Grand slam?
So were you one of the lucky ones to get a free Grand Slam from Denny’s? Yeah, me neither.
Taco Bell! It’s LENTASTIC!
Beware… Rant o’ the month…
Do you have a sudden hankering to run for the border when piously observing the Lenten holiday? If so, fear not stalwart Catholics, for Taco Bell is again reminding you to satisfy your sinful carnivorous urges with a bean burrito, taco, or quesadilla all without- you guessed it- meat.
As someone who works in the land of we’re not lying it’s PR and marketing, this doubly makes me go wtf? As a food snob who enjoys slumming it at the corner Taco Bell after a eight hour bender it makes me go WTF even more. I know there are a fair amount of Catholics in this world (I used to be one), but Jesus Christ on a pogo stick, I want to know who was the marketer that dreamt this shit of a marketing campaign up!?
Three cheers for Taco Bell and their awesomely LENTASTIC tacos!!
Life Lessons in Baking….Birthday Cake
It’s been nearly four months to the day that I told my mother I’d bake my grandmother’s 80th birthday cake. The silence that greeted me on the other line was deafening and the pause in conversation so long in fact I’d thought I’d dropped the call. Finally my mother spoke in a tone that was both bemused and incredulous. “You don’t have to do that,” she said. “We’ll just get a cake from Smith’s Bakery.” “No,” I replied trying to sound as resolute as I could. As I hung-up the phone I realized two things 1) this was the only gift I could give my wealthy grandmother that she didn’t already have twelve of and 2) failure was not an option. If my gift was to turn into fiasco it would be written in the indelible ink of family legend and would be talked about for decades to come. That one moment of realization was enough to send most home cooks reeling. I was no different. This panic signaled the beginning of what I now affectionately remember as “the Bakersfield Baking Challenge.”
Anyone who has made a tiered-cake of any sort from scratch knows that it’s a both a time and labor-intensive process. Having made a this type of cake a whopping two times in my life, I understood that I was both in for one hellavuh baking ride and that I was a blithering baking novice. C’est la vie- what was done was done. For weeks I spent researching cakes: flavors, fillings, fat content, crumb texture. I baked cake after cake after cake, sampling different fillings and frostings with each. While I was drowning in cake batter, something began to nag at me that I couldn’t quite put my finger on. I was in the midst of the stuff of dessert dreams, yet some snarky sense of dread chuckled lowly at each cake I pulled from the oven. What was that sense of dread you ask? Surely nothing could go wrong when you are creating a splendid vanilla cake with apricot filling covered in vanilla buttercream frosting three-tiered cake? To your questions I say– Yep, you are one-hundred and twenty percent right—except for one teeny thing I forgot to account for. I was baking in Bakersfield during the month of August, when temperatures are easily around 108 degrees Fahrenheit. But isn’t that why we have air conditioners and refrigerators you say? Yes, but there’s this annoying little rule and it was about to land on my cake. It’s called Murphy’s Law.
The fascinating thing about baking in a city where the outside temperature is 108 degrees is that if you happen to be in a house built circa 1970, keeping the house cool can be one hellavuh problem. This fact assailed me the moment I arrived at and entered my mother’s house. The air conditioner was running full blast and still the coolest she could get the inside of the house was 85 degrees. She looked at me as I came through the door, her eyes and mouth drawn tight with apprehension as I set down the bags of baking supplies. “We can still order a cake from Smith’s,” she nearly barked. Again I shook my head no. I was too far off the map now. Here there be monsters.
The next morning I found myself assembling the layers in the kitchen. I was making good time. Kitchen mess was at a minimum. Things were good! Still, I kept eyeing the buttercream ingredients warily. That nagging feeling of impending doom was getting thicker and I still couldn’t quite place its source. I’d just finished leveling the last tier when it dawned on me: my mother’s refrigerator wasn’t large enough to house the cake. I looked at my kin assembled in the den. Most of our tribe had traveled cross-country to make it to granny’s birthday party. There simply wasn’t any room for the cake as the refrigerator was overflowing with food to feed the horde. At that moment such creative expletives flew from my mouth that my mother chewed me out. I was midway through my stream of consciousness expletive rant when another realization slammed into my brain: that butter and Bakersfield heat do not mix, especially in an 85 degree house. My only option was a Crisco-based frosting.
I ransacked my mother’s pantry for her butter flavored Crisco while I silently begged the Kitchen Gods to let me find my only good Crisco frosting recipe. In my head I could hear future generations laughing- not to mention the herd assembled in the living room- at the Great Cake Disaster story! I dug through the recipe books I had brought to my mom’s on a whim and luckily found the grease and sugar stained recipe wedged in one. In mere minutes the frosting was made but the consistency was off. It was too warm. Into the refrigerator it went only to be too cold when I pulled it out. This happened over and over for 30 minutes. Just as I was starting to feel like Goldilocks the frosting turned just right. I had two hours left until I had to get dressed and in those two hours I needed to frost, decorate, and repair the cake as I was sure the frosting was going to slide off the cake. And slide off it did.
As I stood in the kitchen, whispering expletives as I frosted each layer white, my family gathered and watched me work. They were fascinated. When the heat in the room and the heat of my hands turned the pink frosting in my decorating bag to near liquid, my family said, “Don’t worry: It’s fine just plain white.” I laughed and stuck it in the freezer. “I can decorate it at the restaurant. Don’t let me forget that bag.” When the frosting slid off the cake, I’d hear my name, stop dressing, and fix the cake with chilled frosting. The frosting finally crusted as the Sister-Cat, Boyfriend, and I drove to the restaurant, AC on full blast with the cake perched precariously on my sister’s lap. Who would have guessed?
The cake became the stuff of family legend and not, I’m proud to say, because of my frosting woes. It’s now remembered as a true, handmade gift of love. In my book, that made all the craziness worth it. That said I’ll always double-check the refrigerator from now on.
Rynn: King’s Cake Recipe
I have no idea why it’s called a King’s Cake. Well, I know why it has King in the name but the cake part is totally a misnomer. Like Rhode Island. Rhode Island isn’t an island any more that a King’s Cake is a cake. Still, this weekend is both the weekend preceding Mardi Gras…and Super Bowl. For real Catholics (like my boyfriend), this is a double-whopper of a weekend to celebrate before Lent. For us recovering Catholics (that would be me), Lent means nothing but Mardi Gras and Superbowl still retain their status. Hence, I made my first King’s Cake (pictures will be uploaded once my boyfriend sends them too me). But as if that wasn’t enough, I also made tamales. I know, I know: I’m getting my holiday food traditions mixed up. But what the hell, life is for living and a part of living is eating well. Hence here are the smash up & altered recipes I mixed together to make my version of a King’s Cake. Thanks to Danno at Nola Cuisine (http://www.nolacuisine.com/2007/01/06/king-cake-recipe/) and Monica Glass at the Gilded Fork (http://www.gildedfork.com/recipes/mardi-gras-king-cake.html) for providing the inspirational recipes. I will say that I used Danno’s brioche recipe verbatim and altered Monica’s a bit.
I will say, I was a bit worried that my experimental filling would be a culinary Frankenstein’s monster, but when my friend’s 92-year-old grandmother (who’s a notoriously picky eater) proclaimed it, “excellent”, I exhaled the breath I hadn’t realized I’d been holding. Even better when people asked for the recipes!
King Cake Recipe
For the Brioche:
1 Envelope Active Dry Yeast
2 Tbsp Warm Water (115 degree F)
1 tsp Iodized Salt
2 Tbsp Granulated Sugar
1/4 Cup Milk
2 tsp Orange Zest, minced
2 Cups All Purpose Flour, sifted
1 tsp Cinnamon
2 Eggs, beaten
1 1/4 sticks cold Unslated Butter, cut into very small dice
1 Egg beaten and 2 Tbsp water, for the eggwash
1 plastic baby trinket
Dissolve the yeast in the workbowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment, let stand until frothy.
Dissolve the salt, sugar, orange zest and milk in a small bowl. When dissolved combine the milk mixture with the yeast mixture. Mix the cinnamon with the flour.
With the mixer on low speed, add the eggs, then gradually add the flour, until all is incorporated. Knead on low speed for 10 minutes, or until a smooth elastic dough is formed. A little more flour may be necessary. With the motor running, incorporate the butter into the dough, a little at a time but rather quickly so that it doesn’t heat up and melt.
Turn the dough into an oiled bowl, loosely cover with plastic wrap and let rise for 1 hour in a warm spot.
When the dough has doubled in bulk punch it down, cover and place in the refrigerator overnight.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
Roll the dough out to a 6 x 18 inch rectangle. Spread the filling (recipe below) out in the middle of the rectangle along the whole length, leaving about 1 1/2 inch on each side. Place the baby trinket somewhere with the filling. Fold the length of the dough over the filling and roll up tightly, leaving the seam side down. Turn the roll into a circle, seam side down and put one end inside of the other to hide the seam, and seal the circle. Place the cake on a baking sheet and let rise, loosely covered with plastic wrap, for 45 minutes or until doubled in bulk.
Place the king cake into the oven and bake for 30 minutes or until golden brown.
When the cake cools, brush with some of the glaze (recipe below). This will help the sugars adhere. Decorate the cake with the colored sugars and drizzle some of the thicker glaze onto the cake.
For the bourbon pecan filling:
1 (8-oz) package cream cheese, room temperature
1/2 cup confectioner’s sugar, sifted
1/2 cup light brown sugar
2 tablespoons Sailor Jerry’s rum (traditionally bourbon, I’d have used Maker’s Mark if I’d had it)
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup chopped pecans
Prepare the rum pecan filling:
Place the cream cheese, confectioner’s sugar, brown sugar, bourbon, vanilla and cinnamon in a work bowl. Using a spoon, fork, paddle attachment, or whatever you use to mix your ingredients, blend the ingredients until they are thoroughly combined and smooth. Add the pecans and mix. Set aside until ready for use.
For the icing:
2 cups confectioner’s sugar, sifted
1 tablespoons warm milk
1 tablespoon orange juice
1 tablespoon Sailor Jerry’s rum
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon melted butter
Purple, green and gold tinted sugar
Heat the milk until it’s warm. Place the butter in the milk and stir until it dissolves. Add the rum, OJ, vanilla, and cinnamon and combine. Sift the powdered sugar and add it slowly to the liquid (or be lazy like me and just dump it in the bowl). Stir until the frosting is a nice glaze with no weird powdered sugar lumps. I like mine to be a little thinker so I added a bit more sugar, but if you prefer a runnier glaze, go with your preference.
Jenn: So much more than a grape…
I have found that over the years my interest or dare say “passion” for wine has grown and thus many of the activities I enjoy tend to be centered around the crushed grape. From taking classes, going to tastings, throwing parties and now, co-initiating a wine and food blog, I can even further project the intimate relationship I have with said beverage.
I used to be almost ashamed of my love for wine thinking I could be viewed as an alcoholic…(especially since in my own life I am quite healthy and active.) To be frank, I am actually not a big “drinker”; in fact, I have been termed the “one-drink wonder” as my tolerance for alcohol is almost laughable.
However, it is not just the consumption of wine that has me so entranced, but rather all that comes with being ‘involved’ with vino. From the terrior to the vine; the vine to the grape; the grape to the barrel; the barrel to the bottle; the bottle to the glass…and for that moment in the glass as you swirl and waft the aromas that permeate with each breath of air, that moment, that time, is perfect. There are no hidden agendas, no anxieties, no right or wrong answers…it is a moment wholly unto itself that is meant to be shared with just one…you.
But it is also just not about the solo experience. With wine, comes good food and good friends. For me, wine can make any dinner a special occasion and thread together all elements of a social setting to make it unforgettable. Watching your guests sip on what you have poured, questioning their own palates, seeking out the perfect descriptors for what they had experienced. That is what wine ultimately is for me…an experience.
Finally, the beauty from which wine is grown is enough to inspire one into a place of serenity and peace. Moments in wine country are therapeutic solely for the aesthetics and ambiance that is found in every corner. Each vine helps to create a haven for families, friends, lovers and even inspires the individual soul to reflect and take note of the wonder that surrounds them.
So I can only hope that all you wine enthusiasts and foodies, young and old, new or proficient, can find some joy out of this blog as I have out of the whole wine experience.