Saturday, May 5, 2012

Gâteau au Yaourt: Yogurt Cake


This is a cake that my family has been making for a long time; I think we got the recipe from some of my cousins. It is a very simple and customizable snack cake that uses yogurt as a flavor base but doesn't actually taste like yogurt. The original recipe has all the measurements (except the eggs) based on the size of a pot of yogurt. Unfortunately, yogurt pots in France are smaller than in the US (they contain 150g of yogurt instead of 170g.) To make this recipe in the US, I find a glass that holds a bit less than a cup of water and use that as my measurement tool.
Once you have made the batter, you can pretty much add whatever flavor you want. The cake in the photo has chocolate chips and unsweetened coconut flakes, but I have also had success with pears, nutella  (mix nutella into some of the batter and swirl that into the rest of the batter,) dried fruit, etc. You could could probably make this a savory cake by removing most of the sugar and putting cheese or bacon or herbs in.
And to prove how easy this recipe is, I was able to make it in the kitchen of my college dorm with my bf.

Gâteau au Yaourt:

Ingredients
  • 3 eggs (separated)
  • 1.5 pots sugar
  • 1 pot yogurt
  • 0.5 pots oil or 60g butter
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 3 pots flour
  • 0.5 tsp baking soda
  • 0.5 tsp salt
  • up to 1.5 cups filling (ie 1 cup chocolate chips + 0.5 cup unsweetened coconut)

Instructions
  1. Preheat an oven to 350F.
  2. Beat yolks with sugar until thick and white.
  3. Add egg whites, yogurt, oil, and vanilla, still beating.
  4. Add remaining ingredients (flour, baking soda, salt) but not the filling. Mix by hand.
  5. Stir in the filling gently.
  6. Grease a cake pan or loaf pan and pour in the batter.
  7. Bake for 40 (cake pan) to 50 (loaf pan) minutes
  8. Enjoy on a picnic or as a snack or casual dessert! You can serve it with greek yogurt and berries or dress it up with whipped cream.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Spring Break 2: Bread-y stuff

So on Thursday I pulled out my beloved The Bread Baker's Apprentice by Peter Reinhart and made some bread. I made a caprese-inspired loaf by putting fresh mozzarella, sundried tomatoes, and basil in Challah dough (I'm sure this is terribly sacrilegious) and pizza.

For the Caprese Bread I made the challah dough per the instructions of Peter Reinhart. To incorporate the filling into the dough, I stretched out the dough like pizza, placed the filling on top, and rolled it up like a log. 

And then I split it into 3 and braided it!


I also made pizza dough (also from Reinhart's book) that I rested in the refrigerator overnight. As toppings for the pizza, I roasted some brussels sprouts and broccolini in a 400 degree oven for 20 minutes, then I turned the oven down to 330 for another 10-20 minutes. For sauce, I blended some canned diced tomatoes and cooked them with onions, garlic, and oregano.


I made 3 pizzas, one with brussels sprouts, broccolini and caramelized onions (not pictured), one with broccolini, copa, and caramelized onions (first), and, at my dad's suggestion, one with chorizo, brussels sprouts, roasted garlic, and an egg in the center (second). The chorizo one was the family favorite!

 


 And on Pi day (3/14) I visited my friend and we made pie!!! (We did not have enough crust dough to make a complete top crust, so we put a circle on top instead! It is off center on purpose.)


Spring Break 1: Roasted Cauliflower with Indian Style BBQ sauce

Today is the last day of Spring Break. And apparently to me, spring break means time to make delicious foods! (And read A Dance with Dragons)

I started out the break relatively simple: Roasted Cauliflower with Indian style BBQ sauce (based off of this recipe.)
  
Cauliflower is really pretty.

  
Roasted cauliflower is really tasty.

I thought the recipe's ingredients for the bbq sauce had way too much ketchup, so I just made something up:
I heated together
  • 1 crushed garlic clove
  • 1 tsp thai red curry paste
  • 1 tsp tamarind paste
  • 2 tsp tomato paste
  • 1 tbsp ground cumin
in some oil to bring out their flavors. Then I added
  • 1/4 ketchup
  • 3 tbsp soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp bbq sauce.
 If I had ginger, I would have added it.

Roasted cauliflower with this sauce is even tastier.

According to Epicurious, someone called roasted cauliflower "veggie candy." I wholeheartedly agree, I could eat this stuff all day.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Crêpes!

Crêpe with onions, mushrooms, ham, and cheese
On Tuesday we celebrated my brother's birthday again (his actual birthday has not yet happened) with a crêpe party! In my family, "crêpe party" means that we pull out the gridle that has six holes for small crêpes so that each person can customize his or her crêpes and the meal goes on.

For our crêpe batter we use half wheat (not whole wheat) flour and half buckwheat flour. Traditionally, savory crêpes (called galettes) are made with 100% buckwheat flour, but the lack of gluten makes the batter hard to work with, and my family's hybrid crêpe batter lets us use the same batter for savory and sweet crêpes!

To make crêpe batter for 4 people (+ leftovers for breakfast the next morning):

Ingredients:
  • 100g all-purpose flour
  • 100g buckwheat flour
  • 3 eggs
  • 2 tsp salt
  • about 360g milk
  • water
Method:
  1. Mix the flours with the salt in a large bowl. (For some reason my family has a designated crêpe bowl)                                                           
  2. Add the eggs and mix with a spoon            
  3. Add the milk slowly, stirring between each addition to avoid making lumps (if you do get lumps, give the dough a whirr with an electric mixer)
  4. Let the dough rest in the refrigerator for at least an hour.
  5. Add water to the dough until it is liquid enough to run off the spoon quickly (if the dough is too thick to spread when you start cooking crêpes, you can always add more water)
To cook crêpes:
  1. Heat your pan with some oil. 
  2. Add a small ladle of batter to the pan and either use the bottom of the ladle to spread out the batter or rotate the pan so that the batter is very thin but not broken.
  3. Cook one side until the bottom is browned, then flip.
  4. Add desired topping if toppings need to melt.
  5. Cook until bottom is also browned.
  6. Adjust the temperature for the next crêpes if they are cooking too fast or too slowly.
  7. Serve.
Remember: the first crêpe you make in the pan is always a failed crêpe. Don't sweat it.

For our savory crêpe toppings we had caramelized onions, sautéed mushrooms, ham, cheese, and eggs. For dessert toppings we had nutella, honey, sugar, butter, bananas, and canned pears.


The classic "crêpe complète"  is ham, cheese, and a fried egg. I add onions and mushrooms because onions and mushrooms make everything even more delicious.

And of course, as crêpes (galettes) are from Bretagne, they must be eaten with apple cider. My dad found some legit unfiltered and unpasteurized cider at Piazza's that supposedly went very well with the crêpes. (As I am under 21 I obviously did not have any ;)


 And the great thing about making crêpes for dinner is that you get to eat the leftovers with nutella the next morning!