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    Entries in the curse continues (3)

    Monday
    May132013

    Pear Mayhem!

    Oh, it's Mayhem alright.

    I bought a bag of pears a little while ago and they are delicious and just the right size for taking to lunch for afternoon snacks, but the trouble with a whole bag of pears is that they all ripen at the same time. And then you have a bag of super-ripe pears and way more afternoon snacks than one person can eat in three days.

    Fortunately, you also need something to take for breakfast. Or eat at home for breakfast. Or dessert. But really, this is more of a breakfast cake.

    Cake for breakfast! Mayhem!

    Oh, and once again, I'm winging it. Because, I laugh in the face of Mayhem!

    It laughed back at me.

    Pear Upside Down Cake

    • 3-4 pears
    • 1/4 cup melted butter
    • 1/2 cup brown sugar
    • 1/2 cup butter
    • 1/2 cup sugar
    • 2 eggs
    • 2 tsp ground ginger
    • 3/4 cup milk
    • 1 1/2 cups flour
    • 1 tsp baking powder
    • 1/2 tsp baking soda
    • 2 pears, grated

    Preheat the oven to 350 and bring all the ingredients to room temperature. 

    Butter and line an 8 inch square pan with parchment.

    Pour the melted butter into the pan, sprinkle over the sugar, and lay in the pears. If you plan on presenting this for some kind of fancy breakfast, you could arrange the pears artfully. Me, I wanted to use as many as possible, so I crammed 4 pears into the bottom of the pan.

    Cream the butter and sugar together, then add the eggs.

    If you ever get eggshell in your batter, the best thing to take it out is another eggshell.

    Beat in the eggs, and then the ginger and the milk.

    Mix in the dry ingredients. If you'd like to sift the baking powder and baking soda into the flour first, go right ahead, but this is a quick cake, and if you just give the dry stuff a bit of a stir as it sits on top of the wet before mixing the two together, that's just fine.

    If the pears you're grating in aren't super ripe and juicy, you may want to add anothe 1/4 cup of milk or pear juice. However, I recommend using ridiculously ripe pears.

    Pears seem to be classed as a "hard" fruit most of the time, treated much like apples are, but a nice ripe pear is not crisp like an apple is. A perfectly ripe pear will crush in your hand the same way a peach does.

    Mix in the pears and spread the batter over the sliced ones on the bottom of the pan.

    Hm. That's a really full pan.

    I however, am not anywhere near as smart as Taneasha, and I didn't put mine onto a baking sheet.

    Instead I popped the pan in the oven and set the timer for 40 minutes.

    10 minutes later, the cake started sending me smoke signals out of the vent. I opened the oven. And then I opened every window in my apartment and the front door.

    The sugar at the bottom of the pan had bubbled up and overflowed onto the bottom of the oven.

    I yanked the cake and put it on a sheet covered with parchment, then shoved it back into the oven.

    I had to vent the smoke every few minutes for the next 15 minutes, but eventually it cleared.

    I've been thinking for a while that I should clean the oven. I guess I really have to now.

    Um, okay, apparently rising was not an issue this time.

    Crap, I'm supposed to flip this thing upside down to let the pears out.

    A bread knife, horizontal, and that wacky peak is taken care of. This trick works well for levelling out the bottom half of a layer cake too.

    And since I don't have a square plate, or a round platter big enough for this thing, and since I need something to store it in, I flipped it into my 9 inch square Corningware pan.

    Nailed it.

    I'll just trim the edge off to make it fit.

    The taste of this is just fabulous. I know there's nothing in there but ginger, but that's the point. The ginger gives the soft cake a nice bite that perfectly offsets the smooth pear.

    And the caramel! Holy cow.

    I think next time I may add a bit of ginger to the sugar-butter mixture that makes up the caramel.

    What would you add ginger to?

     

    Friday
    May042012

    And so begins the Mayhem!

    Last May, we had a wee bit o' the crazy going on. Taneasha was eating nothing but road food as she was being chased across the country by tornadoes, I was posting about ice cream and toads (and dumb fuck june bugs) and neighbours with guns and really, we barely made it out alive.

    So, this year, we decided to do it all over again.

    Of course the first thing that happens is I get locked out of the website while Taneasha is trapped in a car crossing 5 different state lines in 12 hours. And so, No Post For You! (today? yes, Tuesday? no)

    We're pretty sure she's not going to be homeless in the middle of the month, but I'm evicting her from Fridays for a while.

    Carrot Cake Cookies with White Chocolate Cream Cheese Icing

    (Yes, that whole thing is the name of the recipe. Yes, I'm a freaking genius to mix white chocolate and cream cheese)

    What you need:

    • 2-3 carrots (~1 1/2 c once grated)
    • 1 c butter
    • 1 1/2 csugar
    • 1 tsp vanilla
    • 1 egg
    • 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
    • 1/2 tsp cardamom
    • 2 1/2 c flour
    • 1 tsp baking powder

    not shown, but also worth adding

    • 1/2 tsp allspice
    • 1 tbsp orange zest

    What you gotta do:

    Preheat your oven to 350.

    Grate the carrots. If you do this by hand, you are insane and you probably have no skin left on your knuckles.

    Since you've already got the food processor dirtied, may as well go all the way. Switch from the grater blade to the regular blade.

    Dump in the butter and sugar and let the sharp things do all the work.

    I was going to continue the whole recipe in the food processor, thinking I could save dishes that way, but I wasn't convinced that it would be able to hold the whole recipe's worth. Cut this recipe in half and do the whole thing in the food processor. It makes a lot of cookies anyway and you can save a few dishes.

    If you're doing the full recipe, dump the sweet carrot butter into a bowl and add the egg, vanilla, and spices (and orange zest).

    Mash this all together then start adding flour. I did a cup at a time and mixed well after each one.

    This gradual-addition-and-lots-of-mixing method will result in a cookie with a cakier texture.

    You should have a stiff, but sticky dough.

    And you also should have added the baking powder with the flour... dammit.

    I sprinkled about half a teaspoon of baking powder over the dough and mixed it for a couple more minutes. Seemed to work.

    There are a couple ways you can make these cookies.

    You can just drop spoonfuls of dough onto the cookie sheet and bake them, but they don't spread like most drop cookies. They hold their shape. So you'll probably end up patting the tops down a bit so they aren't so blobby.

    You can also chill the dough for about half an hour and then roll it into balls and poke them until they're shaped like eythrocytes. (word of the day, bonus points if you know it, google it if you don't)

    Bake them at 350 for about 14-16 minutes. They should be barely browning on the bottom and look dry on top.

    This recipe makes 5 dozen cookies! I really recommend cutting it in half. Good luck with the egg.

    Now, you could eat these as is. But no one eats carrot cake because they like it. They're all after the icing.

    • 1 c cream cheese
    • 1 c icing sugar
    • 4 oz white chocolate

    Cream the cream cheese and icing sugar together.

    Melt the chocolate in the microwave on 50% power 30 seconds at a time until you can stir the last of the lumps out of it.

    (yes there are only 3 oz in the bowl. I added the fourth after I decided I wanted it)

    Pour the melted chocolate into the sugary cream cheese and mix well.

    Making the icing is never the hard part. Icing 61 cookies with what I'm pretty sure is the world's stickiest icing is the hard part. It never really sets, and it stays sticky, even after an hour in the fridge.

    But they taste damn good.

     Did you know what an erythrocyte was??