Archive for June, 2008

Sunday Breakfast

Posted by the cookworm on June 29th, 2008

I’m off to NYC shortly, with the hopes of getting to visit some of the places I missed last time (Payard, Il Laboratorio del Gelato…) and probably won’t have time to do another post until the end of the week (or maybe next week), as I’m trying to get through a mountain of work before leaving. I had a brief photo inspiration today, though, thanks in part to a visit with my mother. She showed me her raspberry bushes - started only two years ago - which are positively flourishing. As a kid, I spent every July trying to pick as many berries as possible from the bushes in the nearby park, and it was always a challenge to get there before the other neighborhood kids did. When I saw the berries in her yard, I was shocked that there were so many. Well, nobody else had been picking them, of course!

I plucked as many as I could from the prickly branches and had some of them for breakfast this morning with just a little bit of cream-fortified milk. They are the true taste of summer childhood memories to me.

sunday breakfast
Click for berry detail

As you can see, the berries provided half the inspiration, and the rest is a little homage to Simply Breakfast, a blog I really like for its simple style and excellent use of a theme.

Be back soon, and with luck, sharing some tasty bites from the Big Apple!

Olive Oil Cake with Apricots

Posted by the cookworm on June 23rd, 2008

When I stopped at the sour cherry place last week to place my order (for a somewhat obscene amount of cherries), I couldn’t resist buying a small container of apricots. They were cheap, and so enticing, but when I brought them home I knew that I’d once again been taken by temptation rather than logic - the ‘cots were in no shape to be eaten out of hand. In other words, they were just asking to be baked.

Inspired by Aran’s beautiful Olive Oil Sponge from yesterday, I decided to make my own olive oil cake and incorporate the apricots within. The final recipe was borrowed mostly from Emily Luchetti’s plum cake recipe. I’m on a bit of a Luchetti kick lately as I’ve borrowed a few books from the library, so it seemed a fitting opportunity to see if her recipe was adaptable enough for my purposes. It was indeed. The texture of the cake was light and fluffy, enriched with the mellow, sweet apricots - and great for breakfast. There’s a slight crunch of cornmeal, but it’s more on the cakier side than most cornbreads and cornmeal cakes.

apricot cake

You’ll need about 6 apricots for the cake - I had a few extra, which I sliced and cooked with some sugar, water, and a drop of lemon to make a delightfully sticky compote that helped enhance the apricots in the cake. For the olive oil, I used Zoë, a reasonable all-purpose brand, as I wasn’t sure how much of the oil’s flavor would remain in the cake after baking it. It turned out the flavor was really quite subtle, so it would be worth using a fruitier, more powerfully-flavored extra-virgin oil.

(more…)

Coconut Pound Cake with Passion Fruit Filling

Posted by the cookworm on June 21st, 2008

More birthdays at work means more baked goods for my co-workers. Did I mention how glad I am to have a place that welcomes regular donations of high-calorie food? The only thing that causes an occasional problem is transportation - there are many treats that I’d like to bring but would be too difficult to maneuver in the car or on the bus. Still, cupcakes, cookies, bars, and simple cakes are manageable by any reckoning. I suppose this also helps save me from trying to get overly dramatic. The thought of myself, pre-coffee, trying to spin sugar at 8:00am…man, would that be one scary scene!

For the latest baking occasion, I decided to go a little tropical (and help usher in summer) by making a coconut layer cake with passion fruit curd filling and passion-fruit meringue frosting. It’s no secret that coconut and passion fruit are two of my favorite flavors, so I couldn’t resist the potential for an amazing combination. I’m glad to say that it was very good indeed, and the cake is on its way to being a new favorite.

coconut cake

The original recipe was for a single-layer cake that I split into two 8-inch pans. It was rich, buttery, and delicious; easily good enough to stand on its own with little or no accompaniment. For a simpler presentation, it can be made in one pan and decorated with a sprinkle of freshly grated coconut strips or just some sliced fresh fruit. I’m eager to make it again this way and serve it for casual visitors or just to keep around for nibbling (I suspect it would freeze well, too). It does bear mentioning that since the texture is that of a pound cake, some people may find it slightly on the dense side to use for layering. I’ll also add that my colleagues all enjoyed it immensely and one asked for the recipe, so the layering decision is probably best left to individual preference.

For the passion fruit curd filling, I made a departure from my usual curd recipe (as I had several egg yolks to use up) and used Emily Luchetti’s lemon curd recipe from Classic Stars Desserts, substituting passion fruit purée for the lemon juice. The meringue frosting is just ye olde classic 7-minute frosting but with passion fruit in place of the water. The lightness of the frosting was a good foil to the cake’s richness, and I bet whipped cream would be a tasty, equally lofty, and less sweet option.

The cake was easy to transport in a cake-carrier, and only frosting the top meant there was no worry about unsightly filling leakage or other mishaps. Everyone at work was intrigued by the passion fruit, as many people had never tasted it before, so I was glad to have introduced them to something unconventional yet tasty. And once it was cut, the whole thing was demolished in mere moments. That, of course, is the best compliment of all!

(more…)

The Wages of Pie

Posted by the cookworm on June 13th, 2008

Have you ever gone strawberry picking? I went to a pick-your-own strawberry farm last weekend, and it was my first time doing so. The weather was incredibly hot, as it’s been for the past two weeks, but three of us were determined to stuff ourselves with local berries, so we dutifully crouched, sun-blocked and hatted, picking steadily in the heat. There were so many strawberries on the bushes that we could hop down the rows pretty quickly, making a game of nudging leaves and stems aside, peering through the foliage, and letting our fingers instinctively scout for half-hidden signals of bright red. Shift the leaves, reach for a berry, inspect, pick, and repeat. It ended up taking less than 45 minutes to fill three hefty boxes with an outrageous amount of strawberries - somewhere on the order of 15 pounds.

strawberry collage

The only thing about these wonderful berries is that they don’t last long, so the next game was trying to figure out how to use them all up in the few days we had until they began to turn soft. Eating them out of hand got old rather quickly, but I made some sauce to freeze, and also a strawberry crumble pie, inspired by ones I’d seen on Tigers and Strawberries and Allrecipes. My goal, as it often is, was a dessert both simple and homey, although there’s no good explanation for why it was perfectly reasonable to turn my oven on in 90 degree weather. Sometimes I wonder what a psychologist would say about my “baking rationalizations”!

Making the pie was a breeze, just a regular pie crust bottom (I used a very basic all-shortening one), sliced strawberries, and crowned with an easy crisplike topping. But this pie, good as it was, had a price…the trouble came when I decided to share it with my co-workers.

My first mistake was baking the pie in the morning before work. As I don’t yet own a pie-carrier, I improvised one out of a cardboard box that was just the right size for my pie plate. I gently set the pie in the box and carried it, still-warm, into my car and towards the office. When I reached my destination and stepped out of the car to retrieve the box, I realized that my pie had leaked piping-hot strawberry juice all over the back seat. Looking down, I also noticed a few thick stripes of pink on my white shirt, right on the place I had carefully held the box against my body en route from kitchen to car. I hurried up the elevator to the office kitchen to clean up, and opened the box to find a slick puddle of strawberry carnage sloshing at the bottom of the makeshift carrier. The pie itself looked quite unharmed, however…as though completely oblivious to the destruction it had just caused.

strawberry pie1

Luckily, once I wiped everything off, my car seat, carrying-box, and even the white shirt could be salvaged. Everyone at work really enjoyed the pie, and we agreed that it could only be made better by the addition of vanilla ice cream. The slightly crisp, buttery topping in particular was lovely with the soft, warm berries. Because the strawberries are so juicy, this pie does not slice into perfect pieces, but this should not deter you. It’s a very good homestyle dessert, and a fast way to use up an excess of berries. Whatever you do, though, just don’t force it to travel while hot!

(more…)

Pretty in Pink

Posted by the cookworm on June 8th, 2008

Rhubarb…of all the wonderful spring-seasonal foods, this may be my very favorite. I’ve gone through at least 5 pounds of it so far, too caught up in devouring it to snap any pictures. I recently made another batch of compote, though, and finally found a moment to capture its lovely pinkish-mauve hue.

I’ve been eating the compote on practically everything, especially spooned in thick, messy swirls with a dish of Greek yogurt. Regular yogurt is good, too, but the Greek stuff is so much creamier and more luxurious, which perfectly complements the tartness of the rhubarb.

rhubarb compote

Posting about something as simple as compote feels a bit like cheating, but the new job has still not left me as much time to cook and blog as much as I’d like (although I hope to change that soon with more diligent scheduling). I’ve suffered a few kitchen disasters recently, too, the most recent of which was a positively disgusting attempt at a vegetarian (i.e., no gelatine) and heavy-cream-free strawberry bavaroise. Without going into the gory details, let’s just say that sometimes there is just no substitute for the dairy power of heavy cream. On the (literally) brighter side, the sun has at last been shining its face regularly, so there are now plenty of opportunities for evening photographs.

The rhubarb compote doesn’t need much of a recipe, but I’ll include one anyway as a sort of guideline, with encouragement for personalization. I’ll admit to being a bit of a rhubarb purist and don’t often mix my rhubarb with anything but a smidge of sugar and lemon, but I’ve recently opened up to crystallized ginger and raspberries, which are excellent mix-ins. However you make it, rhubarb compote is terrific on pancakes, toast, panna cotta, grilled pork chops, ice cream, ricotta, and, well…just about anything that needs a little something tart, sweet, and tangy to cheer it up. It also freezes beautifully.

Rhubarb Compote
I like my compote very tangy, but feel free to use extra sugar (up to 1/4 cup more) if you prefer it a bit sweeter

1 1/2 pounds of rhubarb, washed and leaves removed, chopped into 1/2-inch pieces
1/3 cup granulated sugar
juice from half a lemon

Mix all ingredients together in a medium, heavy-bottomed saucepan. Cook on a medium flame, stirring occasionally, until rhubarb is very soft and almost syrupy - about 15 minutes. Taste and add more sugar if necessary. Serve warm or at room temperature, or refrigerate in an airtight container for one week.

A Very Important Date

Posted by the cookworm on June 1st, 2008

Well, here I am, late for my own party! Cookworm turned one on Friday, and where was I for the celebration? Alas, one is obliged to do unseemly tasks such as attend work every day and deal with misbehaving automobiles, so you’ll have a heart, right? But luckily I’ve been homebound this weekend while Miss Car gets a fix-up, so there’s been ample time to putter around the old blog. I’ve updated the design to make it a bit more colorful for summer (it’s a real departure, I know, and I may replace the background color with something more soothing, but for now I like it), and will be adding a few more features (like print-friendly recipes) soon. Let me know if you have any problems or if something doesn’t look right as I work out the kinks.

Along with cookworm’s anniversary, this also marks my 100th post. I don’t usually track numbers of posts, but I have to admit, it does sort of fit together nicely, doesn’t it? It almost seems hard to believe that it’s only been a year, although there’s still so much to learn and do. Although I started this blog partly to organize recipes and also to keep me busy when my boyfriend moved away, it’s become much more than that. I’ve met some great people and found the most terrific blogs, all of whom have inspired me to write more, try new recipes and techniques, and share ideas. It’s been great fun so far.

Now, is it time for the celebratory cake yet? Yes, indeed! - well, celebratory pudding, anyway. Since my flour reserves are depleted from bread-baking, I made this tasty self-saucing pudding from Bill Granger. It’s quick as a whistle to make, and is adapted to serve two chocoholics (or one little piglet) on a rainy day. It’s lighter in texture than the familiar molten chocolate cake, although the principle is the same: airy sponge giving way to warm chocolate goo within.

So with that, I raise my chocolatey cup in celebration of a wonderful year, and with many thanks to all who have stopped by to visit cookworm during this time. I hope to bring even better things in the year to come!

chocolate steamed pudding2

(more…)