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Sour Cream Coffee Cake with Berries and Cinnamon Streusel

06.14.2013 by J. Doe //

Some times, there’s nothing left to do but eat cake – it’s like waving the white flag at life. I’d like to say I gave in to fine-crumbed despair on a Friday, after a long week, but I didn’t. It was just a Monday.

A Monday from someplace that isn’t heaven.

I ordered the new dishwasher but had to wait a couple of weeks for the particular one I wanted, which was okay, especially because, just after I placed the order, the old dishwasher miraculously started working again (I’m not dead yet!). I thought my appliances were rising up against me, but a few days later, the dishwasher had a relapse. I’ve never been so happy about a major appliance failure before, and likely never will again: I’m not crazy, it really did need to be replaced.

I turned my attention to the grill in the backyard. It’s summer, after all – it’s time to grill. I didn’t use the grill much last summer, but this year I’m all excited about the possibilities. Also, I have a dinner guest on Friday that I want to make a flank steak for. Since I don’t know the precise time of the guest’s arrival, something that can be tossed on the grill and be ready whenever is the best possible plan. I love this plan.

It’s fortunate that I did a trial run of this plan. I turned on the grill and made some “hamburgers” for myself and The Child, and though I managed to heat them through, I couldn’t get the temperature very high and the whole thing lacked the usual sizzle. The tank seemed to be nearly empty, so I decided that was probably the issue, and took the tank to be refilled.

I know that doesn’t sound like a big deal to you, but it is to me: I’ve never filled a propane tank before. I thought it might be something that I would be expected to know how to do myself, and had visions of some big guy giving me a look that said “Silly, helpless women,” before showing me how to do something ridiculously easy and yet, highly flammable. So it was quite a relief when the gal at the gas station said, no, we do that for you.

And all was well with the world for one brief moment. The next moment, though, I connected the tank and turned on the grill and still couldn’t get much of a flame.

I will spare you the story of how I disassembled the grill’s rusty innards; the punch line is, I either have to transplant some new innards or transplant a whole new grill. The latter will be hard on my pocketbook, while the former apparently involves a socket wrench.

Either way, I won’t have a working grill by Friday, so I have to come up with a new dinner plan. I know this doesn’t seem like it should be a hard thing, but the last thing I made for dinner – shrimp-stuffed peppers – was shockingly bad. I don’t know what to make. How can I? I don’t know what will break next.

I know sometimes the universe is pointing you along a path, saying, Go this way. But I can’t see the path. My view is obstructed by all the broken appliances.

I still have the library copy of The Dahlia Bakery Cookbook, which I’ve had for so long the library has sent me an actual letter about it and I finally decided it might be time to get my own copy and return theirs. But it was still around, and still had that nice recipe for sour cream coffee cake with blackberries, and I had all the ingredients I needed including a bag of frozen blackberries, and all of this could only mean one thing.

The universe was telling me to make cake. So I did.

And it was good.

It was so good, in fact, that I managed to forget I don’t especially like blackberries. I often have them around because they grow wild in the area, and The Child and I like berry-picking, even if we’re not too crazy for the specific berry in question. They’re plentiful and free, so who are we to argue? The coffee cake is light and moist and delightfully buttery, and the berries add a sprightly tang.

I learned a few things, too. First: sift, sift, sift your flour. It really is the difference between a cake and a superlative, light confection – well worth the extra couple of minutes it takes. Next, it’s important to bring your ingredients to room temperature when baking, as it allows them to trap and hold air better. So, what to do when you decide at the last minute, I had a really lousy day that only cake will solve? Douglas offers one suggestion in the opening chapter of the cookbook – put your eggs in a bowl of warm tap water for a few minutes. This works well for butter, too, I discovered.

One thing that didn’t go so well on this recipe was the streusel topping: I used the food processor and ended up with a big lump of streusel that I then had to tear into little-ish pieces, which then sort of melted down and formed a giant cinnamon crisp layer on the top of the cake. It tasted great and honestly, didn’t look that bad – it just wasn’t what I was going for. I did a bit of research and learned that one is done mixing streusel when it is mostly mixed – there should be little bits of butter and so on.  I’m going to try this next time I try a streusel – my last several efforts have all had the same problem.

I give Douglas credit, though, since even when I screwed up his streusel, it still worked: The Child pronounced the whole thing delicious and liked the topping best.

Sour Cream Coffee Cake with Cinnamon Streusel

 

Sour Cream Coffee Cake with Berries and Cinnamon Streusel
 
Print
Prep time
25 mins
Cook time
45 mins
Total time
1 hour 10 mins
 
Author: The Dahlia Bakery Cookbook
Serves: 12
Ingredients
Streusel
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour
  • ½ cup packed brown sugar
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 6 tbsp cold unsalted butter
Cake
  • 2½ cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 1 tbsp vanilla
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 cups berries (blueberries, blackberries, or raspberries)
Instructions
  1. Preheat over to 350 degrees F. Butter a 9x13 pan and set aside.
  2. Make the streusel: combine the flour, brown sugar, and cinnamon in a bowl. Dice the cold butter, add it to the mixture, and blend with your fingers until crumbly. Set aside.
  3. Make the cake: Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda into a bowl, and set aside. In an electric mixer with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Scrape down the bowl. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each and scraping down the bowl as needed. Mix in the sour cream, vanilla, and salt. Add the dry ingredients a third at a time, mixing until just blended. Fold in the berries.
  4. Scrape the batter into the pan and spread it evenly with a spatula. Sprinkle the streusel over the top.
  5. Bake 45-50 minutes, until a tester comes out mostly clean. Cool in the pan in a wire rack. Cut into 12 squares.
Notes
Sift the flour well before measuring. The batter will be thick at the end so fold the berries in gently. Stop blending the streusel when it gets crumbly.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // baking, blackberries

Rhubarb Sour Cream Muffins

06.05.2013 by J. Doe // 6 Comments

The garage door at my house has barely worked since The Departure. It was not long after that event that one of the springs snapped, sending the door crashing to the floor with such a thud that the whole house shook. It took two handymen to liberate my car, which then had to be parked in the driveway until I could get door repaired – many months later, around the time the divorce was being finalized. Within a few months, though, the garage remote stopped working, resulting in, once again, my garage being unusable for its intended function. I was pretty sure it was just a dead battery, but I couldn’t seem to find the right size battery to replace it.

Somewhere in the midst of this, my dishwasher started giving me trouble – lots of it. This was a more pressing matter than the garage door, given how much I like to cook, and how many pans I seem to use when I do – as well as how many plates The Child seems to use for, well, everything. The dishwasher isn’t that old, and it was fairly high-end when it was bought, yet within a couple of years had stopped working. A repairman was called and replaced the control panel. They go bad on this model, he said.

Earlier this year, the dishwasher stopped filling with water, but everything else seemed to work – meaning that the cycles still ran and the heating element still heated up as though there was water, baking the food bits solidly to the dishes. Indeed, it seemed to do a better job with heating and baking than my oven. Maybe it was hoping I’d retire the oven, and wanted to apply for the  job.

I called the repairman back and he couldn’t find anything wrong with the dishwasher, but when he opened the intake valve, there was a buildup of crud from the pipes that was blocking the water. We turned the dishwasher on and no problem. The dishwasher worked fine for several weeks – right until the warranty on the repair expired, in fact.

I called a different repairman, because I thought the problem might be a blockage, rather than the dishwasher. This repairman checked and completely the water heater and the pipes, and pronounced each “The cleanest I’ve ever seen.” His assistant, meanwhile, checked on the dishwasher, the valves, the filters – everything he could think of. Neither of them could find a problem.

Of course, when they turned on the dishwasher, it filled up nicely, just like it was supposed to – and not like I’d been filling it for the previous few days, with a bucket of water.

It proceeded to work fine for another two weeks, until Mother’s Day. That day, The Child cleaned the kitchen before bringing me a cup of coffee in bed. We headed out to have brunch together, and the dishwasher was running when we left – and also when we came back. What time did you turn this on? I asked her.

Six o’clock, she said.

It was now noon. After six hours in my dishwasher, everything was baked on the dishes about as well as any kiln could have done.

I shut off the dishwasher and grumbled and decided that on Memorial Day, I would go out and patriotically replace my dishwasher – which I did. In the meantime, I resorted to running the old machine as  a manually operated dishwasher, by filling it with a bucket of water.

I felt a sense of relief as I bought the new dishwasher at the local home store, followed by a sense of accomplishment when I spied, on the way out, a pack of batteries the right size for my garage door opener. I grabbed it quickly, thrilled to have gotten two things off my To Do list in one day. At home, I replaced the battery, and optimistically aimed the opener at my garage door and …

… nothing.

I think you need to re-sync it, said my father.

I think it does not like me, I replied.

The following day, I had several people coming to my house in the evening, so before they got there, I rushed about tidying up. I cleared the counter of dirty dishes, loading them into the dishwasher, and – since I was in a hurry – simply turning it on. Fifteen minutes later, it dawned on me that I had not filled it with a bucket of water, so I went back to fill it, and discovered it was already full. As though it was working normally and not in need of replacement.

Just to spite me, I told my father.

This is resistentialism at its finest, he replied. Resistentialism, I learned, is a theory used to describe “seemingly spiteful behavior manifested by inanimate objects.”

I think we’ve moved beyond theoretical, I said.

One of the ladies who came over that night knew I like rhubarb, and brought me several large stalks from her garden. It’s funny how a small, well-timed gift can completely change my outlook: I went from being convinced the inanimate objects in my home were rising up against me, to being touched and thrilled at the generosity and thoughtfulness of someone I barely know, who remembered this little thing about me.

So a few days later, I woke up early, and made muffins. I don’t remember where I originally got the recipe for these, though I sure wish I did. The muffins and light and moist, with just the right amount of cinnamon accenting the tart rhubarb. I know a lot of people love strawberries with rhubarb, and it is good – but I like my rhubarb to be the star of the show, as it is here.

I’ve been reading various baking tips and tricks recently, and found a couple of them really improved the end result when making these muffins. First, sifting flour a couple of times before measuring it will result in a very light muffin. Second, and just as important, remove muffins from the pan immediately when they come out of the oven, and cool them on racks. If muffins cool in the pan, the steam cannot escape, and it it causes the muffin to become more dense and hard. Cooling them on racks prevents this. It made a huge difference – it’s totally worth the burned fingertips.

You probably knew all that, but I didn’t, so I thought I’d tell you – just in case.

Rhubarb Sour Cream Muffins

 

Rhubarb Sour Cream Muffins
 
Print
Prep time
15 mins
Cook time
20 mins
Total time
35 mins
 
Author: Sprung At Last
Serves: 12
Ingredients
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 2-1/2 tsp. baking powder
  • 1 tsp. cinnamon
  • ½ tsp. baking soda
  • ½ tsp. salt
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 8 Tbs. unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 tsp. vanilla extract
  • 1½ cups finely diced rhubarb
Instructions
  1. Heat the oven to 400°F. Line a 12-cup muffin tin with baking cups.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt and whisk to blend.
  3. In a medium bowl, whisk together the sour cream, melted butter, eggs, and vanilla until smooth. Lightly stir the sour cream mixture into the dry ingredients with a spatula until the batter just comes together; do not overmix. Gently stir in the diced rhubarb. The batter will be thick.
  4. Divide the batter among the muffin cups, using the back of a spoon or a small spatula to settle the batter into the cups. The batter should mound a bit higher than the tops of the cups.
  5. Bake the muffins until they’re golden brown, spring back most of the way when gently pressed, and a pick inserted in the center comes out clean, 18 to 22 minutes.
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Categories // All By Myself, The Joy of Cooking Tags // baking, muffins, rhubarb

Pinolata (Pine Nut Cake)

05.29.2013 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

Not long after her birthday, The Child gets sick – so sick, she has to back out of the school play, missing everything but the final performance, and then leaving before the cast party. When she recovers, we spend our evenings going over all her class assignments.

Did this get turned into math? Where are you on your science project? These are the questions I ask that fill her evenings.

It quickly becomes clear that she’s not just catching up on work she missed when she was sick, but perhaps a little bit from before she got sick … perhaps, quite a bit from then. I try to help her organize, and get back on track, but things keep popping up. She has to create a book cover for history class, she remembered. Oh! And also, she has to bring in food for class. In two days.

She’s pleased she remembered so far ahead of time. Roman food, she says. It’s for history class.

I wonder if this is my assignment or hers, but decide that her part of the assignment is probably complete now: she remembered to tell me before we got in the car to drive to school the day it was needed. I scan through my shelf and find two Italian cookbooks, my beloved Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking by Marcella Hazan, and another one, De Medici Kitchen, by Lorenza de Medici, now out of print, and which I bought for fifty cents at a thrift shop not long ago. (You can get used copies for not much on Amazon).

I start by looking for a recipe that says it’s Roman, but nothing pops out – at least, nothing that is suitable for a middle school history class toga party. So I fudge it a little, and settle instead on a simple Tuscan recipe that I think the kids will like, and which doesn’t involve refrigeration, unusual ingredients, or a trip to the store.

The Pinolata cake from De Medici Kitchen is incredibly simple – just a butter cake accented with pine nuts. I was surprised when I mixed all the ingredients and realized the recipe included no vanilla, cinnamon, or nutmeg. Just butter, flour, sugar – and not very much sugar at that. The resulting cake is a bit dry and very buttery tasting: The perfect thing to serve alongside a cup of coffee or tea, or to accompany fresh fruit.

I liked it so much that I hated to send it off to school for the kids, but send it I did. It’s simple enough to make any time I want more.

Pinolata

 

Pinolata (Pine Nut Cake)
 
Print
Prep time
20 mins
Cook time
40 mins
Total time
1 hour
 
Author: Lorenza de Medici
Ingredients
  • 1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • pinch of salt
  • ½ cup unsalted butter, softened
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • ½ cup pine nuts
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees (F). Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt in a bowl.
  2. In another bowl, mix together the butter and sugar until soft and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time. Then add the flour mixture. The dough should be quite soft.
  3. Butter a loaf pan and dust with flour. Pour the dough into the pan and sprinkle with the pine nuts. Bake for 40 minutes or until toothpick inserted in the middle comes out dry.
  4. Remove from pan and cool completely on a rack before serving.
Notes
Another blogger who tried this recipe suggests mixing the pine nuts into the dough. I pressed them into the top, but found quite a few fell off and many got a rather brown, so if this is a problem, then mixing them in would be a nice solution.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // baking, pine nuts, recipes

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