Tomato Kumato

March 16, 2009

Alex’s Birthday

I have a problem.

I write one post a day, usually. Sometimes, I don’t write a post at all. But I make dinner every day. And lunch most days. And pretty much everything I make is something that I want to blog about, otherwise I wouldn’t have made it. Throw in the fact that I worked for a month, during which I barely had the energy to eat what I had made, much less blog about it (ugh… remind me never to work again), and you have quite an archive of unblogged recipes.

This, of course, is how I end up blogging about Alex’s birthday, which is at the beginning of February, more than halfway through March.

This meal was definitely blog-worthy. After discussing whether we wanted to take his friends out on the town, we decided we would much prefer having a party at home. This, of course, meant that I was cooking. After Alex made a series of odd requests, like “meat cake” (which I took to mean meatloaf, something he had never heard of but now desperately wants me to make), we settled on pasta with bolognese sauce. For me, of course, this was a challenge: I was going to make real Bolognese, and I was going to follow all the rules.

The recipe I followed is outlined, in detail, here, at FX Cuisine. A very large majority of the recipes on this site have made their way onto my list of things to try, but I’ve never attempted any of them before. They always look so gorgeous, but I’ve always been afraid that a) I’d mess them up, or b) they wouldn’t be worth the hours it takes to make them properly.

I needn’t have been afraid. (Wow… I just used needn’t in a sentence. Crazy.) I followed the recipe to the letter, chicken livers included (something I had never tried to use before, but I really liked in the sauce.) It was incredible, and everyone agreed. My only regret is that I didn’t make it for someone who truly appreciates slow-cooked Italian food, like my brother or my dad. Oh well… they’ll be getting a taste of the Neapolitan Meat Sauce soon enough… like next Christmas.

I think what my guests truly appreciated were the chocolate cupcakes with peanut butter frosting. I knew immediately that I would have to do something with peanut butter for Alex. I almost did something with Marshmallow Fluff too, a little piece of Americana that my Frenchman, somehow, absolutely adores, but I figured the rest of the French boys in my apartment wouldn’t take too kindly to liquid marshmallow in a jar. Instead, I went for this peanut butter and chocolate cake that Deb over at Smitten Kitchen made for her Alex for his birthday. I decided to make it in cupcake form, because big things like roasts and cakes scare me.

The cupcakes were a huge success (although this is the embarrassing excuse for a picture of the final product that I found on my camera… this is what happens when I try to tackle Bolognese and cake in the same afternoon). I’ll have to try the full cake someday, when I’m not so scared.

This is chocolate peanut butter ganache.

It is incredible in every sense of the word.

March 10, 2009

Cake Day

Filed under: Cake Day, Muffins and Cupcakes, Quickbreads — Tags: , , — emiglia @ 2:14 pm

I’ve mentioned the fact that Saturday is baking day in my house before. Every Saturday, I pick something from the endless list of recipes for cupcakes, brownies, quickbread, muffins, and other desserts, and I make enough to feed an army. Then I spend the next few days trying to find a way to get rid of them.

It’s a fun little ritual that I have with myself. Baking was not a big part of my lie growing up: my mom is an incredible cook, but she never really launched herself into baking. For me, baking was the first way I learned how to give my cooking to other people, and so baking every Saturday is something I look forward to all week.

What I didn’t realize was that other people look forward to it too.

I know that people notice that I cook. A lot. Just another day, we had an orange-themed dinner party (it wasn’t on purpose) because some friends wanted me to make this pumpkin tarte tatin that appeared at my Thanksgiving. But I didn’t realize how many people look forward to baking Saturdays as much as I do.

When some friends started to filter in for a party we were having Saturday night, one of them mentioned the fact that the last time he was there on a Saturday, I had provided peanut butter-frosted chocolate cupcakes. Now, this was a party for the Boy, but it was also a Saturday, and so of course I had baked (with him in mind). But someone else noticed. And that made me smile.

But my favorite comment about Saturday baking happened earlier that day, right when I woke up. The first thing the boy said to me? “Mmm… it’s cake day!”

This Saturday, “cake day” was all about orange, just like yesterday’s dinner (which I promise to outline soon). I took a recipe for crumb cake that I found over on Vanilla Sugar and doctored it to make it a little bit healthier and a little bit more orange by using pumpkin in the cake base. If you want to use brown sugar, use an equal proportion of white and brown sugar. I didn’t have any, so I used all white, which made for a bit of a crunchier topping. Not bad, but definitely atypical.

Make sure to push the crumb mixture well to adhere to the cakes. In the first batch, I didn’t, and as Alex said, the crumbs “cassent la geule:” break their faces. Have I mentioned how much I like visual French expressions?

Pumpkin Crumb Cake (Adapted from Vanilla Sugar)

Topping:
1 1/3 cup sugar

2 tsp quatre épices (a spice-powder including cinnamon, cloves, black pepper and nutmeg)
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp salt
3 cups all purpose flour
1 cup butter, melted and cooled

Cake:
1 ¾ cups all purpose flour
¾ tsp baking powder
½ tsp baking soda
¼ tsp salt
2/3 cup pumpkin purée
1 cup sugar
2 large eggs
1 ½ tsp vanilla extract
1 tsp. cinnamon
2/3 cup fromage frais

Combine all the ingredients for the crumb topping except the butter in a large bowl. Slowly add the butter, combining with a rubber spatula. When all the butter is added, the topping should be crumb-like and sandy. Set aside.

Combine the dry ingredients for the cake. Set aside. Cream the purée and sugar together until light (it won’t get as light as if you used butter. Beat in the eggs one at a time, and add the vanilla and cinnamon. Add the flour mixture and fromage frais alternately in three to five steps, adding the flour first and last. Stir just until there is no flour streaking.

Grease a muffin pan or add paper liners. Fill each tin halfway with muffin mixture and then top the other half with crumb mixture, making sure to push down so that the mixture adheres. Bake 10-12 minutes at 350 degrees, or until the cakes spring back to the touch.

December 6, 2008

Chocolate Intensity Muffins

Filed under: Muffins and Cupcakes — Tags: , — emiglia @ 9:18 pm

I know… I know… another muffin recipe. I swear, tomorrow I’ll post some normal food.

But these muffins are incredible. Grab the recipe (and the reason I felt the need to post three muffin recipes in a row) here, at Accidental Hedonist.

December 3, 2008

Mixed Berry and Olive Oil Cornmeal Muffins

Filed under: Muffins and Cupcakes — Tags: , , , — emiglia @ 11:56 am

I usually don’t do this. I know it’s silly to post two muffin recipes in a row… especially when I have a host of other things just waiting to be posted. It seems rather silly to post muffins twice.

But I can’t help it: these are the first muffins I ever invented myself!

I usually post recipes that are based off someone else’s recipe. Sure, I put my own spin on things, but I always have to give the credit to someone else. Finally… FINALLY… I can make my own muffins. No recipe, no nothing.

It’s a big day for me.

These muffins are pretty different from other muffins out there, and definitely different from other muffins I’ve posted on this site. For one, they’re corn-based. I posted a link to the cornbread muffin recipe I used at Thanksgiving, but these are not your typical cornbread. They’re much sweeter, for one. They’re also a great deal softer and not as crumbly as traditional cornbread.

The berry mix I used contains all sorts of berries including red currants, which are quite acidic. I love it, but that means that these muffins are not as sweet as some that you may be used to. They’re definitely not as sweet as the blueberry muffins I posted yesterday, but I think the acidity adds a nice kick. If you want them to be a little sweeter, just use a different mix of berries: I’m thinking about doing the same recipe with just raspberries or blackberries next time, which is the selection I currently have in my freezer.

Go ahead and try them, and be sure to let me know what you think. I’m very excited to get back to experimenting, and I can’t wait for some of your tips!

Mixed Berry and Olive Oil Cornmeal Muffins

1 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup cornmeal
1 tbsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
5 tbsp. olive oil
1 egg
5 tbsp. honey
5 tbsp. cassonade or Sugar in the Raw + 2 tbsp. for sprinkling
1 generous cup plain yogurt (I used nonfat)
2 cups frozen mixed berries

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
Combine first four ingredients and set aside. Combine all other ingredients (except the reserved 2 tbsp. sugar and berries). Mix well. Add wet ingredients to dry and mix until just combined. Fold in berries.

Grease 12 muffin tins and distribute the batter equally amongst them. Sprinkle the reserved sugar over the tops of the muffins. Bake for 15-20 minutes until a toothpick tester comes out clean with a few crumbs attached. Allow to cool 2 minutes in the pan before removing to cool on a wire rack.

December 2, 2008

INCREDIBLE Blueberry Muffins

Filed under: Muffins and Cupcakes — Tags: , — emiglia @ 1:59 pm

I am often bothered by people who type in all caps, as I’m sure many of you are. But these muffins warrant it. I swear.

Blueberry muffins are my favorite kind of muffin, and these are the best of all blueberry muffins, so technically, I suppose that makes them the best of all muffins. I like logic when it’s subjective.

These muffins, as so many delicious things do, come from The Pioneer Woman. She and I share a love for plain yogurt… I pretty much break out in hives when I run out. I eat it for breakfast, put it in pretty much every baked good I buy, and eat it on top of everything from pasta to potatoes. It’s a wonderful invention, and this recipe uses a lot of it. Ree even shares a recipe for blueberry yogurt sauce to put on top, but I had thrown the last of my frozen blueberries (a little more than she suggests, but oh-so-tasty) into these muffins. They were excellent without the sauce and a perfect breakfast on the run… that wouldn’t have worked so well with sauce.

If you like blueberry muffins, try these. I used one 125 oz. container of whole milk yogurt and one 125 oz. container of fat-free yogurt (both the French velouté kind, which is super-creamy), so they weren’t even that unhealthy. (BTW: PW calls for a generous cup of yogurt… 250 oz. is a bit more than a cup and is the perfect amount for a dense, moist crumb. I hate the word moist. Moving on.)

IF YOU WANT TO IGNORE MY BLABBERING… JUST READ THIS PART.

Ellen’s Blueberry Muffins=crazy delicious.

That is all.

November 1, 2008

Accidental Hedonist: Halloween Cupcakes

Filed under: Muffins and Cupcakes — Tags: , , , — emiglia @ 5:16 pm

My tradition is to bake on Saturdays, but in honor of Halloween, I baked yesterday. Check it out at Accidental Hedonist.

October 9, 2008

Wedding Cake

Filed under: Cakes, Muffins and Cupcakes — Tags: , , , — emiglia @ 4:25 pm

I don’t really think I’ll ever understand dessert trends. From frozen yogurt to cupcakes to pudding bars… I just don’t see why something that’s already so good has to go one further and become “trendy.”

*Sigh.* I just don’t understand.

However, one good thing has come from the cupcake trend, and that is wedding cupcakes. Ten years ago, serving an assortment of cupcakes instead of the tiered white cake that everyone is so used to would have seemed strange, but now it’s become the norm, and at my friend Angela’s wedding in Minnesota last week, I finally understood why.

Wedding cakes have to be made in advance and then assembled, so no matter how hard the bakery tries, I’ve always been disappointed, either by a cake that’s wanting in moisture or an almost cement-like ultra-sweet frosting that tries to keep the moisture inside. These cupcakes, however, were the perfect choice for a wedding.

Angela and her new husband Chris had chosen three flavors: strawberry, pumpkin and chocolate-pistachio. They also had a small almond-praline cake so that they wouldn’t miss out on the cake-cutting ceremony. I didn’t try all four, but I have it on good authority that they were all superb. The cake was moist, the frosting was plentiful, but light and almost mousse-y instead of heavy and overly sweet. All in all, I’m thinking that this dessert trend may be something I can get on board with.

February 5, 2008

Mardi Gras… and Snickerdoodle Muffins

Filed under: Muffins and Cupcakes — Tags: , — emiglia @ 2:29 pm

I know, it’s Mardi Gras, and I’m supposed to be making pancakes, but the truth is, I just didn’t have time today. However, I will take this opportunity to blog about another recipe that I made recently that also uses up your excess flour, butter and eggs before Lent.

Yes, I finally jumped on the bandwagon and made Peabody’s Snickerdoodle Muffins, also known as, the little muffin that caused a big stir in the food blogging world… and I have to say, I totally understand the hype now! The dough was incredibly easy, made entirely from pantry items (except the sour cream… but how hard is it to get sour cream?) and rolling the dough in sugar before plopping it in the muffins tin made me giddy! Hee hee.

No, but these muffins are incredible. The outside, coated with sugar (I used cassonade, which is like Sugar in the Raw) ends up crunchy and crisp, while the inside of the muffin stays moist, probably due to the sour cream. The Canadian and I were both vying for the last one (he got it while I was at school). I made sixteen, and Britney got one… the rest we hoarded for ourselves.

I didn’t change anything… as always, the recipe is perfect, but if any of the rest of you have been slow like me about getting into the kitchen and making these… well then march yourself right on into the kitchen.

Now!

November 1, 2007

Halloween Party: Pasta, Cupcakes and… Britney Spears?

Filed under: Muffins and Cupcakes, Pasta — Tags: , , , — emiglia @ 11:00 am

I know that most people celebrate Halloween with candy… so how in the world did I end up spending my holiday with pasta, cupcakes and Britney Spears? I suppose I should begin at the beginning.

After a “tiring” shopping trip (tiring to the Canadian… I like wandering down the Champs Elysées), we headed back home. I went straight to the kitchen, where I had planned to bake some Belgian Brownies (love this recipe!) and some Chocolate Orange Muffins with Orange Cream Cheese Frosting, from slashfood. I had just started melting the chocolate over the double boiler when the Canadian called out, “You hungry?”

Of course, this doesn’t mean, “are you hungry,” but rather, “I’m hungry. Please feed me.” Because we were drinking that night (and also a little bit because I was already devoting all of my energy to melting chocolate), I suggested pasta. Directly after this, I remembered that a) we had finished all of the jarred pesto, b) I hadn’t replaced the parmesan cheese and c) the vat of tomato sauce I froze was frozen into the fridge and would need to be removed on a rainy day when I had a hammer and chisel. I did, however, have some tomato paste, tomatoes, and a recipe for Quick Tomato-Cream Sauce that was also on my list of things to try from Under the Tuscan Sun. Bingo.

This was one of the best tomato sauces I’ve ever tried, and it was really easy. My only qualm, as you can probably tell from the pictures, is that I made too much pasta and not enough sauce.

Once we ate the pasta, I still had cupcakes to bake. I made the Belgian Brownies no problem: this is one of the easiest recipes in the world and one of my favorites… and I don’t even like chocolate! But I had also wanted to make the Chocolate Orange Cupcakes… seeing as it was Halloween. One problem: no cream cheese. I decided to sub mascarpone, but in the end, the frosting was looking a little funny. I put it in the fridge, hoping that chilling it would help, and continued getting ready for our Halloween party. When my friends got there, I hadn’t had time to frost them, so I left them in the kitchen and just brought out the Belgian Brownies. However, they disappeared rather fast, and my friend Emese found and delivered the Orange-Chocolate Cupcake stash. And you know what? They were good even without the frosting. The mix of chocolate and orange is delicious, as always, and the crumb was dense. They were sweet without being cloying, and basically, just good. Sure, it looked very pretty on the slashfood site, but sometimes you just can’t make everything look pretty.

(The flatter ones are Belgian Brownies, the kind of bulbous ones are the cupcakes.)

Oh… and Britney? That was Emese:

Quick-Tomato Cream Sauce from Under the Tuscan Sun

Cook 4 or 5 slices of pancetta, drain on paper towels, then crumble and set aside. Chop 2 medium onions and 2 or 3 cloves of garlic and sauté in the pork fat for 5 minutes. Chop and add 1 large red pepper and 4 or 5 whole tomatoes from a can. Season with salt and pepper and cook 5 minutes more. Stir in 1/2 cup of creme fraîche and another 3/4 cup of canned tomatoes with juice. Add a spoonful or so of the pasta water to the sauce. Stir the pancetta into the sauce at the last minute to retain crispness. Cook and drain enough pasta for 4. Mix the pasta with half the sauce; serve the rest of the sauce over the pasta.

October 21, 2007

The Wednesday Chef

Filed under: Muffins and Cupcakes — Tags: , , , — emiglia @ 9:16 am

I stumbled across The Wednesday Chef very recently, and I immediately became obsessed with Luisa’s recipes. She gets them from the New York and LA Times’ food sections, which appear on Wednesdays. I love that she even posts recipes that didn’t work out… sometimes I feel as though my fellow food bloggers prepare perfect and effortless food every day, but Luisa reminds me (not often, mind you) that not every recipe turns out exactly the way you planned.
Yesterday, I decided, like her, to try my hand at one of the recipes piling up in my recipe box, and what I tried were these: le Pain Quotidien’s Belgian Brownies. The recipe was perfect as-is, so I won’t post it here, but it’s over at her site if you want to copy it so get over there and copy it. Now. I brought a box of them in to the newspaper office while we did layout yesterday afternoon. There are none left. I only got half of one, but what I got was tender and delicious. The chocolate power is intense, and seeing as these cakes are near flourless, they are very light and moist.

On top of everything, the recipe was ridiculously easy. It’s going into my top five for desserts… I think I’ll get to taste a whole Belgian Brownie yet.

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