Thursday, December 15, 2011
kimchi jjigae
I've been into watching the show "Kimchi Chronicles" on PBS lately - it's a show where chef Jean-Georges and his wife Marja (who is half Korean) travel throughout Korea and taste different Korean foods, and then they go back home and each cook up a version of the dishes they tasted. One weekend I watched an episode where they had kimchi jjigae, a spicy Korean kimchi soup. My mouth immediately started watering, and after that day I've been obsessed with it!
A couple of weeks later I was craving that spicy soup, so I decided to try making it using Marja's recipe. I didn't have any pork belly on hand, so instead I used a leftover rotisserie chicken, bones and all. I know, rotisserie chicken bones in kimchi jjigae is probably not the authentic way to make it, but I was desperate for some soup!
So I browned my leftover chicken and bones with some sesame oil in my cast iron pot, added thinly sliced onions and chopped kimchi, and then covered it with water. Then I brought it to a boil and then let it simmer for over half an hour, then added a bit of fish sauce and scallions and allowed it to simmer for another 10-15 minutes.
It was so simple to make, yet so delicious! Hot, sour, spicy, salty ... perfect for a cold winter day. Next time I'm definitely going to try it with the pork belly!
*** Update: I have no made this several times, using various meats such as leftover roast chicken or turkey, spam, or portugese sausage, and I still love it each time! One note about using portugese sausage - it makes the soup extra spicy, so beware when inhaling soup as the spiciness will make you cough!
Friday, December 9, 2011
thanksgiving birthday cake - pumpkin spice layer cake with browned butter cream cheese frosting piped roses
My cousin Yvonne's birthday was on Thanksgiving Day this year, and since the two of us are known to devour an entire pumpkin pie together, I decided to bake her a pumpkin spice layer cake. I used a recipe from Martha Stewart's "Cupcakes" book, except instead of making cupcakes I made two 8-inch round cakes.
While the cakes were cooling, I started on the filling and the frosting. I knew that I wanted to make brown butter cream cheese frosting (when I made that combination for my Halloween cupcakes, the flavors combined were delicious!), but I wanted the filling to be a bit lighter, since my family doesn't like desserts that are too sweet. So I whipped up some fresh whipped cream, and then added about a cup or so of the brown butter cream cheese frosting to it, to make a lighter filling with the same flavors.
Once my cake was filled and stacked, I let it set in the fridge so that I could add color to my remaining frosting. I was going for a peachy-pinky color, so I mixed pink with orange and a bit of yellow. Once that was ready, I applied my crumb coat of frosting (this is to seal the cake and to prevent any cake crumbs from ruining the finished frosting).
Since the first roses cake I made was so popular (inspired from the rose cake tutorial by I Am Baker), I decided to decorate this cake the same way. Using a 1M Wilton tip, I piped large roses all over the cake, and filled in the remaining spaces with swoops and swirls. I loved the way the specks (from the browned butter) in the frosting showed through the peachy color of the frosting. Although, while my frosting started out to be the perfect peachy color, after a few hours the color set and turned into more of a bright orange sherbet color! It wasn't what I was originally going for, but it actually worked out to match the whole Thanksgiving theme of the cake.
The final touch was a homemade birthday banner for the cake, similar to the one I made for my son's Superman birthday cake. I took differently patterned craft paper and cut small triangles out of them, then threaded them together with string and a sewing needle, and then wrote "HAPPY BIRTHDAY" on them. Then I attached the two ends of the banner to bamboo skewers ... I attached double-sided tape on the skewers, wound the string around the sticky part of the skewer, and finally tied the string securely in a few knots.
It was the perfect combination of Thanksgiving flavors, birthday cake look-and-feel, and girliness with the roses and patterned banner. Hope you enjoyed it, Yvonne! Happy Birthday!!!
Labels:
birthday cake,
cake,
flower cake,
rose cake,
thanksgiving,
yvonne
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
thanksgiving persimmon tart
I started out by making my favorite all-butter pie crust, and rolled it out into a 9-inch tart pan. While that chilled in the fridge, I washed, peeled, and sliced my persimmons. Then I added some sugar, flour, cinnamon, salt, and just a pinch of cloves, and tossed the sliced persimmons in it.
Then I pulled my chilled pie crust out of the fridge, and arranged my persimmon slices in a pretty pattern on top of the crust.
For the final touch, I brushed egg wash over the top of the exposed crust, and sprinkled on a bit of sanding sugar, before baking the tart in a 375 F oven for about 45 minutes.
This was my first time eating cooked persimmon - we usually just eat it raw, sliced thin or in thick wedges, and I have to say I think I actually prefer eating it raw. There's just something so delicious about the crunch and juiciness of a perfectly ripe persimmon. That said, while I loved the look of the finished tart, I think next time I'll stick to using other fruits for this type of tart, such as apples or pears, or rhubarb (my favorite!).
Labels:
pie,
tart,
thanksgiving,
thanksgiving pie
Thursday, December 1, 2011
lemon meringue pie
By the time I got to the signup sheet for my son Matthew's preschool Thanksgiving party, the only things left were things like napkins, plates, (boring!) and ... lemon meringue pie. Really? For Thanksgiving? In any case, I have never made lemon meringue pie, so of course I instantly put my name down! I wouldn't have ever thought to associate lemon meringue pie with Thanksgiving, but at least this year I didn't have to make an entire turkey for the party like I did last year!
For the crust I used my favorite all-butter crust recipe - I've used this crust for everything from rhubarb pie, chicken pot pie, pocket pies, savory tarts, and fruit tarts, and it always comes out great.
For the lemon curd filling, I chose this recipe from Gourmet on Epicurious, except I increased the lemon zest to one tablespoon (instead of 2 teaspoons), for more of a lemony flavor.
I also used the recipe's meringue topping, but instead of just spreading all the meringue on top of the pie, I used a piping bag fitted with a large star tip to pipe the meringue in decorative swirls.
Once assembled, the pie went back into the oven for the meringue brown nicely.
When it came out of the oven, I was so excited to try it since I had never made one before! And Matthew was so excited to bring it to school the next day!
Later on after the party, I asked Matthew how he liked the pie. He said he loved it, except ... he didn't like the yellow part!!! But, that's the "lemon" in "lemon meringue", I explained! Alas, he thought it was too sour. On the other hand, my husband and I both thought the filling was a perfect balance of tart, sweet, and creamy. And especially delicious when combined with flaky crust and soft clouds of meringue! Maybe one day when Matthew grows up, he too will learn to love the "lemon" in "lemon meringue"...
I also used the recipe's meringue topping, but instead of just spreading all the meringue on top of the pie, I used a piping bag fitted with a large star tip to pipe the meringue in decorative swirls.
Once assembled, the pie went back into the oven for the meringue brown nicely.
When it came out of the oven, I was so excited to try it since I had never made one before! And Matthew was so excited to bring it to school the next day!
Later on after the party, I asked Matthew how he liked the pie. He said he loved it, except ... he didn't like the yellow part!!! But, that's the "lemon" in "lemon meringue", I explained! Alas, he thought it was too sour. On the other hand, my husband and I both thought the filling was a perfect balance of tart, sweet, and creamy. And especially delicious when combined with flaky crust and soft clouds of meringue! Maybe one day when Matthew grows up, he too will learn to love the "lemon" in "lemon meringue"...
Labels:
lemon,
meringue,
pie,
thanksgiving,
thanksgiving pie
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
blogiversary and banana cream tuxedo cake
I totally missed my one year blogiversary. My very first post was October 5th of last year, and I totally forgot about it until I suddenly realized one day in November that I had missed it!
To celebrate, I decided to recreate a cake that I had eaten at a birthday party a few months ago. It was a banana cream cake - two layers of moist banana cake, filled with a thick layer of pastry cream, and covered with whipped cream. And it was delicious! To take it one step further, I wanted to decorate it like this tuxedo cake at Annie's Eats, with a gorgeous ganache glaze dripping down the sides.
For the cake I initially considered using my mom's banana bread recipe, which I love because it's so easy and very moist and delicious. But I thought perhaps I should choose a recipe intended for cake, since i wanted a cake-like fluffy texture. So I chose a recipe from David Lebovitz's book "Ready for Dessert". It called for ingredients that I would never think to pair with bananas, including cinnamon and espresso! I was curious to see how the combination would taste.
Once the cake was baked and cooled, I made a batch of pastry cream, using the recipe from my boston cream pie inspired cake. After letting the pastry cream cool in the fridge, I piped a thick layer on top of a layer of banana cake, and returned it to the fridge to let it set. When I though enough time had passed, I placed the second layer of banana cake on top, and placed it back in the fridge while I prepared the whipped cream frosting.
When I was ready to decorate the cake, I opened the fridge, and gasped when I saw that the pastry cream was oozing and dripping down the sides of the cake. Not pretty. I guess I didn't let it set enough. But I tried not to freak out, and just used a spatula to scrape off the excess pastry cream and dump it in the sink. What a waste. At least there was still a thin layer of pastry cream in between the two cakes!
After covering my cake with whipped cream and piping a shell border on the bottom, I returned it to the fridge and then began to make my ganache glaze. I used an Ina Garten recipe, and it was so simple to make - just semisweet chocolate, heavy cream! I didn't want the glaze to melt the whipped cream on my cake, so I waited for it to come to room temperature first. But perhaps I waited too long, because by the time I spread it over my cake, it wasn't drippy enough to ooze down the sides!
The next time I make this, I think I'd change a few things - a) I'd use my mom's banana bread recipe, as it is still my favorite; b) I'd lighten the pastry cream with whipped cream, which might help it from oozing out the sides; c) I'd spread the ganache when it's warm and still slightly runny. But the cake still ended up tasting great, and I especially loved the flavor combination of all the components! Bananas, chocolate, and cream - YUM! Perfect for a blogiversary! :)
Labels:
banana,
banana bread,
banana cake,
birthday cake,
blogiversary,
cake,
ganache,
tuxedo cake
Saturday, November 12, 2011
carnival birthday cake - red velvet cake filled with cream cheese frosting and topped with cream cheese buttercream
To go along with the carnival animal cookies that I made in my previous post, I also made a 12 x 17 inch red velvet carnival cake. The only other time I made a cake this large was the Superman birthday cake that I made for my son Matthew, and for that cake I had used four 9 x 13 inch cakes (two side-by-side, and two on top of that for the second layer). But I was hesitant to do that again, since I felt like I could see a line down the middle where the two sets of cakes met. So this time I bought a 12 x 17 inch cake pan, so that I could make it the right way!
(Notice in the picture above the size of the 9 x 13 inch pan is on the left, compared to the giant 12 x 17 inch pan on the right!)
I thought since I had the right pan this time, that everything would go smoothly. But since the pan was so large, I found myself extending the baking time over and over again so that the middle of the cake could finish baking. When the middle was finally done and the cakes came out of the oven, I could already see that the edges of the cake were overdone, and even looked crispy! So after the cakes had cooled, I sliced off about half an inch of cake from each of the edges.
After applying a crumb coating over the whole cake, and a second coating over the top of the cake, I started to decorate my sides. I was inspired by the red and yellow stripes of Martha Stewart's carnival cake, and thought the look would go perfectly with this cake. I had brainstormed different ways to make the carnival stripes, but in the end went with the original idea (see below, my brainstorming sketches for the cookies and the cake).
Next, I piped a shell border along the bottom and the top of the cake, and then I was ready to add the final touches to the top of the cake.
To tie in with the animal cookies, I used black icing and a star tip with various colors of icing to pipe the face of a giraffe:
an elephant:
and a lion:
And finally, I added a birthday message with black icing. I had originally also wanted to include fondant stars on skewers or florist wire, but in the end I left it out because I didn't want to clutter the cake. Instead, I bought a little star-shaped candle to go along with the cake (not pictured).
Hope you had an awesome first birthday Jianna!
Labels:
birthday cake,
cake,
carnival,
elephant,
giraffe,
lion,
red velvet
Sunday, November 6, 2011
circus carnival animal cookies - giraffes, lions, and elephants
My friend Cindy has a friend Michelle who was planning a carnival-themed birthday party for her daughter, and she asked me to make cookies shaped like animals for the party favors. After a few emails back and forth, I decided on making elephants, lions, and giraffes. (Luckily a few months ago I had purchased this animal cookie cutter set, so a variety of different animals were at my fingertips!)
After baking and cooling my cookies, I set out to decorate the cookies with royal icing. I decided to pipe the elephants in blue, and after the first layer of icing had dried (overnight), I piped on eyes and ears and outlined the elephant for the finishing touches.
For the giraffes, I piped them in yellow, and while the icing was still wet I dropped in some brown royal icing for the spots. Then after all that had dried, I piped on the eyes and a yellow outline.
The lions were also piped in yellow, and after they dried overnight I piped on a bright orange mane, eyes, and outlined it in yellow as well. For the mane, I couldn't decide between a curly-Q mane or a solid filled-in mane, so I ended up doing both!
I loved all the colors of the final result! Stay tuned for my upcoming post on the carnival cake that I made to go with these cookies!
*** Update: The carnival cake post can be found here!
Labels:
carnival,
cookies,
elephant,
elephant cookies,
giraffe,
giraffe cookies,
lion,
lion cookies,
royal icing cookies
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