Saturday, July 19, 2025

Strawberry Shortcake for a Crowd


It may be past strawberry season where you live, but we are still enjoying fresh strawberries from the Hwy. 12 stand. No strawberries? Try this with blackberries, which are in season right now many places.

This is based on an idea on the King Arthur Baking website and has probably also been on their blog. You bake a large (9 x 13-inch) cake then top it with lots of freshly whipped cream, making dips and valleys and higher spots with the cream as you spread it out, then top with  juicy fruit (could probably also use peaches or plums!). The juices pool in the dips and valleys. Cut into squares and serve!  It's a bit messy but soooo good. 




I made a double recipe of the Vanilla Warm Buttermilk Cake for this. The recipe for the single recipe can be found HERE. Just double it. I tried splitting it and putting strawberries in the middle, but it was really difficult because the cake is not sturdy enough for that method and partially fell apart. The photo of the slice shows it that way, but I recommend not splitting the cake, so whole cake, whipped cream, fruit should work better! If you hull and slice the strawberries in the morning, sprinkle them with sugar and let sit and marinate until dinner time, you should have lots of juice. Didn't do it this way, but you might think about poking the cake with a skewer all over before putting on the cream and that way some of the juices will soak into the cake...I think.



Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Let's Hear It for the Chocolate Version


 

Sweetie isn't usually a cake person, but he really liked the Warm Buttermilk Vanilla Cake that I made in May and then again, in a larger version, in June. Monday night we had guests for dinner and we also had some raspberries from the Hwy 12 farm stand, so I decided to see if I could make the same cake in a chocolate version. A square of the chocolate cake, some whipped cream, a handful of fresh raspberries and another dollop of whipped cream not only looked pretty, but it was delicious! Now I want to share that chocolate version with you so that you, too, can try a yummy, moist chocolate cake that is easy to make. On Wednesday I made the same dessert, but used a cherry compote I made, plus ripe, sweet, pitted dark red cherries. I liked that version better. 

Probably the most unusual thing about this recipe, in either the vanilla or the chocolate versions, is that you melt some butter and then add buttermilk to that. The buttermilk combines with the butter and also gets warm.  I does mean that you have a pot to clean along with the mixing bowl and beater(s), but the results are worth the extra effort...you'll see.

I was planning on serving this cake with some fresh cherries on Monday, but ran out of time, so the raspberries worked well. The only thing that I wished I had done was to have a sauce...or even some raspberry syrup...to add along with the berries and cream. It would have tied it all together and added some extra juiciness. Good without, but probably better with. Next time!

The cherry version (which I took photos of...but no photos of the raspberry version...sorry) benefited by the cherry compote being added. It not only offset the slightly dry chocolate cake, but it really carried the cherry flavor throughout the dessert.

To make this dessert place a square of cake on a plate or in a shallow bowl. Top with the warm Cherry Compote (about 1/4 cup per serving if serving 4), top the compote with a large dollop of whipped cream, then top the whipped cream with about 1/2 cup of the fresh cherries. It's fine that the cherries fall off the cake and down to the plate or bowl. Serve at once.



Warm Buttermilk Chocolate Cake
2 eggs
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 cup cake flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt

!/4 cup dark cocoa powder
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons buttermilk

In a large mixing bowl, beat eggs, sugar and vanilla on high until thick and lemon-colored, about 4 minutes. Combine flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cocoa powder and sift together twice; add flour mixture to egg mixture. Beat on low just until combined. Melt butter in a small saucepan until butter melts. Remove from heat and stir in the buttermilk. Add to batter; beat thoroughly (the batter will be thin). Pour into a greased 9-in. square baking pan. Bake in a preheated 350 degrees F oven for 20-25 minutes or until cake tests done. If top browns too quickly, tent with foil. Cool 5 minutes in the pan, then turn out on a wire rack to cool completely. Cut into 9 squares.   

Warm Cherry Compote

1 cup cherries (I used about 1/4 Rainier cherries and 3/4 Bing cherries), pitted and cut into quarters
1 teaspoon cornstarch
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1/4 cup water

In a small pot combine all the ingredients, stirring well so that all the cornstarch is mixed in. Place the pot over very low heat, cover, and cook for 1 minute. Uncover, stir, cover and cook for 3 minutes. Uncover, stir, and continue cooking, stirring occasionally, until sauce thickens and cherries are warmed through. It is now ready to serve or store until needed. Rewarm over low heat to bring out the cherry flavor and to have the sauce be more liquid.

Whipped Cream

In a chilled mixer bowl pour 1 pint heavy whipping cream. Attach the whisk attachment. Start on low and gradually increase speed to highest setting. Beat until the cream is thick enough to dollop. Use at once.

Cherries

Pit and chunk 2 cups of fresh ripe Bing cherries. Use at once on top of the dessert.



Friday, July 11, 2025

Zuccanoes and an Aioli Feast



Many, many moons ago a very artistic cook wrote...actually hand-lettered...and hand illustrated (no photos) an amazing cookbook called the Moosewood Cookbook. The recipes are vegetarian but you won't miss the meat because they are soo good. 

Once the zucchini in my garden start producing a few every day, I almost always remember how much I love the Zuccanoes, which are actually stuffed zucchini. This is an especially good recipe if you've missed one of the squash which was hiding under one of those big leaves and it got to be 7 or 8 inches long...or longer! You slice it in half long wise and scoop out some of the inner part. If the zucchini has gotten more than a day or two old, you may be scooping out a lot of seeds...that's O.K. I sometimes just discard the seedy part that I remove. Below is the photo of the finished zuccanoe. Looks a bit like a canoe made out of a half of a zucchini, right? Love the melty cheese on top!


Now comes the fun part. You get to make a filling. The recipe calls for mushrooms, onions, garlic and sunflower seeds. Sometimes I do it that way and sometimes I make my own combination. A few days ago I combined some leftover brown rice (about a cup), some onion (1/4 of a large one) that I had cooked in a bit of olive oil for a few minutes, four or five cherry tomatoes, diced, some frozen corn (about 1/3 cup) that I defrosted in the microwave, a lone steamed and peeled golden beet that I found in the fridge, and some seasonings like salt, pepper and Italian herb mix. All of that went into the scooped out part of the two zucchini halves, then I put a three cheese mixture on top (equal parts Parmesan, shredded mozzarella and shredded cheddar) and then baked them in a small baking dish at 350 until tender, about 18-20 minutes. Delicious and I used up two leftovers! There was more filling, so I heated that up completely in a small skillet and served it along side the zuccanoes.

Yesterday for dinner I decided to make an aioli feast. Aioli is basically garlic mayo and you make it in a blender. It's another recipe from the Moosewood Cookbook and it's home territory is the south of France. You serve that wonderful sauce with warm and cool veggies and you can throw in leftovers if you don't care if you are authentic. The photo at the top of the post shows my version last night.

I served mine with steamed green beans, small chunks of red potatoes that I'd boiled until tender and then drained, a yellow zucchini that I sliced and then browned in a skillet, cherry tomatoes, and warmed leftover grilled chicken and sausage. It was delicious and I still have aioli in the fridge for another meal...and I had garlic breath! Other veggies that work well include broccoli, cauliflower, carrot sticks, mushrooms, and steamed beets. Hard cooked eggs are nice, too.




Here is the recipe for the Aioli found in the Moosewood Cookbook by Mollie Katzen. This garlic-mayonnaise sauce is on the thin side, but fully flavored.

Combine in a blender and blend well:
1/4 cup fresh-squeezed lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon salt
 1/2 teaspoon tamari
2 medium cloves crushed garlic
1 whole egg
2 egg yolks

After those are well blended at high speed, take off the cap so that you can pour into the blender. Turn the speed down to medium. Measure 1 cup oil...all or part olive oil...in a measuring cup that pours well.

Very gradually, drizzle in the oil a little at a time. After a few tablespoons have been drizzled in, gradually dribble in the rest of the oil in a slow, thin stream until all the oil is entered. The mixture should be fairly thick. Once it's thick, turn off the blender...if you beat too much it will get thin again which is not what you want.

Transfer to a covered jar or bowl and put in the fridge until ready to use if it's not already meal time. Be generous with this sauce for dipping those warm  and cool veggies (and protein if you like). It makes a nice topping for fish, too.


Saturday, July 05, 2025

Fresh Apricot Cake



Recently we purchased a bag of beautiful, ripe, fresh apricots at the farm stand on Hwy 12, just outside of Sebastopol to the east. I didn't really know what I wanted to do with them, but the next day I processed them by dipping briefly in boiling water, then putting them into cold water. That way the skin slips off easily and they are ready to slice and to have the pit removed. I ended up with a good sized container of ready-to-use fresh apricot slices. A few slices were used over the next couple of days in cereal and other dishes, but they were getting nearer to the end of time to use them, so I needed a recipe that could take a lot of them. 


I needed something to bring to a potluck on the 4th of July. What better way to use the fresh apricots than in a picnic cake. I wanted a cake that was moist so that it didn't need any icing or other embellishment, one that would be easy to transport to the picnic, and one that would not be too sweet because the hostess prefers sweets with a tang and not very sweet. I found the perfect recipe in Dorie Greenspan's cookbook Around My French Table. In her book the cake is made with apples, but I knew that I could make it work with my fresh apricots.

Of course there were changes to be made. First off, I don't own an 8-inch springform pan, so I had to adjust for a 9-inch springform pan. Then I found that the freshly laid eggs that were a gift from a neighbor were on the small side. As it turned out that worked well. I used three small eggs instead of two large, increased the flour and baking powder a bit to both absorb the extra egg and to make the batter work in the larger pan. I kept the butter the same knowing that the apricots would have more moisture than the apples so there would be sufficient moisture. I added 1/4 teaspoon of almond extract since almond is a great flavor with apricots. I also put in 3 tablespoons of run, another great flavor with fruit. The sliced almonds on top were also my addition, both for looks and to keep the almond theme going.  As you can see, there were so many changes that this is truly a variation of the original recipe. Even, so, I'm going to give the recipe for the 8-inch springform pan since  I didn't write down the amounts of the changes I made.

Do try this yourself! Everyone at the picnic who tried a slice really, really liked it. It's moist, tender, buttery, has that unbeatable fresh apricot flavor and is delicious!



Fresh Apricot Cake

a variation of Marie-Helene's Apple Cake in Dorie Greenspan's Around My French Table 

3/4 cup all-purpose flour
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
Pinch of salt
4 cups fresh apricots that have been peeled, pitted, and sliced into 1/2-inch slices
2 large eggs
3/4 cup sugar
3 tablespoons dark rum
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted and cooled
1 tablespoon sliced almonds

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and center a rack in the oven. Generously butter an 8-inch springform pan. Line a baking sheet with parchment or a silicon baking mat. Put the springform pan on it.

In a small bowl whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt.

In a medium bowl beat the eggs with a whisk until they're foamy. (I used my Kitchen Aid mixer and the whisk attachment.

Pour in the sugar and whisk for a minute or so to blend. Whisk in the rum, vanilla, and almond extract.

Whisk in half the flour, and, when it's incorporated, whisk in half the melted and cooled butter. Scrape the bowl, then whisk in the rest of the flour, followed by the rest of the melted butter, mixing gently after each addition. Scrape the bowl and whisk for a few seconds to incorporate the scrapings. You should have a batter that is smooth and rather thick. Switch to a rubber or silicon spatula and fold in the apricots, turning the fruit so that it's coated with the batter and fairly evenly distributed in the batter.

Scrape the batter into the prepared springform pan. Smooth it with the spatula so that it is pretty evenish. Sprinkle evenly with the sliced almonds.

Slide the pan into the oven and bake for 50 to 60 minutes, or until the top of the cake is golden brown and a knife inserted deep into the center comes out clean. The cake may pull away from the sides of the pan. That's OK. Transfer to a cooling rack and cool for 5 minutes.

Carefully run a blunt knife around the sides of the pan and remove the sides of the springform pan carefully. Use the blunt knife to loosen any apricots sticking to the sides before opening the sides fully.

Allow the cake to cool until it's just slightly warm or is at room temperature, then run a long spatula between the cake and the pan bottom, cover the top of the cake with a piece of parchment or wax paper, invert onto a rack, carefully remove the bottom of the pan, and turn the cake over onto a serving dish. Remove the parchment or wax paper and you are ready to serve.

If taking to a picnic, let cool completely, then wrap in plastic wrap for transport.

This cake will keep for about 2 days at room temperature. Don't cover, just let sit at room temperature with a piece of plastic wrap or waxed paper up against any cut surfaces.