Showing posts with label Christmas desserts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas desserts. Show all posts
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Christmas crack
This year, I delegated most of my Christmas traditions and responsibilities in advance, knowing that when Baby 2.0 was born in November, the holidays would be hectic. Thank goodness for family... My sister knocked off all the presents on my list, she helped me decorate the house, and we hired someone to put up the lights. And I told myself I wouldn't do any Christmas baking.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
The case of the curious Christmas cake pops
Christmas is well behind us, I know.
I can't even use Armenian Christmas as an excuse (it falls on January 6) but I think this post on cake pops still merits a read for those of you, seasoned or newbie, who are considering making these.
While I have always dismissed suggestions cake pops were the new cupcakes, I also followed this trend from a distance. I concede I thought they were a charming novelty.
I can't even use Armenian Christmas as an excuse (it falls on January 6) but I think this post on cake pops still merits a read for those of you, seasoned or newbie, who are considering making these.
While I have always dismissed suggestions cake pops were the new cupcakes, I also followed this trend from a distance. I concede I thought they were a charming novelty.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Dark chocolate Buche de Noel with meringue mushrooms
This is the single, proudest moment I've had as a baker this holiday season. I really thought I lost my baking mojo until I produced this whimsical Buche de Noel. I'll admit I've made quite a few cheesy treats over my time. I like the glitz and the glam and the glitter and the flashing lights. I like the red and the green and the cartoon-type figures that please my toddler.
But a Buche de Noel, a traditional dessert served at Christmas, is for me evocative of a fallen log in a snow-dusted forest. It's untouched, it's pure. It's a quiet, delicious moment undisturbed by the usual din and racket. It's indulgent simply because it takes so long to create something that disappears in just a few minutes.
Thursday, December 22, 2011
White-Chocolate Cherry Shortbread

This recipe caught my eye on Pinterest with the simple caption: "Apparently, the best Christmas cookie ever." "Best" piqued my interest, and "ever" drove it home. How could I possibly ignore the recipe for the best Christmas cookie ever?
So I decide to make it on a whim and take it to my friend's house as my contribution to her annual cookie swap. I had already made a couple of other kinds of cookies but this one seemed like it would be my show-stopper.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Canadian Living's Really Good Rum Balls
I considered not blogging about this recipe because I'm not crazy about this photo and I'm a big perfectionist. But, I'm also a realist and these rum balls were such a hit they're all gone, and I can't bear not to share the recipe with you. I'm not making them again just for the photo, sorry.
I never used to like rum balls, but over the last couple of years I've developed a soft spot for those gigantic tennis ball-sized rum balls I can get at mom-and-pop run Italian bakeries.
I never used to like rum balls, but over the last couple of years I've developed a soft spot for those gigantic tennis ball-sized rum balls I can get at mom-and-pop run Italian bakeries.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Hershey's Candy Cane Blossoms
You know that saying: Don't judge a book by it's cover? Well, I'd like to meet the puritan who came up with that one to have a word or two. Because we're going to judge a book by it cover even if we don't want to! As a book publishing graduate, I study the cover: It tells me the market the publisher is going for. It tells me if it's won any awards, it tells me what other prominent authors think of the text. A cover is important.
And I also decide to make cookies based on their appearance, obviously. Especially during the holidays. So I flagged this recipe on Pinterest because I loved the vibrant Christmas colours. And we eat, first, with our eyes.
Monday, December 19, 2011
Santa Hat Party Mix
I like alliteration. I like sequins. I like punny jokes. I like Palm Beach fashion. I like a bit of camp. Isn't it obvious? I like a good gimmick. So by the time Christmas rolls around, I've already been bookmarking festive recipes for months. This one jumped right out at me on Pinterest because I'd never seen anything like it and the Santa hats were so festive, so fantastic, so fun! Flavour had absolutely nothing to do with it.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Martha Stewart's Pumpkin-Chocolate Tiramisu
If you love pumpkin, if you love chocolate, heck even if you just love cake, you will love this dessert.
I found this recipe after doing some Googling to find a way to use up my leftover pumpkin puree.
And I'm so very glad I took a chance on this revamp of the classic Italian dessert. Luscious, moist, delicate, the perfect combination of fall flavours. What can I say? I'm a big fan of this dessert.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Frosty vanilla snowflake cake
It had been a while since I felt the burning ambition to decorate a cake. Lord knows I'm all about shortcuts these days -- which is why when I saw this in the Kraft Kitchens' holiday edition I knew this recipe would be quick to bake, slower to decorate. And though the purists may be choking on their homemade shortcrust pastry right now, sometimes that's about all you can ask of me.
The beauty of this dessert is that it is lovely, covered by fragile white-chocolate piped snowflakes that will hide a not-so-perfectly frosted cake.
Saturday, January 1, 2011
Chocolate Mousse Igloo
Monday, December 27, 2010
Paula Deen's Pumpkin Gingerbread Trifle
I first discovered the recipe for this trifle months ago. But I knew that the only time I could get away with serving a dessert as decadent, as creamy, as luscious, as gooey, as spicy, as flavourful as this one was during the holiday season. And so I flagged this recipe way back then and made a note in my BlackBerry calendar that I must make this trifle for Christmas Eve this year.
No sooner had someone taken a spoonful of this trifle did I hear my name being called out, to ask about the recipe. Truth be told, my family is not really a trifle crowd. The ladies often ask for chocolate, or perhaps cheesecake, but for the most part we are nibbling on cannoli or Middle Eastern dense date-filled cookies after our holiday and birthday feasts.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Nigella's Christmas Cornflake Wreaths
So, I will admit that I have never ever made Rice Krispie treats and the prospect of making these Christmas Cornflake Wreaths was a bit daunting. These aren't your typical melted mallow-and-cereal treats, though, these are Rice Krispie treats all grown up.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Chocolate Gingerbread House Petits Fours
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Cookbook Review: The Gourmet Cookie Book
Despite all the cookie collections that have recently hit bookshelves, "The Gourmet Cookie Book" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) is not just any old compendium of cookies. This book lists the single best recipe for each year from 1941 to 2009, offering not only an archive of the best cookies over the decades, but documenting America's history and evolving taste buds through its cookies.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Crisp maple shortbread cookies
And the maple glaze is the perfect touch to elevate a, let's face it, often boring and overexposed cookie.
Add this to your repertoire and you won't be sorry.
Best of all? This isn't one of those recipes that produces a sorry output of a whole 20 cookies. I got dozens of cookies out of this batch and froze most of them for the holiday season. (I already took a few out to see how they freeze and after spending some time at room temperature, they are as good as new).
Monday, October 25, 2010
Bobby Flay's pumpkin pie with cinnamon crunch and bourbon-maple whipped cream
I have to admit I was wary when making this pie from Bobby Flay's new book "Throwdown!", which features recipes from his cooking challenge show on Food Network. For one, whenever he is challenged on his baking skills, he is nervous because he knows baking is not his forte.
Second, even he acknowledges taking the easy way out by making a graham cracker crust rather than making a pastry crust. Third, he admits the "Throwdown" show audience booed him for using pumpkin puree from a can. Well, he won the challenge.
So when my co-worker and I agreed to bring pumpkin pie leftover from our Thanksgiving celebrations, and be judged by our peers in an informal "Throwdown" of our own, I was feeling pretty unbeatable. After all, I'm the more domestic of the two of us - married with a kid and I bake all the time, while my competitor is a bachelor and admits not to baking.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Christmas tree cupcakes
I made these chocolate cupcakes with coffee-flavoured buttercream for Christmas Eve with the in-laws. I thought I had everything under control. To maximize my time, I made everything in batches. Cupcakes one day. Buttercream, another. I planned to decorate and pipe the buttercream just before leaving for the party. I had even done my own mise en place with all my dragees and other decorations.
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Mini pumpkin spice bundt cakes
I took a several-week hiatus from blogging and baking after my son was born, but decided to get back in the kitchen and finally put my mini Bundt cake pans to use with a recipe for pumpkin spice cake. While my Kitchen-Aid mixer has been relegated to a top shelf I can't barely reach - to make room for the baby bottles and bottle warmer - I haven't lost my touch.
This recipe for pumpkin spice cake with maple cream-cheese frosting is from a wonderful book called The Art and Soul of Baking by Cindy Mushet. The recipe is for a regular cake, but I adapted it for the mini Bundt cake pans, left out the frosting, and decorated it with confectioner's sugar and caramel sauce. You can also make it in a regular Bundt cake pan.
The recipe follows.
Cake
•1 stick (4 ounces) unsalted butter, softened (65° to 68°F)
•1½ cups (12 ounces) firmly packed light brown sugar
•2 large eggs, at room temperature
•1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
•1 cup (8 ounces) canned pumpkin puree (not spiced pumpkin pie filling)
•2 cups (7 ounces) sifted cake flour
•1 teaspoon baking soda
•¼ teaspoon baking powder
•¼ teaspoon salt
•½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
•¼ teaspoon ground allspice
•¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
•¹⁄8 teaspoon ground cloves
•½ cup (4 ounces) buttermilk, at room temperature
Frosting
•12 ounces cream cheese, at room temperature
•¾ stick (3 ounces) unsalted butter, at room temperature
•½ cup plus 1 tablespoon (6½ ounces) pure maple syrup, preferably Grade C
•1¾ cups (5¼ ounces) sifted confectioners’ sugar
•1 cup (4 ounces) pecan pieces, toasted and finely chopped, for garnish
1.Preheat the oven to 350°F and position an oven rack in the center. Lightly coat the pan with melted butter, oil, or high-heat canola-oil spray and fit it with a round of parchment paper.
2.Cream the butter with the sugar: Beat the butter and brown sugar in the bowl of the stand mixer on medium-high until very light in color, 4 to 5 minutes. You can also use a hand mixer and a medium bowl, although you may need to beat the mixture a little longer to achieve the same results. Scrape down the bowl with the spatula.
3.Add the eggs: Beat the eggs and vanilla in the small bowl to blend. With the mixer on medium, add the eggs to the butter mixture about 1 tablespoon at a time, allowing each addition to completely blend in before adding the next. About halfway through, turn off the mixer and scrape down the bowl, then resume adding the eggs. Scrape down the bowl again. Add the pumpkin and blend well.
4.Add the dry and wet ingredients alternately: With the fine-mesh strainer, sift the cake flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, and cloves into the medium bowl and whisk to blend. With the mixer on the lowest speed, add the flour mixture and the buttermilk alternately, beginning with one-third of the flour mixture and half of the buttermilk; repeat, then finish with the flour mixture. Scrape down the bowl and finish blending the batter by hand.
5.Bake the cake: Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Bake for about 1 hour, or until the top is firm to the touch and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Transfer to a rack to cool completely.
6.Make the frosting: Place the cream cheese and butter in the cleaned bowl of the mixer or a food processor. Blend until smooth. Add the maple syrup and confectioners’ sugar and mix thoroughly. Scrape down the bowl with a clean spatula and blend again briefly.
7.Unmold the cake: Run the thin, flexible knife or spatula around the edge of the pan to loosen the cake. Place a cake cardboard or tart pan bottom on top of the pan, hold the two together, and flip over. Lift the pan off the cake, leaving the parchment on the cake. Flip again so the cake is right side up. Level the cake, if necessary. Using the serrated knife, slice the cake horizontally into two layers.
8.Assemble and frost the cake: Place a cake cardboard (or plate) on your work surface. Using the second cardboard or tart bottom, transfer the cake’s top layer to the assembly cardboard, cut side up. With the icing spatula, spread a generous ½ cup of frosting evenly over the surface. Flip over the bottom layer of cake, slide it into place on top of the frosting, then remove the parchment paper. Voilà!—a crumb-free surface for frosting. Use the remaining frosting to cover the top and side of the cake. Use a spoon to create swirls all over the top by gently pressing the tip of the spoon, rounded edge down, into the frosting in a back-and-forth motion. Press the toasted pecans into the side of the cake. Serve immediately, slicing with a thin, sharp knife, or refrigerate until needed.
Storing: The cake will keep, refrigerated, for 3 days. It is best served at cool room temperature, so be sure to take it out of the refrigerator 30 to 45 minutes before serving. Once cut, there is no need to wrap the whole cake with plastic; simply press a piece of plastic wrap firmly against the cut surfaces to keep the cake fresh.
To make the mini Bundt cakes:
Thoroughly coat the Bundt pans with butter or oil spray then dust them with flour. Pour the batter in, but leave an inch or two of space. I baked these for about 35 minutes but the best way to test is by checking whether they are firm to the touch and inserting a toothpick in the centre comes out clean.
Substitutions:
I didn't have time to make the frosting so I tapped some confectioner's sugar on top of the mini cakes and then drizzled some caramel sauce for presentation. Next time I will indeed try the frosting and perhaps drizzle some pecans or walnuts on top for some added crunch.
Would I make this again?
Yes indeed I would. These were light, fluffy, and packed with flavour. The ideal fall or winter dessert for a casual dinner party.
Grade:
Five stars out of five. I made these in a race against time, praying, and hoping that my baby would not wake up. Fortunately this recipe was quick and easy, and turned out as promised.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Easter egg nest cupcakes
I got the idea for the toasted coconut from Williams Sonoma's version of Easter cupcakes, I thought it would be more realistic looking than coloured butter cream.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Maple apple cinnamon cake
Ever had guests coming over for coffee, but you have nothing on hand to serve? This happens to me a lot, particularly because I try not to buy sweets that I will be tempted to snack on.
I have, in the past, made a run for the 24-hour grocery store that's within walking distance. But usually that results in serving stale desserts that I normally wouldn't be caught dead eating.
Fortunately, I can whip up a quick coffee cake that is as indulgent as its aroma is pleasing to guests as they walk through the door.
This recipe is one of those such coffee cakes. Bonus, you can safely tell your guests it's a more nutritious recipe, thanks to Rose Reisman, who finds easy alternatives to fattening ingredients such as butter and sugar.
Try maple syrup, applesauce, or even low-fat yogurt. You won't even know the difference.
This recipe is from my dog-eared copy of Reisman's "Divine Indulgences."
Ingredients for cake:
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1 large egg
2 large egg whites
1 cup unsweetened applesauce
1/2 cup maple syrup
1/2 low-fat yogurt
1/3 cup vegetable oil
2 tsp vanilla
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 cup diced, peeled apples
2 tbsp granulated sugar
1 tbsp all-purpose flour
Ingredients for icing:
1 cup icing sugar
2 tbsp maple syrup
1 tbsp water
Adapted directions:
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Spray Bundt pan with vegetable oil spray.
2. In large bowl, using whisk or electric mixer, beat together brown sugar, cinnamon, egg, egg whites, applesauce, maple syrup, yogurt, oil, and vanilla.
3. In another bowl, stir together 2 cups flour, baking powder, and baking soda. With a wooden spoon, stir the dry mixture into the applesauce one until everything is properly mixed. Pour into pan
4. Place pan in centre of oven and bake for 35 to 40 minutes or until toothpick comes out dry. Let cool.
5. Meantime you can make the icing by beating together the icing sugar, syrup and water. If you need to, add extra water to achieve spreading consistency. Spread icing over cooled cake.
Substitutions:
None. I happened to have everything on hand, which greatly endeared me to the ingredients.
Would I make this again?
Yes, I would. This cake kept well for several times, wrapped tightly on my kitchen counter.
Grade:
Four stars out of five. While this cake was delicious and easy to make, as my niece remarked, it tasted better several days later. Also, while it was moist than fluffy and light, this might not be to everyone's liking.
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