Sunday, May 15, 2011

Yellow Cake with Chocolate Frosting

             Growing up, my mom always made homemade cakes for every birthday, party, or random event held at my house. Her specialty: devils food chocolate cake with homemade cream cheese frosting. Delicious! Raising two kids who are 11 months apart (Michelle and I were born in the same year, and yes, we are Irish twins), my mom never had time to fully bake a cake from scratch, so she used a box of Duncan Hines Devil’s Food Cake, and made her own cream cheese frosting (the recipe is here). Even though she doesn’t have to deal with two whining, complaining children anymore, she still has trouble finding time to bake anything from scratch, between work and cleaning up after four messy people and a dog. While I love eating and baking homemade goods, I grew up on this cake, so I really have no complaints and I love when my mom makes it. Like the rest of my family, I am a huge chocolate fan, so this cake has never disappointed anyone, and it continues to be a favorite amongst family and friends to this day. While I love Mom’s special chocolate birthday cake, sometimes I crave the exact opposite: yellow cake with chocolate frosting.
            I don’t know why, but the thought of eating a homemade yellow cake with chocolate frosting makes my mouth water, so I decided it would be a great idea to make a homemade yellow cake for my graduation party. In all of my 18 years of life, I have yet to have a homemade yellow butter cake, yet it is probably my favorite cake in the entire world. With 4 ½ days left of school and graduation coming up soon, I recently embarked on an internet journey to find a great yellow butter cake and chocolate frosting recipe. With many recipes out there, I found a recipe that looks promising, and while I have yet to try it out due to the end of the year craziness, I am excited to try the recipe and hopefully use it to make my graduation cake!



Yellow Cake with Chocolate Frosting

Time: 1 Hour
Makes: 1 two layer 9x 1 ½ inch cake

Ingredients:
      Cake:
            6 large egg yolks
            1 cup milk
            2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
            3 cups sifted cake flour
            1 ½ cups granulated white sugar
            1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon baking powder
            ¾ teaspoon salt
            12 teaspoons unsalted butter, room temp and cut into pieces
      Frosting:
            1 (8 ounce) package cream cheese
            ¼ cup confectioners’ sugar
            ¼ cup heavy whipping cream
            1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
           
Procedure:
   Cake:
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F
  2. Spray two 9-inch x 1 1/2 inch (23 x 4 cm) cake pans with Pam cooking spray
  3. In a medium bowl, lightly combine the egg yolks, ¼ cup milk, and vanilla extract
  4. In the bowl of your electric mixer, combine the dry ingredients (flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt) and mix on low speed for about 30 seconds or until blended.
  5. Add the butter and remaining 3/4 cup (180 ml) milk. Mix on low speed until the dry ingredients are moistened.  Increase the mixer speed to medium and beat for about 2 minutes to aerate and develop the cake's structure.
  6. Gradually add the egg mixture, in 3 additions, beating about 30 seconds after each addition to incorporate the egg.
  7. Divide the batter and pour into the prepared pans, smoothing the surface with an offset spatula.
  8. Bake 25 to 35 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean and the cake springs back when pressed lightly in center.
  9. Cool completely before frosting on wire racks.
   Frosting:
  1. In double boiler melt chips and add heavy cream, mix until smooth take off of heat.
  2. In mixing bowl cream together sugar and cream cheese until smooth, slowly add chocolate mixture. Mixture will thicken up as the chocolate cools.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Field Trip to Market Basket

Yesterday, my writing class took a field trip to the local Market Basket, which is conveniently located a little over a mile away from my high school. Throughout my high school career, I think I have been on one or two field trips, so when the news of this field trip was announced, I was stoked. The trip was planned for our long block, which is an 80 minute block, plus a half hour for lunch, place smack-dab in the middle of the school day, leaving us plenty of time to walk to Market Basket and back without missing any of our other classes.
While it was not a very nice day out, it was sprinkling slightly and clouds were completely covering the sky, the walk to and from the store was refreshing. It was not cold out by any means, very comfortable actually, and I always love the chance to get out during school. While the weather was decent enough to take a walk, it was a long walk, especially for someone who is slightly sick and beyond exhausted from the lack of sleep that occurs over a vacation.
            The point of this field trip was to look at products and see how they are marketed. We were to look around the store and view the writing on products, and study how they capture the attention of the buyer, and persuade them to purchase that product. While doing so, we were also to look around for any spelling and/or grammatical mistakes. After this experience, I realized how well done the marketing is for food, since I found not a single mistake (that could also be because I wasn’t looking too hard, oops). However, a few mistakes were found. One of them surprised me, it was on a bag of chips from a pretty decent company; the other mistake was found on a sign printed by Market Basket.


            After we left Market Basket, we walked to a chain restaurant called D’Angelo’s to get some lunch. There, I got a bland turkey sub with lettuce, tomato, onion, and mayonnaise. The turkey had pretty much no flavor at all, and all I could taste was over-bearing amounts of mayonnaise. I only ate half of the small sub I paid a little less than $6 for, so I was still a little hungry after. I didn’t pack a full lunch for that day since I knew that I would not be eating at school, and I was really hoping to stop at Panera for a nice, healthy, delicious sandwich, but that didn’t happen. Needless to say, I was delighted when I returned to school and found out that my mom had slipped cut up oranges and crackers in my bag, just in case.

Monday, April 25, 2011

7 Layer Cookie Bars

This past weekend, I experienced my first 7 layer cookie bar, ever. Surprising, I know, as I am a total dessert girl. Not knowing what it was, I was excited, and a little nervous to try the small cut up bars that were sitting in front of me. Before I discovered the recipe to these delicious little treats, all I noticed about them was layer upon layer of sweet gooey-ness, all topped with coconut, a delicacy I have always been iffy with. I love the flavor of coconut (so much in fact that my car has consistently had a coconut air refresher in it since it was bought this past summer), but I have never liked the gritty texture of it, let alone that when it is shaved it is almost impossible to completely chew and swallow without leaving bits of coconut stuck in between your teeth.
While I never thought my issues with coconut would ever cease, they did, which is truly a miracle. Apparently, the trick to making coconut a completely delicious treat is to toast it, which is not something I had ever thought of before. Toasting the shavings makes them a little less malleable; therefore they can be chewed and swallowed without any difficulty. Coconut is the perfect topping to these scrumptious little treats.
While these cookie bars are probably the most delicious treats I have ever tried, they are terrible for you. Consisting of everything sweet and fattening, including sweetened condensed milk, these are a snack that should only be made on occasion, and should never be eaten days in a row like I ate them when I first had them (I think I ate about 4 to 8 squares a day for around 4 days until they were gone; not good.). To try and find a healthier version of these bars, I searched the internet for around an hour and a half, searching everywhere I could, but to no luck, I didn’t find a cookie bar that promised the same delicious flavors that this recipe does. Each healthy version still included some type of candy that was beyond fattening, or the sweetened condensed milk that promises an unhealthy treat. So, it is safe to say, if you want to enjoy a truly delicious cookie bar, a trip to the gym after is 100% necessary (if you eat them like I did)!


7 Layer Cookie Bars
Time: 45 minutes
Makes: 12 servings

Ingredients:
            ½ cup butter
            1 cup graham cracker crumbs
            1 cup butterscotch chips
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
            1 1/3 cup flaked coconut
            ½ cup walnuts, chopped
1 can sweetened condensed milk

Procedure:
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F
  2. Melt butter in a 13 x 9 x 2 inch pan
  3. Sprinkle graham cracker crumbs evenly over butter
  4. Sprinkle in layers, chocolate chips, butterscotch chips, nuts, and top with coconut
  5. Pour condensed milk over all
  6. Bake for 30 minutes
  7. Let cool and cut in bars

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

The Ultimate Oatmeal Cookie

Nothing beats homemade cookies, especially store bought cookies. Yes, they are purchased already cooked for you, saving the precious time and money it takes to make your own cookie dough, heat the oven, and bake them, but are they really worth it? In my opinion, all store bought cookies do not live up to the cookie name, and they are definitely not worth it in any way. Besides the fact that they are relatively dry and flavorless, you never know when these cookies were “baked”, and you don’t know the quality of the ingredients used. On top of that, you never get to experience warm, gooey cookies that just came out of the oven, or scrape the rest of the cookie dough out of the bowl to enjoy raw (I know all of you do that, don’t deny it). You also never get to enjoy the delightful scent that flows through your house after baking a batch of cookies, a scent that could never be recreated by simply burning a cookie-scented candle. While I do enjoy an occasional Chips Ahoy! cookie, nothing beats homemade cookies in my heart.
Homemade cookies never fail to put a smile on my face. Mouth-watering and delicious, they come in a small, rich, and flavorful package, and even better, there are thousands of variations, so you never run out of fresh ideas for a new, tasty cookie. Having always loved traditional chocolate chip cookies, I decided to spice up my cookie life with a new, fresh cookie. Utilizing the internet, I went on a search for something new, different, and maybe even a little crazy; a cookie that had a name longer than necessary because it had so many delicious ingredients in it. The cookie I found: Cinnamon Oatmeal Raisin Craisin Chocolate Chip cookies, or as I like to call them, The Ultimate Oatmeal Cookies. Scrumptious, I know. Originally, the recipe I came across was a simple and quite boring oatmeal craisin cookie, but thanks to my ever-so-present sweet tooth, I decided to spice them up and add more “toppings” as I like to call them. As a result, these cookies came out better than I could have ever imagined, and were a huge hit with all of my family and friends. In fact, people would not stop asking for more!


The Ultimate Oatmeal Cookie
Time: 30-45 minutes
Makes: 4 Dozen

Ingredients:
1 cup butter, softened
1 cup packed brown sugar
1 cup white sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups quick cooking oats
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
2/3 cup raisins
2/3 cup craisins
2/3 cup mini semisweet chocolate chips

Procedure:
  1. Beat butter, sugars, eggs, and vanilla for 5 minutes in Kitchen Aid
  2. In another bowl, combine oats, flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt
  3. Add to butter mixture 1 cup at a time
  4. Mix in raisins, craisins, and chocolate chips
  5. Drop by spoonfuls onto greased cookie sheets and bake for 11-14 minutes at 350 degrees F. Enjoy!

Friday, April 1, 2011

Chicken Caesar Salad on Pesto Pizza


            I have discovered one of the most delicious pizzas in the entire universe; so delicious, in fact, I thought it would be worth going off topic for. This pizza: chicken caesar salad on top of pesto pizza. Now, I fully understand that a salad on top of a pizza sounds quite unappetizing, and downright revolting, and you are probably picturing warm, cooked, wilted, greasy lettuce atop of a green pizza, but it is nothing like that. No, this pizza is a true masterpiece, and if you have never experienced one before, you are in for a surprise.
While this pizza is a new discovery for me, it is actually slightly popular meal, and often appears on the specials menu at David's Tavern, a restaurant I have worked at for a few years now. Pesto pizza is one of David’s Tavern’s specialty pizzas on the menu, and it is absolutely delicious. There is a perfect blend of fresh pesto sauce and cheese, all on top of delectable homemade pizza crust that is freshly made by the wonderful, talented kitchen staff. To make the pizza with chicken caesar salad on top, the pesto pizza is first cooked alone in the oven, like any pizza would be. Then once the pizza finishes cooking and is taken out of the oven, it is topped with lettuce dressed David’s Tavern’s homemade caesar dressing and strips of grilled chicken breasts.
To say the least, this pizza is absolutely delicious, and obviously messy. To eat it, it requires much more effort than it takes to eat any normal pizza, but I think it is completely worth it. So what if you have to use a fork and your hands simultaneously to pick up a slice of salad covered pizza? I mean, once you get the pizza slice up and off the plate, it is not that hard to scoop some salad onto the pizza, or even right into your mouth. There is really no wrong way to eat this delectable duo, and trust me all of the work it takes to simply take a bite is well worth it in the end. This pizza is extravagant.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Pita Bread Pizza

            As of lately, I have been on a seriously healthy path. Choosing anything green over a mound of meat on my plate, I have been eating broccoli and string beans like they are never going to appear in my house ever again. On top of that, I have been trying to stay away from unhealthy foods, like my macaroni and cheese I blogged about a few weeks ago. With my new healthy take on food, I no longer enjoy the Friday night tradition of ordering greasy, expensive pizza from a local pizza place that has been a part of my life ever since I can remember.
Now, I understand that ordering a pizza from a pizza place is a quick and easy solution to dinner, it really isn’t worth it. To buy one pizza, it costs on average around 15 dollars, and that’s before toppings! On top of that, the pizzas are quickly made with little to no thought or effort, and are often made with artificial cheeses and other toppings. These pizzas are almost always topped with more than enough fake cheese, and covered in ridiculous amounts of grease. While the pizza may be warm and inviting when it is fresh out of the oven, having it delivered promises you a half an hour, or longer, wait, only for you to receive a pizza that is barely warm and dripping with grease. So, in the end, you pay the $15 for the pizza, and around $5 extra to get it delivered, just to receive a pizza that is barely appetizing, and not worth the money at all.
To satisfy my craving for pizza, I have discovered the pita pizza. Delicious, nutritious, and super easy to make, pita pizzas are a delectable alternative to the standard pizza. They are made with pita bread, real cheese, real sauce, and any other toppings that you could imagine, so they are healthier than a standard pizza, and they taste amazing! Best of all, they have little to no oil, so they are not nearly as greasy as a standard pizza is. One circle of pita bread makes a perfect dinner for one, but it is easy enough to make multiple pizzas to satisfy a group.

Pita Bread Pizza
Time: 10-15 minutes
Makes: 4-6 pita pizzas, depending on how many you decide to make

Ingredients:
            4-6 pita rounds (white or whole wheat)
            1 cup pizza sauce
            2 cups mozzarella cheese
            Toppings of your choice (veggies, cooked meats, cheeses, etc)

Procedure:
  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees
  2. Spoon pizza sauce over the pita rounds
  3. Top with mozzarella and any desired toppings
  4. Place on a baking sheet and cook for 7-10 minutes, or until the cheese has melted
  5. Serve immediately after cooking, enjoy!

Cream Cheese Frosting

I am, by no means, a cake decorator. Give me ingredients and a Kitchen Aid and I can make any amazing, moist, decadent cake that my heart desires, but when it comes time to frost it, I struggle immensely. Calling my mom, sister, or various friends for help, I am quick to sit back and watch how they do it, but that doesn’t make a difference, I still cannot frost the cake. My abilities to frost a cake are very limited to frosting the top and sides, slightly destroying the top layer of the two layer cake that is often made, and getting spots of frosting all over the plate the cake is sitting on, instead of the cake itself. On top of that, I am a master at the art of decorative sprinkles, creating a beautiful rainbow with the Easter sprinkles that are somehow always supplied in my house. Honestly, my cakes are hideous, yet delicious creations, and I fully understand that I should stay away from the frosting and focus more on the baking.
While my abilities to frost a cake are pretty much non-existent, I do have some skill when it comes to cupcakes. Being miniature in size, cupcakes pose less of a threat to me than a giant two layer cake, and the fact that you only have to frost the top of them, instead of the whole thing, makes the job a lot easier. Whenever I make cupcakes, I often find myself putting a dollop of cream cheese frosting on top of the cupcake instead of frosting them the traditional way, making sure the frosting covers the entire surface of the cupcake. To do this, I use a large plastic freezer bag, or sandwich bag, to make up for my lack of piping bags. I spoon the frosting into the baggy, making sure the frosting is concentrated to one corner, and then cut a small hole in the corner of the bag where the frosting is. On each cupcake, I put a dollop of frosting on and then usually top with some type of fruit or sprinkles.
When frosting cupcakes, and cakes, I always use homemade cream cheese frosting. While I understand how easy it is to buy a container of pre-made frosting at the store, I believe that if you are going to take the time to bake from scratch, you should take the time to make the frosting from scratch, also. Homemade cream cheese frosting is not hard to make by any means, and it tastes so much better than the processed, repulsive crap that comes in a container at the market.


Cream Cheese Frosting
Time: 5-10 minutes
Makes: Enough for 24 cupcakes or one cake

Ingredients:
            1 package (8 oz) cream cheese (I prefer Philadelphia Cream Cheese)
¼ cup butter or margarine, softened
1 tsp. vanilla
1 package (16 oz) powdered sugar (about 4 cups), sifted

Procedure:
  1. Beat cream cheese, butter, and vanilla in large bowl with a mixer until it is well blended
  2. Gradually add sifted sugar, beating after each addition until well blended