Showing posts with label birthday cake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birthday cake. Show all posts

Saturday, October 2, 2021

BAKING WITH OLIVE OIL, cont.

Non-traditional pineapple upside-down cake--with olive oil and pomegranate.


This week I cooked for a dear friend’s birthday. Her only request was “those spring rolls with mint,” rice paper rolls filled with shrimp, bean sprouts, rice vermicelli and fresh mint with a gingery dipping sauce. I cooked a mild chicken-coconut curry with mango and cashews to follow. And birthday cake, with lots of whipped cream!


A can of pineapple in the cupboard, offloaded from a sailing voyage, inspired me to make an old-fashioned pineapple upside-down cake, such as my mom used to make when I was a kid. Only I customized the original recipe, substituting olive oil for the butter in the cake batter. Olive oil seems to go especially well with fruity flavors, such as pineapple.

My mother’s recipe—I think from The Good Housekeeping Cookbook—called for maraschino cherries to fill the centers of the pineapple rings. There are no maraschino cherries in my pantry, nor even any cranberries, a colorful alternative. I used ruby-red pomegranates, in season now, embedded in the gooey glaze for the punch of color. 

Happy birthday, Charlotte!



Pineapple Upside-Down Cake with Olive Oil
Tarta al Revés con Piña

1 (20-ounce) can sliced pineapple
¼ cup butter
½ cup brown sugar
6 walnuts
1 ½ cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon salt
Pinch of ground cloves
½ cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
2 eggs
½ cup pineapple juice
Grated lemon zest
Pomegranate seeds (optional)
Whipped cream to serve

Drain the pineapple, saving the juice.

Lightly grease a 9-inch cake pan.

In a heavy skillet, melt the butter with the brown sugar. Let it cook 2 minutes. Carefully pour the butter-sugar into the cake pan and spread it evenly. Place rings of pineapple in the pan, cutting additional slices to fill in the spaces between rings. (Save any remaining pineapple for another use.) Break the walnuts into pieces and push them in between the pineapple. 

Preheat oven to 350ºF.

Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cloves. 

Combine the sugar and oil in a mixing bowl. Using a mixer, beat the sugar and oil together until light. Add the eggs and beat 2 minutes. Add the dry ingredients alternating with ½ cup of the reserved pineapple juice. Stir in the lemon zest.

Pour the batter over the pineapple in the pan. Bake the cake until a tester comes out clean, about 40 minutes. 

Let the cake set 5 minutes. Have ready a cake platter. While cake is still hot, very carefully (use oven mitts) place the platter on top of the pan and invert the pan, releasing the cake onto the platter. Let it set a minute so all the butter and sugar drains onto the cake. Remove pan. 

If using pomegranate, scatter the seeds over the cake and push them gently into the still-warm topping. 


More recipes for baking with olive oil:







Saturday, April 22, 2017

APRIL IS BIRTHDAY MONTH

We seem to have a lot of April birthdays in our family—grandparents, cousins, my son Benjamin. So there’s inevitably at least one birthday cake on the agenda.


My usual favorite for birthdays is a carrot cake, which is big enough to serve a party. For Ben’s spring birthday the cake was always accompanied by strawberries. Son Daniel would get pomegranates for an October birthday.

"Gypsy's arm" cake roll, lovely for spring birthdays. Serve with bubbly cava to celebrate.

This year I decided to do something different—a roulade filled with white chocolate mousse. In Spanish, it’s called brazo de gitano—meaning “gypsy’s arm,” presumably because the filled and rolled cake sort of looks like an arm. I’ve noticed that in current pastry packaging, the cake is just called “brazo.” The gypsy designation has disappeared, perhaps because singling out that ethnic group is not politically correct in this day and age.

Ben was off to a birthday barbecue afternoon, shared with a friend with a birthday the day before his. He decided that he wanted a carrot cake too. He got it started; I finished it up. Both cakes went to the party!

"Brazo" in arms.

Cake filling is a white chocolate mousse.

Cake and filling are light and sweet. Strawberries are a nice accompaniment.

“Gypsy’s Arm” (Rolled Cake with White Chocolate Filling)
Brazo de Gitano con Chocolate Blanco


Use either the Custard Cream Filling or the White Chocolate Mousse Filling for this rolled cake, also called roulade, Swiss roll or jelly roll. (You will need some custard cream to make the white chocolate mousse; the remainder can be saved for another pastry.) If using the plain custard, flavor the cake and filling with grated lemon zest. If choosing the white chocolate, flavor it with vanilla.

While still warm, roll up the sponge layer with the towel.

The cake—a simple sponge—bakes in a sheet pan lined with parchment. While still warm, unmold it onto a clean dish towel that has been lightly sprinkled with confectioners’ sugar. Roll cake up with the towel.

When the filling is ready, unroll the cake, spread the filling and use the towel as a guide to roll the cake around the filling. Use the towel to lift the cake and ease it onto a serving platter. 

Makes 10 1-inch slices.

For the sponge cake roll
4 eggs, separated
2/3 cup sugar
1 cup flour, sifted
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
Pinch of salt
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
2 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar
Custard cream or white chocolate mousse filling (recipes follow)
1 teaspoon unsweetened cocoa powder


Preheat oven to 350ºF. Prepare a jellyroll pan or rimmed baking sheet, 11 X 17 inches. Brush it with oil, then place a sheet of baking parchment on the bottom.

Place the egg whites in a mixing bowl and beat them at high speed until stiff.

In another bowl, combine the yolks and sugar. Beat on medium speed until thick and pale. Beat in a quarter of the egg whites. Then fold in remaining whites.

Sift the flour, baking powder and salt into the batter and fold it in with the vanilla.

Spread the batter evenly in the baking pan. It will be very thin. Bake until cake springs back when pressed in the center, about 12 minutes.

Spread a clean dish towel on a work surface and sprinkle it with 1 tablespoon of confectioners’ sugar. Reverse the cake while still warm onto the towel. Peel off the baking parchment. While cake is still warm, roll it with the towel into a long cylinder.

Unroll the cake and spread it with the custard cream filling or white chocolate mousse. Using the cloth as a helper, roll up the cake, enclosing the filling. Roll the cake onto a serving dish and allow it to cool.

Sift remaining powdered sugar over the top. Sift cocoa over the sugar. 

Refrigerate the cake. Use a serrated knife to slice it.

Use an offset spatula to spread mousse on the cake.

Roll the cake, enclosing the mousse filling.

The filled and rolled cake. Ends can be trimmed.


Place strips of parchment alongside the cake and sift sugar over it.  Remove parchment with excess sugar.

Sift cocoa over the sugar.



Custard Cream Cake Filling
Crema Pastelera

Makes 2 cups of custard. You will need only 2/3 cup to make the White Chocolate Mousse. The custard also can be served as a pudding or spooned over fresh fruit.

If using the custard cream for the White Chocolate Mousse, it can be prepared in advance, refrigerated, and melted along with the chocolate.

2 cups milk
1/3 cup cornstarch
2/3 cup sugar
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla extract (or lemon zest)


In a bowl combine ½ cup of the milk and the cornstarch. Stir until it is very smooth. Add the sugar and egg yolks to the cornstarch and beat until smooth.

Scald the remaining milk. Pour it through a strainer into a heat-proof pitcher. While beating the egg mixture with a whisk, slowly pour the hot milk into the eggs.

Place the custard mixture in a clean pan on a medium heat, beating constantly, until it thickens. Cook, stirring, on a low heat 5 minutes more. Remove and stir in the vanilla. Beat the custard well, then let it cool before spreading on cake.

White Chocolate Mousse Filling
Mousse de Chocolate Blanco

Chilling bowl and beaters makes whipping the cream faster.

2 teaspoons unflavored gelatin
¼ cup water
2/3 cup of Custard Cream Filling (recipe above)
4 ounces white chocolate, broken into pieces
1 cup whipping cream


Sprinkle gelatin over water and allow to soften 5 minutes.

Set a heatproof bowl over a pan of simmering water. Put in the custard cream and the chocolate. Heat, stirring frequently, until chocolate is melted. Add the gelatin and stir until dissolved and the custard cream is smooth. Remove from the heat. Scrape into a chilled bowl.

Fold whipped cream into white chocolate.

Beat the cream until stiff. Beat a scoop of the cream into the chocolate-custard filling, then fold the rest of the cream into the filling. Refrigerate 15 minutes. The mousse filling is now ready to spread on the cake.





Why is the cake called a "brazo"? It does sort of look like an arm.



Birthday boy, Ben, gets a carrot cake too. Not nearly enough candles!

More birthday cake recipes:

Layer Cake with Apricots and Marzipan (Bizcocho de Toledo) http://mykitcheninspain.blogspot.com.es/2011/12/seasons-greetings-with-marzipan.html  
Sugar-free Almond Torte (Torta de Almendras sin Azucar) http://mykitcheninspain.blogspot.com.es/2016/04/the-dessert-dilemma.html  

Saturday, April 19, 2014

BIRTHDAY CAKE: VARIATION ON AN OLD FAVORITE


We’re celebrating a birthday this week! At our house, birthdays almost always mean carrot cake. When the kids were growing up, I could depend on the carrot cake recipe, even with a cranky Spanish oven, and I knew the cake would feed a bunch of kids gathered for a party.

Original recipe, tattered and stained.
But, after all these years (older son turned 40 last year, second son is a significant 39), that tried and true recipe has gotten a make-over. The main change is to use extra virgin olive oil in place of the generic “salad oil” called for in the original. I’ve also reduced the sugar by a fourth and changed the spicing. I use only one teaspoon of cinnamon and add chopped fresh ginger, crushed cardamom seeds and lots of grated orange zest. These flavorings complement the olive oil beautifully. I still add raisins, but like to use dry apricots as well. Sometimes I substitute almonds for walnuts. It's definitely a more grown-up cake, but kids seem to love it too. (OK, grandson picks out the raisins.)

I found a recipe in a Spanish cookbook published by a local lady (Mas Ollas Que Días, by Josefa Ruiz Arnao) for Tarta “Hippy.” It is a basic carrot cake, with almonds, chopped figs and raisins, making a very Spanish rendition. The designation of "hippy cake" made me smile. 


I made this birthday cake in the same old bundt pan I’ve always used. Its six-cup capacity is too small for the amount of batter the recipe makes, so I wind up making a little cake on the side. (In the recipe I suggest using an eight-cup pan.) The ring mold is good, because it lets oven heat penetrate to the center of the cake. But, I think next time I’ll try baking the cake in three layer pans.

I’ve also used the carrot cake recipe to make Olive Oil Carrot Muffins, reducing the sugar to ½ cup. They are so good served with (unsweetened) cream cheese or any soft cheese.

Olive oil is a principal ingredient in this carrot cake.


Olive Oil Carrot Cake
Tarta de Zanahorias



Extra virgin olive oil.
3 cups all-purpose flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon salt
1 ½ cups sugar
1 cup extra virgin olive oil + additional to grease pan
4 eggs
¼ teaspoon crushed cardamom
1 teaspoon chopped fresh ginger
Zest of 1 orange
2 cups grated carrots (about 5)
1 cup chopped walnuts or almonds
1/3 cup seedless raisins
1/3 cup dry apricots, chopped


Preheat oven to 350ºF. Lightly grease an 8-cup bundt pan or ring mold.

Sift together the flour, baking powder, soda, cinnamon and salt.

Combine sugar and oil in a large mixing bowl. Beat well. Beat in eggs one at a time until mixture is thick and creamy. Add cardamom, ginger and orange zest.

Beat in the dry ingredients. Fold in the carrots, nuts, raisins and apricots. Pour the batter into the pan. Bake for 1 hour without opening the oven door. Test the cake with a skewer—it is done when the skewer comes out clean. Bake 15 minutes more, as necessary.

Cool cake in pan for 15 minutes before removing it. Frost while cake is still warm. (Recipe below.)

Olive oil carrot cake is moist and flavorful.


Frosting
1 small package cream cheese
½ cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoon orange zest


Cream all ingredients. Spread on warm cake.