Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Vegan fudgy zucchini brownie cupcakes with lavender buttercream

vegan chocolate zucchini lavender buttercream brownie cupcakes

Whipping up these cupcakes has caused me to wonder: why haven’t I made anything with lavender before?

No idea.

Because it is mind-blowing. World-changing. Palate-arousing. “Ugh, can’t even”-inspiring.

And you can expect me to incorporate lavender into as many recipes as possible in the coming months, for better or for worse.

Friday, August 1, 2014

Vegan tiramisu pancakes

vegan tiramisu pancakes how to philosophize with cake

Hey y’all! Long time no see! No worries, I’m back to torture you with more odd-looking breakfast food and gory butchering of the English language. Hide yo wife and hide yo kids, cos June is here to stay.

Sunday, July 27, 2014

Vegan baked French toast topped with maple blueberry crisp

vegan baked French toast topped with blueberry maple crisp

Right after departing from our five days of Suzuki violin force-feeding otherwise known as Ogontz, la familia de Baby June headed right over to Lincoln, New Hampshire for some more vacationing. Why? I am not entirely sure. This is, however, our only big vacation of the year, so it is only natural that we would want to milk the opportunity for all it’s worth.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Vegan chocolate peanut butter swirl bread

vegan chocolate peanut butter swirl bread

There’s something special about making homemade bread. It’s not like cake, my first true love, where you whip up a batter—usually involving just a few steps—and stick it in the oven. With bread, you have to nurture the dough for hours; you have to be careful with it and play with it gently to get all of the right attributes, whatever those may be. And if you’re like me, you will probably mess up at some point and end up with a weird-looking, if delicious, little loaf.

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Strawberry rhubarb custard bars

how to philosophize with cake rhubarb strawberry custard bars

When you’re depressed, one of the first things that goes away is your motivation. You will go from your own hero to zero faster than you can say “hey that’s a Katy Perry lyric”. You will find it awfully difficult to do basic things like brushing your teeth, mostly because that requires getting up and going into the bathroom and putting toothpaste on the brush and ugh so much work. Effort becomes the one true evil in the world (besides your own shitty self, obviously).

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Vegan sweet potato layer cake with candied pecans and chocolate frosting

vegan sweet potato layer cake with candied pecans chocolate frosting

As you can see, some dramatic, earth-shaking changes have been enacted on this here blog as of late. To the left, there is a line of social media icons, as follows:

bloglovin facebook google plus pinterest twitter
No fucking duh, Baby June.

You will find that these symbols link to my social media profiles. Why did I do this? Because I am a validation-starved attention whore, obviously. Feel free to click on them. Or not. It hardly matters, because my point in mentioning this is to give credit to Sew Many Ways’ tutorial on how to create this beautiful line of symbols as well as Carrie Loves’ free downloads.

In case you were wondering, I used “dazzling blue”.

So thank you, Sew Many Ways and Carrie Loves, for this.

Well, that had absolutely nothing to do with the recipe I have here, so let us move on to more fascinating and delicious courses of conversation—I mean, single-stream ranting—like, I don’t know…sweet potatoes.

twice baked sweet potatoes
Sweet, sweet potatoes. source

Imma let you finish, but sweet potatoes are the greatest vegetable of all time. And yes, they are vegetables. Even though they taste like candy.

Not only are sweet potatoes delicious, but they have been a staple of the human diet for millennia. The World Until Yesterday by Jared Diamond, a fascinating book I recently read, described how many traditional societies (the term used for the tribes and bands of, you know, yore). I can’t find a direct quote, but I distinctly remember reading that some societies (mostly those in Polynesia and South America, where sweet potatoes are a native plant) had diets consisting of up to 90% sweet potatoes. In case you aren’t so great in math, that’s a lot. Trust me. I eat tons of sweet potatoes, but my dietary intake probably maxes out at around 5%, depending on the day.

Why were these societies able subsist off of this fabulous vegetable? Because it is a) readily available in their climates and b) super nutritious and c) probably the tastiest food these primitive societies had available to them. I mean, if you have a choice between taro root, plain greens, and sweet potato, would you really  say, “Hey, I’m really feeling that spinach today, let’s go munch on some dressing-less salad while we fight of starvation and disease”? No. You fucking wouldn’t. In fact, you would probably rather go and hunt some lions. Sweet potatoes just happen to be a bit easier to acquire than fresh lion flank steak.

GO EAT SOME SWEET POTATOES, MOTHERFUCKER. source

Okay lion, calm down. Bitch.

And that is how some traditional societies came to rely on sweet potatoes so heavily. Does that make eating 90% sweet potatoes paleo?

nuts and berries fruit veggies lean meats and fish the paleo pyramid
I don't think traditional societies were able to acquire that much meat, but whatever. source

Reading The World Until Yesterday in large part justified my obsession with this glorious vegetable. It’s natural. Must be in my genes, buried underneath all of the beer-loving Irishness and croissant-gomphing Frenchness and whiteness in general.

So it came as no surprise to my family that, when I officially finished all of my stupid fucking exams and was home for the summer, I chose to make a sweet potato layer cake to celebrate. 

vegan sweet potato layer cake candied pecans chocolate frosting
Um...I don't see any sweet potato.

Yes, there is sweet potato in there. Somewhere. Somehow. If you dig beneath all of that frosting, you shall find it.

Scroll up to the top where I so helpfully placed that shot of a single slice of this beautiful mess, and you will see that the frosting is sort of sectioned off into two layers. That is because there is actually two layers of frosting. The first layer consists of world-famous two-ingredient vegan frosting, made with coconut cream and chocolate chips, and to be honest it came out quite shitty. Shitty enough that I smeared it all over my painstakingly crafted layer cake and cried my heart out before sucking it up and making a batch of buttercream to hide the failure. The second frosting recipe I tried, from Add a Pinch, came out far, far better—and so from now on I recommend that instead as a staple vegan frosting. It is simple and fabulous and fluffy and delicious and every way. You can’t go wrong with chocolate buttercream.

Now about the cake. The pound cake, which I adapted from Taste of Home, was sort of a mess too. I did not think you would have to spread the batter perfectly smooth in the pans before baking. I was wrong. Thus I strongly recommend you make sure to do so if you attempt this recipe. Also—I was lacking silken tofu to make my favorite egg replacement, therefore I was forced to use chia seeds (as you can plainly see). That was not so grand, unless you like having little black dots studded throughout your cake. So feel free to use tofu instead.

Otherwise, there was nothing wrong with this layer cake. Nothing at all.

I know. I’m just perfect that way.
___________

Sweet potato layer cake with candied pecans and chocolate frosting

Makes one large layer cake

Ingredients

Sweet potato pound cake (adapted from Taste of Home)

56 grams ● Earth Balance, softened ● ¼ cup

54 grams ● coconut oil, softened (or more Earth Balance) ● ¼ cup

100 grams ● granulated sugar ● ½ cup

124 grams ● silken tofu, blended until smooth (or other substitute for two eggs—I used two chia eggs) ● ½ cup

2 grams ● vanilla extract ● ½ teaspoon

187 grams ● all-purpose flour ● 1 ½ cups

4 grams ● baking powder ● 1 teaspoon

1 gram ● baking soda ● ¼ teaspoon

1 gram ● salt ● 1/8 teaspoon

2 grams ● cinnamon ● ½ teaspoon


1 gram ● nutmeg ● 1/8 teaspoon

200 grams ● mashed and cooled sweet potatoes ● 1 cup

Sweet potato cheesecake (adapted from Nutrition Stripped)

318 grams ● sweet potato ● 1 cup plus ½ cup plus 2 tablespoons

141 grams ● cashews, soaked for one hour ● 1 cup

240 grams ● maple syrup ● ¾ cup

14 grams ● coconut oil ● 1 tablespoon

0.5 gram ● salt ● 1 pinch

168 ● chocolate chips ● 1 cup

Candied pecans (adapted from Babble)

100 grams ● pecans ● 1 cup

50 grams ● sugar ● ¼ cup

14 grams ● coconut oil ● 1 tablespoon

2 grams ● vanilla extract ● ½ teaspoon

2 grams ● salt ● ¼ teaspoon

2 grams ● cinnamon ● 1 teaspoon

Chocolate fudge frosting (adapted from Add a Pinch)

170 grams ● Earth Balance, softened ● ¾ cup

43 grams ● cocoa powder ● ½ cup

300 grams ● powdered sugar ● 2 ½ cups

60 grams ● nondairy milk ● ¼ cup

4 grams ● vanilla extract ● 1 teaspoon

1 gram ● espresso powder ● ¼ teaspoon

Instructions

To make sweet potato pound cake, start by preheating the oven to 350 degrees F and greasing two nine-inch round baking pans. Set aside.

Place Earth Balance, coconut oil, and sugar in the bowl of an electric stand mixer and beat until light and fluffy. Add tofu (or chia eggs) and vanilla extract and beat until combined. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, nutmeg, and salt. Add to creamed mixture alternately with sweet potatoes and mix just until combined. The batter will be stiff, and that’s okay.

Divide batter into the greased baking pans, smoothing over batter into an even layer, and bake for about 20 to 25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean. Let cool for ten minutes before removing from pans, then let cake layers cool completely before making the other layers.

To make sweet potato cheesecake, combine all ingredients in a powerful blender or food processor and let it whir until thoroughly combined.

To make candied pecans, start by placing parchment paper on a baking sheet. Set aside. Then, melt coconut oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add sugar, salt, and cinnamon and stir to combine. Add nuts and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until sugar caramelizes and the nuts are toasted. Remove from heat and add vanilla. Pour nuts on prepared baking sheet and use a fork to separate nuts into a single layer. Let cool completely before using.

Now, place the cooled sweet potato cake at the bottom of a nine-inch springform pan. Sprinkle some candied pecans on top, then pour sweet potato cheesecake on top of that. Add the rest of the candied pecans. Top with the final layer of sweet potato cake and put the whole shebang in the freezer.

To make chocolate frosting, place softened Earth Balance and cocoa powder in the bowl of an electric stand mixer and cream together until well combined. Next, add one cup of powdered sugar and one tablespoon of milk. Turn mixer on high for about a minute, then add another cup of powdered sugar and another tablespoon of milk. Mix on high once again. Finish with the remaining milk and sugar as well as vanilla extract and espresso. Beat like a mofo until it is nice and fluffy and wonderful.

To finish cake, remove the sides of the springform pan from the prepared layers and cover the whole thing with frosting. Do it like a dude; don’t be afraid to get messy with that bitch. Put it on a cake tray and serve it up to your drooling guests. Or yourself.
___________

Out of all of the components in this cake, I would say the chocolate chip sweet potato cheesecake and the candied pecans are tied for most delicious. I could not stop eating those pecans, I swear. Had to hurry to put together the cake lest I eat them all. Same thing with the cheesecake—could have eaten it with a spoon right out of the food processor like the fucking punk rocker I am on the inside if I hadn’t mustered up a shred of self-control just in time. 

vegan sweet potato layer cake with candied pecans and chocolate frosting
That green plate does not go well with that brown cake. Sorry.

And despite this cake’s imperfections, I would say it was one of the best cakes I’ve ever made. Maybe not number one—the Thin Mint cake still takes that designation—but still up there. So much chocolate. So much sweet potato. I am lost for words.

vegan sweet potato layer cake candied pecans chocolate frosting
I'm as confused as this photo is right now.

In other news (besides cake, obviously): I have recently gone to the cake store (or whatever it is called) to get some more awesome-sauce baking supplies, such as new piping tips (ZOMG!), an offset spatula (finally!), a box of fifty piping bags (yes yes yes!), and—wait for it—SPRINKLES! Nonpareils, to be specific. Armed with these and a library copy of Sensational Buttercream Decorating, I shall conquer the world.

You just wait and see. 

Friday, June 20, 2014

Easy vegan banana split ice cream

There are some special recipes out there so simple one hardly needs instructions—a PB & Elvis, for example—yet the end result is remarkable enough that you can’t keep it to yourself. This is one of those.

easy vegan banana split ice cream

Banana ice cream has been around for a while now. I think we can all agree it is fabulous. One ingredient. Takes about five minutes of kitchening around, if you don’t count the time the bananas spend in the freezer; and unless you are allergic to bananas (an allergy which I actually have encountered) pretty much everyone, no matter their sensitivities or food preferences, can enjoy it. Okay, and unless you are my mom, who can only stand half a banana at once.

half a banana
She eats them for the nutrition. I admire her virtuousness. source

As you can see, this berry-filled treat is practically the epitome of health and happiness and life itself, and goddamit, it’s not going to give you acne and body odor. Hallelujah. But I hesitate to label this as OMGhealthy, since, you know, the pursuit of healthyness really means ain’t so clear as this ice cream is delicious.

The Interwebs are full of people who seem to have it all figured out, whether that means cutting out types of food or food groups or mimicking Paleolithic dietary patterns (mkay) or only drinking juice (wut) or only eating foods that do not have dirt on them (double wut). It’s all quite confusing, in the end, since most of these natural food specialists or dieticians or whatever seem to have vastly different sources of information to support their ideas. And that’s okay. Maybe they should go into politics.

So like the pretentious uppity bitch that I am, I go ahead and ignore everything every natural food specialist or whatever says and eat my cake. Even though wheat and sugar and canola oil and all that shit will obviously blow you up like Violet Beauregard, not to mention bestow you with nearly every disease and disability in existence and ultimately crush our already fragile health care system under the weight of your flubbishness. You sick fatty fat.

Frankly, I’m more worried about the important issues—like whether or not I should spend the next four hours of summer vacation sleeping or faffing around online. 

internet forever 3:17 am
You said it. source

Irreverence aside, you’ve got to admit the world of healthy eating is full of contradictions and misinformation and other sort of things that make it pretty damn hard to figure out what, exactly, you should eat today. I try my best. I eat a lot of salad. Even if I put stale bread and Cheez-its and coconut bacon and shit all over them.

salad bacon one leaf
I made a salad! So proud. source

Lucky for us hapless plebeians there seems to be a consensus that whole foods—fruits and vegetables and other such things which are harvested in their whole, natural form—are the best for one’s health. So there’s that.

And guess what? This ice cream is filled with whole foods. Well, I think it does. Pretty sure. Bananas are whole foods, right? And cherries? Or does it not count if you don’t eat the pits? What if you discard the shells of the walnuts? I don’t know. This is confusing.

In an attempt to further understand whether or not this ice cream really is “healthy”, I plugged the ingredients list into a nutrition calculator and examined the results, as follows:

easy vegan banana ice cream nutrition facts
Wow! Exactly 200 calories!

So it has a bit of saturated fat. Whatever. There is some polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fat, both of which are supposed to be good for you. Or maybe not. Maybe fat is evil. We don’t know. There’s a lot of potassium, anyway, which is fabulous, as well as fiber. There’s a whole bunch of sugar, which we all know is the devil, but there are almost four whole grams of protein! So it’s worth it!

minerals present in easy vegan banana split ice cream
Didn't need to know all of that but whatever.

Thanks to Sparkpeople’s recipe calculator, we can all know way more than we needed to about the recipes we make. For example, who knew this sexy awesome ice cream recipe was rich in Vitamin B-6, Vitamin C, Copper, Magnesium, Manganese, and Riboflavin? Ain’t that fine! I don’t know what it means, but it sounds good!

By now, you must be totally utterly heads-over-heels in love with this super-duper healthy recipe. I know I am. 

easy vegan banana split ice cream
Um...I guess?

Yes, yes. You can obviously see above that it isn’t the prettiest of ice creams. I’m not exactly a seasoned ice cream maker, banana or otherwise, so maybe I lack the skills to swirl fudge sauce into ice cream properly so it looks all nice and neat.

Who cares, it tastes great. Like a banana split. But healthier.
____________
Banana split ice cream

Makes six servings

Ingredients

About 4 spotted (well-ripened) bananas

Handful of cherries (maybe try maraschino cherries, but I used fresh)

Chopped walnuts

Hot fudge sauce (recipe below)

Instructions

Chop bananas into coins and put in the freezer with cherries until hardened, about 2 to 3 hours. At this time, place frozen cherries and bananas in food processor and blend until smooth. It will take a few minutes, so be patient. When it looks all creamy and ice cream-like, pour into a freeze-able plastic container. Fold in some chopped walnuts and hot fudge sauce. Freeze for a few more minutes and serve. Store any leftovers in the freezer.
_____________

Hot fudge sauce (adapted from The Pretty Bee)

Ingredients

21 grams • Earth Balance or other vegan buttery spread • 1 ½ tablespoons

16 grams • all-purpose flour (gluten free if desired) • 2 tablespoons

244 grams • nondairy milk • 1 cup

21 grams • cocoa powder • ¼ cup

43 grams • sugar • 3 ½ tablespoons

Pinch salt

Instructions

Head on over to The Pretty Bee to get instructions. Allow to cool completely before using.
__________

As you can see, this recipe is so incredibly easy you don’t even need to measure some of the components. You can put as many or as few bananas as you want, so long as they are fully ripened and frozen. You could even try swapping fresh cherries for maraschino cherries, for an extra boost of nostalgia-inducing banana split flavor. 

easy vegan banana split ice cream how to philosophize with cake
That font is making my eyes bleed.

Not only does this bowl of deliciousness bestow you with the joy that only good ice cream can bring, it allows you to retain your position of smug self-righteousness regarding your own health! Ain’t it fine?

Or maybe that’s just me.

Seriously, though, this stuff is good enough for breakfast. And that’s good enough for me.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Peanut butter and jelly birthday cake

If there’s anything more futile than the pursuit of happiness, that would be the pursuit of perfection.

peanut butter and jelly birthday cake

People used to say I was a perfectionist. A child who painstakingly organized her room every day and fretted over the most insignificant of test scores had to be a perfectionist, or maybe fusspot or a hairsplitter (as the trusty thesaurus would have you believe). And for years, I believed it. I fussed over the stories I wrote and split hairs over school assignments as if they were the difference between life and death—even though my heart was never in it. Eventually, my unsustainable habits came back to bite me in the ass, and whoop-de-doo, I contracted the sad disease.

i haz a sad cat
Not me in there, actually. source

Nowadays, instead of getting ass in gear when faced with a less-than-desirable challenge, I tend to bitch and moan about the problem and, in the end, do nothing about it. This is not an uncommon phenomenon, I think.
My tendency to bitch and moan has led to another brilliant coping skill—avoidance! Genius, is it not? Instead of trying to deal with my imperfections, I slink back up to my room and turn on my laptop. A few hours of interneting later, I’ve totally forgotten about the original issue without having to exert all of that effort to resolve it. Brilliance in motion, I tell you. 

sleeping woman
This is also a great method of avoidance. source

You might call it laziness. I know I do; in fact, my laziness is one of the things I bitch and moan about, which is quite meta if you ask me. Lazy little Baby June doesn’t want to go out and run and face the fact that, hey, maybe she ate a little too much cake over this past winter—if she stays inside and internets the time away, she won’t ever have to confront her newfound slowness, the little bit of extra pudge. Perfectionism indeed.
My indulgence in this brilliant coping skill has even been the death of another hobby: drawing. You may have seen the chili I drew against a backdrop of odd-looking fire to accent my sweet curry pancakes.  

sweet curry pancakes with mango chutney
You may or may not have been permanently scarred.

For years, I loved to draw and did it all the time, and I’d say I was getting pretty good at it—until the internet, high school, and depression struck all at the same time. Those three factors combined leave very little time for fooling around with a pencil and paper. No; there is only time for fucking around on Reddit and Facebook and blogs, searching for validation where it was lacking inside. That may sound very deep and tragic, but in reality it was the emptiest thing possible. Drawing gave me joy; the internet just made me feel hollow. As time passed and I didn’t pick up the pencil, my drawing skills regressed until I could only muster up the likes of that chili you see above. Because I was embarrassed by my lack of skills, I avoided drawing. That, you see, is avoidance at its best.
Until, of course, I went to the hospital and had nothing to do all day except, well, draw. I drew lots and lots of doges.

pencil drawing of doge says wow
One of many.

It was therapeutic, almost, creating that inexplicably hilarious face on paper. It may or may not have made me tear up. 

lie down try not to cry cry a lot
Every fucking time. source

I may not have liked staying at the hospital, but it made me confront a lot of things. Life, for example. Life is filled with people you have to socialize with and things you aren’t perfect at right away and struggles that can’t be overcome easily. Without the internet to distract me, reality stared me in the face. Even though a hospital is kind of as far from reality as you can get.
Back home, I of course went ahead and made some cake. Imperfect cake. Very messy cake with frosting smudged all over the place and layers that stuck to the pans and pastry cream ridden with lumps. I could have cried about it; I could have ignored the imperfections I had created and gone to hide in my room. But no. I plastered the fucking thing all over the internet, like I didn’t even care. I mean, it tasted good. Probably one the most addictively delicious things I ever made, that cake was, but it wasn’t particularly pretty.
And I was pretty damn proud of that.
So today, I present to you another imperfect cake.

peanut butter and jelly birthday cake
Go on.

My own mother admitted it looked kind of weird. My own mother, goddamit! Will you believe that?
But it’s true. I could have fussed and split hairs for hours, I could have done so many things to make this cake look at least a bit more presentable, yet I was satisfied with this flawed presentation. For my own brother’s birthday, no less.
It tastes amazing. The jelly frosting is slightly lumpy; the strawberry cake layer was dense and flat (probably due to my inaccurate measurements of the strawberry puree); the peanut praline didn’t come out quite like I had imagined. And yet I am satisfied. How could this be? Isn’t Baby June a perfectionist?
No. I’m not a perfectionist. It’s hard enough for me to care about basic things like my own body odor let alone the presentation of cake. It’s time for me to be realistic. I just don’t fucking care anymore, you know?

keep calm because frankly idgaf
My new motto, everyone. source

Time to relax. Nobody cares if you are imperfect. We’re gonna keep calm whether your cake falls apart in a mess of buttercream and crumbs or wins Cake International.
Maybe someday I’ll even socialize a little bit. But let’s not get our hopes up.
Here is the recipe du jour:
_______________
Peanut butter and jelly birthday layer cake
Makes one giant cake
____________
Strawberry cake (adapted from Baker Bettie)
Ingredients
93 grams ● silken tofu, blended until smooth ● ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons
61 grams ● nondairy milk ● ¼ cup
87 grams ● strawberry puree ● ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons
3 grams ● vanilla extract ● ¾ teaspoon
1 gram ● almond extract ● ¼ teaspoon
137 grams ● cake flour ● 1 cup
5 grams ● baking powder ● 1 teaspoon
2 grams ● salt ● ¼ teaspoon
113 grams ● sugar ● ½ cup plus 1 tablespoon
38 grams ● Earth Balance, softened and cut into small pieces ● 1/3 cup
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease one 9-inch baking pan and set aside.
In a small bowl, mix blended tofu, milk, strawberry puree, vanilla, and almond extract.
Add cake flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar to the bowl of a stand mixer and pulse a few times to combine. One piece at a time, add Earth Balance with mixer on low until the dough looks sandy—not doughy quite yet.
Add about half of the wet mixture and beat on low speed until combined, then increase speed and beat until light and fluffy. Add the remaining wet mixture on low speed and mix just until incorporated. The batter will look a bit curdled, and that’s okay.
Pour batter into prepared pan and bake for about 23 to 25 minutes, until an inserted toothpick comes out clean. Remove from baking pan after cooling for ten minutes. Allow to cool completely before using.
______________
Peanut butter cake (adapted from Pastry Affair)
Ingredients
60 grams ● vegetable oil ● ¼ cup
65 grams ● peanut butter ● ¼ cup
50 grams ● sugar ● ¼ cup
50 grams ● brown sugar ● ¼ cup, packed
93 grams ● silken tofu, blended until smooth ● ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons
3 grams ● vanilla extract ● ½ teaspoon
140 grams ● all-purpose flour ● 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons
5 grams ● baking powder ● 1 teaspoon
2 grams ● salt ● ½ scant teaspoon
122 grams ● nondairy milk ● ½ cup
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease one 9-inch cake pan and set aside.
In a large mixing bowl, beat together oil, peanut butter, sugar, and tofu until uniform. Add vanilla extract. In a separate bowl, sift together all-purpose flour, baking powder, and salt. Add flour mixture and milk in alternating additions, mixing until batter is uniform and smooth.
Pour batter into cake pan and bake for about 30 to 35 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Remove from baking pan after ten minutes. Cool completely before using.
__________
Strawberry curd (adapted from Healthy Happy Life)
Ingredients
122 grams ● nondairy milk (I used soy) ● ½ cup
60 grams ● water ● ¼ cup
16 grams ● cornstarch ● 1 tablespoon
75 grams ● sugar ● ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons
90 grams ● strawberry juice, fresh or bottled (or try using fresh puree) ● ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons
2 grams ● lemon zest ● 1 teaspoon
71 grams ● Earth Balance or other vegan buttery spread ● 5 tablespoons
Instructions
Head on over to Healthy Happy Life to get the instructions, being sure to replace lemon juice with strawberry juice. Allow to cool completely before using.
____________
Peanut butter frosting (adapted from All Recipes)
Ingredients
113 grams ● Earth Balance, softened ● ½ cup
256 grams ● peanut butter ● 1 cup
45 grams ● nondairy milk ● 3 tablespoons
288 grams ● powdered sugar ● 2 ¼ cups
Salt to taste
Instructions
Place Earth Balance and peanut butter in the bowl of a stand mixer and beat until fluffy and lightened in color. Gradually add powdered sugar while the mixer is running on low, then increase speed and whip it like you mean it. Add nondairy milk to make it nice and spreadable, and sprinkle in some salt if you think it is too sweet.
____________
Strawberry frosting (adapted from Food Network)
Ingredients
56 grams ● Earth Balance ● ¼ cup
256 grams ● powdered sugar ● 2 cups
30 grams ● nondairy milk ● 2 tablespoons
3 grams ● vanilla extract ● ½ teaspoon
40 grams ● strawberry jam or preserves ● 2 tablespoons
Instructions
Place Earth Balance in the bowl of an electric stand mixer and beat until fluffy and light. Slowly add powdered sugar. Beat in nondairy milk, vanilla, and strawberry jam / preserves until thoroughly combined and fluffy and smooth and wonderful.
____________

Peanut praline (from Serious Eats)
Ingredients
220 grams ● brown sugar ● 1 cup, firmly packed
146 grams ● peanuts ● 1 cup
Instructions
Go to Serious Eats to get the complete recipe. Allow to cool completely before using.
______________
Assembly
Ingredients
1 layer strawberry cake
1 layer peanut butter cake
Strawberry curd
Peanut praline
Peanut butter frosting
Strawberry frosting
Instructions
Place peanut butter cake layer at the bottom of a nine inch springform pan. Smear strawberry curd all over that bitch, then top with peanut praline. Top with strawberry cake layer. Put the whole thing in the freezer until it is nice and hard and easy to frost.
To finish, frost the entire cake with peanut butter buttercream. At this point you can freeze the cake for another few minutes to harden up the frosting, or you can just go ahead and add strawberry frosting in stripes. Doesn’t really matter. Tastes good no matter what.
________________

Now, if you want to attempt this cake, be sure to measure the ingredients for the strawberry cake layer accurately. You’d think that would be a given by my lazy ass thought measuring was optional for a few ingredients, for some reason.

peanut butter and jelly birthday cake how to philosophize with cake
Wow. Fancy.

I’d also try using fresh strawberry puree instead of bottled strawberry juice, because frankly that store bought stuff is nasty. If you have a juicer, feel free to use that.
But it hardly matters. This cake was delicious. Was. Before we devoured it.
Even if it’s not perfect.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Fresh strawberry oatmeal cookie cups with lemon buttercream

strawberry almond lemon cookie cups buttercream


If there is one universally loveable food trend out there, that would be miniature food. We’ve seen all kinds of hand-held, bite-sized edibles come into fashion in the past decade or so, from cupcakes to burger sliders to cake pops to hand pies. And I know these foods have been in existence for more than a decade, but, you know, with foodie culture and all it’s only recently that these things have become widespread and, in some cases, “elevated”.


Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Dark chocolate strawberry banana bread muffins

dark chocolate strawberry banana bread muffins

Arguments about whether a plant is a fruit or a vegetable (or legume or whatever) are largely akin to arguments about whether or not something is actually ironic: most of the parties involved come across as pretentious know-it-all assholes, and no one really knows what they’re talking about.

oatmeal writes about irony but you should not debate it
Don't stop, Mr. Oatmeal. source


Saturday, June 7, 2014

Peanut butter chocolate cookie dough-studded dark cocoa brownies with candied almond crust, banana pudding swirls, and hazelnut chocolate drizzle, plus sprinkles

Hi, friends, it’s Baby June! and we’re back with another episode of #CookingWithRandomShit and #FMLFridays. Even though it’s not Friday.
But seriously, FML.

I wish I was half that classy flipping the bird. source

peanut butter dark chocolate cookie dough brownies candied almond crust banana


Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Friday, May 30, 2014

Momofuku-inspired vegan birthday cake funfetti pancakes

momofuku inspired funfetti birthday cake pancakes

I’m sure you—all three of you!—were all a bit befuddled by my last post. And that’s totally okay. It was a pleasure to write. And bake. Holy fuck that stuff was delicious. You couldn’t even taste the individual components (which I listed so helpfully in the title); it was more akin to an oversized Oreo bar covered in sticky caramel goo than…well, you know. A salted dark chocolate Oreo-stuffed white chocolate chip cookie bar with walnuts streusel, coconut red velvet cheesecake swirls and salty caramelized drizzle sauce, plus sprinkles!

Yeah. About that.

Let me just stay by saying that yes, it was satire (albeit pretty shitty satire). And no, it doesn’t mean I hate everyone. I’m just a bitch, that’s all.

There is a somewhat long and very pointless story behind that post; and as there is a pointless story behind most everything you probably don’t want or need to hear it. I don’t want to alienate more people than I already have.

You know... source

However, I will say that you don’t have to fear that I am launching smear campaigns against all the bloggers in an attempt to make my way up the food blogging hierarchy—no, that was mostly all fun and games and friendly bullying and I mean—what? Just…don’t take it personally. 
Please? With sprinkles on top?