Cake, I Love You: Decadent, Delectable, and Do-able Recipes
By Jill O'Connor, Leigh Beisch and Jordan Sondler
4.5/5
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About this ebook
What better way to celebrate life’s big and small achievements than with cake? This love letter to a classic indulgence offers sixty divinely decadent recipes home bakers will want to make right away.
Organized by flavor profile (banana, coconut, chocolate, caramel, spice, fruit) and level of difficulty, each chapter in this cookbook from baking master Jill O’Connor presents a wide range of sweet choices, from easy weeknight sheet cakes to showstoppers layered with frosting and ganache. With photos that will make readers want to reach out and swipe their fingers through the frosting, Cake, I Love You offers foolproof cake-making advice for beginning bakers and master mixers alike.
“This bright, delight-filled book is a whimsical valentine to the pleasures of baking, and also a smart, practical, and detailed workbook on how to create exquisite, spectacularly tasty confections for all the occasions that anchor and enrich our days.” —Nancie’s Table
“Whether you like to bake cakes that are no-nonsense or like to spend hours decorating them to the hilt, you’re sure to find a cake in here to please.” —Food Gal
“Jill provides helpful tips and techniques throughout the book that will make the cake-making experience even better . . . a no-butter-spared tribute to this classic indulgence.” —Books, Cooks, Looks
Read more from Jill O'connor
Sticky, Chewy, Messy, Gooey: Desserts for the Serious Sweet Tooth Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsSticky, Chewy, Messy, Gooey Treats for Kids Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Cake, I Love You
5 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5OH.MY.WORD.This is a cakebook full of achievable drama. If you have made a two layer cake and successfully iced it you will be able to get to the beauties in this book. Some are more complicated than others but with patience and attention to detail you can present a bakery style cake at your next party.There are simple cakes too, like the one showcased below but then there are recipes like the one I can’t wait to try; it is three layers but one layer is marshmallow! MARSHMALLOW – can you imagine? It’s chocolate cake, marshmallow, caramel and fudge. I can taste it already. This cake has been in my dreams since I read the recipe. It’s just finding the time to make it.The book offers tips for each type of cake; the equipment you will need, the best ingredients to use and where you can find things. I especially liked the section on the different buttercreams. I have tried several different types and have had successes and failures. Perhaps with some of the insights offered I’ll do better.This book will keep me happy for a very long time. Even if only for that one recipe with the marshmallow. But I know I will use it for more than that. Just looking through it was a delight. There was not a photo of each recipe but there were enough photos to keep me very happy. This book would make an excellent gift for any baker in your life.
Book preview
Cake, I Love You - Jill O'Connor
Cake: A Love Story
It’s no secret that I love cake. At different times, it’s been my best friend, my muse, and, when I am on a diet, my kryptonite. I think there is no fragrance more heavenly than the smell of pound cake baking, and that everything good and right and wonderful in the world starts with the words, cream together the butter and sugar.
I’ve been baking for as long as I can remember, and my favorite dessert to bake by far has always been cake.
There is something inherently festive and special about a homemade cake, from the simplest loaf of banana cake sprinkled with confectioners’ sugar to a towering triple-layer chocolate fudge cake filled with pastry cream and caramel, slathered with buttercream, and dripping in chocolate ganache. I remain convinced that the addition of a cake, no matter how humble, can make the most mundane event feel like a party.
When I was in the second grade, my mother brought home a huge burnt almond cake from our neighborhood bakery to celebrate my first communion. The delicate vanilla-scented cake layers were frosted with a creamy German buttercream—a heart-skipping concoction of rich pastry cream rendered airy and silken by whipping in lots of butter. Encrusted in caramelized almonds, with big white frosting roses crowded into the corners, it was an imposing beauty. But what impressed me the most was the giant, pressed-sugar chalice brushed with gold, and moonlike communion wafer that floated on top of the cake. I barely remember the important events of the day, but I do remember circling that cake, like a fox circling a chicken coop, through most of my party. I indulged my grandparents as they planted congratulatory kisses on my cheek, but remained transfixed and slightly obsessed—until my mother cut the cake. She handed me a corner piece with a fat frosting rose and another small plate holding the sugar chalice and communion wafer. I was awed, and a bit confused. Do I eat them? Do I save them? Were they, in fact, holy? This last question remained unanswered, as temptation got the better of me and I crunched my way through the chalice by the end of the day. Holy? Well, I saved the communion wafer, wrapped in a cocktail napkin, for about a week, until my mother told me to eat it or throw it away before the ants got to it.
To this day, I still find cake slightly magical, and in all its many flavors, shapes, and sizes, worthy of my obsessive attention. Ever since that transcendent burnt-almond cake, I’ve realized that in so many of my memories, of both the big events and the little everyday moments, there is usually cake.
I wooed my husband with dark chocolate black-bottom cupcakes while we were dating—their rich, robust exterior hiding a sweet and creamy cheesecake heart that said more than I could with words at the time. When our daughters were born (their taste buds genetically programmed to adore everything sweet), cake was always a happy part of their everyday lives. For big events like their birthdays, their cakes matched the birthday party theme. There was a chocolate cake shaped like a bowling ball; a lemon sheet cake carved into an artist’s palette, complete with colorful dollops of frosting paint
; and a honey cake shaped like a beehive and frosted in loopy swirls of honey buttercream with little marzipan bees buzzing around it.
When my oldest daughter had to create a 3-D model of an animal cell in sixth grade, I helped her carve it out of cream-cheese pound cake, piping everything from the mitochondria to the ribosomes in colorful royal icing. I think it was the first completely edible cell her teacher had ever seen. When my youngest daughter turned ten and started playing softball, I wanted to participate with the other parents, but my knowledge of the game wouldn’t fill a teacup, so I did what I always do—I baked. Every week there were chocolate chip cookies, snickerdoodles, cupcakes, slices of banana bread, or pumpkin muffins, but my most popular offering, hands down, was the New York–style crumb cake I brought to one game—big squares of tender sour-cream coffee cake covered in big chunks of sweet, rocky, brown sugar crumble.
Of course, I am not the only one who thinks a cake equals a party. Birthdays and weddings, graduation days and baby showers wouldn’t be the same without a luscious cake bedecked and festooned in layers of buttercream and sprinkles and flowers and candles, holding a place of honor to symbolize the importance of the occasion.
Everyone loves cake, in one form or another, and they always will. Life is too short to live on kale, kombucha, and quinoa alone. This book is my unapologetic love letter to cake, in all its sweet, gorgeous, indulgent, and celebratory glory. In these pages, I serve up an irresistible, eclectic, and multilayered homage to the goodness of cake, with a collection of recipes for baking both simple and elaborate but always delicious and beautiful cakes at home.
The chapters are divided by flavors, focusing on the ones we love most, from banana to coconut to chocolate to caramel to lemon, all dolled up with nuts and spices—and the occasional splash of spirits to make things interesting.
Each flavor-centric chapter begins with a few simple recipes for snack cakes, loaf cakes, coffee cakes, and single-layer cakes, such as the Banana-Butterscotch Loaf (page 27), Hummingbird Morning Cake (page 30), Classic Diner Crumb Cake (page 136), and Kona Coconut Loaf (page 48), that can be stirred together in a matter of minutes. The heart of each chapter is an array of slightly more ambitious creations, from traditional sheet cakes and layer cakes like Old-Fashioned Chocolate Mayonnaise Cake with Melted Chocolate Bar Frosting (page 74) and Proper Victoria Sponge with Ginger-Roasted Rhubarb and Devonshire-Style Cream (page 163) to exuberant, triple-layer wonders like Classic Southern Caramel Cake (page 102) and Chocolate–Peanut Butter Blackout Cake (page 82), that might require a stand mixer, multiple cake pans—and maybe even a candy thermometer—to produce a dazzling showstopper of a cake that will light up any celebration table.
When you can’t decide which cake to make, look for the crowd-pleaser
stamp of approval. Every chapter features one classic, iconic favorite you can turn to again and again with confidence.
Whether you’re looking for an extravagant birthday cake dripping in caramel and covered in chocolate curls or just a simple loaf of lemon cake to serve with your morning coffee, Cake, I Love You, has just the right cake, in just the right flavor, for you.
crowd-Pleaser
Baker’s Gear
Here are the tools, equipment, and bakeware you will need to make baking a cake a pleasure in your kitchen.
Heavy–Duty Equipment
FOOD PROCESSOR
Indispensable for chopping nuts and making nut flours, chopping and puréeing fruit, making mayonnaise, and blending simple cake batters.
HAND MIXER
With the exception of meringue buttercreams, every recipe in this book can be successfully prepared with a hand mixer. Even if you have a stand mixer, a hand mixer is a must. Hand mixers are perfect for smaller jobs, and for things like beating egg whites or whipping cream when your stand mixer is already in use.
STAND MIXER
I once joked that I wanted to be buried with my KitchenAid mixer. A stand mixer makes baking so much easier. With paddle and whisk attachments, it is indispensable for making smooth cake batters and for making meringue-based frostings and buttercreams that require a prodigious amount of beating. With the hands-free benefit, you can do more than one thing at a time.
Bakeware
BAKING SHEETS
Professional-quality rimmed half-sheet pans (aka baking sheets) (13 by 18 in [33 cm by 46 cm]) are available in kitchenware stores and restaurant supply stores. You’ll find them necessary for roasting fruit, toasting nuts, or holding a wire rack when glazing cakes. I like to spread melted chocolate on the back of a rimmed baking sheet pan to make chocolate curls (see page 37). Sheet pans with a nonstick coating are not as versatile and rugged as standard aluminum sheet pans and tend to scratch, so stick with the sturdier, classic aluminum pans.
CAKE PANS
There’s no need to buy the most expensive cake pans. Kitchenware, restaurant supply, and craft stores carry a variety of cost-effective, sturdy, lightweight, rustproof aluminum cake pans in various sizes and depths that are easy to clean. It’s a good idea to have three pans each in 6-in [15-cm], 8-in [20-cm], and 9-in [23-cm] sizes, for triple-layer cakes. I prefer cake pans without a nonstick coating. They are less expensive and more versatile, appropriate for multiple batters from butter cakes to sponge and chiffon cakes.
All the cakes in this book are made in a few specific pans of various sizes, as follows:
Bundt pan
10- or 12- cup [2.4- or 2.8-L]
Loaf pan
9 by 5 in [23 by 12 cm]
Round pans
6 by 2 in [15 by 5 cm]
8 by 2 in [20 by 5 cm]
9 by 2 in [23 by 5 cm]
9 by 3 in [23 by 7.5 cm]
Square pan
9 in [23 cm]
Sheet pan
9 by 13 in [23 by 33 cm]
Springform pan
9 in [23 cm]
Look for the newer version of this pan, with a wider base and a stronger latch. The new pan is engineered to be leakproof, to accommodate thinner cake batters without any dripping or leaking while baking.
Fluted tart pan with removable bottom
9 or 10 in [23 or 25 cm]
A shallow tart pan is perfect for baking dense, sticky batters like the Raspberry-Hazelnut Financier (page 160). The removable bottom easily supports the cake when you slip off the pan’s outer ring.
NONSTICK COOKING/BAKING SPRAYS
I prefer using a very thin film of nonstick cooking spray or nonstick baking spray (an aerosol mixture of oil and flour) to guarantee that my cakes don’t stick. Pans that are buttered and floured to prevent sticking can also give the baked cake a tough exterior crust or leave tiny, dry pockets of flour behind in the baked cake.
PARCHMENT PAPER
This is one of the most indispensable tools in cake baking. You can buy it in rolls like foil or plastic wrap or in precut rounds for individual cake pans. It is crucial for ensuring that cakes come out of their pans without sticking.
WIRE COOLING RACKS
Cakes need to be cooled on raised wire racks so that air can circulate to keep the sponge from getting soggy. Racks are also handy for holding cakes over a rimmed baking sheet as you glaze them with ganache and other sauces.
Pots and Pans
CAST-IRON SKILLET (10 IN [25 CM])
Use on the stovetop to sauté fruit or toast and caramelize nuts, and in the oven for baking upside-down cakes and fruit buckles. I like Lodge cast-iron skillets as well as Le Creuset enameled cast-iron pans.
STAINLESS STEEL–LINED SAUCEPANS
Heavy stainless steel–lined saucepans are worth the investment. I have one each in 1-qt [960-ml], 2-qt [2-L], and 3-qt [2.8-L] sizes. Use them for poaching fruit; making custards, sugar syrups, and caramel sauce; browning butter; and making small quantities of jam or jelly.
STOCKPOT (8 QT [7.5 L])
Necessary for jam making and boiling cans of sweetened condensed milk to make dulce de leche.
Cups, Bowls, and Spoons
DRY MEASURING CUPS
These sturdy metal or plastic cups do not reflect true volume measurements, so use them for measuring dry ingredients from sugar and flour to cornmeal and chopped or ground nuts. A standard set of dry measuring cups should include ¹/4-cup [60-ml], ¹/3-cup [80-ml], ¹/2-cup [125-ml], and 1-cup [250-ml] scoops.
LIQUID MEASURING CUPS
These come in plastic or Pyrex. It’s nice to have at least one each of microwave-safe 2-cup [480-ml] and 4-cup [960-ml] sizes for measuring liquids.
MEASURING SPOONS
Metal or plastic spoons in ¹/4-tsp, ¹/2-tsp, 1-tsp, and 1-Tbsp amounts.
NESTING PYREX BOWLS
Pyrex bowls are oven-, dishwasher-, and freezer-safe. I place one over a saucepan to make an impromptu double boiler, bake cakes in them, whip small amounts of cream in them, and use them for every other reason one would need a bowl.
STAINLESS-STEEL BOWLS (2 QT [2 L])
These bowls are also oven-, dishwasher-, and freezer-safe, with the added benefit of being very lightweight and easy to clean.
Tools
BENCH SCRAPER
In cake baking, I use these for making chocolate curls and smoothing the sides of frosted cakes. Bench scrapers have a flat stainless-steel blade measuring about 6 by 4 in [15 by 10 cm]. They usually have an easy-to-grip rubber or wooden handle.
BLOWTORCH
I use a standard propane blowtorch that I bought at the hardware store, but smaller kitchen torches that run on butane are available from kitchenware stores if a big blowtorch seems intimidating. Use the torch to caramelize sugar and to burnish meringue.
CANDY THERMOMETER
I bought one years ago to make the caramel icing for a caramel cake, and realized that this little tool makes candy making so much less stressful. Candy thermometers are inexpensive, and crucial for measuring the temperature when cooking sugar syrups for caramel, marshmallows, and French and Italian meringue buttercream. They take the guesswork out of the equation, and make the whole process much easier.
DIGITAL SCALE
Weighing ingredients isn’t common in American kitchens, but it is a more accurate way to bake. If you want to give it a try, start by weighing your flour; an inaccurate measurement of flour is one of the biggest reasons cakes, especially, turn out heavy or dry. One cup of all-purpose flour weighs 140 grams.
GRATERS AND ZESTER
Box graters and Microplane zesters (both fine and coarse) are used to grate chocolate, fresh coconut, and citrus zest.
KNIVES
A paring knife, an 8- or 10-in [20- or 25-cm] chef’s knife, and a 12-in [30.5-cm] serrated bread knife are really all you need. Serrated knives are necessary for splitting cake layers into multiple layers.
SIEVE
Use fine-mesh sieves for sifting dry ingredients together, sprinkling confectioners’ sugar over cakes, and straining fruit purées and citrus curds.
SPATULAS
Long, flat, narrow metal spatulas and offset spatulas (flat, narrow metal spatulas with a bend near the handle) in various sizes are my favorite tools for frosting cakes. Offset spatulas follow the curves of the cake and make it easy to get into the nooks and crannies. Heatproof rubber or silicone spatulas are great for stirring, scraping, spreading, and folding ingredients together. You can never have too many.
WIRE WHISKS
I use a variety of wire whisks. Favorites include a large, round balloon whisk for whisking eggs and egg whites and a longer, narrower whisk with stiffer wires, sometimes called a piano whisk,
for beating custards and firmer batters. I also like having a few small whisks for beating a single egg or whisking smaller amounts of ingredients together.
Decorating Tools
CAKE TURNTABLE
Revolving cake stands with a cast-iron base are sturdy and durable. If you want to get really proficient at frosting cakes, they are a necessity. The spinning action makes frosting a cake fast and almost effortless.
CARDBOARD CAKE ROUNDS
Made from corrugated cardboard, single-use cake rounds or cake circles provide sturdy support for layer cakes, and enable you to move the cake from a revolving cake turntable to a cake box or covered cake carrier for traveling, or to a cake plate or cake stand for serving. Look for 6-in [15-cm], 8-in [20-cm], 9-in [23-cm], and 10-in [25-cm] sizes.
DISPOSABLE PIPING BAGS
Disposable piping, or pastry, bags make frosting and decorating easy. Both 12-in [30.5-cm] and 16-in [40.5-cm] bags are handy to have on hand.
Baker’s Pantry
Every baker will tell you, the most delicious cakes start with the finest ingredients. Use fruits and vegetables when they are in season and at their best and most flavorful; real butter; pure cane sugar; fresh eggs; and the best cocoa and chocolate you can find. Here is a list of the ingredients I like to have on hand whenever I start baking.
ALMOND FLOUR AND ALMOND MEAL
Almond flour is made from very finely ground blanched almonds. Almond meal is made from finely ground roasted whole almonds (the little bits of skin add color and texture). Both are available in most supermarkets and natural-food markets.
If you prefer, you can make almond flour or meal yourself by grinding either blanched slivered almonds or sliced almonds in a food processor or high-powered blender (such as Vitamix) until soft and powdery (see page 16). As a guide: 4¹/4 oz [120 g] almonds usually yields about 1 cup almond flour or meal.
BUTTER
Butter, butter, and more butter. I usually use unsalted butter for baking, adding the salt to my cake batters, fillings, and frostings myself. I always have salted butter on hand as well, for my morning slice of sourdough toast and the occasional batch of salted butter caramel sauce. When it comes to butter, you get what you pay for, so buy the best-quality butter you can afford. Sweet cream butter has a smooth, neutral flavor and light texture that melts easily. Cultured European-style and Irish butters are created by adding live bacteria (cultures) to the cream before it is churned, giving it a slightly tangy flavor. Cultured butter also has a slightly higher milk-fat content than sweet cream butter, giving it a richer flavor and creamier texture. Some bakers feel the acidity in cultured butter gives cakes and other baked goods a more delicate and tender crumb.
Brown butter: When butter is melted and cooked until it begins to turn brown, it develops a sweet, nutty flavor and aroma as the milk solids caramelize. Brown butter, or beurre noisette in French, which literally translates to hazelnut butter,
is a delicious addition to cake batters, frostings, and buttercreams.
To make brown butter, in a saucepan over low heat, melt unsalted butter. When the butter is completely melted, increase the heat to medium-high and bring the butter to a boil. When butter boils, the hissing and burbling sounds like distant applause—this is the heat boiling away the water in the butter. When the sound fades, this means most of the water in the butter has been boiled away. Continue cooking, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, until the milk solids at the bottom of the pan start to caramelize, turn brown, and develop a sweet, nutty aroma. The whole process will take 5 to 7 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat and immediately pour the brown butter into a bowl. This will stop the cooking process and prevent the butter from becoming too dark or burning. Make sure to include all the nutty browned bits. Let cool. Brown butter can be refrigerated in a covered container for up to 1 week.
CHOCOLATE
I tested the recipes in this book with a variety of chocolates available in most standard grocery stores and large specialty markets, including Scharffen Berger, Lindt, Guittard, and Trader Joe’s 72 percent dark chocolate bar. Callebaut and Valrhona are wonderful, if pricey, choices, and although not available in most grocery stores, they can