buttercream - topped with a Stormtrooper shaped graham cracker, which of course would be called a SMOREStrooper! Link here.

Finalist 6: Cake Fried Whoopie Pie Sundae

Finalist 6: Cake Fried Whoopie Pie Sundae by Jared S.

Sundays used to be for family, church, and long drives through the countryside (at a slow pace, of course).  Then, something happened…the “y” got replaced with an “e”, and sundaes were never the same again.  They became something of indulgence and lust.  Picture a creamy frozen treat mounted atop a sizzling ball of cake batter fried goodness with a luscious whoopie pie tucked inside all warm and snuggly (like your favorite childhood blanky). This bad boy, weighing in at a hefty 25 pounds, (give or take 24 pounds), will change your life in more ways than imaginable.  

Finalist 7: Whack and Unwrap Chocolate Orange Bars

Finalist 7: Whack and Unwrap Chocolate Orange Bars by Becca T.

Whack! Biting into the chocolate-orange I had just smashed on the table—the kind I find at the bottom of my stocking every year— Icrave to have this flavor combo more often.  Whack again! An idea smashes into my brain.  Taking my favorite lemon-bar recipe, I addGhirardelli cocoa powder to the shortbread crust, top it with a layer of chopped chocolate-orange pieces, and substitute into the filling fresh-squeezed OJ, orange zest, and a spoonful of orange marmalade (for that extra orangey oomph).  The result… citrusy tang mingles blissfully with melt-in-your-mouth chocolate decadence to form anunbreakable flavor combo.

Finalist 8: Stuffed Brownie Cupcakes (with chocolate covered mint oreos)

Finalist 8: Chocolate Brownie Cupcakes with Chocolate Covered Mint Oreos inside by Andrea B.

Chocolate brownie cupcakes with chocolate-covered mint Oreos inside, and mint buttercream or mint
chocolate buttercream frosting. Link here.

Finalist 9: Chocolate Crunch Funfetti Cake

Finalist 9: Chocolate Crunch Confetti Cake by Jency W.

I designed this Chocolate Crunch Confetti Cake for my dad's 65th birthday. Since he's a New Year's baby I created a cake that embodied novelty, exuberance and extravagance. I baked a chocolate cake and added a crunch layer from an orange crunch cake for textural pizazz. For the icing I borrowed my mom's cream cheese frosting recipe and I dyed the coconut with food dye in individual batches. The combination of flavors and colors made for dramatic presentation. Cutting through the three dark layers hiding beneath the snowy frosting and rainbow coconut was like ripping into another birthday surprise altogether!

Finalist 10: Donut Pies

Finalist 10: Donut Pies by Jory S.

I followed the recipe using buttercream filling. After removing the donuts from the fryer, they were dipped in a mixture of cinnamon-sugar. Lastly, they were frosted with whipped chocolate and embellished with more cinnamon-sugar and rainbow sprinkles. This book is inspiring and fantastic! Grilled cheesecake and birthday cake French toast are next! 

Finalist 11: Valhalla Bars

Finalist 11: Valhalla Bars by Carrie F.

Valhalla bars, otherwise known as "heaven in your mouth"are delicate, nutty, just ever so slightly salty and sweet brown butter, pretzel shortbread, smothered in gooey, creamy, buttery caramel then topped with a thin blanket of rich dark chocolate ganache. See? SERIOUSLY heaven in your mouth!! Link here.

Finalist 12: Peanut Butter Toffee Cupcakes

Entry 12: Peanut Butter/Toffee Cupcakes by David S.

Our Peanut Butter/Toffee cupcake is packed with power and passion, as all cupcakes should be! We created a delicious, moist peanut butter cake with toffee covered peanut baked inside and a light peanut butter buttercream on top with a single toffee peanut right smack in the middle! Our kitchen smelled so good and I have to admit, my wife and I licked the bowl, spoon and devoured two cupcakes each before taking pictures! I hope you like them!!!

Finalist 13: Banana Caramel Coconut Cream Pie with Dark Rum

Entry 13: Banana Caramel Coconut Cream Pie with Dark Rum by Joanna S.

I love desserts that call upon childhood memories, but have adult flavor. What is a better combination of that than animal crackers and dark rum? This Banana Caramel Coconut Cream Pie with Dark Rum makes people who don't like coconut want to eat it every day and makes everyone who has eaten it give into their baser urges (i.e. sugar and cream and sweet nom nom nom). I am a cake person, and this pie is the best competitor I've ever had for one of my cupcakes. And coming from me, that's a big deal. Link here.

Finalist 14: Frau Brownies

Finalist 14: Frau Brownies by Linda H.

Named after its creator, a local high school German teacher, this recipe has been passed on by word of mouth across the community. Legend has it that the recipe has even appeared in a Purdue University dining court. Frau brownies consist of a triple layer of childhood flavors combined into a decadent treat. The base is a cakey brownie followed by a thick spread of marshmallow fluff which is topped by a crunchy mix of rice crispies with equal parts melted peanut butter, chocolate chips, and butterscotch chips. Best served warm and when feeling nostalgic about being a kid again. Here's a link.

Finalist 15: Cookie Time

Finalist 15: Cookie Time Cookies by Alexandra

If there's anything I've learned from years of following CakeSpy, it's to look for the whimsy and sweetness in life. And what could be sweeter than Cookie Monster on a cookie, eating a cookie, while chatting on CookieTime? Made from Pillsbury chocolate chip cookie dough, homemade buttercream frosting, food coloring and, of course, love, these treats are perfect for techie-philes and cookie-philes alike. For instructions how to make your own "CookieTime" cookies, click here.

Finalist 16: Cold Cookie Pie

Finalist 16: Cold Cookie Pie by Juliann L.

A cookie-lovers delight, this ice cream cake has layers of cookie-dough ice cream, hot fudge, peanut butter truffle, crumbled oreos and, of course, chocolate chip cookies on top. Did I mention it's delicious? Link here.

Finalist 17: Drug Cake

Finalist 17: Drug Cake by Becca S.

The sweetest dessert I have encountered is a cake I purchased from a lady out of her home in the sketchy part of town and paid for with a bundle of cash.  This made me feel like I was dealing drugs and inspired my name for it: Drug Cake (also, the feeling of chocolate comatose bliss after indulging).  Drug Cake is a decadent triple-layer chocolate buttermilk cake filled with assorted rich ganaches and frosted with silky mocha buttercream.  The top is piled precariously high with chocolate cake balls, Grand Marnier chocolate truffles, Guittard chocolate shavings and classic chocolate covered strawberries.

Finalist 18: Pie Tatin

Finalist 18: Pie Tatin by Jessica T.

Tarte tatin is already amazing, with its decadent apples and caramel that can make you dream in butter. But I'm also a fan of pie, as pie is awesome, and cinnamon-sugar swirled pie crust just makes everything better. So, I put the two together and added in a whole vanilla bean. I now regret that I didn't triple the batch size. Links to recipes used here and here.

Finalist 19: Funfetti Cake Balls

Finalist 19:  Tricked Out Funfetti Cake Balls

Agent Oink is part of the CakeSpy detective agency, disguised as an oven timer inside the kitchen of Allyson Dwyer. His mission is to help make delicious and adorable desserts to report back to the CakeSpy Agency. To test his discoveries, he shares them at parties among his kitchen friends who help him to come up with new baking ideas. This week he is investigating how to make these vanilla-frosting-filled, white-chocolate-drenched, Funfetti cake balls bigger, more festive, and ultra delicious by stuffing them with fresh chocolate chip cookie dough, peanut butter cups, and chocolate caramels. What will his verdict be?! 

Finalist 20: Beach Dessert

Entry 20: Beach Dessert by Elizabeth M.

These are beach desserts, made of butterscotch pudding, crumbled graham crackers, chocolate-candy coated “sea shells,” blue Jell-o, Swedish fish, and whipped cream, garnished with drink umbrellas. Prepare both the pudding and Jell-o as directed and let it cool a bit before pouring them into plastic cocktail cups. Sprinkle the graham cracker crumbs on top of the pudding, then add the “shells” and umbrella. Wait for the Jell-o to solidify, then put in the fish by sticking the end of a knife into the Jell-o and pushing them in. Lastly, add some whipped cream to the top for "whitecaps."

Finalist 21: Chocolate Salami

Entry 21: Chocolate "Salami" treats by Kati S.

See the salami-looking treats on top of the regular cookies? This is dark chocolate salami, my version of a common Portuguese treat. Instead of Maria cookies, I used animal crackers. Along with dark Hershey's cocoa, butter, eggs, sugar, and a splash of Kahlua, this treat is easy (if a tad messy) to make, requires no baking (so use fresh eggs), and is ridiculously delicious. The best part is that the odds of someone else making it in the U.S. is essentially nil, so no repeats! Unique and yummy, that's my fave.

Finalist 22: Tiramisu Turtle Cheesecake

Finalist 22: Turtle Tiramisu Cheesecake by Lori R.

I want to be a Cake Spy! Here is my dessert for your consideration. It doesn't get much sweeter than when a turtle cheesecake meets tiramisu. Sweet lady fingers firmly grounded in a chocolate graham cracker crust grasp a creamy cheesecake filling topped with melted chocolate and caramel. Link here.

Finalist 23: Hazelnut Coffee Gateau

Finalist 23: Coffee Hazelnut Gateau by Kim L.

For the Cake Spy Contest I decided to do a twist on the typical coffee sponge cake by creating a multi layered hazelnut coffee gâteau with a delicious creamy yet light white chocolate bavarois with spices and cocoa powder in between each layer. Then to top it all off I drizzled chocolate ganache made with a hint of nutmeg and cinnamon.  As for garnishing, I added a magenta flower and white chocolate designs. The gâteau had rich subtle flavors and the multiple cake layers added a light airy texture but it was still smooth and creamy with the ganache topping. Link here.

Finalist 24: Strawberry Rice Krispie Cupcakes

Finalist 24: Strawberry Rice Krispie Cupcakes by Jeanee D.

This experiment I concocted was my husband's idea. We saw strawberry marshmallows in the grocery store and he thought it would be a good idea to make some rice krispie treats with them. I finally gave in, and at the last minute he grabbed strawberry icing to add. "What?," I thought. "Strawberries in my rice krispies and NOW icing?" I thought this man was mad!I took it up a notch and made the treats look like cupcakes. It was the most cute and delicious sugar high ever! See the tutorial here.

Finalist 25: Chili Trompe l'oeil

Finalist 25: Faux Chili by Jennifer B.

Savor the sweetness of summer with this delish dish: A trifle of cupcakes and strawberry puree decorated with candy beans, crumbled chocolate-hazlenut candies, sliced apple licorice and a dollop of fresh buttercream frosting. No Independence Day hero is complete without a sidekick. Close by its side is a mini cupcake smeared with more buttercream and topped with a butter mint.

Finalist 26: Ice Cream Bites

Finalist 26: Lemon Drop bites by Shaina M.

Homemade Strawberry Lemonade Ice Cream Bites. This Ice cream recipe does not require an ice cream maker and the ice cream is frozen in  lemon rinds then cut into wedges for a super cute sweet snack! Link here.

Finalist 27: Unicorn Cake Pops

Finalist 27: Unicorn Cake Pops by Heather M.

This is my Unicorn Cake Pop.  Inside she is delicious devil's food cake mixed with dark chocolate frosting.  Outside she is dipped in Guittard white chocolate coating.  Her ears are white chocolate chips (applied before dipping) and her mane is Guittard strawberry candy coating.  She is dusted with pink pearl dust (Wilton).  Her horn is made of candy clay (modeling chocolate) and dusted with silver sparkle dust (CK Products).  She has candy eyeballs and her eyelashes, smile and nostrils are drawn on with Americolor Gourmet Writers.

Finalist 28: The Veruca

Finalist 28: The Veruca by Mary P.

A silky pumpkin pie baked (flaky crust and all!) into a white cake and layered with additional cakey goodness and gooey pecan pie deliciousness.  Frosted with a heavenly whipped cream frosting and garnished with pecan praline, this dessert medley is the answer to the ultimate Turkey Day dilemma… How to fit every personal favorite dessert perfectly on my fork.

What would you call such a concoction? The Veruca, of course!  Since it is everything a spoiled little girl could possibly ask for in a dessert.

Finalist 29: Choco-Fluffernutter Ice Cream Sandwich

Finalist 29: Choco-Fluffernutter Ice Cream Sandwich by Amy G.

Last summer I came home from work inspired to make oatmeal peanut butter cookies.  I made the cookies, and upon remembering a few sweet accompaniments in my cupboard and freezer, did not stop there.  I created a choco-fluffernutter ice cream sandwich: one scoop of double dark chocolate gelato and a generous dollop of marshmallow fluff sandwiched between two fresh peanut butter cookies! Link here.

 

Finalist 30: Beer Crispy Treats

Finalist 30: Beer Crispy Treats by Nom N.

Beer Crispy Treats are decadent upon decadent - sugar on sugar. First homemade beer marshmallow fluff gets whipped up. Then it is mixed with browned butter [oh so good!] and puffed rice cereal. Once the whole gooey mess sets up in a pan, the squares are dipped in dark chocolate and drizzled [or drowned] in homemade beer caramel sauce. 

With all the sweet flavors in each bite, the beer becomes a background player - adding some spice and depth, not really screaming beer. It's all about the sugars and textures playing together. Link here.

Monday
Jan162012

Sweets to Eat: Twinkie Tiramisu Recipe for Serious Eats

It's official: Hostess, the maker of Twinkies, has filed for Chapter 11.

While this doesn't necessarily mean the demise of the iconic treat, it's as good an excuse as any to stockpile on the sweet snack cakes and make something amazing:Twinkie Tiramisu.

This dessert is not difficult to make: basically, what you're doing is swapping Twinkies for ladyfingers in a traditional Tiramisu recipe. The sponginess of the Twinkies soaks up the flavors of the espresso-and-cream mixture, and they lend a little extra creaminess to the final dish. It makes for a fine mix of pinkies-out dessert and guilty-pleasure junk food.

Note: This dessert is made with raw eggs. There is a slight risk of salmonella or other food-borne illness. To reduce this risk, it is recommended that you use only fresh, properly refrigerated, clean grade A or AA eggs with intact shells, and avoid contact between the yolks or whites and the shell.

For the full entry and recipe, visit Serious Eats!

Monday
Jan162012

Hello, Sweetness: Meet Chichi fregi

Image: Paperblog.frI want to introduce you to my newest obsession, chichi fregi.

I know what you're thinking. Who or what on earth is chichi fregi?

Let me tell you.

Sort of like a churro but with an (arguably) cuter name, Chichifregi is defined by Glenn and Laura Halpin Rinsky's The Pastry Chef's Companion: A Comprehensive Resource Guide for the Baking and Pastry Professional as "A small fluted fritter made from yeast dough, deep-fried and rolled in sugar; a popular French street snack."

Or, as I translated from this web page (I love the slightly odd translation), they are "large donuts Provence, traditionally long and swollen, sweet and flavored with olive oil and orange blossom water. In Provence, they are tasted at fairs, at carnivals, and in the streets."

Based on some online sleuthing it seems that the chichi fregi is often served in a circle or spiral form.

It seems that the name has something to do with Garbanzo beans (chickpeas). Starting with the Latin cicer, we go to the French "chiche", referring to chickpeas, which at one time were a key ingredient in the dough made to make the fritters.

Either way, a sweet new friend for you to enjoy.

Find recipes for it here and here.

Monday
Jan162012

Sweet Love: CakeSpy Kind of Loves Hippie Cookies

Before you read this next statement, I just want to assure you that everything is really, truly OK.

That having been said: I am having a love affair with a healthy cookie.

It's true. It's called the NRG Orb, and its Coco Orb counterpart, and both are made by Capers (affiliated with Whole Foods in Canada).

I don't know what it is about these little nuggets, which are made with a fairly virtuous cast of ingredients, including coconut, apples, dates, and maple syrup.

They're free of refined sugar, and they're vegan to boot. I know! I know! You're thinking I am a fallen Cake Gumshoe. You're thinking "did she really write that book with all the butter and sugar laden recipes?".

But the thing is, they're very, very tasty. And I have been enjoying them quite frequently as a post-lunch sweet (you know, when you just need a bite or two of something sweet) or a mid-afternoon pick me up.

Don't despair though, because I assure you that I always either precede or follow them up with something butter and sugar packed.

Find NRG Orbs at Whole Foods markets in the Northwest (from Vancouver to Seattle at least); online at wholefoods.com.

Saturday
Jan142012

So You Wanna Be a CakeSpy? Deadline Tomorrow!

You guys. There's still time, but not much. 

If you want to win an all-expenses paid trip to Seattle to eat cake with me, you've got to enter the So You Wanna Be a CakeSpy? contest!!

It is inspired by my book, CakeSpy Presents Sweet Treats for a Sugar-Filled Life, but no purchase is necessary to enter--the only prerequisites are awesomeness and that you be an over-18 resident of the USA.

Saturday
Jan142012

Honey, I'm Home: Pear and Honey Custard Tart Recipe from Macrina Bakery

Image: Macrina BakeryOh, hey, honey.

Whatcha doin', honey?

Whatcha want to eat, honey?

The answer: Pear and Honey Custard Tart. This recipe comes by way of Macrina Bakery, and is 100% delicious.

Here's how you make it happen in your own home.

Pear and Honey Custard Tart

Makes 1 (10-inch) tart

  • 1/4 cup whole almonds
  • 1 recipe Sweet Almond Dough at room temperature (recipe below)
  • 3 cups white wine
  • 3/4  cup granulated sugar
  • 3 pears, peeled, halved, and cored
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tablespoons unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 1/2 teaspoon pure almond extract

Procedure

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F.
  2. Spread almonds on rimmed baking sheet and toast for about 10 minutes, or until golden brown. Let cool, then finely grind in food processor. Set aside for garnishing the tart.
  3. Using your fingers, press the Sweet Almond Dough into a 10-inch tart pan with a removable bottom. Form an even crust, about 1/8 inch thick, over the bottom and all the way up the sides of the pan. (It's important that the crust be the same thickness on the bottom and the sides.) Chill in the refrigerator for 30 minutes.
  4. Line the chilled tart shell with a piece of parchment paper and fill it with dried beans or baking weights. Bake on center rack of oven for 20 to 25 minutes, or until crust is golden brown. Carefully remove paper and beans and set tart shell aside to cool. Leave the oven on.
  5. Combine wine and sugar in a medium, heavy-bottomed saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes, whisking occasionally. Gently place pears in hot wine, rounded sides down, and poach for 7 to 10 minutes, or until pears are fork-tender. Remove pears with a slotted spoon and set aside to cool. Continue simmering the poaching liquid until it has reduced by half its volume, then set it aside to use as glaze on the finished tart.
  6. Combine cream, honey, eggs, flour, vanilla extract, and almond extract in a medium bowl. Mix well with a whisk.
  7. Place cooled, pre-baked tart shell on a rimmed baking sheet. Slice the poached pears in half again lengthwise and arrange them in the bottom of the tart shell. (At the bakery we like to spread the slices out in a fan-like pattern.) Pour the custard filling over the pears, filling the shell to just below the top. Place baking sheet on center rack of oven and bake for 50 to 55 minutes, or until custard is set and golden brown. Let the tart cool on a wire rack for 30 minutes, then remove the sides of the pan.
  8. Warm the reduced wine glaze over a low heat until it thins, then brush the surface of the tart with a little glaze. Sprinkle ground toasted almonds around the outer edge.

Sweet Almond Dough

This cookie-like dough is easy to make and even easier to work with. Rather than rolling out the dough, you simply press it into the tart pans by hand.

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup whole almonds
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 1  1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1/2  teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 1/2  teaspoon pure almond extract
  • 8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled

Procedure

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F.
  2. Spread almonds on rimmed baking sheet and toast for about 10 minutes, or until golden brown. Let cool, then finely grind in a food processor. Measure out 2 tablespoons of ground almonds and set aside. (The remaining ground almonds will not be needed.)
  3. Combine 2 tablespoons of the ground almonds, sugar, and flour in a medium bowl and mix with a wooden spoon. In a separate bowl, mix together vanilla extract, almond extract and melted butter. Add butter mixture to the bowl of dry ingredients and mix until coarse and crumbly, using your hands to break up any large lumps. The finished dough will stick together when squeezed between your thumb and forefinger.
  4. At this point, the dough is ready to be pressed into a tart ring. It doesn't need to be chilled. If you're not ready to bake with the dough, pack it into a ball and wrap it tightly in plastic wrap. The wrapped dough can be stored in the refrigerator for 1 or 2 days, or frozen for up to 1 month. It's a good idea to double wrap the dough before freezing it.
  5. Frozen Sweet Almond Dough needs to be fully defrosted before it's used. My preferred method is to transfer the dough to the refrigerator 1 day in advance. Generally this crumbly dough is pressed into tart pans by hand rather than rolled out, but once it has been frozen the dough will be quite firm. In this case, roll the dough out to 1/8 inch thick and fit it into the desired tart man. The dough will probably crack when you lift it, but don't worry. Simply pinch the cracks together with your fingers to repair.

 

Saturday
Jan142012

Cashew Talkin' Bout? Cashew Crunch By Sweet Girl Sweets

It is time for me to tell you about my latest obsession: Cashew Crunch by Sweet Girl Sweets.

Sweet Girl Sweets was borne out of baker/candy maker Cindy Parsons' passion for making sweet treats for friends and family; she's upgraded to a small commercial operation, and will ship her Cashew Crunch nationwide.

I had the pleasure of meeting Cindy and sampling the Cashew Crunch when she was in town for business and dropped by the Tom Douglas cookbook social; she was kind enough to bring some of the sweet stuff for me to sample. Now, after one bite of the sweet confection, I was hooked.

How to explain? Well, if you imagine the most delicious peanut brittle you can, and then take it into the back alley and pummel it, pound out the peanuts and replace them with creamy, slightly salty, delicious cashews, you're starting to get the idea. I literally could not stop eating this stuff. I was tempted to say I'd never eat peanut brittle again, but I wouldn't want to be too hasty, you know?

But I digress. Basically what I am telling you is that you should buy this stuff. Per the website: 

The specialty of the house is Cashew Crunch, a simple blend of fine cashews, real butter, and sugar, combined to make a sweet treat you won't be able to put down once you've had your first bite.

Sweet Girl Sweets makes each batch to order.  We don't make a big batch and split it up.  This "small-batch" thing seems to work for scotch and wine and other fine foods, so why not for our exceptional candy as well?

 

You can find Sweet Girl Sweets online here.

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