Showing posts with label vanilla. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vanilla. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 February 2013

French Vanilla Sour Cream Cake with Swiss Meringue Buttercream

A few weeks ago I was catching up on all the latest entertainment gossip, as one does and I was reading about the wedding of Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds and I found out they had a French Vanilla Sour Cream cake, which sounded amazing! So from then I was recipe possessed and I had to make THE perfect cake! The first time I attempted baking one, it was disgusting, but I tried again and I am happy to say I have found my staple vanilla cake recipe. It is moist and had the perfect density and leaves no crumbs when cut. Give this a try it is super-duper easy and you're bound to have most of the ingredients at home! Now I did make two variations of this cake in the same weekend for two birthdays, one with Lemon Swiss Meringue Buttercream and one with Raspberry Swiss Meringue Buttercream. If you do prefer your cake sweeter, sticking with a traditional buttercream is always a winner!



French Vanilla Sour Cream Cake

190 grams butter
270 grams caster sugar
3 eggs
270 grams plain flour (sifted)
2 teaspoons of vanilla bean paste/ vanilla extract
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon bi-carb soda
pinch salt
250 mls sour cream


Method

1. Preheat oven to 170C and grease and line cake tin/s. Cream butter and sugar until pale and fluffy
2. Add eggs gradually whilst electric mixer is still on.
3. Turn mixer to a lower setting and over three additions add a third of the sour cream followed by a third of the flour until all gone.
4. Increase speed to medium and add remaining ingredients and leave to mix for around 4-6 minutes.
5. I divided my mixture into three and baked each cake in a 9inch tin for 20 minutes or until skewer comes back clean or cake springs back.

Now I confess I didn't take photos of the cake making process this time, because I was worried it wouldn't work out again, BUT, I did take photos of the SMB (Swiss Meringue Buttercream) in action since it was much more difficult than the cake. This is maybe a simplified version of the SMB found on Sweetapolita.

Swiss Meringue Buttercream

250 grams unsalted butter (room temperature)
120 grams caster sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste / vanilla extract
2 egg whites


1. Add caster sugar and egg whites to a heatproof bowl over simmering water.
2. Whisk until sugar has dissolved into the egg and the mixture has been warmed to an approximate temperature of 60C or 140F.
3. Transfer mixture to electric mixing bowl and fit with the whisk attachment and beat for around 3-4 minutes. The mixture should be bright white in colour and quite stiff.
4. Ensure the bowl has cooled down enough before proceeding. Divide the butter into 8 small blocks and ensure mixer is on medium speed.
5. Gradually add the butter, one block at a time, ensure each block has been thoroughly mixed through before adding the next.
6. NOTE, mixture will begin to look curdled and that is completely normal by around block number 5 of butter.
7. Once all the butter has been included, add the vanilla (or desired flavouring) and leave to mix for 4-6 minutes. The buttercream will gradually go from curdled and chunky, to glossy and smooth, just keep mixing!
8. Once complete add desired colourings and flavours, for my first cake, I added some fresh rapsberries and for the other, the juice of one lemon and some yellow food colouring.
9. SMB is a great frosting to pipe with and smooth and I used it in between the layers of the cake for a subtle creamy flavour.
(Please note SMB is best served at room temperature and not refrigerated)





Looking curdled





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Sunday, 9 December 2012

Cannoli with Crema di Pasticceria

Given that the festive season is upon us, I thought I would share a little family classic. This is the kind of food we have at parties and celebrations and Christmas. Cannoli are a Sicilian pastry dessert, cannoli essentially means little tubes, traditionally they are filled with ricotta cream or another kind of sweet pasty cream/custard which I will show you below. Now I normally love making everything from scratch, but given these tiny tubes are consumed in seconds but are time-consuming to make, I always buy the shells and then fill them myself. I know shells are readily available in Australia from a good continental deli, but finding them in the UK has been seemingly difficult. I ended up purchasing my shells from my local Antonio Carluccio restaurant for a staggering £12 which is about $20AUD for 24 small shells, but it was all worth it, they disappeared in minutes. So here is my recipe for Cannoli Crema di Pasticceria.


These were the only cannoli shells I could find!

Crema di Pasticceria (fills 24 cannoli shells)

1/3 cup cornflour
1/3 cup of custard powder
1/4 cup caster sugar
2 cups milk
2 teaspoons vanilla bean paste or essence
300ml cream
1 egg yolk (beaten)
2 tbls of liquor (only if you like)

(150g of mixed dark/milk cooking chocolate for half the mixture to be chocolate flavoured)

1. Sift cornflour, custard powder, and caster sugar into a pot and stir to combine.


2. Gradually add milk and whisk until smooth and free from lumps.


3. Add vanilla bean and cream and continue whisking until combined.


4. Turn heat on. Whisk over a low heat until mixture begins to thicken and simmer.




5. Remove pot from heat and allow to cool slighly before adding the beaten egg yolk. Mix well.

6. Separate mixture evenly into two bowls.

7. Pour in melted chocolate into one of the bowls to make a chocolate version of the crema di pasticceria.


8. Cover bowls with cling film and refrigerate either over night or for several hours. Don't worry if mixture is slightly lumpy at this point.


9. Remove from fridge and place mixture into an electric mixing bowl and beat for a few minutes. This will remove any lumps from the cream and will make the mixture smooth and easy to pipe.



10. Fill piping bag up with mixture and pipe vanilla through one side and chocolate on the other. This means you get the best of both in one tiny tube. (Note: It is best to pipe the mixture as close as possible to serving so cannoli shells are still crispy)

11. Once piped, sift icing sugar on top for serving. Enjoy!



Sunday, 4 November 2012

Chiffon Cake with Meringue Frosting

Hello cakelets! This week I bring to you maybe my favourite recipe ever! Until a few weeks ago I had never even heard of a chiffon cake until I watched "The Great British Bake Off" so I thought it would have to be the next cake on my agenda. Now part of my caking and baking is to look at a standard base recipe and either change quantities, add or remove things to make it my own and hopefully better, so I can pass it on for all to enjoy. Chiffon cake is the lightest and fluffiest cake I have ever made and it worked perfectly with the fluffy meringue frosting. It is one of those cakes which when you cut into it leaves no crumbs behind and when you bite into it, and it practically dissolves when you eat it, it's like eating a big fluffy vanillery cloud... if one could ha!


Chefette's Chiffon Cake & Meringue Frosting


1 ½ cups plain flour
½ cup corn flour
1 ½ cups caster sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ cup vegetable oil
7 eggs separated
¾ cup cold water
2 ½ teaspoons vanilla bean paste
1 teaspoon cream of tartar



1. Preheat oven to 165°C, and grease and line your cake tin/s with baking paper.

2. Sift flour, sugar and baking powder into a large mixing bowl and make a well.

3. Add oil, egg yolks, water and vanilla to the well, fold mixture until smooth. Set aside.

4. In an electric mixer beat egg whites and cream of tartar until stiff.

5. Gradually add egg white mixture, to the other ingredients, carefully folding in with a spatula. (It is crucial to fold rather than mix to ensure the air is left in the cake batter.)

6. Pour mixture into cake tin/s and bake until a skewer comes back clean or when cake springs back. 

(The timing will depend on the size of your cake tin, for example, I divided my mixture into 6 small portions for baking in sandwich tins and each took only 10 minutes or so.)

Meringue Frosting

(This is the first time I have used Meringue Frosting and credits to my cousin from Back In G-Town for the recipe. It is a difficult frosting to pipe with because it is so soft, which is why the piping looks a bit shabby. I think this kind of frosting is best with a “rustic effect”)

2 cups caster sugar
1/2 cup water
1 teaspoon cream of tartar
6 egg whites




1. Place the sugar, water and ½ teaspoon of cream of tartar into a saucepan over high heat. Stir until sugar is dissolved. Bring to the boil, then reduce heat to low and simmer for 3 mins.

2. Place egg whites into an electric mixer with the remaining ½ teaspoon of cream of tartar and beat until soft peaks form.

3. With the motor running gradually add the sugar mixture and beat until thick and glossy (Keep beating until it is fairly thick.)

(Frosting is best used right before serving and should be kept at room temperature)

Now if you want to make a rainbow version of this cake like I did, please see this post for assembly instructions!

Meringue Frosting in action!
Layer upon layer upon layer...
Voila.... Finished product!
Silly me forgot to take a photo of the inside with the SLR until the day after. So this is the day after, following a very windy car trip which is why it is a little bit wonky and melted haha! I just wanted to show the inside colours really.
Happy Caking! xxx




Thursday, 12 July 2012

Masterchefette's Confetti Cupcakes with Vanilla Bean Frosting

There's nothing that makes you feel more like a kid than colourful frosting with lashings of sprinkles and candied confetti. Well taking some "pintrespiration" (pinterest inspiration) I came up with these little babies yesterday and I think they are perfect for birthday parties or for some good old baking fun. I have used the base from my chocolate chip muffins post found here.
  
Confetti Cupcakes with Vanilla Bean Frosting


Ingredients

1¾ cups Cake & Biscuit Flour (Self-Raising) (I use Lighthouse brand)
¾ cup sugar 
½ teaspoon salt
2 eggs 
125gm butter or margarine
1 cup vanilla yoghurt (I use Danone Vanilla)
Nemar Heart Sprinkles
1 tsp of vanilla bean paste (I use Queen Organic Vanilla Bean Paste)



Method
1.   Preheat oven to 170°C (fan forced)
2.   Cream butter, sugar and vanilla bean paste in an electric mixer until light and fluffy, I use the paddle attachment.
3.   Add eggs to the mixture.
4.   Gradually add salt and flour in 3 batches.
5.   Once combined gradually add the yoghurt.
6.   Fill greased or paper-lined muffin cups full.
7. Sprinkle some hearts into each case and give it a light stir with the end of a teaspoon.
8.   Bake at 180°C (fan forced) for 20-30 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.

Vanilla Bean Frosting

Ingredients

375 grams unsalted butter 
3 cups sifted icing sugar
2 tablespoons milk
1 1/2 teaspoons of vanilla bean paste



Method

1. In an electric mixer using the paddle attachment whip butter for 7 minutes on medium speed until pale and fluffy.
2. Turn mixer down to low speed and add icing sugar, vanilla and milk until combined.
3. Mix on medium setting for a further 6 minutes.
4. Butter-cream should be very fluffy and pale.
5. Add your favourite colouring or leave natural colour.
6. Pipe on top and serve with additional heart sprinkles.

 


 


Chefette's Chocolate Chip Muffins with Vanilla Yoghurt

As I am currently busy cleaning out the house and packing for the epic move, I stumbled across some of my old Home Economics books from High School yesterday and I was reminded why I held on to them for so long. 

I first used this recipe at school in year seven and after making some slight adaptations, this is now one of my favourites to use. 

I decided to part with the old exercise books and decided to write up a more formal recipe to share with all of you. I hope you enjoy these muffins as much as I do. They're also a great addition to the school lunch box as they contain much less butter and oil than regular muffins and they have a generous amount of yoghurt in them. Enjoy! xxx

Chocolate-Chip Muffins with Vanilla Yoghurt

Ingredients

1¾ cups Cake & Biscuit Flour (Self-Raising) (I use Lighthouse brand)
¾ cup sugar 
½ teaspoon salt
2 eggs 
125gm butter or margarine
1 cup vanilla yoghurt (I use Danone Vanilla)
¾ cup chocolate chips (I use Cadbury Milk)
1 tsp of vanilla bean paste (I use Queen Vanilla Bean Paste)



Method
1.   Preheat oven to 170°C (fan forced)
2.   Cream butter, sugar and vanilla bean paste in an electric mixer until light and fluffy, I use the paddle attachment.
3.   Add eggs to the mixture.
4.   Gradually add salt and flour in 3 batches.
5.   Once combined gradually add the yoghurt.
6.   Mix in chocolate chips either on low speed or by hand.
7.   Fill greased or paper-lined muffin cups full.
8.   Bake at 180°C (fan forced) for 20-30 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.



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