Sunday, October 16, 2011

Apple Walnut Brownie Cake

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Chirr chirr. Chiiirrrrrrr. Chirr chirr. What's that noise? Oh yes, it's the SILENCE that nested in here over the last days.

It has gotten a bit quiet around here, hasn't it? That is because I am really busy these days, having only little time for la dolce Vita. But don't fret, I'm here to stay. A weekly post is still something you can count on. Bare with me until mid-November, when life is hopefully a bit less stress-laden. That is when I am (hopefully) done with my bachelor's thesis. Keep your fingers crossed for me, would ya?

Apple Walnut Brownie Cake

Alright, I have to admit...that's not all. Last week, I allowed myself a teensy weensy time off from everything. I was in London! How I LONG for that city! I have expressed my love for London before when I did that seven things about me post, and it's oh so true. Maybe one day I'll manage to live there. Especially after a friend of mine who is living there now has proven to me that it is basically just as EXPENSIVE to live right in the centre as it is in any other part of LDN. How I envy her...Sigh. I realize that I only lived there for the shortest time and I still kind of see things through rose-coloured glasses, but lets wait what time will bring.

Apple Walnut Brownie Cake

While three days is not long (I did not go alone and we only managed to do the touristy things), it meant that I had to catch up on all the work that waited for me back home. Uhhhgh. Je ne regrette rien. Maybe a bit. No. Nothing.

Alright, this week I am back on the apple track, after last week's short break. The recipe combines one of my favourite combinations - chocolate and walnuts – with the sweet tartness that bring the apples. Alas, while the apples were supposed to stay at the top, the batter 'ate them up' just a bit too much in the baking process (maybe I should not have eyeballed the amount of baking powder...) so that they were hardly visible anymore in the final cake that was so wonderfully ooey-gooey, it was difficult to cut a piece without making a mess. Still, it's a texture and flavour paradise. It's juicy, a bit crunchy and creamy.

Apple Walnut Brownie Cake

Apple Walnut Brownie Cake
Adapted from here (German).

  • 100 g (3.5 oz.) butter
  • 100 g (3.5 oz.) dark chocolate (70% cocoa)
  • 100 g (3.5 oz.) walnuts
  • 75 g (2.65 oz.) flour
  • 225 g (8 oz.) brown sugar
  • 50 g (1.75 oz.) + 1/2 tsp cocoa powder
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 package of vanilla sugar (can be substituted with 1 tsp vanilla extract)
  • 3 eggs (size M)
  • 125 g (4.4 oz.) crème fraîche
  • 4 apples (each ca. 175 g or 6.2 oz.)
  • 75 g (2.65 oz.) apricot jam
  • 1 tsp powdered sugar
  • Butter for the pan

  1. Melt butter and let cool slightly.
  2. Coarsely chop the chocolate and walnuts.
  3. Whisk together flour, sugar, 50g cocoa, baking powder and vanilla sugar in a bowl.
  4. Add eggs to a mixing bowl, beat with a handmixer (or food processor) until creamy. Stir in butter. With a spoon, stir in the flour mixture well.
  5. Fold in crème fraîche, chocolate and nuts in portions.
  6. Pour batter into a greased springform pan (26 cm diameter or 9'') and smooth out.
  7. Peel the apples into quarters, remove seeds and cut in several times with a knife.
  8. Lay them out tightly onto batter.
  9. Bake in a preheated oven (electric oven: 175°C or 350°F / fan 150°C or 300°F / gas mark 2) on middle rack for about 45 minutes. Meanwhile, heat up jam.
  10. After 25 minutes, remove cake from oven. Brush apples with jam and put the cake back into the oven for the remaining 20 minutes.
  11. Remove from oven, place on a wire rack, loosen edge of springform pan and let cool in the pan.
  12. Mix together 1/2 tsp powdered sugar and cocoa.
  13. Loosen cake from the springform pan, set on a cake plate and sprinkle the sides with powdered sugar and cocoa mixture.

Enjoy!

There is still that document open that I have to focus on... so back to work!

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Five Spice Snickerdoodles

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Five. Spice. Baby. Dudun dududun dudu dun dun. I bet Vanilla Ice never saw that one coming.

You know what? Before I got sucked into the fast-paced and capturing world of food blogs, I have never heard of the miraculous concoction that is five spice powder. Then I read about it on several blogs, featured in both sweet and savory dishes. I was intrigued, yes, but never imagined ever getting my hands on it because I thought I would not be able to get where I live. I was wrong.

Five Spice Snickerdoodles

One day I was just sort of meandering through my go-to self-proclaimed 'international' shop – and with 'international' they mean mostly Asian and Oriental food with a bit of African thrown in – when I found a semi-transparent little plastic bag tightly stuffed between a plethora of other semi-transparent plastic bags filled with spices. This one, however had the unexpected printed on it in bold black letters on a baby blue background: 5 Spice. Jackpot.

Curiously, I sniffed the package – quickly checking whether anybody else is in sight because, you know, I don't want to be the weird person sniffing stuff in public except fruits maybe – and fell in love with what I was smelling. Usually, five spice powder consists of a combination of cinnamon, fennel seeds, star anise, sichuan pepper and ginger, each representing one element of the five element theory (Wu Xing). 
Probably one of the most famous dishes it is used in is peking duck.

So, as I have never used this spice mix before, I wanted to try something basic with the powder providing most of the flavour. I found this amazing quick recipe over at Dispatches From Whitcomb Street for snickerdoodles. Can it get more basic than that? I don't think so.

They turned out amazing. Crispy and airy on the outside but nice and chewy in the centre. Scrumptious.
My family liked them so much that I had to make them again two days later.

Five Spice Snickerdoodles


Five Spice Snickerdoodles
Adapted from here.

  • 1 cup (225g) of butter
  • 1.5 cups (340g) of sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2.75 (345g) cups flour
  • 2 ts of baking powder
  • 1/2 ts salt
  • 1/2 ts five spice powder

  1. Cream butter and sugar together until light and fluffy.
  2. Beat in eggs.
  3. Whisk together flour, baking powder, salt and five spice and fold into wet ingredients until just incorporated.
  4. Roll dough into 1'' (about 2,5 cm) balls and roll in a mixture of sugar and five spice powder (the original recipe said 3 tbsp of each was enough but I almost used 6 tbsp of each)
  5. Put on lined or greased baking sheets at least 2'' (5cm) apart and bake at 400°F (about 200°C) for 8-10 minutes.

Enjoy!

Five Spice Snickerdoodles