Tag Archives: dessert

Best banana bread recipe really is

I never, and I mean never, post recipes here that I find on the Web. I am going to make an exception for this banana bread recipe, which claims to be “Best Banana Bread.”

It is. By far. It calls for 4 bananas. You know it’s going to be a moist quick bread just from the looks of the batter.

Banana bread batter in cake pan

Here’s the finished product.

Banana bread ready in square cake pan

I often make quick bread in a square cake pan. We like it that way. You need not worry about slicing evenly, and slices falling apart. You get it.

It’s hot as blazes in the Bay Area right now, but I have guests from Germany who wanted some typical American fare. Given that I had some overripe bananas hanging around, I Googled “best banana bread” and that is exactly what I got.

More to come when things turn chilly around here.

Here’s a link to the recipe.

http://www.food.com/recipe/best-banana-bread-2886

 

Downsizing, or Why I Buy Ben & Jerry’s, Where a Pint is a Pint is a Pint

A 14-ounce container of Haagen-Dazs ice cream with the weight circled in marker.

Downsizing always makes me mad. This ice cream should be 16 ounces — a pint!!!!

Why don’t manufacturers take a little hit to their own bottom lines in order to benefit the consumer? I guess in today’s world greed reigns supreme.

Downsizing is why I now rarely buy Hellmann’s/Best Foods mayo. I buy Kirkland brand, which is excellent, and believe me when I say that I was always a Hellmann’s girl. I’m from New York City, for crying out loud.

The Kirkland version is a little salty, but it’s great, and is a full 64 ounces!

I am simply tired of being given less. I understand that prices need to go up now and then. I get that. This game of downsizing, though, I don’t get, and I try to opt out of participation whenever possible.

 

 

Caramel in a Pinch

Caramel in a glass jar

If you find you’re in need of caramel and don’t want to go through the full spiel, read on.

Caramel elevates most everything it’s added to, and to have a decent caramel sauce available with little notice and a reduced chance of being maimed by sugar cooked above 230 deg F. — which is what you do to make it the “real” way — is heaven.

This quick recipe is more milky than traditionally-made caramel, which, in a nutshell, involves cooking sugar to a high temperature and then cutting it with butter and/or heavy cream.

To make it the quick way you cook a little butter and sugar and then add a can of sweetened condensed milk and continue to cook it.  The whole thing takes about 30 minutes, give or take.

Let’s start with something even easier, though.

can of sweetened condensed milk with lid open

Dulce de Leche

If you use only sweetened condensed milk, you’ll be making dulce de leche, a caramelized milk and sugar confection.

Some people boil a can of sweetened condensed milk for several hours, but it’s dangerous. If you don’t keep it completely submerged the whole time it can explode, and you don’t want any part of that.

I generally just cook the sweetened condensed milk down slowly in a saucepan.

I sometimes put it in little canning jars, place them in my slow cooker, completely submerge them under water, and cook on low for 7 hours or so — making sure the jars remain completely submerged.  If you try this, be sure to take them out carefully when done, like with jar lifters, and allow them to cool down some before you open anything. Whatever you do, don’t put hot jars on a cold surface or they’ll crack!  I got the slow cooker/canning jar idea here.

Quick Caramel with Butter

If you want a buttery-milky faux caramel, use the recipe I’ve included at the end of this posting.

You’ll need only a little white sugar (it’ll work better than organic sugar), a little butter and sweetened condensed milk.

leftover caramel in a blue bowl

Because I assume you need a topping for that quart of ice cream burning a hole in your freezer and not because you’re producing artisanal candies, I think you’ll be happy with the result.

If it’s thick, you can thin it with milk or cream.

If it’s grainy, you can sieve it.

Just don’t burn the caramel.  If you burn it, it is not salvageable, and you will be unhappy.

Quick Caramel Sauce
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
If you have a little butter and a little sugar and a can of sweetened condensed milk on hand, you can make a respectable caramel sauce.
Author:
Recipe type: Dessert
Ingredients
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 2 tablespoons white sugar (organic or brown sugar can sometimes cause graininess)
  • 1 can (14 ounces) sweetened condensed milk
  • Milk or cream to thin, if needed
Method
  1. Cook sugar and butter in small saucepan over moderate heat until sugar has melted
  2. Add sweetened condensed milk and combine well with sugar/butter mixture
  3. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly with heat-proof spatula
  4. Cook until you get the color and consistency you want. DO NOT BURN!
  5. If too thick, CAREFULLY thin with heavy cream or milk while still in the saucepan and combine well. The mass will be VERY HOT and it may bubble up when you add the milk or cream!
  6. If grainy, just press through a sieve

Affogato: Quick, wonderful dessert

Affogato at Pasta Pomodoro in El Cerrito

My son’s friend, Ed, introduced him to affogato a few years ago, and I’m glad.

Affogato means “drowned” in Italian, and involves pouring a shot of hot espresso over a scoop of vanilla gelato or ice cream, and is quite delicious.  I’m glad to have learned about it because it’s an easy way to serve a lovely dessert on the fly.

If you don’t have an espresso machine, a very strong shot of regular or good instant coffee works, but, really, you can go to Marshall’s or Ross and get a stove top espresso maker for around $10.  You don’t need some expensive job from Sur La Table.  One can of Illy and a quart of decent ice cream in the freezer will make you dessert-ready.

Ideally, serve the ice cream in a cup and the espresso on the side in a little silver pitcher or creamer, allowing your guests to pour said espresso over said ice cream.

The photo above is of a mini-affogato we had recently at Pasta Pomodoro in El Cerrito – which you can generally order even when it’s not listed on the menu.

Abstract 4th of July Glazed 7up Cake

Abstract glaze for a 4th of July cake

My mother is going to see family in New York City and Germany this summer.  She’ll be gone for two months and is leaving on Tuesday, so I made a couple of special things as a sort of a bon voyage last night.  This is a reason to celebrate for all of us, if you catch my drift.

The meal turned out to be a total bomb.  It was hot in the kitchen, I was rushing and trying to do too much, and my leg was bothering me.  I have osteoarthritis in my right leg, which set in, they think, because of a minor injury I had years and years ago.  Standing for long periods wreaks havoc with that leg, even with a gel mat.  I was one miserable camper even before the oyster soup overcooked and broke.  Then I undercooked the brie in puff pastry, so it was gummy.  Amateur mistakes that were my own fault.  I stewed in my own juices as my family ate the oysters I fished out of the soup with the top layer of the baked brie, telling me all the while how good everything was.  You have to love kind people.

I sought to redeem that meal via the 7up cake I made for Matthew to take to a party today, which I gave an abstract glaze in red, white and blue.

Here’s how you can do it, too.

1).  First, make a pound cake in a bundt pan of some kind and let it cool completely.  Make this 7up cake, which is a huge favorite in my home, but ignore the glaze in the recipe.  It’s buttery and dense with a lemony zing, and uses 7up as a leavening agent.  When it’s cool, set out a sheet pan, line it with foil, place a small bowl on top, and then place the cake on the bowl, right side up, so it’s elevated.  Use a bowl whose diameter is smaller than that of the cake.  Check out the photos below.

2).  Assemble blue and red food coloring (you can buy concentrated natural food colorings on the web or in baking or specialty stores), confectioners sugar, lemon juice, one medium-sized bowl and two smaller bowls.  Use bowls that won’t be ruined by the food coloring.  You’ll also need three spoons.

3).  Place three cups of confectioners sugar in the larger of the three bowls.  Add a very small amount of lemon juice — no more than three tablespoons.  Mix in to check consistency.  Add more lemon juice in tiny increments, so you wind up with a very thick glaze that runs slowly.  You will need only a small amount of lemon juice!!!  Transfer 1/3 of the glaze to each of the smaller bowls.

4).  Add a few drops of blue food coloring to one of the smaller bowls of glaze and mix it in thoroughly.  Add more, if needed, until you get the color you want.  Repeat for red.

5).  Using a spoon and holding it above the cake, apply white glaze (the one you added no color to that’s remaining in the larger bowl), allowing it to cover the top well and run down the sides and middle. Check out the photo below for an idea of how things should look.  Allow cake to sit a few minutes.

6).  Apply red next, using quite a bit of glaze with each spoonful.  Drizzle on using a looping motion.  You want plenty of red, but allow lots of the white to show.  Make sure the red glaze runs down the sides and middle.  Allow cake to sit a few minutes.

7).  With blue, swirl all over cake in small ribbons.  You want this layer thin with lots of lines so it creates an abstract design.

8).  Let cake sit for a couple of hours.  Do not touch it!  Do not cover it!

9).  Tent foil over cake gently and let it sit all night so that the glaze hardens completely.  Do not touch cake with foil!  Do not move cake!  Leave the whole contraption as-is and cover it with foil!