Posts Tagged vanilla


Rabbit’s Envy Carrot Cake

03/30/2010 5:00:00 AM

This is THE carrot cake. The secret, award-winning carrot cake recipe that I have used in my home-based dessert catering business for years.

It’s the best carrot cake in the world.

The best thing about developing the best carrot cake recipe in the world, is that when you start getting overwhelmed with orders – you have two choices:

a) Open up a bakery (um….no – I like being home with my kiddos and I don’t really think the military would move my bakery from duty station to duty station….)

or b) Start teaching classes on HOW to make that carrot cake.

I chose option ‘b’, of course.

Option ‘b’ works well enough and is really, really FUN!! But what happens when you are stretched so thin by teaching classes and you realize that once the military moves you, your student’s will need a place to find more recipes, more classes, and more talk about food?

That’s when you start a blog.

Friends, thank you so much for following The Flying Kitchen. We have been up and running now for 2 months exactly and we have received hits from all fifty states and over twenty countries. I’m spending more time with my family than ever – and the most wondrous thing about all of this is that my family eats everything that I post on this blog. So…I’m able to do what I love to do – which is teach, write and develop recipes WHILE I’m taking care of my family, which is what I love to do most of all!

Sometimes I think that my kids get tired of me ‘fiddling around’ in the kitchen, and yes, there have been times when I have pushed the envelope once or twice, and my toddler (in protest) had to smash a few eggs to get my attention. I’ve got to hand it to her – that was not only effective, but it did stick with the whole ‘cooking’ theme – which is worthy of applause in of itself.

But then there are times when one of my kids does something so extraordinary that all I can do is stand there and blink my eyes in disbelief. Like yesterday, when my ten-year-old announced that she would like to make a “Lemon Layer Cake”. She found the recipe in a library book and proceeded to make a vanilla sponge cake – from scratch – completely on her own. She THEN pulled out my double-boiler and made lemon curd. LEMON CURD. From lemons, and egg yolks, sugar and butter. Again, totally on her own. And then a glaze to pour over the top of her layer cake. She even knew which cake pedestal she wanted to use. It was glorious. All of it.

And those are the kids of moments that make me just sit in a quiet kind of wonder and think. I ponder that this little person has never had a formal ‘lesson’ from me. She has never read my writing. She expressly picked a recipe that was not mine. And she flew.

If I can offer any advice to any mommy, it is to always follow your passion. Always. And while there may be days where you seem to get little sleep, being mommy-by-day, and graphic designer/writer/student or artist by night – those tired days will not last forever, further; they will fill your home with an energy and enthusiasm that is absolutely priceless!! Find what it is that makes your eyes pop with excitement and run – just run with it!

Or FLY!

Fly until you have reached your pinnacle, then sit on that precipice and rest, and watch the ripple effect of what you have done as it continues to radiate through every fiber of your life. And smile.

Find your passion, friends.

_____________________________

Rabbit’s Envy Carrot Cake

Preheat oven to 350.

Prepare two 8 or 9 inch round pans.

Ingredients:

2 cups sifted all purpose flour

2 teaspoons baking soda

1 teaspoon salt

4 large eggs

1 cup sugar

1 cup brown sugar

1 1/2 cups (3 sticks) unsalted butter

2 tablespoons vanilla extract

2 teaspoons cinnamon

1 teaspoon nutmeg

3 cups grated carrots

1 1/2 cup crushed pineapple, drained well

1 cup pecans

1)Open can of pineapple and drain in strainer over a seperate bowl or the sink. You will want the pineapple to sit in this strainer for about 20 minutes so very little juice remains.

2) Chop the pecans very finely. Almost to a powder. Place on cookie sheet and toast in a 400 degree oven for 4-6 minutes, stirring occasionally – until lightly toasted and fragrant. This is a very, very important step.

3) Sift the flour, baking soda and salt together. Set aside.

4) cream butter, brown sugar, white sugar, vanilla and eggs together. Whip until light and fluffy. Add cinnamon and nutmeg.

5) Gently add the flour mixture to the butter/sugar mixture – taking care not to over-beat (over-beating makes a from-scratch cake dry).

6) When the flour mixture and the butter/sugar mixture and well combined, add the grated carrots, pineapple and toasted pecans. Combine gently.

Pour into pans and bake for 35-40 minutes, or until inside of cake is no longer gooey.

Cream Cheese Icing:

2 sticks unsalted butter

2 packages cream cheese

1 2lb bag of powdered sugar

2 teaspoons vanilla

Cream butter, cream cheese and vanilla. Add powdered sugar gradually and whip until the whole mixture is fluffy.

When the cake is cool, layer this icing in between your two cakes then frost the entire cake.

If you would like to decorate your cake with little ‘carrots’, reserve 1/2 cup of your icing and color it with orange and green food coloring.

This is what I’ll be making for our Easter dinner on Sunday! I’m really looking forward to it!

Sometimes, saying something out loud is all you need to do to start believing in yourself. So, if you would please say out loud, “My passion is _____”. Even if you are not sure if THAT is in fact, your passion. It could be one of many – that’s okay. If you would like to take an extra step toward walking the path of your passion, leave a comment telling us what your passion is! I know that putting it out there for all to see IS a bold move, but sometimes making a bold move, while scary, is just what the doctor ordered! So, what’s your passion?!?

Walk in JOY.

Bon appetit, and bonne chance in YOUR Adventures In Cookery,


Exceptional Red Velvet Cupcakes

02/22/2010 5:21:00 AM

I can’t deny the fact that the red food coloring in a Red Velvet Cake makes it better.  I just can’t.

For those of you who are not Red Velvet Cake aficionados like myself – Red Velvet Cake is just devil’s food cake with a heap of red food coloring in it.

Please let me expain that I’m really not a ‘red food color’ person.  I’m just not fond of colorings and additives of any kind.  But when it comes to Red Velvet Cake I must make an exception.

I also make an exception to my ‘no additives’ policy when it comes to maraschino cherries.  I love them.  End of story.

That is why I have named these little goodies ‘Exceptional Red Velvet Cupcakes’.  Not only because they are exceptions to my rules, but  because they really are EXCEPTIONAL little pieces of decadence.  I highly recommend making them for a friend who has had a hard week or been through a general rough patch as of late.  After all, don’t we all need a little ‘lift’ once in a while?

2 1/4 cups sifted cake flour

1 1/4 tsp baking soda

1/4 tsp salt

1/2 cup sifted unsweetened cocoa

1/2 cup butter

1 1/2 cups granulated sugar

2 large eggs

1 tsp real vanilla extract

1 1/2 cups buttermilk

4 tsp red food coloring

Sift together all dry ingredients. Set aside.

 Beat butter till smooth and fluffy. Add sugar and whip till creamy. Add eggs, one at at time, stirring after every addition. Dump dry ingredients, buttermilk, vanilla extract and red food coloring into your bowl in one fell swoop. Mix gently with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula.Pour into 24 prepared cupcake tins. Bake for 10-15 minutes or until done. Cool on a wire rack and frost with Cream Cheese Frosting.

 Cream Cheese Frosting

 First, a word on Cream Cheese Frosting and Red Velvet Cake-

Cream Cheese Frosting is really one of the best frostings on Earth. I have heard it said that the best thing about a Red Velvet Cake is in fact, that it is a vehicle for Cream Cheese Frosting. For people who decrease the amount of cocoa in the cake recipe in order to achieve a startling red color, this claim must be true (a true Red Velvet Cake should be a deep burgundy, not a startling Red).  However, my cake recipe is really very good and wonderful and chocolaty, so the Cream Cheese Frosting is really the perfect partner to it, and doesn’t overshadow it in any way.

1 pack Philly Cream Cheese

1 stick unsalted butter

4 cups powdered sugar 

1 tsp pure vanilla extract 

Frost the cupcakes and top each with a cherry. DIVINE!

*TIP* Before placing the cherries on the cupcakes, be sure to dry the cherries thoroughly and let them sit on paper towels for about 20 minutes to absorb any excess ‘cherry juice’. 

Good friends are exceptional treasures, and empathy is the crowning jewel of any friendship.  Make some of these for someone you know who might need a pick-me-up!

Bon appetit and bonne chance in your Adventures In Cookery,