Sunday, January 31, 2010

Mardi Gras King Cake

Today I made my first ever King Cake. It was so much fun. I attempted to make one the other day, but the recipe was awful. I found this recipe on a New Orleans newspaper website. It was fun to make and decorate this Louisiana tradition. Jeff said it was his favorite king cake yet. I think it's a little too sweet.

Basic King Cake Dough


1 envelope dry yeast
1/4 cup warm water
1/2 cup milk
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1/2 cup sugar
2 egg yolks
2 whole eggs
4 cups, approximately, unbleached flour

Mix the yeast with the warm water. Stir 1 teaspoon of the sugar and 1 teaspoon of the flour into the yeast and set aside. By the time you have measured the other ingredients, the yeast should be beginning to bubble and show signs of life.

Bring the milk to a boil and stir in the butter and the sugar. Pour into a large bowl; the mixture should be lukewarm. Beat in the egg yolks, whole eggs and the yeast.

Beat in approximately 2 cups of flour, until the dough is fairly smooth, then gradually add enough additional flour to make a soft dough that you can form into a ball. Knead it, by hand or machine, until smooth and elastic. Lightly oil a bowl, turn the dough once or twice in it to grease it lightly all over, cover with a cloth and leave to rise in a warm spot until doubled in size, about 1 1/2 to 2 hours.

Pat the dough down and cover the bowl with a damp towel, plastic film over that and refrigerate until the next day. This recipe makes enough dough for two king cakes. Extra dough may be frozen, or make two king cakes and freeze one. Thaw frozen cake and reheat 10 minutes in a 375-degree oven.

Filling

1/2 recipe king cake (above)
1 (16-ounce) can cherry, apple or apricot pie filling
8 ounces cream cheese
1/4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons flour
2 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 dried bean (to bake in the cake as per tradition)
Colored sugars or confectioner's sugar and food coloring

Remove dough from refrigerator and with well-floured hands, while it's firm and cold, shape it into a long sausage shape. Using a floured roller on a floured surface, roll out the dough into a 30-by-9-inch rectangle as thin as pie crust. Let dough rest.

If necessary, drain extra juice from pie filling. Mix the cream cheese with the sugar, flour, egg yolks and vanilla. Spoon an inch-wide strip of fruit filling the length of the dough, about 3 inches from one edge. Spoon the cream cheese mixture alongside the fruit, about 3 inches from the other edge. Brush both sides of dough with egg wash. Insert the bean.

Fold one edge of dough over the cream cheese and fruit, then fold the other edge over. Gently place one end of the filled roll onto a greased pizza pan or large cookie sheet. Ease the rest of the roll onto the pan, joining the ends to form a circle or oval. Cover and let rest for 30 minutes. Brush again with egg wash and cut deep vents into the cake. Sprinkle with colored sugars if desired.

Bakeon 350 for about 30 minutes, or until cake is well risen and golden. Cool before icing with confectioner's sugar mixed with enough water to make a spreadable paste. Sprinkle your sugars and get creative. Makes one cake that serves 10 to 12 people. If using a plastic baby instead of the bean, insert it into the bottom of the cake after it is cooked.




The finished product!

Starting to put the sugar sprinkles on.

The icing that allows the sugar sprinkles to stick.



Mardi Gras colored sugar sprinkles.



The king cake all naked!




Thursday, January 21, 2010

Christmas Cake 2008

I have been going through some old photos, and noticed ones I would want on my blog. I will slowly add them all on here and what they are all about.


This is a Christmas cake I made in 2008. I thought it came out yummy. I think that by the end of the night the top layer of the cake was slidding off.. CLASSIC!

NY Yankee Cake

Here is the cake I made for my trainer at Discover. Rebecca LOVES the NY Yankees and LOVED this cake. I was pretty proud of it when I did it!










Crawfish Etoufee

1 OR 2 POUNDS OF CRAWFISH

1 OR 2 STICKS OF BUTTER (I USE ONE STICK BUTTER PER POUND OF CRAWFISH)

USE THE REST OF THESE MEASUREMENTS REGARDLESS IF YOU USE 1 OR 2 POUNDS

½ CUP GREEN ONIONS

1 CAN CREAM OF MUSHROOM SOUP

1 CUP CHOPPED CELERY

1 TBSP. CREOLE SEASONING ( I used Slap your Mama)

1 BELL PEPPER, CHOPPED

1 TBSP OF FLOUR

2 CUPS WATER

1 TSP. MINCE GARLIC

1 MEDIUM ONION, CHOPPED

1 TSP. CAYENNE PEPPER

½ TSP. SALT

½ TSP. EACH OF BLACK PEPPER AND PAPRIKA

MELT BUTTER IN A SKILLET, ADD ONIONS, BELL PEPPER, GARLIC, GREEN ONIONS, CELERY AND SAUTE UNTIL TENDER. ADD THE FLOUR TO THICKEN. ADD CREAM OF MUSHROOM SOUP AND WATER. POUR SOME OF THE WATER INTO THE CRAWFISH BAG AND SHAKE TO TRY AND GET AS MUCH CRAWFISH FAT OUT AS POSSIBLE. STIR AND SIMMER UNTIL HEATED AGAIN. ADD THE CAYENNE PEPPER, CREOLE SEASONING, PAPRIKA, SALT AND BLACK PEPPER. STIR UNTIL MIXED.

ADD CRAWFISH TAILS AND SIMMER FOR ABOUT 30 TO 40 MINUTES. STIR OCCASIONALLY MAKING SURE NOT TO SCORCH. IF YOUR GRAVY IS TOO THICK JUST ADD A LITTLE MORE WATER AND SEASON TO YOUR TASTE.

SERVE OVER RICE.


What it looks like all put together

I found my crawfish tails at WalMart

I cook my rice with 3 TB of butter and some Slap your Mama's

The finished product!

Sooo yummy!