Monday, December 7, 2009
Chocolate Cake Pudding...
Don't you hate it when you make your best cake ever, right on time so it will be slightly warm when served, and kaboooom ! You drop it ! We all have those horror stories. They are all too real, unfortunately. But I find that's in the face of adversity that we can make huge leaps in creativity. Let me share my story, which happened this past week-end...
I was pumped, ready to make my sin-delicious chocolate cake for the ceramics studio opening, Clay Associates. I stopped at the grocery store on my way from work to stock up on eggs (good thinking in retrospect!), and once home I started at once. Cake batter was ready in 20 minutes following the recipe on my previous post. I even added some clementine rind (out of oranges) for extra flavor (great combo !). I baked the cake for 30 minutes, it looked good, it smelled good, I was on a roll. I took it out of the oven, the kitchen towel I used to grab the pan slipped thus exposing my ring finger to the hot pan. Surprised, I screamed well-placed expletives while dropping my creation upside down on the lowered oven door! Followed by 10 seconds of silence, a minute of self-cursing, then heavy sweat. "What am I going to do ?" I could easily salvage the cake but it was in no shape presentable anymore.
What ensued was the longest 5 minutes in my life. I was processing thousands of ideas in my mind to turn my proverbial lemons into lemonade. I settled for the quick and easy, as I was running out of time. I made my first pudding !
You see, pudding originally is recycled bread, old bread that's too hard to eat. It is crumbled and soaked in a sweet egg-based cream to find new life as a warm dessert, excellent with ice-cream. Suddenly, it was the perfect solution for my problems.
Here is what I did.
1) I boiled a pint of half and half with a pint of fat-free milk (normally I would simply boil whole milk but I was out) and 1/2 cup sugar.
2) I beat 4 eggs and slowly added the warm milk to it while turning.
3) I added some vanilla flavor (1/8 teaspon) (it's optional and can be substituted with your favorite flavoring including alcohols!)
4) I crumbled the chocolate cake in small pieces and let them soak in the egg cream for 20 minutes
5) I transfered the mixture into a greased loaf pan and baked at 320F for 45 minutes.
The pudding was still warm when I brought it to the studio. It was an instant hit and disappeared quickly ! Light, soft, chocolatey with a smooth orangy flavor, not too sweet, it was divine, or as one guest told me "one bite and I went to Heaven!". Best compliment ever !
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Tired of the same old pumpkin pie ?
I knew what I was up against. Like every year, the store-bought pumpkin pie invariably makes its appearance on the dining table, plain or with a puff of whipped cream in the center. It is a Thanksgiving staple that will never go away, whether you like it or not. I like my friend Ryan's sweet potato pie better. Maybe because it is homemade, with a recipe passed along the generations. It fits with the tradition of a homemade meal that the entire family helps prepare.
What did I bring, do you ask ? Well, I wanted to go for another seasonal fruit, the apple. And I wanted something that could hold up to a rich and satisfying meal without topping over the glucose level. By the end of a Thanksgiving meal, you can't taste sugar anymore but you can still appreciate texture ! I decided to modify my apple tart recipe by caramelizing the apples first and surround them in frangipane on a thin bed of chocolate. I present you the Apple Frangipane Tart !
Apple Frangipane Tart
It is a deep-dish style tart with sweetened apple slices and a light almond crust that is best consummed warm with a dollup of whipped cream. The almond filling will remind you of macaroons, but softer. To the recipe !
Ingredients (for a 1.5" deep 10" tart):
frangipane filling:
- 1/2 cup butter
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1 cup almond flour
- 1 tbsp white flour
- 1 egg
- 1/4 tsp almond extract
Preparing the apples:
- 6 apples, peeled, cored and cut in eights
- 1/4 cup sugar
- 1/4 cup butter
- 1/4 cup rum
For the crust:
- 1.5 cup flour
- 3/4 cup butter
- 1 egg
- a pinch of salt
- 1/4 tsp vanilla extract
Directions:
- Prepare the crust as directed in this post.
- Melt 1/4 cup of 60-70% chocolate on low and pour it on top of the uncooked crust in a thin layer. Let it cool down in the fridge until the chocolate is solid again.
- Frangipane: beat the butter and the sugar to a white froth, mix in the flour, the almond flour, the egg and the almond extract until smooth and homogeneous. Set aside.
- To caramelize the apples: in a wide pan, first melt the butter and sugar on a low setting, then add the apple slices and cook them covered on medium heat. Once they have grown soft, remove the cover, add the rum and reduce the liquid (apples give out a lot of water!) until the apples start browning a little. Limit your stirring to a minimum to keep the slices whole.
- Finish the tart by pouring a layer of frangipane on top of the chocolate layer and adding the apple slices on top of the frangipane. Do not worry too much about arranging the slices neatly, they will slowly sink into the frangipane under heating and some will disappear under.
- Bake at 370F for 45 minutes.
- Serve the tart warm with some whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.
- To make whipped cream: pour a cold pint of heavy whipped cream into a chilled bowl, add 2-3 tbsp of powdered sugar and beat it on high until firm. Do not overbeat it or it will turn into butter !!! I recommend the "finger test". Dunk the finger and give it a taste!
Enjoy !
Friday, November 20, 2009
How disturbing...the truth behind the food we eat ?

Sunday, November 15, 2009
Mastering the Art of Crepe !
A gust of cold wind. A persisting sniffle. A cold bathroom in the morning. Little signs that cold weather is taking a firm grip in our lives, even in sunny San Diego. Suddenly holding a warm cup of coffee, or chocolate, becomes a much-anticipated ritual throughout the day. For me, it triggers another craving, firmly embedded in years of french upbringing: a warm crepe, with my favorite filling, Nutella. When the wind turns cold and the leaves have begun to fall, city streets in France are filling up with all kinds of aromas, most of which come from grilled chestnuts and warm crepes bubbling on hot portable stoves. As a kid I would be mesmerized watching the crepe maker skillfully pour the batter on the hot plate and spread it in a circular motion to create that soft, eggy, thin and large pancake that is called "crepe". At home, we would have crepe nights in the middle of winter. As a student, they would turn into crepe parties, with all kinds of fillings, from ham and cheese to rum-soaked sugar.
So this week-end was a bit cold, and my conditioning kicked in, I was at the stove making a huge pile of crepes ! The crepe recipe is pretty simple, really. Making them however requires a certain dexterity and practice. So before deciding for a crepe party with the neighbors, make sure you know how to pour the batter adroitly, flip the crepe, and deliver it hot and steaming on your guests' plates. Here is the basic recipe, which gives me 20-25 crepes on a 12-inch nonstick pan.
Ingredients:
- 1L or 4 cups of whole milk (don't substitute with reduced fat milk or the batter will be too runny and hell to cook)
- 4 eggs
- 2 cups of flour
- a pinch of salt
- 2 tablespoons of vegetable oil (canola)
- optional flavoring (vanilla, Grand Marnier, rum, orange blossom...)
Directions:
- Beat the eggs, salt, oil, and a few tablespoons of milk together.
- Add the flour and mix to get a very heavy dough.
- Add the milk little by little while stirring until you get a homogeneous batter. I use a whisk to break up the clumps.
- Let the batter settle for 1 hour in the fridge before using. If it gets too heavy you can add some milk to it just before use.
To make a crepe: (Note to self: a YouTube video would be perfect here!)
- Choose a nonstick pan, usually Teflon-coated, and grease it with a thin film of canola oil. Personally I rub an oil-soaked paper towel that I use before making each crepe.
- Preheat the pan on the stove. Medium heat is good. It's easier to make crepes when the pan is really hot. Quite often I screw up my first crepe because it wasn't hot enough. Typically, the crepe ends up sticking too much to the pan and I can't flip it without breaking it.
- Pour enough batter to cover the entire pan floor in a thin layer. I tend to transfer my batter to an old milk container, it comes out great without the use of a ladle.
- Wait until the crepe border detaches itself from the pan then gently slide a flat wooden stick under until you feel confident enough you can flip it. This is a critical step when the crepe is fragile and can break easily. You'll likely to spend many attempts there. Practice, practice, practice ! My secret: I use my fingers to flip the crepe ! Quick or you get burned !
- Once you flipped the crepe, the other side will cook quickly. Transfer to a plate, regrease and repeat step 3 !
Oui, oui, making crepes is an art that every self-proclaimed french cook has to master. Consider it a rite of passage before tackling Julia Child's french recipe book.
For fillings, I'll leave it to your imagination for now. Between sweet and salt-based fillings, it would take another entire post. For immediate craving, I recommend Nutella, jams, jellies, plain sugar with or without a sprinkle of alcohol (Grand-Margnier tastes good here), peanut butter, ice-cream...have you run out of crepes yet ??? :)
I also have a recipe for buckwheat crepes for the health-conscious and advanced crepe-maker. Also another post for later. If you are antsy, shoot me an email and I'll share. For the price of a crepe or two :)
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Brioches aux Amandes
Almond BriocheAnother week-end, another brioche experiment ! What can I say, I am still in the brioche honeymoon phase :)
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Bob's Red Mill's Almond Cake - Gluten-free !
Heard of Bob's Red Mill ? The Oregon company has been around for 25 years, delivering a wide range of grain products and baking products. A good part of them are certified organic and even gluten-free. Your local organic store is certain to sell some of its products, easily recognisable in a clear package with a yellow, white, green or red label showing the jolly face of a white-bearded man with a white beret.
To me, BRM is a savior ! One of the baking staples in France is finely ground almond, even more so in Provence where almonds are queen of the fields (hmm, at least sharing the title with olives). Ground almond is added in a range of cakes and confections, notably marzepan and almond paste. It adds texture and a slight almond taste that can be enhanced with salt or almond extract. I like it in cookies very much :) In cakes, I substitute part of the flour (up to 20%) with almond flour. So, yes, almond flour is a required necessity in my kitchen, and for the longest time I had to do without, short of grinding almond slivers (which I did by the way!). But Bob and his white beard winked at me one time at Henry's grocery store and that was the start of our love affair.
I recently discovered the company's website. Nowadays, everything is on the internet, why not Bob ? I was pleasantly surprised by the site expansiveness. Besides a list of over 400 products, you can find recipes, an online shop, but also a company blog ! I have yet to read through it. For now, I dived into their recipe collection. Their almond cake caught my eye, even more so when I saw no regular flour on the ingredient list. Pure almond flour, and some coconut flour. I had to try it !
Here is the link for ingredients and directions (magically moist almond cake). I let mine bake for 50 min at 350F for a brown top. If you like macaroons, you'll love this cake. That's what it reminded me of. It's a bit on the crumbly side, very "moist" (read buttery), with a light almond taste. Personally it's a bit too rich for me. But it's a gluten-free treat for our gluten-intolerant friends. I agree with the author, it would taste great with whipped cream (homemade please) and any berries. Or use it as a layer for an elaborate two or three-layer cake.
Thinking ahead, adding some melted chocolate to the preparation would make an interesting variation on my almost-flourless chocolate cake. Ditch the flour and replace with the almond/coconut flour combo. Hmmm....time to get some butter out of the fridge...:)
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Sweet Chocolate Bites
Before
AfterWhile best out of the oven, the buns can be heated up in a microwave for 20 seconds to recapture that hot and fresh taste with oozing chocolate. One can imagine replacing the chocolate chips for other appropriate fillings, including jams, peanut butter, white chocolate, etc...or mixture thereof !
Great for breakfast, morning or afternoon snacks, you can slide a few in your pocket to enjoy later. And if you've got more to spare, don't forget your friends !



