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Filtering by Category: Sweets (and some savories)

Peach Raspberry & Rosewater de la Cake

apollina baker

cake de la renta

I did it, I finally made another cake!  I haven't baked since I found out I was pregnant last summer.  I attempted to make a couple of cakes in my first trimester but quit halfway through.  After slicing and tasting, they ended up in a shoe box. But I've been wanting to make this cake since I laid eyes on this lovely number in Oscar de la Renta's Spring 2013 collection.  It's so flirty and feminine and peachy pink!

Destined to be a cake made of peaches, raspberries and rosewater...

oscar de la cakey

After brainstorming the flavors with Sara, my lovely friend and coworker, I found an awesome Peach & Rosewater Curd recipe online and the rest of the cake practically made itself.  Ha.  Not really.  It took me 3 days.  Baking with a baby makes it a lot longer of a process...  How do Smitten Kitchen and Sweetapolita do it??

oscar cake
cake slicey

It was a delicious cake and I know this because my aversion-to-sweets husband said so.  I think I should have made it with two layers of the peach/rosewater curd instead of just one because the flavor was so subtle.  I baked raspberries and peaches in their own layers and frosted them with a vanilla buttercream made with juice from a jar of sliced peaches. Also very subtle, could have gone crazier with the frosting flavor.  Amara was on my hip for most of the curd stirring, it takes so much time for curd to thicken up!  That was the extent of her assistance with the baking part but she did lend her cute little self for the photo shoot...

my lil cake helper

We got a little messy.  The recipe is below.  I should have added rosewater to the decorative frosting...  I was nervous about making the cake taste too flowery since rosewater can be pretty potent.  But if it was in the rosettes then you could eat as much or as little as you like.  All in all, I am happy with it.  It just felt nice to bake again.

amara mess

Peach, Raspberry and Rosewater Cake ...

For the Cake: (I doubled this recipe since I made 4 layers)

Ingredients:

  • 4 eggs
  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • ½ cup vegetable oil
  • ½ cup peach puree
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder
  • 1/4 cup milk (whole)
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1.5 cups fresh raspberries (or you can use frozen)
  • 1 cup sliced fresh peaches (ditto above)
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon

To Make: Preheat oven to 350°. Beat the eggs and add 2 cups of sugar, the oil and the peach puree, beat until well blended. In a separate bowl, combine flour, salt, and baking powder. Next, beat those dry ingredients into the egg and oil mixture alternating with the milk. After that, blend in the vanilla. In a separate bowl, toss the sliced peaches with 1/4 cup sugar and the cinnamon. Pour half of the batter that you would normally pour into a greased and floured pan and then layer the peach mixture over it and then cover with the other portion of the batter. Repeat this in a second pan with the raspberries (I didn't toss them with any sugar or cinnamon). Again, I doubled this recipe so that I had two layers of the peach cake and two layers of the raspberry cake. Bake at 350° for 30-35 minute or until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool cake 10 minutes in pan; turn out onto a wire rack.

Peach and Rosewater Curd (found here on Group Recipes)

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup fresh peach puree (make in a blender/food processor)
  • lemon juice to taste, about 1 tablespoon
  • 1/2 teaspoon rosewater (bought at Whole Foods)
  • 6 tablespoons butter

To Make: Beat the egg yolks with the sugar, peach puree, lemon juice, and rosewater. Place over simmering water and stir constantly until thickened (eventually, it will thicken). Remove from heat and beat in butter, bit by bit. Strain well and chill.

Vanilla Buttercream Frosting (with a bit of peach juice and/or rosewater*): (double if making extra to decorate)

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup butter, softened
  • 3 1/2 cups confectioners’ sugar (add more or less to get the right consistency & taste preference)
  • 1 teaspoon milk

*Play with the flavor a little and add some of the juice/syrup from a jar of peaches and/or a little rosewater

To Make: In mixer bowl, beat butter first and then combine in the sugar and salt. Beat until thoroughly blended. Add the milk, juice and vanilla and beat until smooth and creamy.

To Assemble/Decorate: Layer the curd in between the fruit cake layers (I only used it in the center layer since I had 4 layers). Frost the cake with the buttercream and then pipe the flowers on top. I used 3 different gel food colors: peach (for the bottom half of the cake and half of the flowers), copper/fleshtone (for the top half of the cake) and fuchsia (for the remaining flowers). The fuchsia was too purple and not quite pink enough so I would just use bright pink and add in some purple/fuchsia if it needed it. I used a Wilton 2D to pipe the flowers. Just hold the tip vertically onto the cake and squeeze until the flower has built up a bit, add a slight twist while squeezing. Stop the pressure and then pull away.

It was really a delightful tasting cake, not too sweet and subtle fruitiness. The fresh peaches and raspberries were awesome. Let me know if you try it out and alter the flavors!

I want to start decorating!

apollina baker

More specifically, I want to put up a bunch of white lights all over our apartment and keep them lit for the rest of the year.

Festive lighting just makes you feel so warm and glamorous.  And like something exciting is about to happen...

In other news, check out these white chocolate eggs filled with eggnog and painted with edible gold dust... Oh how rich?!

Fall Dinner Party: Pumpkin Pot Pies

apollina baker

I hosted a Fall dinner party last weekend and tried out Martha Stewart's Pumpkin Pot Pie recipe which was a hearty hit! After watching these two videos from Martha (1 & 2), I set out to create the pumpkin cuties for my lovely guests. On the guest list were the beautiful D.C. bloggers and great friends, Sara, Rosa and Katalina. They are by far 3 of the best things to come out of this little blog adventure of mine. There were 10 of us total so 10 sugar pumpkins, also called pie pumpkins, were needed to act as the festive fall vessels for this delicious chicken stew. They are pretty easy to prep, especially when there is a big, strong man in the kitchen slicing off pumpkin tops and scooping out guts. After that part was over with, I brushed melted butter inside the pumpkins and on the rim, sprinkled salt, pepper and nutmeg inside and baked them at 375 degrees for 30 minutes. Oh man, the kitchen smelled good...

We then got to chopping the veggies. Once the pumpkins were out of the oven, we roasted the chicken with olive oil, salt and pepper for 45 minutes and left the pumpkins to cool. All this, by the way, can be done in advance. You can fridge/freeze the stew and then just stick them in the pumpkins when you're ready to bake.

photo via the lovely Rosa Loves DC

Once the stew is done and the pumpkins are cool, load the stew inside and cover with the pastry dough. Now, M.S. makes her own Pate Brisee (which I had to look up) but instead of messing with all of that, I bought Pepperidge Farm's puff pastry sheets and called it a day. They are easy ( you thaw them, roll them out and cut them) and they're dairy free in case you have any guests with allergies. I kind of messed up this part though because I was afraid of running out of dough. I rolled them out too thin so they didn't rise as much as I wanted. It's so cute cause Martha covers the pumpkins with the dough, twists up the center to mimic the stem and then draws little lines with a knife to line up with the creases on the pumpkin. If I had used more dough they probably would have appeared clearer coming out of the oven.

images via the very talented Sara from High Fashion 4 Less

And the chatting and drinking and munching ensued while the PPPs baked. Also on the menu, was Spiced Rum Apple Cider, Warm Brie with Walnuts and Caramel, Frisée and Apple Salad with Dried Cranberries and Walnuts, Apple Cobbler and Pumpkin Carrot muffins (dairy free). Oh, and another beautiful friend made some delicious pumpkin bread.

photos via the lovely Rosa Loves DC

And then the oven timer buzzed and we were ready to eat!

photos via the lovely Rosa Loves DC

And they were delicious! Scraping the sides and bottom of the pumpkin as you eat the warm, savory stew was SO GOOD. Next time I make them I'll only put a quarter of the pearl onions in, they took up way too much space. And I'll make a thicker dough top.

It was so much fun to try out this recipe and much more fun to have friends around to help me eat! And may I just say how great it is to have blogger friends who take great pics? :)

Almost time to make like a palm tree... and leave!

apollina baker

It’s about time I clear off the dust that I’ve allowed to accumulate on my blog and do a freakin’ post!  My wedding in Mexico is exactly 7 days away now and I have palm trees and tropical weather on the brain… I thought a fun cake inspired by Charlotte Olympia’s ridiculously awesome Meridith wedges was appropriate right now...

Now, this cake isn't one of my favorites.  I’ll be the first to admit, it doesn't exactly mirror the wedges in color or proportion, but I said I’d share the good and not-so-good of my baking endeavors with you so, here’s my little homage to C.O. and her tropically conceived Spring/Summer 2012 line.

The leaf portion is a key lime cake (I just added a few tablespoons of lime zest and and a half cup or so of fresh lime juice to my standard vanilla cake recipe) layered with a lemony icing (mixed equal parts lemon curd with a classic vanilla buttercream recipe).

The top layer is strawberry cake layered with strawberry frosting (it is that same classic vanilla buttercream mixed with frozen strawberries  thawed & pureed in a food processor, to taste). The key to this strawberry frosting is mixing the heck out of the butter before adding any other ingredients. The frosting will literally taste like strawberry ice cream. OMG.

By far, the best thing about this cake is the photos. I enlisted the aid and expertise of my dear friend and photo guru Rosa from Rosa Loves DC to take some pictures of these tropical tiers; she is a miracle worker, let me tell you.  I'm not as proud of this baby, but as I said, I'm letting it all hang out, cake wrecks and all.

The whole time I was baking/frosting/decorating this cake last weekend, I was on speaker phone with my sister coming up with/finalizing the design of my menu cards.  HINT: there are palm leaves on them.

And now, a poem for Rosa Loves DC:

Roses are red,

Violets are blue,

You may love DC,

but Rosa,

I love you!