Friday, December 27, 2013

Clementine Cake?

We took the kids to see "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" last night.  What a great movie!  We all liked it a lot.  Funny, upbeat, real, good story with a great ending - I highly recommend it.  Central to part of the plot was this thing called a Clementine Cake...?  I'd never heard of it.  Looked like a single layer of a round cake with sliced oranges on top...maybe like an upside down cake?  I honestly thought it was made up for the quirky characters in the movie, and let it go at that. 

Then my husband text me from work this afternoon, "Are you gonna make a clementine cake?  You can use the cuties."  We have cuties on our kitchen table, delivered by a neighbor.  My kids like them, but can never eat all that she brings over before they start turning bad.  So, my husband was thinking of that cake?  And, he wanted me to make it?  Although I bake all of the time, it is very rare that my husband actually requests something. (I like to think this is because he is happy with everything I bake)  I was on it.  Pinterest is my friend, and within a matter of seconds, I was staring at a variety of clementine cake recipes.  I went with the one that looked most like the one we saw in the movie, and whipped it up pretty quickly.

Clementine Cake

Cake Ingredients:
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 cup granulated sugar
4 eggs, room temperature
1 1/2 teaspoon grated clementine zest
2 cups all purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
7 tablespoons fresh squeezed clementine juice (I needed about 7 clementines total to make the cake and glaze)

Glaze Ingredients:
1 1/2 – 2 cups powdered sugar
4 tablespoons fresh squeezed orange juice
grated clementine zest
Directions:
Heat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter a 9-inch cake pan and line the bottom with parchment paper. Butter the paper and set aside> (I never use the parchment paper - not sure if it really makes a difference - my cakes don't stick because I wait for them to cool completely to invert the pan.  And, I always put the pan side of the cake down on the plate.)

Cream the butter and sugar well for several minutes, until it is very pale and thick.

Add the eggs one by one, beating well after each addition, then add the zest. (I did not add the zest, because I don't like zest in anything - it's a texture thing, not a taste thing.)  Add the flour, baking powder and salt all at once, and beat well, then slowly add the clementine juice until it is incorporated.

Pour the batter into the prepared cake tin, and bake for 35-40 minutes – or until an inserted skewer comes out clean (If it starts to brown too much on the top, cover loosely with a sheet of foil.)

 Allow cake to cool in pan for 15-20 minutes on a wire rack. Then invert onto a plate, remove the parchment paper and allow to cool completely before glazing.

To make the icing, stir the clementine juice into the icing sugar until you have the right spreading consistency. Using a skewer, dowel, or toothpick, poke holes through entire cake to allow glaze to seep down into it. Pour the icing onto the cake and spread with a spatula or butter knife, allowing the icing to drip down the sides of the cake.

I served it with fresh whipped cream (you can see the silver canister I use in the background). 

I personally didn't really like the cake...not sweet enough or orangy enough for me.  (Maybe because I did not add the zest called for in the recipe.)  However, all of my family loved it, saying it was sweet enough.  My son compares it to a pound cake.

It may taste good with some coffee in the morning...I'll give it one more try;)

Saturday, December 21, 2013

I'm back!

Christmas baking!

My daughter asked me this week, "Why do we make so many desserts and eat so much candy during Christmas?"  I had no answer for her, but it got me thinking....maybe we should just keep on baking through the New Year?  In preparation for a few Christmas celebrations coming up this week, I spent my Saturday (and first day of Christmas vacation:) grocery shopping, cleaning, baking and wrapping.  I'm going to share a recipe for Coconut kiss cookies tonight.  My husband says they're really good...I don't know...I do not care for coconut.  He says they taste like a macaroon.  I also made 2 batches of chocolate fudge, 1 pecan pie, 1 loaf of zucchini bread, and prepared the scalloped potatoes for tomorrow.

Here is the recipe, as copied from Pinterest:
(I made some changes which I'll explain below)

Coconut kiss cookies

2 1/2 cups All purpose flour
1 Tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon table salt
2/3 cups butter, softened
6 oz. cream cheese, softened
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
2 egg yolks
1 Tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
1 Tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon juice from a fresh orange
10 cups sweetened flaked coconut, divided in to 6 cup and 4 cup portions
1 bag Hershey Kisses (48 pieces)
Step 1: In a medium bowl, sift flour, baking powder and salt. Set aside.
Step 2: In the bowl of an electric mixer, beat the butter, cream cheese, and sugar until light and fluffy. Add egg yolks, vanilla and orange juice and beat till smooth.
Step 3: In 1 cup increments, mix flour in to the butter mixture. Add the 6 cups flaked coconut and beat to combine.
Step 4: Refrigerate dough for 1 hour. While dough is chilling, remove wrappers from the Kisses.
Step 5: Preheat oven to 350. One at a time, scoop dough into 1.5" balls (about the size of a large walnut, roll between your palms, then roll in the bowl of remaining coconut (4 cups). Arrange on an ungreased baking sheet, at least an inch apart (cookies will spread slightly). A standard cookie sheet should accommodate a dozen cookies at a time. Bake 12-14 minutes, until the cookies puff and are very lightly browned.
Step 6: Remove from oven. Immediately press one Kiss into each cookie. Return pan to oven and bake for an additional minute.
 
Step 7: Remove pan from oven and cool on a rack for 10 minutes. With a thin spatula, gently move cookies on to a rack to finish cooling.
 
My changes:  I did not use orange juice and I used half the coconut that the recipe calls for (again, I don't like coconut). 

 

 
And there you have coconut kiss cookies!
 
I started this blog last year, as part of a New Year's resolution.  I started out pretty good, and was encouraged that people actually looked at the page, but then somewhere between the middle of summer fun and the craziness that always comes with the new school year, I dropped the ball.  So, here I am, sitting on the couch waiting for the elevel o'clock news, and thinking about resolutions.  One of them is going to be to get back on track with this project.  Baking and cooking are things I enjoy doing for my family.  And, I'm looking forward to sharing my successes here.
 
Wishing you all a Merry Christmas!