Sunday, 25 August 2013

Cake twenty-nine Symphony in red, black and white

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This time my task was not easy: cupcakes which had to be ready one day ahead and needed to be transported for about 200 km. and, to make things more complicated, we'd have to eat them in the university courtyard with no tables or seats available. We went on for weeks talking about the right size of the cupcakes, the right recipe, the type of icing or frosting and, of course, of decoration that would resist a three-hour drive. We also needed a tray or something similar to transport them safely to destination, something nice of course that’d suit a graduation ceremony.
After some wandering in town I found a plexiglass tray that looked perfect for this purpose, but I still didn’t know how to keep the cupcakes well separated one from the other: I was afraid they’d be all messed up and the decoration would be destroyed. Coffee beans was the answer! And it did work well! The cupcakes arrived in a perfect state and what’s more they had an unexpected aftertaste of coffee that made them special!
We chose to make two different tastes with different decorations and decided on the smaller size for the cupcakes  The colours would be red and white for one type (red is the  typical colour for graduation here) and black and white for the other type. 

Symphony in red and white
250 g butter
250 g flour
250 g sugar
3 eggs
150 g choco chips
Beat the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time (don’t forget to beat in some flour between additions) and then the flour. Fold in the chocolate chips. Pour mixture into cupcake cases and bake at 180° for about 15 minutes. 

White chocolate frosting
100 g white chocolate, chopped
3 tbs milk 
175 g icing sugar 
Put the chocolate and the milk in a heatproof bowl and rest the bowl over a saucepan of gently simmering water. Leave until the chocolate has melted, stirring frequently.
Remove the bowl from the heat and stir in the icing sugar until smooth. Use freshly made. 

Decoration
red food coloring
chocolate sprinkles
red sugar sprinkles
Divide the white chocolate frosting and put them into two bowls. Beat some red food coloring into one bowl until the desired shade is reached. Put the red frosting into a pastry bag and pipe generous swirls of frosting over the cupcakes and decorate with chocolate sprinkles. Repeat same operation with the white chocolate frosting.

Symphony in black and white
250 g butter, chopped
150 g white chocolate, chopped coarsely
225 g flour
75 g self-raising flour
440  g sugar
250 ml milk
2 eggs, beaten lightly
150 g choco chips
Combine butter, white chocolate, sugar and milk in medium saucepan. Stir over heat, without boiling, until smooth. Cool 15 minutes. Whisk flours into white chocolate mixture then whisk in eggs. Pour mixture into prepared cupcake cases and bake at 150° for about 20 minutes. 


White Chocolate frosting
see above

Dark Chocolate Frosting
100 g dark  chocolate, chopped
2 tbs milk 
50 g butter
150 g icing sugar 
Put the chocolate, the milk and the butter in a heatproof bowl, stirring frequently until the chocolate and butter have melted. 
Remove the bowl from the heat and stir in the icing sugar until smooth and shiny.

Decoration
red sugar sprinkles 
chocolate sprinkles
Put the white frosting into a pastry bag and pipe generous swirls of frosting over the cupcakes and decorate with chocolate 
sprinkles. Repeat same operation with the dark frosting.

also visit: 
http://time-for-a-cake.blogspot.it/2013/08/cake-twenty-nine.html

Sunday, 4 August 2013

Cake twenty-eight Lilac Chic

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There’s something in the tiered cakes which attracts me a lot. It’s like a personal challenge, the kind of ‘Will I be able to make it?’, in other words a chance to test my skills. Sure, but not only! There’s also some unconscious reason which takes me back to a happy memory from my childhood: a photo of one of my first birthdays, me with my parents and a two-tiered birthday cake decorated in white with some silver pearls my mum had made for me.. 
Although decoration is very important as it’s what we see first, the choice of the cake is nonetheless relevant since it’s what we actually eat.
When making a tiered cake you should always choose a solid cake which can stand the weight of the other cakes you put on top. 
For this cake we chose three different cakes which all have, anyway, a common ingredient - chocolate. (My younger daughter loves it...)

Phase 1: Recipes

Dark Chocolate Mud Cake
250 g butter, chopped
150  g dark chocolate, chopped
440 g sugar
250 ml milk 
225g flour
75 g self-raising flour
2 eggs, lightly beaten 
2 tbs cocoa powder
150 g fresh raspberries
Put butter, chocolate, sugar and milk in medium saucepan, stir over heat without boiling, until smooth. Cool 15 minutes. Add flours, eggs and raspberries.  
Line base and sides of a 30cm-round cake pan with baking paper. Pour mixture into pan. Bake at 150° for 50 minutes. Cool cake.

White Chocolate Mud Cake
250 g butter, chopped
150  g white chocolate, chopped
440 g sugar
250 ml milk 
225g flour
75 g self-raising flour
2 eggs, lightly beaten 
2 tbs cocoa powder
150 g fresh blackberries or 150 g choco drops
Same procedure as Dark Chocolate Mud Cake.
Bake two cakes: one in a 30cm round cake pan - use blackberries; the second one in a 24cm round cake pan - use chocolate drops.

Chocolate icing
200 g chocolate, chopped
200 g icing sugar
1 egg
Melt chocolate in small saucepan over boiling water. Cool. Add egg and icing sugar. Stir until smooth.

Chocolate Butterscotch Cake
25 g cocoa powder
250 g butter
200 g brown sugar
2 eggs
1 tbs golden syrup
185 g self-raising flour
125 ml milk
Beat cocoa, butter, brown sugar, eggs, golden syrup, flour and milk with electric mixer until combined.
Line base and sides of a 18 cm-round cake pan with baking paper. Pour mixture into pan. Bake at 180° for about 1 hour. Cool cake.

Mascarpone Cream
250 g mascarpone cheese
300ml thickened cream
Mix mascarpone and cream until soft peaks form.

Caramel Icing
60g butter
100g brown sugar
60ml milk 
240g icing sugar
Heat butter, brown sugar and milk in small saucepan, stirring constantly, without boiling, until sugar dissolves. Remove from heat. Add icing sugar and stir until smooth.

Phase 2: Tiers
Here’s a sketch of the cake showing details of each tier.
1. Chocolate Butterscotch Cake
2. White Chocolate Mud Cake (with raspberries)
3. White Chocolate Mud Cake (with choco drops)
4. White Chocolate Mud Cake (with raspberries)
5. Dark Chocolate Mud Cake (with blackberries)

A. Mascarpone & Caramel Icing
B. Choco Icing

Phase 3: Decoration
purple and peach food colour
600/700 g ready-made white fondant
some corn starch
Assemble and decorate each tier separately. 

Bottom tier
Take the Dark Chocolate Mud Cake and place it onto serving plate.  Spread with chocolate icing.
Take the 30cm round White Chocolate Cake and split into two layers. Put one layer on top of cake and leave second layer aside for middle tier.
Dust a large nonstick mat lightly with corn starch and knead fondant until smooth and pliable.
Roll fondant out in the approximate shape of the cake. Roll fondant up around rolling pin and then place it onto the cake. You can cut out the centre of the circle if you don't have enough fondant.
Add some purple and peach food colour to some white fondant and knead until you have the colour you like. Roll it out and cut about 30 2cm wide circles. 
Decorate cake with some of the circles using some mascarpone cream to help them stick to the cake.

Middle tier
Cut the second 30cm round White Chocolate Cake layer the same size as the 24cm round White Chocolate Cake. 
Place one 24cm round cake on a plate, spread with chocolate icing and put second cake on top.
Colour some fondant the same shade as the spots and follow same procedure as per cake from bottom tier.

Top tier
Split Chocolate Butterscotch Cake into three layers. Put one layer on a plate, spread with some mascarpone cream and some caramel icing. Repeat with second and third layer. Cover cake with white fondant and purple spots.

Phase 4: Assembling the cake 
Once all cakes are ready assemble the cake and carefully put one tier on top of the other.


Wednesday, 31 July 2013

Cake twenty-seven alias Bread one - Multigrain Dove

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This is my favourite bread and the shape I like most: It’s a must on my Easter table, dove is in fact a symbol for this day: we do have a ‘Dove’ cake in Italy just as we have ‘Panettone’ for Christmas.
Whether you use a bread machine or not you need a few hours before your bread is ready. I don’t have a bread machine although I’ve been thinking to buy one for some years. In fact it’s quite practical and saves a lot of your time: you don’t need to knead your dough more than once which is in some cases hard work. When you make bread the old style, I mean without a bread machine, you need a whole morning considering rise and knead times - I’m speaking of yeast bread of course! Anyway I think you should try and I'm sure you'll love it! 

50 g buckwheat 
80 g pearled barley
50 g sunflower seeds
10g dry yeast
1 teaspoon sugar
180 ml warm milk
60 ml warm water
235g white plain flour
180g wholemeal plain flour
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons olive oil 
1 egg yolk
1 teaspoon milk, extra
2 teaspoons sesame seeds, extra
Place buckwheat, pearled barley and sunflower seeds in small heatproof bowl, cover with boiling water, cover and stand 30 min. Then rinse and drain well.
In the meantime combine yeast, sugar, milk and water in small bowl, whisk until yeast is dissolved. Cover and stand in warm place about 20 min or until mixture looks frothy. 
Put flour and salt into a large bowl, add grain mixture, oil and yeast mixture. Mix to a soft dough. Turn dough onto a floured surface and knead well until dough is smooth and elastic (about 10 min).
Place dough in large greased bowl, cover and stand in warm place about one hour or until dough has doubled in size. 
Turn dough onto a floured surface, knead until smooth. Divide it into 3 pieces, shape each piece into a 30cm sausage. 
Plait sausages and place dough into a greased loaf pan.

Cover, stand in warm place about 30 min or until risen.

Brush dough with combined egg yolk and extra milk. Sprinkle with sesame seeds.
Bake at 200° for about 45 min

Monday, 15 July 2013

Cake twenty-six Sicilian Cassata

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It’s a cake which steals a lot of your time and patience of course. It’s not too difficult to make, anyway: you need some practice to get to the right combination of good taste and elegant decoration but it’s well worth a try! 
Consider one day to bake and assemble it, then another day in the fridge before decoration and a couple of days before eating so that all the flavours can harmoniously blend in.

Step 1 - Sponge Cake
6 eggs, separated
250 g sugar
250 g flour
Beat yolks and sugar with electric mixer until thick and foamy. Fold in flour. In the meantime beat egg whites with electric mixer until soft peaks form. Gently fold a little of the beaten egg whites into the batter to lighten it and then add the rest of the whites folding just until incorporated. Do not overmix the batter or it will deflate. Pour mixture evenly into a 20cm-round tin and bake cake at 180° for about 30 min.  or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. 
Immediately turn cake onto a wire rack prepared with baking parchment to cool.  

Step 2 - Ricotta filling
1 kg fresh ricotta
250 g sugar 
100 g chocolate, chopped 
Should ricotta be too wet, place it on a colander for about 30 min. Then whip ricotta and sugar with an electric mixer until well blended and smooth. Fold in the chocolate. Refrigerate.

Step 3 - Marzipan
200 g marzipan 
green food colouring
Knead marzipan and some green food colouring until you get a vivid green and the colour is uniform.

Step 4 - Cake assembling
sponge cake
green marzipan 
some vermouth 
ricotta filling 
plastic wrap
Line a 30cm frying pan with plastic wrap. 
Roll out a 10cm wide marzipan stripe. Line the side of the pan as in photo. Cut the sponge cake into 1cm thick slices and use them to line the base and sides of the frying pan. Sprinkle some vermouth over the slices until they’re moist but not wet. Spread ricotta filling evenly over cake base. Top with remaining cake slices and sprinkle vermouth over cake. 






Refrigerate for at least one day.

Step 5 - Royal Icing
2 egg whites
375 g icing sugar
some lemon juice
Whip egg whites and sugar with an electric mixer until hard peaks form. Pour in some lemon juice.

Step 6 - Cake assembling
Cake in the frying pan
Royal icing 
Candied fruit: cherries, citron, a tangerine, or any fruit of your choice.
Turn Cassata onto serving plate. Discard plastic wrap.


 Decorate the cake to your taste. Refrigerate for 3/4 hours at least.




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Sunday, 26 May 2013

Cake twenty-five Choco Lollipops

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You don’t need special ingredients for these lollipops: you need chocolate, of course, patience, some free time, your fancy and the right moulds! They’re not complicated to make but you have to proceed step by step and be extremely precise when filling the spaces if you’re using chocolate of different colours.
These chocolate lollipos are in the shape of an egg, and they’re typical of Easter but chocolate is too good to be limited to a special time of the year... so you don’t have to wait until next year to have a go.

g 100 white chocolate 
g. 200 milk chocolate
g. 300 dark chocolate
any food dye you like
lollipos sticks

1. Make sure your lollipop mould is clean and dry.

2. Melt chocolate first of all. You can use a microwave which is faster, if you like  but I prefer the double boiler as you can better control the temperature. Set up your double boiler with a small amount of water - the water should not be touching the top pan- and warm it over medium-low heat. 
Start with white chocolate. Cut it in small pieces and place them into pan,  stirring occasionally, just until the mixture is smooth, then remove the pan from the heat. White chocolate is particularly sensitive to burning, so take extra care and stir meticulously.

3. When chocolate is melted and smooth, take a spoon and dip it into the white chocolate. Place enough white chocolate in the bottom of each cavity. 

4. Refrigerate for about 10 minutes or until chocolate is set. 

5. Melt the milk chocolate following the same procedure. 

6. Place some chocolate spoonfuls into the mould and continue to add until cavities are full.

7. Position lollipop sticks in place. 

8. Refrigerate to set. 

9. Pop the lollipops out of the  moulds. Decorate to your taste. Place them in small cellophane bags with a ribbon, for example.

You can alternatively use dark, milk or white chocolate and add any food colouring too. It’s all up to you and you fancy!

 


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Sunday, 5 May 2013

Cake twenty-four - Bunnies, Bunnies, Bunnies...

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It’s a quick and easy recipe I often use for cakes with special shapes. I’ve recently made a basket for some choco bunnies and roses.. since it was Easter time and Spring. 
It was on the box of a bunny mould, no special ingredients, you’ll see, it’s the combination of butter and choco chips that makes this cake delicious. Anyway it’s a cake you should eat the same day you make it to taste its full flavour, but I never do...... I like to watch my creations....

1 egg
70 g butter or margarine
70 g sugar
a pinch of salt
90 g flour 
1/2 teaspoon baking powder

Separate the egg. Beat the egg white with half of the sugar until stiff. Beat the egg yolk with the rest of the sugar, butter and salt until fluffy, mix the baking powder into the flour and stir in. Then fold in the beaten egg white. 
Grease your mould with butter and sprinkle with breadcrumbs. Fill in the mixture and smooth out. Bake at 180° for 35/40 min. Wrap in a damp cloth after baking. Carefully remove from the mould after 10 minutes and allow to cool down.
Then set your fancy free and decorate using some glacé icing. 





Saturday, 27 April 2013

Cake twenty three - Easter Eggs

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Patience is the secret ingredient for chocolate eggs and of course good quality chocolate!
It’s better to start from smaller chocolate eggs if it’s your first time.. 
Eggs can either be empty inside or solid, in which case you can fill them with a creamy chocolate mixture, some small meringues or crunched hazelnuts.

Plain Solid Eggs
200 g dark chocolate 
Cut chocolate in small pieces and place it in a heatproof bowl over a saucepan half filled with simmering water. Stir until it’s melted. 
Pour spoonfuls of the melted chocolate into the choco egg moulds until they’re filled up to the brim. Remove excess chocolate with the help of a knife to ensure a clean edge. Refrigerate until set. Carefully un-mould the egg halves and place them on a clean surface. Don’t touch them too much or they will start to melt from the heat of your hands. Heat a knife, take two halves, gently push them together and use the knife to stick them together. The blade musn’t be too hot or you’ll have holes in the egdes.
Follow the same procedure for bigger eggs.. 

Rich Solid Eggs
200 g dark chocolate
100 g milk or white chocolate
100 g small meringues
100 g crunched hazelnuts
Repeat same procedure to melt chocolate. Pour spoonfuls of the cholate into the mould, use a knife to scrape the excess chocolate from the mould. Give it a good vibrating shake so that all the air bubbles are gone. Scrape again. Let the chocolate sit for about 5 min, then flip the mould over allowing the chocolate to pour out. Scrape once more time to ensure the neatest shells. Flip it back. Cool a fe
w minutes. 


Now you can fill them with some melted milk or white chocolate and add some small meringues or hazelnuts to your taste. Let filling sit for about 15 minutes, then pour more melted chocolate over the mould. Scrape again to remove any excess. Refirgerate for 15 minutes. Then place in the freezer for 5 minutes and they’re ready to un-mould. Now carefully push the two halves together and use a heated knife to stick them together.

Fancy Chocolate Easter Egg
300 g dark, milk or white chocolate

Follow same procedure. Decorate to your taste.

Add some Rice Krispies when the chocolate is melted if you want to make a really special Easter Egg. 
Use Coco Pops if you’re making a white chocolate egg.

also visit: 
http://time-for-a-cake.blogspot.it/2013/04/cake-twenty-three.html