Category: <span>Dessert</span>

We decided on a low-key, home-made dinner for hubby’s birthday. After a long discussion, he ordered some sort of a stew, mashed potatoes and Tiramisu. I happily obliged. Warning: there is no finished picture of the Tiramisu as we devoured it, and my mother’s AMAZING apple cake before snapping any pictures. I assure you, they both were delicious.

Manly beef…

Seared for MAXIMUM flavor…

Accompanied with mashed potatoes and sweet snap peas.

Chased with dessert…

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The summer and fall were busy seasons in our family as they were peppered with many children’s birthday celebrations. Although tiring to commute up north to Pennsylvania and Delaware, it is always great to see family and watch kids play together. This past Saturday marked the last of the children’s birthdays; It was my nephew’s 9th birthday and I had offered to make his cake. My sister and brother-in-law accepted my offer and gave me free reign on the theme. Their sole request was that the cake be any flavor other than chocolate. Begrudgingly, I agreed. I mean c’mon, how can you not want a chocolate birthday cake?!

Regardless, a roasted apple spice cake with cream cheese (and butter) frosting was baked with love and adorned with fondant legos. It was a hit with the kids and sophisticated enough for the adults despite the aqua blue icing. Maybe next year, I’ll make Sophia’s cake…

Culinary Adventures Dessert

We planned a nice celebration what with Sophia turning one. Although not exceptionally girly, I decided that a little tea party was in order to toast her with our family and friends. We sent out proper invitations and planned to serve tea sandwiches, scones and the likes. The day finally came last Saturday. All in all, after recuperating from the exhaustion of prepping and the hard work of celebrating, we’ve got pictures to look back on.

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Today is Yom Kippur and tomorrow happens to be my mom’s birthday. I decided to bake a cake as a surprise to augment her already fairly significant dessert table. I know it is going to be a reverse dinner (much more dessert than savory foods) when she announces a menu of strudel, sochinskoe (more on that in a minute), apple cake and another layered vanilla cake. I realized that she is making this delicious break-the-fast meal and yet tomorrow is her birthday and no one really made plans to celebrate. I decided to make a birthday cake fit for a Bubbie: a chocolate cake with raspberry filling and a rich chocolate frosting from here.

Sochinskoe by the way, is another dessert that my mother learned to bake while we were in Baku. It is really a sweet pastry filled with nuts and sugar and vanilla. It is utterly divine and remains one of the two desserts (the other one is her famous strudel) that I have yet to master. After a little bit of googling, I found a comparable recipe and read that it happens to be an Armenian dessert. I shouldn’t be too surprised as there were many Armenians living in Baku in the late 80ies before the Karabakh Conflict. I was there and lived to see too much for a child my age. In any event… it is heavenly and maybe I’ll make it one of these days.

But this post is really about the cake… so here it is in parts and as a finished masterpiece.

Cookery Dessert Flavors

Inspired by early summer, beautiful weather and enabled by my wonderful Mother-in-Law who visited and played with Sophia, I took on the challenge of making Pirozhki for the first time ever. Since Late Spring/Early Summer is in the air and strawberries are sweet, the rhubarb is tart they together will comprise my Saturday pirozhki filling. The dough was a yeast-based dough with butter (what could be better than puffy, buttery dough?) and the filling was just diced strawberries, rhubarb and a bit of sugar. I am still practicing my crimping skills… maybe a few hundred more batches and my parties will be uniform…

Culinary Adventures Dessert

As Sophia is still too little to really enable us to travel to far and exotic destinations, but a vacation was an absolute must, we decided to have a stay-cation. That is, we planned not to go anywhere (far) and enjoyed just being out and about locally. My parents offered for us to come up so that they could babysit in the evenings and we could go out and catch up with friends. We accepted without hesitation. The Friday before we left, I got an email that my local farm opened with pick-your-own strawberries and tart cherries. I happily ran over to pick some for the road and as a hostess gift for my parents. Ten pounds of strawberries later (with obvious signs of heat exhaustion not to mention sunburn, I opted for the pre-picked tart cherries).

Tart cherries hold a special place in my heart. My mother’s mother had a beautiful fruit and vegetable garden. Aside from apples, pears, apricots, peaches, strawberries, red and black currants, rhubarb, gooseberries, and rasberries, she also grew tart cherries. Tart cherry season meant one thing when I was little: Tart Cherry Vareniki. Hot out of the water, tart, sweet, oozing with syrup — there are very few dishes that are better in the early summer. We used to pick them ourselves, gallons of cherries, their red juice squirting everywhere in our little hands. They were probably a little worse for the wear and fewer in numbers by the time they got to the house when we picked them as kids, but that made them perfect for varenniki.

Anyway, apparently tart cherries aren’t as available here. In fact, I’ve only seen them at farmer’s markets in Philadelphia and at the local farm. We’ve begged my mom to make the varenniki with them for years and even used hubby as a ploy. My sister, her husband, my dad and I would say “Come on mom, E. hasn’t had these, EVER…. don’t you want to show off your culinary prowess with dumplings?” She would always say “Get me real tart cherries, come help and I will do it”. Well, the day had finally come. Too hot, tired and dirty from a very wet strawberry field, I picked up two quarts of cherries and ran quickly to my car as if the cashier at the farm was going to demand her cherries back. To excited, I called my mom and told her of my acquisition. She was in disbelief and probably slightly disgruntled but very much up to the challenge. So, in true multi-cultural fashion, we decided to make them for Memorial Day to supplement the remainder of our pretty typical BBQ menu. Since I acquired the cherries and essentially was the cause of this, I volunteered to pit the cherries. Two hours later (my mother was so sure she would NEVER make these here in the States that she does not own a cherry pitter), I was done albeit already ready to be done with cooking. I helped make the dough and learned how to form them. You’ll see in the pictures that mine are the much uglier and misshapen and my mom’s are beautiful and uniform. Nonetheless, they were D-E-L-I-C-I-O-U-S and hubby declared that they were amazing and worth waiting for. All in all, not too difficult to make, but they disappear into hungry bellies much faster than it takes to make them. I’ll make them again, and again and always remember my childhood summer memories as I cook them. When she is older, I’ll tell Sophia the stories of my childhood over a plate of varenniki.

Culinary Adventures Dessert Mom's Cooking Uncategorized

A day without chocolate seems inconceivable to me. Nothing can replace the deep earthy flavor of chocolate as it melts in your mouth except… well an exceptional chocolate chip cookie. Actually, a chocolate chip cookie with walnuts is better than a plain chocolate chip cookie and white chocolate (which I don’t consider to be chocolate at all) with macadamia nuts and dried Bing cherries is a close second.

I don’t know of many people who like their chocolate chip cookies to be brittle and crisp. The best way to achieve soft, rich and gooey cookies is with a high fat content (aren’t most things better with more fat in them?) and also to use melted not softened butter. So that’s just what I do, I take a regular chocolate chip cookie recipe and melt the butter, beat it with regular and brown sugars, add eggs (not 1 egg, but 1 egg and 1 egg yolk), vanilla, flower, baking soda and of course… CHOCOLATE CHIPS. Last tip, don’t overmix the batter after you add the flour and stir the chocolate chips in by hand.

Ooey, Gooey and Delicious

This is just what you need to get through your Wednesday!

Dessert

A welcome visit from the in-laws provided me with ample opportunity to indulge in my much-forgotten past-time: BAKING.

While they took Sophia for a mid-afternoon walk/nap, I jumped into action trying a new banana cake recipe with cream cheese frosting. I have made plenty of banana breads in my life, but it is simply too hard to pass up an opportunity to make cream cheese frosting!

Banana Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting

As imagined and expected, the result was moist, decadent and just absolutely devine without being cloyingly sweet and too rich like many of our usual go-to chocolate concoctions often are.

Cookery Dessert