Posts tagged ‘ginger’

February 25th, 2012

Chocolate Deliquesce with Cayenne Pepper & Ginger

A gooey, chocolate deliquesce that's truly multidimensional. First you taste the chocolate, then the stem ginger and then arises the sensation of cayenne pepper.

I’ve been wanting to use cayenne pepper in a chocolate dessert for almost two years now. I just never got around to it. It’s obvious to anyone who follows my blog that I think almost anything taste better with ginger, so it’s probably no surprise that I chose stem ginger in syrup to accompany the cayenne. This is truly a multidimensional dessert.

First you taste the chocolate, then the ginger and as you swallow, the sensation of cayenne arises in your palate, slightly warming your tongue. This recipe has a lot more flour than I usually use in a moelleux. A moelleux is slightly less fluid in the center than a fondant but it should always be gooey in the middle with a bit up crunch on the outer top.  As for why I call it a “deliquesce”…

Here’s the recipe:

1/2 cup all purpose, self-rising flour

3/4 cup sugar

1 tsp baking powder

1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder

1 tsp cayenne (two if you’re brave)

1/2 tsp real vanilla either in powder form or scraped from a pod

6 ounces (170 grams) semi-sweet bakers chocolate chips

1 1/3 cup melted, unsalted butter -  If you are in the USA, try to use European butter.  It has a higher fat content than American butters and yields a better moelleux.

Large pinch of salt

Stem ginger in syrup

Pre-heat oven to 180°C (350°F)

NOTE: For the baking time to be equal to mine, it’s important that you make your deliquesce in the same size molds that I used. I used muffin trays of this size

Cut up the stem ginger so that you have about one tsp of ginger per cake (this recipe yields 10 moelleuxs), set aside

Sift flour, cocoa, cayenne, baking powder and a pinch of salt in a mixing bowl

In another bowl, mix the sugar and eggs with an electric mixer for about 3 minutes until smooth and pale. Then add the vanilla.

Fold in 1/3 of the butter and 1/3 of the dry ingredients at a time until all of it is incorporated. Mix well with a hand mixer but do not over mix

Fold in the chocolate chips

If you are not using a silicone muffin tray, you will need to grease your muffin tin

Divide the batter evenly among in each cup, careful to fill each cup only half way at first

Spoon 1 tsp of stem ginger in the center of each cup (after you have filled it half-way with the batter). Then spoon about 1/3 (max!) of the ginger syrup on top of the ginger.

Spoon the rest of the batter on top of each of the cups to completely cover the ginger in the center

Put in the oven with the rack slightly below the center of the oven

Bake for precisely 20 minutes. You may bake for only 18 if you want an even softer center but *never bake for more than 20 minutes*

Makes 10 cakes

  Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2012

© 2012, Epicure on a Budget. All rights reserved.

October 17th, 2010

Ginger-Pecan Carrot Cake – Aiming for Moisture

Ginger-Pecan Carrot Cake

I made my first cake when I was ten years old and home, playing hooky from school. A carrot cake seemed like a good idea at the time. Despite the fact that I had no idea how to bake a cake, I decided to forge ahead. There were carrots in the kitchen and after a quick check that the other ingredients I had seen my mother use while baking, were available as well – I got started. This was improvisation at it’s…worst.

A few cups of four, some milk, eggs, sugar and chopped (yes, large chunks of carrot as I was scared to scrape my fingers on the grater) mixed together and baked about approximately 500°F for an hour.

The result was something resembling an alien pod that would require a laser to cut through.

Afraid to get into trouble, I cleaned up the evidence and wrapped the alien carrot pod in aluminum foil (rendering even more susceptible to radio-waves – perfect for localization by the Mother-Ship). I hid it in the most logical place: my bedside table.

A few months later my carrot cake pod mysteriously disappeared. Twenty years passed before I discovered where it went. Feeling safe from punishment, I told my mother about the experiment. She laughed and told me that she did indeed find the cake, wrapped in aluminum foil in my bedside table. It was molded and completely unidentifiable. But she never said a word, nor did she punish me.

I never attempted carrot cake improvisation again…until yesterday.

Carrot cake is rather polarizing. People either love it or hate it. The same applies to ginger. So for those of you who love both carrot cake and ginger – this is for you.

The recipe has a couple special adaptions from me. I wanted the most moist cake possible without it becoming too dense. To accomplish this I added organic baby food! Puréed baby carrots.

The ginger is soft candied ginger and instead of walnuts I used something closer to home for a Georgia Girl: pecans.

3 medium eggs

250g brown sugar

150ml of sunflower or vegetable oil

250g grated carrots

2 pots (130ms each) baby food – pure puréed carrots

300g flour

100g chopped pecans

100g chopped (soft) candied ginger (rinse off any crystal sugar coating and pat dry before chopping)

1 tbsp ground cinnamon

1 tbsp ground nutmeg

1.5 tsp baking powder

1 tsp salt

For the Icing:

400g icing sugar
300g cream cheese
50g unsalted butter

Preheat oven to 180c. Line a square baking tin (about 20 cm on each side) with baking paper.

In a large bowl, whisk the eggs at high speed, add the sugar and continue beating until pale and fluffy. Keep the whisk on at high speed, and add the oil in a steady stream. Keep beating until the mixture holds the shape of any trail across the surface. Add baby food puréed carrots.

Gently fold in the flour, cinnamon, nutmeg, bicarb, grated carrots, chopped ginger, pecans and salt, and then fold the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients.

Divide and transfer the mixture to your tins and bake for 40 minutes, or until a skewer comes out clean. If it browns too much before the middle is done.

Prepare the icing by using an electric whisk, add the powdered sugar and cream cheese together. Once that is all in and mixed, carry on using the electric whist until any lumps have gone from the icing. Put in the fridge to set.

Once your cake is done, leave to cool for 10-15 mins, before turning onto a wire rack. Then, refridgerate for at least four hours. Afterwards, spread the icing generously over the top.

Garnish with ginger candies and pecans.

  Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011

© 2010 – 2011, Epicure on a Budget. All rights reserved.

May 22nd, 2010

Not Just for Salad – Olive Oil & Vinegars are for Desserts Too

Click on image to see higher quality photo

I had my precious cherries in mind today as I entered Oliviers & Co., a purveyor of olive oils from Haute-Provence. My original intention was to buy only a bottle of their Cherry Balsamic but then the Honey & Ginger Balsamic looked so good too, that I wished I had bought some earlier for the orange and sweet chili pepper salsa I made last week.

When the shop assistant noticed I was open to buying more she asked me if I have a good olive oil at home. I told her I did indeed need an olive oil, but I want the mildest flavour possible. She showed a bottle of extra virgin olive oil from Château du Vignal to me, asking, “Do you know the macaroons from Ladurée?

Cherries with Cherry Balsamic

Well they make one macaroon with olive oil and this particular oil is the one they use for their macaroon.” I’ve had that particular macaroon actually and it is delicious. She let me taste a teaspoon of the Château du Vignal which is classified as a Grand Cru Oil with the selection being limited to only 1000 liters. It was so delicate I could almost drink it. It definately belongs in desserts.

As I left the shop with my two balsamics and the olive oil I decided to use the oil and cherry balsamic to create a dessert with my remaining cherries.

Cherry Balsamic

Here is the recipe that formed in my mind as I walked back home:

1/2 cup of cherries that have been cut in half and   pitted

1 teaspoon Cherry Balsamic

1 teaspoon  olive oil (the absolutely mildest olive oil you can find) – try the Château du Vignal

1 tablespoon of orange & dark chocolate confit

1 almond wafer

Dark chocolate with orange shavings (from a bar of dark chocolate)

Toss the cherries in the olive oil and cherry balsamic. Sprinkly with white sugar. Put the dark chocolate confit on plate and insert the almond wafer (the confit should support the wafer so that it stands)

Arrange the cherries on the plate, against the wafer. Drizzle more oil and balsamic if you like. Sprinkle with shavings of dark chocolate.

Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2010

© 2010, Epicure on a Budget. All rights reserved.


© 2010-2012 Epicure on a Budget All Rights Reserved -- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright