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Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts

Friday, April 8, 2011

We Have a Winner!

 

Amelia and I used her new Fancy Nancy game to determine a winner for the King Arthur Flour giveaway. She had to get all fancied up before we could play, so cute!

Contestants

I taped the contestants names to the back of each scoop of ice cream, the one on top wins! Here’s the video:

So, it turns out that Miss Jaimie wins a bottle of this fantabulous Montmorency Cherry Concentrate!

cherry concentrate

 

Thank you so much, King Arthur Flour for sponsoring this giveaway!!!

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Amelia’s Fairy Cakes

 
Fairy Cakes

My little girl loves tea parties. (Who doesn’t?) And many of the tea party books that she has depict tiny cakes as part of the spread. Not cupcakes and not always petit fours. (Thank Heaven for that!) Just little cakes. And this is good news for me because my little Amelia doesn’t like frosting and let’s face it, frosting cupcakes is where all the work is! I love it when your child wants something easy. (Because that is definitely a rarity in this house!) And these are perfectly easy, and a really perfect white cake recipe in general. The cake is delicately scented with lemon and has a beautiful tight, soft, crumb. It’s almost like a bakery cake or a cake mix, except that you get to control the flavor and there aren’t any strange, unpronounceable ingredients.

For these cakes, I got to use a really fabulous product from King Arthur Flour. It’s Tart Montmorency Cherry Concentrate and it is outrageously wonderful! I got hooked on dried Montmorency cherries when we lived closer to a Costco and I could get a big ole bag of them for a song. (They are SO much more expensive here in Maine!) But with this one bottle of concentrate, I can add that tart, snappy flavor to anything I want! I did a few test runs of some of my old standbys and decided that I prefer to drizzle it on after the baked good in question has come out of the oven. When I tried baking it right into the recipe it lost some of it’s bright flavor and it sunk to the bottom of the baking pan (where it sometimes burned, sad.). Jay gives me a really hard time if I use anything but maple seeeerup on my pancakes, but I gladly took one for the team and poured some of this onto a big stack. Heavenly! It is very tart, so a little goes a long way.

 
cherry concentrate

I think it’s very economical as well. A 16 ounce bottle sells for $16.95. (And that’s made with the juice from over 1000 pressed cherries! Cool, huh?) I’ve used it in these cakes, scones, pancakes, and drizzled over lemon ice cream (oh.my.gosh!!!) and I’ve only used about 2 and a half ounces! And guess what, my lovely bloggy friends? King Arthur Flour has graciously offered a bottle of Montmorency Cherry Concentrate for one of you lucky readers! Wheeee! And all you need to do to enter is leave a comment on this post! Easy Peasy!
 
Amelia’s Fairy Cakes
 
 
zest of 1 lemon
 
1 1/2 cups sugar
 
1 stick butter, at room temperature
 
4 egg whites, at room temperature
 
2 1/4 cups cake flour
 
1 tablespoon baking powder
 
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups buttermilk, at room temperature
 
1/4 cup Tart Cherry Concentrate
 
1 1/2 cups white chocolate chips
 
1 teaspoon shortening
 
Royal icing or pressed sugar flowers to decorate
 
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line two 12 cup muffin tins with pretty liners. (Alternatively, you can prepare two 9” cake pans, one 9x13 baking dish or one baking sheet (jellyroll pan), you’ll just need to  adjust the baking time.)
 
In the bowl of your mixer, combine the sugar and the lemon zest. With your fingers, massage the zest into the sugar. (This releases the oils in the zest and really pulverizes it, the air will smell absolutely luscious!)
 
Attach the beater to your mixer and beat in the butter until the mixture is very light and fluffy.
 
Add the egg whites and beat until well combined.
 
Whisk together the cake flour, baking powder and salt.
 
Add 1/3 of the dry mixture to the batter and beat.
 
Pour in about 1/3 of the buttermilk and beat.
 
Repeat this process until all the ingredients are incorporated. Scrape down the bowl VERY WELL and beat until all the ingredients are well incorporated.
 
Pour into prepared pans and bake until the cakes spring back when you gently touch them with your finger; about 20 minutes for cupcakes, 35 minutes for 9” cakes and the sheet cake, or 45 minutes for a 9x13” dish.
 
Remove cakes to a cooking rack. While the cakes are cooling, drizzle about a teaspoon of cherry concentrate
on the top of each cake.
When the cakes have thoroughly cooled, melt the white chocolate chips in the microwave using 30 second bursts of power to avoid burning the chocolate.
 
Stir in the shortening.
 
Spoon a tablespoon of the chocolate over the cake, swirling it around until it settles and press a flower into the center of the cake.
 
Let chocolate harden, about 30 minutes.
 
Enjoy with the darling little girl of your choice :)
 
P.S. Don’t forget to leave a comment on this post for your chance at a free bottle of Montmorency Cherry Concentrate! You’ll be glad you did!
 
P.P.S. This giveaway will close on Wednesday, April 6th at midnight. Good luck!

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Reese Picks a Winner!

 

Thursday night - really, really late Thursday night, mind you – I made fortune cookies with all the ‘contestants’ names in them (and a few extra in case of late entries). Then, yesterday, I just got terribly busy and totally forgot to pick a winner. So, this morning Reese pulled one out and we finally have a winner for the King Arthur Flour giveaway!!! I hope you’ve enjoyed this week, I really have! And I hope you don’t feel overly pressured to buy yourself some of this cocoa, I do tend to go overboard! But this is truly one of my favorite products and I know you’ll love it too! Without further ado. . . .

Recently Updated

 

Congratulations Rubipumps!!! You’ve won a pound of Bensdorp cocoa powder, a box of unbleached cake flour and an issue of The Baking Sheet from King Arthur Flour! I know you’ll enjoy them!!!

 

P.S. I’d like to thank King Arthur Flour for sponsoring this giveaway! Allison was so kind and generous to work with, and I really enjoyed hosting it for you!

P.P.S. Fortune cookies suck. I have the burned fingertips to prove it.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Full of Chocolatey Goodness!

I was going to tell you about this giveaway last week, when I debuted my new blog makeover. But I couldn’t decide which recipe to show you. I fought and argued with myself all week, trying to pick my favorite chocolatey recipe. But I’ve been on a chocolate kick lately and I couldn’t decide on which one, so prepare yourself to be inundated with chocolate goodies!

Chocolate Spice Cake

You’ve probably heard celebrity chefs and cookbook authors say that you should always buy the best ingredients you can afford and that is the secret to great cooking/baking, right? They’re not kidding. And I have one ingredient for you that will change every single recipe you use it in from ‘mmm, that’s good’ to something more like, ‘HOLY MOSES! That is AMAZING! You MADE this????’ That’s not hyperbole, its the truth. And I think you can handle the truth.

You know that can of cocoa powder you have in your cupboard? Stand up, go to the cupboard, grab that tin and throw it in the garbage. Really. Now. Go. I promise you’ll thank me later. Now, go to King Arthur Flour and purchase this, Bensdorp Cocoa Powder. It’s absolutely amazing. My sister-in-law’s mother-in-law (you follow? good.) gave me a pound of this stuff last year and it’s changed my life, people!!! And really, it only costs three dollars more per pound than that tin you just tossed, the one that you can get in every grocery store in America. The one that starts with an ‘H’. And ends with an ‘ershey’. You don’t want that stuff in your house. You want this. . . . .

cocoa powder

 

I mean, look at it!!! It’s almost red. It is noticeably richer. When you open the package it smells deep and chocolatey and almost earthy. If you were to smell the box of the stuff you already threw away (but you can’t because you trusted me when I told you to hock it, right???), it smells sugary sweet. Like candy, almost. This Bensdorp cocoa smells like ooey gooey brownies. Or devils’ food chocolate cake. Really, it’s the difference between a chocolate bar of, well, one that rhymes with Schmerchey, and a bar of Valrhona, or Ghirardelli or Scharffen Berger. They all make cocoa powders too, but I think this one is the best. (P.S. Please don’t tell my hubby that I’ve tried all those or how much they cost. He’ll blow a gasket. Thanks.)

Now, one of you will get the chance to try some for yourself! King Arthur Flour has generously offered a bag of their Bensdorp cocoa powder to one of my readers!

All you have to do is leave a comment on this post!

I’ll pick a winner on Friday and that person’s life will never be the same! You’ll shudder when you see that box of drab, flavorless stuff sitting there on the baking aisle, telling shoppers that it will make their chocolatey dreams come true. It’s a liar! Or at least, deluded.

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But, that is not all. Oh, no! That is not all! (Name that children's book.) King Arthur Flour is also offering a box of their unbleached cake flour for our giveaway! I’d show you a side by side comparison of that too, but I don’t want to buy a box of the bleached stuff just for a photo op. (I only had a tin of the Schmerchey stuff because it was down in my basement pantry from when we moved in and I had forgotten that it even existed.) But when I tried out the King Arthur’s cake flour I got to see it next to a dab that I had left of some other brand I’d gotten at the grocery. I was sort of expecting the unbleached to be a lot darker. It wasn’t. The bleached stuff was stark white, and the KA cake flour was nice and creamy colored. And it made a wonderful cake! As light and fluffy as you could wish for! I am DEFINITELY making the switch to this stuff. I noticed that my grocery store is carrying it now, how convenient!

So, this is the recipe I finally decided on. For Day One anyway! When I got the box of cake flour from King Arthur I was sort of in a quandary. I had been wanting to make a spice cake, but then there was this really great looking chocolate cake recipe on the back of the box. So, I decided to just combine them, since the quantities were so similar to my spice cake recipe. Oh. My. Gosh. It made SUCH a wonderful cake!!! And my house smelled absolutely incredible while it was baking. I made a simple ganache scented with cardamom to drizzle over it, which I did while the cake was still warm, so it soaked into the cake a bit and made it absolutely scrumptious!

 

Chocolate Spice Cake

Adapted from King Arthur

2 cups King Arthur Unbleached Cake Flour Blend

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon allspice

1/4 teaspoon ground clove

1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom

3/4 cup cocoa powder (use the good stuff, not that Schmershey stuff)

1 3/4 cups sugar

1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, softened

1/3 cup vegetable oil

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 cup milk

1/2 cup water

4 eggs

 

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Prepare 2 round 9” pans with baking spray and set aside.

Place a strainer over you mixer’s bowl and sift in the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, spices, cocoa and sugar.

Add the butter and mix at low speed for a minute. While the mixer is running, add the oil and continue mixing until the mixture looks like sand.

Combine the vanilla, milk and water and add all at once. Mix for a minute at low speed, then scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl well and mix another 30 seconds until all the dry ingredients are well incorporated.

Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well at medium-high speed between additions. The batter will be thin.

Pour into prepared pans and bake 25-30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean.

Remove from the oven and cool on a rack.

While the cakes are cooling make the ganache.

P.S. We had a lot of treats around when I baked these, so I only served one layer. After the second layer was COMPLETELY cooled I wrapped it well with cling wrap and stashed it in the freezer.

 

Ganache Glaze

4 ounces dark chocolate (I used Ghirardelli 60% cacao chips)

1/2 cup heavy cream

2 tablespoons sugar

2 tablespoons water

a scant 1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom (optional)

 

Put the chips in a heat-proof bowl and set aside.

In a small saucepan, bring the cream, sugar, water and cardamom to a full boil.

Pour over the chocolate. Let it sit for 30 seconds, then gently stir the chocolate together. It should take 3-4 minutes before you get a gorgeous, shiny glaze.

Pour the glaze over your still warm cake and spread it around to coat the sides.

Makes enough glaze for one 9'” cake. 

 

So, to enter the giveaway, all you have to do is leave a comment on this post!

I’ll pick a winner on Friday, so get your entry in by 11:59pm Thursday!

Good luck!

Friday, September 17, 2010

Wilton Review, Gorgeous Buttercream, and a Winner!!!

ruffled cups

Along with the cupcake kit giveaway, Wilton generously let me pick a few things to review! I was smitten with these cupcake liners, I looooove cupcake liners! Pretty ones like these sort of take the pressure off of you to do something tremendous with the decorating, you know? You wouldn’t want to detract from the pretty liner, now would you? I loved these ruffled cups! So girlie and sweet! They are nice and thick too, and they come off of the cupcake beautifully!

I also picked these liners. I really loved them, with all the ingredients printed on the sides! They really dressed up the muffins I made in them. Unfortunately, I used them all on a test run of a new recipe. Dumb idea. The muffins didn’t turn out at all well (they were chewy! Muffins should NOT be chewy!!! Ew.) and bubbled up and out of the pretty muffin cups. I was so disappointed, I didn’t even take a picture of them. So, recipe fail. Sorry.

So, here is the recipe for the buttercream I used on the cupcakes. The cupcakes themselves are from this chocolate cake recipe. I usually use American buttercream when frosting cakes and cupcakes, but decided to tackle a fancy one again. I had a run of bad luck with Italian buttercreams a while back (the kind made with a sugar syrup) and had shied away from them and their Swiss cousins. But this recipe really was easy and the softness and delicateness (is that a word?) of this buttercream has made me a believer again! I might even get brave and tackle another evil sugar-syrup Italian version again. Or the French variety made with whole eggs! Who knows? I might also climb Mt. Everest or swim across the Atlantic! Just kidding ;) Anyhow, they’re a nice, grown-up alternative to sugary sweet American buttercreams.

Beautiful Swiss Buttercream

Adapted from Dorie Greenspan’s Baking: From My Home to Yours

1 cup sugar

4 large egg whites

3 sticks unsalted butter, room temperature

pinch of salt

flavoring of your choice: a squeeze of lemon, 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla, or 1/2 teaspoon almond extract

Optional: food coloring

 

Set a pan of water to boil on the stove. Turn it down to a simmer.

In your mixer’s bowl, combine the sugar and egg whites.

Set this over the simmering water and, using a hand mixer, whisk constantly, until the mixture becomes hot to the touch, about 3 minutes. (The sugar will be dissolved and the mixture will be nice and shiny.)

Remove the bowl from heat and attach it to your mixer. Using the whisk attachment, beat the meringue at medium speed for about 5 minutes, until it has cooled.

Switch to the paddle attachment, mix in a pinch of salt, and add the butter, a few tablespoons at a time, beating until smooth.

Once all the butter has been added, beat the buttercream on medium-high unitl it is thick and very smooth, about 6-10 minutes.

Turn the speed to low and add the flavoring and coloring if you’re using it.

Scoop into a pastry bag and pipe onto your cupcakes!

Make enough for a dozen cupcakes, more if you’re more frugal with your buttercream than I am ;)

P.S. Don’t panic if your buttercream falls apart and/or looks curdled when you add the butter. Turn the mixer up to high and keep whipping it, it will come back together! Don’t be scared!

 

And now for transportation of your beautiful treats . . . . . . . 

cupcake box

Wilton also let me try out their adorable cupcake boxes! I really like to keep a stash of cake boxes around, then I can take goodies to someone on the spur of the moment without the worry of how to transport them safely! I keep a few square cake boxes and a few of the long, rectangular ones, along with cake boards for each. The rectangular ones are great because you can carry a sheet cake or a few dozen cupcakes in them. Just don’t forget the cake board to go on the bottom or you’ll end up with cupcakes dancing all over inside the box! When I can’t get a hold of the cupcake holding inserts, I just dab a little dot of royal icing to the board, then set the cupcake on top of it. It works like glue to hold the cupcake in place and when you want to take them out of the box, the ‘glue’ comes right off again. Easy!

Anyway, I am definitely going to be keeping a stash of these around! They come with the little inserts to keep the cupcakes in place! And they’re perfect when you just want to take a few cupcakes to a friend. They have solid white ones, fun prints and seasonal boxes too. It would be nice to have a selection on hand!

Thank you, Wilton, for sponsoring this review and giveaway! I really enjoyed playing with some new products and loved hosting your giveaway!!!

Speaking of giveaway. . . . . we picked a winner! Amelia and her herd of ponies helped me out! Click the video to see who won the cupcake kit!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

New Look and a Giveaway from Wilton!!!

TA DA!!!!

My blog has a new look! What do you think? I really loved my old blog template, but I felt like it didn’t actually fit my blog. I contacted Dena at The Photo Spot on Etsy and she made me this gorgeous header! Isn’t it lovely! If you’re in the market for a new header, I highly recommend her. She is such an amazing artist, she’s a pleasure to work with, and her prices are great! I changed a few of my settings to make my blog a little easier to read too. And I added pictures to my recipe list to make it easier to find things. So, what do you think of my little makeover???

I’m still sort of ‘trying to find myself’ in the kitchen. I don’t really know what I think my baking specialty is, I love baking everything! Cookies, cakes, breads, cupcakes, pastry, pies, tarts . . . I’m not saying I’m a pro at any of them, mind you. Just that I get enormous pleasure out of baking them! Jay thinks my specialty is cupcakes. I did get a bit obsessed with them about the same time I started my blog. I mean, I’d made them before, lots of times even, but I’d never really given them a whole lot of thought. Then Amelia got Crumbs Bake Shop in a Box for Christmas from her Auntie Kristi. She loved the story it came with and immediately asked me to make the cupcakes for her. So we put on our matching aprons and got started.

Mommy and Amelia2

Isn’t she cuuuuuuute? Anyway, we LOVED these cupcakes. And then I went a little nuts making them. I made them for any and all occasions! First, the batch for Amelia. Next for Reese’s birthday, and again for him to take to preschool. Then my friend had a baby, so she got a batch. Then another friend had a baby. Then is was a Wednesday, or cloudy, or sunny . . . any reason was a good reason to make some more cupcakes!

To frost them, I broke out a cupcake kit I’d recently bought from the Wilton aisle at Walmart. (Thank Heaven for the Wilton aisle at Walmart, by the way! The closest thing to a baking shop I had when I lived out in the middle of NOWHERE! I think I have one of every Wilton product that Walmart carries!!!) Anyway, I promptly fell in love with the large star tip in the kit. I think it’s so much easier to frost a cupcake with a big tip than it is to use a knife and spread it on by hand. You can just fill the bag with frosting, make a few big swirls on top of the cupcakes and you’re done in no time!!!

The other thing I love in the cupcake kit is the Bismarck tip. You fill things with it. Like cupcakes. Or doughnuts. Or cream puffs. It. Is. Awesome!!!! I’ve used it to fill cupcakes with frosting, jam, caramel, ganache, pastry cream, marshmallow, custard cream. . . . . seriously, you’re going to LOVE IT!!!

2104-6667_m1

Wilton has graciously offered a cupcake kit to one of my readers! How cool is that!?!?!?! I was SO doing the happy dance when I got the email! This cupcake kit really started me on the road to making awesome cupcakes! And since you’re going to need a great recipe to go along with the cupcake kit, I’m going to give you the recipe that launched a thousand cupcakes (in my house, anyway)!!! It’s the one from the Crumbs baking set. It’s SUPER sweet and kids just gobble them up! (I’ve moved on to a different recipe for grown ups.)

Cupcake

The Crumbs Cupcake

3 sticks of butter, room temperature

2 1/2 cups sugar

5 eggs

1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1 1/2 teaspoons almond extract

3 cups flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

1 cup buttermilk

 

Preheat the oven to 325 and line two 12 cup muffin tins with paper liners.

In your mixer, cream together the butter and sugar.

Add the eggs, vanilla and almond and mix thoroughly.

In a medium bowl, sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.

Add a third of the flour mixture to the butter mixture. Then add a third of the buttermilk.

Continue with the next third of flour and buttermilk. Repeat with the remaining bits.

Scrape the mixing bowl well, them mix for another minute to make sure everything is incorporated.

Fill each liner up 2/3s of the way to the top.

Bake for 25-35 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean.

Remove from pans and cool completely on a wire rack before frosting.

 

Crumbs Frosting

1 pound of butter (4 sticks)

1 pound of cream cheese (2 bricks)

2 pounds of powdered sugar (a whole bag)

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

 

In your mixer bowl, cream together the butter and cream cheese.

Sift in the powdered sugar. Cover the mixer with a towel and turn the power on to the lowest setting until the frosting starts to come together. This will avoid the inevitable mushroom cloud you’d get from adding that much sugar all at once!

Scrape the mixer bowl down, add the vanilla and mix for another minute to incorporate.

*If you’re going to fill your cupcakes, now’s the time! Then proceed to the frosting instructions.*

Insert the large star tip from the Wilton Cupcake Kit into one of the included disposable bags. Scoop frosting into the bag and squeeze it all down to the end, making sure to expel any air bubbles. Start at the outside of the cupcake and swirl frosting onto the top, applying even pressure to the frosting bag. When you get to the center, stop applying pressure and lift the bag up and away from the cupcake. Done! Easy peasy, right???

 

P.S. The cupcake pictured is a mini. I really like making mini cupcakes from this recipe. Beware that you will get about 500 cupcakes per batch. (I exaggerate, but just a little.)

P.P.S. Little ones will love you forever and ever if you make them mini cupcakes. And there’s less guilt in eating a dozen minis than there is in eating a dozen regular cupcakes. Just sayin’.

 

*********The giveaway is now closed! Thanks for playing!**********

And now. . . . . . .

The Wilton Cupcake Kit Giveaway!!!!!

Let’s make this easy, shall we??? All you have to do to enter is. . .

leave a comment on this post!

That’s it. Easy peasy! I’ll pick a winner on Friday, so get your comment it by 11:59pm Thursday evening. Be sure to keep checking in with me this week, I have some other surprises too!