Thursday, November 18, 2010

Wedding Cake

Brad and I are engaged and doing all the exciting/crazy things people do/have to do when they are preparing for a wedding. So far we have booked our wedding ceremony and reception sites, I bought my dress, and we booked a photographer. We have pretty much decided on the caterer because they have a contract with the reception site and we have heard great things- all we need to do is the tasting and pick a menu. Next up on our list is DJ and Florist.

By now, most couples would have started going to cake tasting appointments. Brad and I have not discussed it and I find it hilarious it hasn't crossed our minds to engage in this very special rite of passage, which is probably because we both knew from the beginning that I would be making the cake. This decision is not meant to shock or excite people.. in fact, I figured it would just be me and a couple of my geeky baker friends who would be excited or even care. Not so.

The reactions have been from mild shock to people downright arguing with me about how it will not be fun and I will not have time and will be too stressed out (even a potential photographer! thanks, Brad).

Okay, now the brat comes out. Let me ask.. when has it ever been appropriate to not do something you absolutely love, simply because something might go wrong or it might be a little time consuming? NEVER! Why punish yourself with fear? The amazing thing is if something goes wrong, life actually does go on (unless of course you love skydiving and your chute doesn't open). Seriously.. I cannot believe the number of people who are actually trying to talk me out of making my own cake with the argument that it will not be fun. Um, making my own dress wouldn't be fun because I don't know how and don't have a passion for clothing design or sewing! Making my cake WILL be fun because I love to bake. It will still be fun if something goes wrong because I would have tried to do something challenging in the process. And come on.. it's cake!! If it doesn't come out right, so be it. We will cut into a Costco sheet cake at the reception and laugh for the rest of our lives. The point is, we will make it work.

Back up plans are great and all, but I am super confident about this cake. Willful will be helping. It will be delicious because we are making our favorite cakes. It will be gorgeous because we have a simple, bright, and elegant design planned. It will be fun because when Willful and Collie get together.. everything is fun! We also work well together, swapping the role of whiner and leader effortlessly until a job is done. If we could find the Trevi Fountain on a gloomy day with an ill-planned map, we can do anything. Ha! I am really excited.

I still think it's funny Brad and I haven't gone to tastings and would very much like to correct this. I'm interested to try some cakes and see what Brad likes.. he tends to have favorite things that are cheap.. like boxed cake, russel stover chocolate, etc. Even in Italy his favorite gelato was this generic tasting chocolate flavor he got in Padua that tasted like Thrifty ice cream..you know, the square scoops? Hilarious.

Yay for cake!

Monday, November 15, 2010

Apple Pie

I love making apple pie.. but I've always cheated on the crust. Why? Because every gosh darn recipe out there says to use a food processor to make your dough. I don't have one! Or a pastry cutter thingy! And shortening don't live here.. so any crust that is made with it is not eligible either. The prospect of making crust always seems doomed.

Alas, my former boss had a birthday last Friday and I signed up to make apple pie since she is not a cake person. A while back, she actually bought me the most neato thing ever for peeling and coring apples. Anyhoo.. since we had Thursday off, thank you Veterans, I decided it would be a good first go at making my own pie crust.

It seems simple enough.. mix some flour with butter and cold water. Don't be fooled, it is a science. You want to get the butter incorporated and have the whole thing look like crumbs while the butter is still cold. This means no touching and working very fast so the butter doesn't get warm and melt all over the flour. Still without a food processor or pastry cutter, I used this handheld half-moon shaped knife thing to cut the butter into the flour, chopping like a maniac for at least 5 minutes. It worked out really well! I didn't even have any trouble balling up my dough to refrigerate, which required touching. After about an hour of chilling, I was vury vury scurred to roll out the dough so I could mold it into my pie shell.. it was the moment of truth. But it rolled superbly! My recipe told me to roll it out on a lightly floured piece of parchent paper- I really think that made all the difference. The apple peeling, coring, and slicing was a breeze. While the pie shell continued to chill, I mixed the apples with sugar and spices and excitedly piled them into my shell. Then I covered the top with a second dough I had rolled out, pinched up the corners, cut steam holes, brushed on an egg wash, and baked my pie up. **I'm aware I look very cross-eyed in the picture on the left!

I had almost forgotten one of the major reasons I dislike making my own pie.. the dome issue. The top crust forms a dome from all the apples, and when the pie bakes, the apples bake down, but the crust stays domed. This equals an air pocket in the middle, and awkward cutting later. I googled this later, and learned a little trick, in which you cook the apples first then bake them in your pie.. apparently they don't shrink twice! I will try this next time.

Sadly, I never got a picture of the finished pie, only one of it going into the oven. It looked the same as below, only brown. The crust was delish.. but, the apples were too tart. I guess I didn't add enough sugar!


If you like pie, you might check out Wilfull's hilarious apple pie entry on her blog, Cooking on the Farm.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Water for Elephants, Cupcakes for Book Club

I joined my first evar book club recently, which I am extra excited about. But I completely failed to read the first book, Life of Pi. I just couldn't get into it. This month's book was Water for Elephants.. a novel I completely avoided reading because I'm a brat and don't like reading hyped up books (unless of course I happen to read it before it gets hyped up). Whatever, I'm not the only one. :P In the spirit of trying new things, I put on my big girl pants and mustered up the courage to read a popular book.

Water for Elephants, a book about a young man who runs away to join the circus, was a fast enjoyable read. There was little depth to the characters and more raunch than I expected, but the story flowed which is always nice when you're reading a book in a short amount of time (yes, one month is short for me). I expect it will translate really well to the screen and can't imagine how anyone could screw it up. However, Robert Pattinson and Reese Witherspoon are cast.. and without spoiling, I'll only say I just don't see how that will work for Reese, bless her heart.

I wanted to help out the hostess of our meeting, so I offered to make dessert. Upon finishing the circus tale, I decided playfully decorated cupcakes would fit the mood. I went with chocolate because it is my fave, and had two frostings: cream cheese and chocolate. In the end it worked out well.. the alternating colors resembled the liberty horses in the book.

I had to make them when I got home from work.. at 5:30.. and have them out the door.. at 7:15. When I got home, I was a machine.. it was a beautiful thing. I took care of boiling water and mixing with the cocoa powders to start, melted the chocolate chips for the frosting, threw together the cupcake batter, put 12 cupcakes in the oven, busted out the rest of the chocolate frosting, put 12 more cupcakes in the oven, threw 12 minis in the oven with the extra batter I had, did all the dishes, took the cupcakes out, busted out the cream cheese frosting, did more dishes, piped all the cupcakes, decorated, took pictures, packed them up, and was out the door only three minutes late at 7:18. That's my kind of marathon!!

I think they came out super cute, too. The majority had dum dums sticking out the top which looked like balloons (thanks Halloween), and they all had sprinkles. Only 5 of us showed up to book club. The hostess made the most delicious chili, and we all scarfed down at least two cupcakes each. But I still have extra.. any bidders???

no flash

flash!

Monday, November 1, 2010

Longest Break Evar! + Spice Cupcakes

Dear friends,

I have missed you! I took a break from the baking blog to start an Italy travel blog, then took a break after Italy that lasted way longer than I expected! Italy was so much fun, I guess I needed a while to recover :)

While we were there, we saw lots of bakery shop displays. One thing that was expected but still surprising was that none of the shops had cakes or cupcakes, they mostly had biscotti, pastries, and other sweets all on display, lined up perfectly. I think it's where the term "eye candy" came from. Imagine a whole storefront display covered in all different kinds of sweets in every pretty color imaginable. And the packaging is to die for. In Florence, especially, they used special Florentine paper to wrap things up, and everything was tied with beautiful ribbons. The less fancy stores just had pastries galore, and I had the best "brioche" of my life at one of these places. It was a giant croissant type thing with a chocolate/hazelnut filling, kind of like nutella but better. I know, you must be asking, is that possible??? YES! Drool drool drool. I would weigh 400 pounds if I had my way and ate one for breakfast every morning for the rest of my life. Fortunately, they're tucked away on a tiny street in Vernazza and out of reach.

Back at home, I've been a bit lazy. It took me a few days to even remember that I had to do dishes and chores.. I was so used to only worrying about a back pack and how to navigate the Italian trains and streets. It took even longer to remember that take-out is easy but not necessary, and that I liked to bake for fun. Bizarre how two weeks away from home can totally change everything!

My first opportunity to bake came when I was about to see my new favorite triplets for the first time. Mom mentioned spice cake the night before my visit (hello, why didn't I think of it! Italy induced zombieness!!). I had to pick a recipe based on the ingredients I had on hand, and ended up going with Martha's recipe which she passed on from her mother. It seemed easy enough and I whipped them up pretty quick, but it was obvious about 10 minutes into baking that these weren't the best cupcakes. Sure enough, they came out a bit rubbery and super spicy. The recipe called for an icing, but that bored me. I would have rather topped with a cream cheese frosting, but didn't have any cream cheese, so I went with vanilla buttercream. They came out cute but sadly, they were nothing special. I felt bad bringing them to such an extraordinary hard working mother of three newborns, but decided she wouldn't mind and probably wouldn't notice they weren't the best because she'd be a zombie, too. :) And besides.. when I got there, it was all about the babies! They're adorable!!!

I had another request for spice cupcakes for a coworkers birthday, and was determined to get it right this time. I am a huge fan of buttermilk cakes, so I googled a recipe for buttermilk spice cupcakes and found a total winner. You make them like you'd make a chiffon cake, with egg whites whipped in at the end, and they came out super moist and fluffy. Martha's cream cheese frosting on top is the perfect compliment. I brought them in for the coworkers birthday/halloween potluck and they were a hit. Cream cheese frosting makes any cupcake outstanding, though! This time I remembered to take a photo:




Happy belated Halloween and hurrah hurray for Thanksgiving and Christmas coming up!!

xo
Collie