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4 posts from March 2011

March 28, 2011

Raspberry Cocoa Nib Coffee Cake

Raspberrycoffeecakeslice

Thanks to everyone who entered the Daily Gourmet/NewTree giveaway! The five winners are: Michelle, Jessica, Jessicah89, Debbie, and Kristin! Congrats to you all!

We had company last week: my brother-in-law had the honor of being our first houseguest to use our (finally)properly fitted out second bedroom. (Previous guests enjoyed the luxury of our living room couch while the second bedroom served as our glorified storage closet). The organization of our place has reached a kind of halfway inertia, like the interminable midpoint of a marathon. All our public spaces are perfectly presentable - on most days, at least, while we take advantage of the doors to all our private bedrooms to hide the multitude of home-decorating failures: bare walls, still-unpacked boxes, miscellany and ephemera as yet unsorted. Another roadblock to my dream of a fully-organized home: we need more bookshelves. Currently about 60% of my book collection is homeless, meaning my floor is a constantly-morphing library as I pile and un-pile books over each other. (This is only a pseudo-complaint, though, as I really love my books too much to ever begrudge my lost square footage).

Coffeecakeaddins

However, there's nothing like a visiting guest to kickstart the home-organizing process. Or to provide a reason to bake a little welcome treat to leave on the counter. One of my first favorite recipes when I started baking was this coffee cake made with cream cheese and swirled with raspberry jam. It evolved over the years into its current incarnation, with sour cream and a topping of hazelnut streusel. I sprinkle my streusel over the top of the coffee cake, but you can also swirl it into the cake batter if you like a contrasty layer in your coffee cake. I also threw in some cocoa nibs I had to add another dimension of flavor. The result is your classic golden, pillowy coffee cake, moist with a ribbon of jam, and a crunchy, buttery-nutty top. Just the thing to make someone feel right at home.

Raspberrycoffeecake

 

Raspberry Cocoa Nib Coffee Cake with Hazelnut Streusel


Streusel

1/2 cup flour

1/4 cup ground toasted hazelnuts

1/2 cup sugar

1/8 teaspoon salt

5 tablespoons (2 1/2 ounces) butter, chilled

 

Cake

1 1/4 cups (150 g) flour

3/8 teaspoon baking powder

1 teaspoon baking soda

1/4 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, room temperature

1 cup (200 g) sugar

2 eggs

1 1/2 teaspoona vanilla extract

3/8 cup (90 g) sour cream

1/2 cup raspberry jam

2 tablespoons cocoa nibs

 

For the streusel: Combine the flour, hazelnuts, sugar, and salt together in bowl of food processor.

Cut the butter into small cubes and add to the flour mixture.

Process until mixture resembles small peas. Do not let it combine fully into one ball of dough.

Refrigerate streusel until ready to use.

 

For the cake: Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Butter and flour a 13" x 9" x 2" baking pan.

Sift flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt together into a medium bowl and set aside.

Combine butter and sugar together in a stand mixer and beat together until light and fluffy.

Add in flour mixture and beat until mixture just begins to come together into a dough.

Combine eggs, vanilla, and sour cream together in a small bowl. With the mixer running on low speed, pour the egg mixture slowly into the bowl. Mix until the batter is smooth and fully combined, about 3 to 5 minutes.

Pour the batter into prepared pan and spread out evenly. Use a spoon to place 8-10 dollops of raspberry jam over the top. Sprinkle the cocoa nibs over the top of the batter as well. Using a knife, swirl jam and nibs into the batter to marble.

Sprinkle streusel over the top of the swirled batter.

Bake for about 25 to 30 minutes, until top is brown and a cake tester inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Remove from oven and let cool before serving.

 

March 24, 2011

Daily Gourmet/NewTree Chocolate Deal

Newtreemedium

I was recently contacted by Daily Gourmet, a new site that offers limited-time offers on artisanal products from around the country. They found me because they were currently running an offer on Amella Caramels, which I had reviewed favorably during my last visit to the San Francisco Chocolate Salon.

Their current offer is for NewTree Chocolates, a brand I am also familar with from my days working in a chocolate shop. Started by a Belgian biochemical engineer, NewTree's chocolates combine fine chocolate with a mixture of antioxidants and botanicals; for example, the Lavender "Tranquility" bar contains lavender and lime blossom extract, while the Cherry "Eternity" bar holds bits of cherry and contains grape seed extract, a polyphenol.

Daily Gourmet is offering a five bar sampler of the following new flavors:
- Apricot "Cocoon"
- Lavender "Tranquility"
- Cherry "Eternity"
- Dark Cocoa "Pleasure"
- Ginger "Sexy"
for $26, with free shipping, which is a 34% savings.

THey are also giving an extra $5 off to 5 Dessert First readers.

How to participate: Leave a comment saying that you have signed up for dailygourmet.com (You can't see the deals until you sign up). I'll pick five readers at random and send you a code that will give you an additional $5 off. Sound good?
This offer is good through Sunday, March 27 only. So I will close this giveaway at the end of Friday tomorrow and send out the codes. Thanks and good luck!

March 16, 2011

TCHO and Chocolate Mint Filled Cupcakes

Chocomintcupcakes

Pardon the slightly disjointed nature of this post; it was meant to be report on my TCHO factory experience that evolved into a St. Patrick's Day recipe that now includes a mention of Japan.

Paperwishes


Apologies, but I couldn't not mention that I fell in love with Japan long before I visited it for the first time, and I love it more with every subsequent visit. Their refined aesthetic that is visible is everything from their bridge design to their bento packaging; their concepts of wabi-sabi and mono no aware that appeals to my introvert's, observer personality; the spare beauty of the countryside (captured in one of my favorite movies ever, Totoro), gives Japan a special place in my heart. It was hard to think about regular life, much less blogging, when seeing the awful images of devastation everywhere.

I wanted to pass along the word that food bloggers are already mobilizing to help out; local bay area chef Samin Nostrat is organizing a bake sale for Japan; check out her site to get involved. Or, for those of you not in the bay area, Sabrina of The Tomato Tart is holding a virtual bake sale. Do consider helping out and be a part of this wonderful, caring community of food bloggers. Thank you!

Now, back to the original subject of this post. A few weeks ago I got the chance to visit the TCHO chocolate factory at Pier 17 in San Francisco. TCHO is a bean-to-bar chocolate company; they work directly with farmers from Madagascar, Peru, and Ghana to grow cacao to their specifications. The roasted beans are shipped to San Francisco where they are turned into chocolate in the Pier 17 factory. With the closing of the Scharffen Berger factory in Berkeley, TCHO is the only place near San Francisco to get a glimpse of the chocolate making process. TCHO started offering tours of their factory at the end of last year; they are free and you simply sign up on their site and show up for an hour long tour that includes a brief overview of the chocolate making process and a chocolate tasting.

Larry Del Santo, the marketing manager, described TCHO to me as "geared towards the millenial generation." With its high tech background and fast-moving startup feel, TCHO does fit in perfectly with the future savvy, iPhone-loving Bay Area set. As a lover of food history, I was delighted to learn that the swirling, geometric patterns are based on the anti-counterfeit patterns used on money; quite apropos since cacao beans were once used as currency.

 TCHO-factory-tour-richard

Photo courtesy of TCHO

Although they don't allow the public to take pictures of the factory, you can get a glimpse with this video on The Feast.

Tchocounter


The retail counter at the factory, where you can also get a coffee or TCHO's own drinking chocolate.


Tchotins

I really liked the chocolate; it is pretty much straight melted chocolate, gloriously thick, clearly harkening back to the xocolatl of the ancient Aztecs rather than the insipid watery pretenders found today.

Tcho-Factory-Tour-chocolatepipe

Photo courtesy of TCHO

 Willy Wonka's chocolate factory in reality: pipes gushing liquid chocolate. When asked how the pipes were cleaned, the tour guide replied that they were flushed with warm cocoa butter. These must be the only pipes you would want to lick!

Tcho-Factory-Tour-chocolatebuttons

Photo courtesy of TCHO

Chocolate buttons being born.

Tchobars

TCHO uses a "flavor wheel" to describe its various chocolate bars. There are six flavors on the wheel and currently four of them are offered: nutty, chocolatey, fruity, and citrus. TCHO takes pains to note there are no add-ins to their chocolate; all the flavor comes directly from the beans. Tasting all four of the bars is a quick and simple way to learn about some of the most basic flavor notes in chocolate. Unlike other artisan bars which may have a combination of notes, if you eat a "Nutty" bar you will clearly taste a nutty, toasted flavor. My favorites of the four were the Nutty and Fruity, which again contains no actual fruit but boasts a bright, clean berry flavor. The flavors are constantly being refined, which is why there is a "Fruity 2.0" and "Nutty 2.0". TCHO is still working on the earthy and floral bars - the R&D process includes the now-famous "beta bars" which are sent to volunteers to taste and critique, a clever strategy that not surprisingly has gone over like gangbusters in this town of foodies.

Tchomango

TCHO is also branching out into simple confectionery items such as these chocolate covered mango pieces. They have also started creating their own private label bars for Starbucks, which means in the very near future TCHO could be a household name.

Chocomintcupcakeinside

TCHO also has a professional line of baking bars and drops that come in a variety of percentages. I was gifted with a couple bags of the 68% Baking Drops as I was leaving, so I'd been waiting for a chance to try them out. Since St. Patrick's Day was coming up, I wanted to do my spin on a chocolate mint cupcake. Something a little more elegant than the neon green frosted sugar bombs littering the bakeries. (Although I did think later that St. Patrick's Day isn't really a holiday associated with modest restraint, is it? Oh well.)

 I came up with a chocolate sour cream cupcake (sour cream or creme fraiche are my favorites for a super rich cake) with a peppermint cream filling (if you really want, you can tint this green). A chocolate buttercream morphed into a chocolate ganache frosting, and the end result is sort of a cross between peppermint pattie and a Hostess cupcake. The sugar ball trios on top are a very light pastel green - surprisingly, no shamrock green available! I put a lucky group of four on one for someone to enjoy on St. Patrick's Day. I also realized a little too late that luster dust on chocolate just makes it look grainy in photos-argh!

The TCHO baking drops performed beautifully and lent the cupcakes a robust, fudgey taste. Because I'm a geek, I'm really curious to do a comparison with some of the other baking chocolates on the market - look for this post in the near future! However, for now I can conclude that TCHO is a perfectly excellent addition to any baker's arsenal. Singlechoccupcake

 

Chocolate Cupcakes

(adapted from Cooks' Illustrated)

makes 12 cupcakes

8 tablespoons (4 oz) unsalted butter, cut into pieces

2 ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped

1/2 cup cocoa powder

3/4 cup (3 3/4 oz) flour

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

3/4 teaspoon baking powder

2 large eggs

3/4 cup (5 1/4 oz) sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/2 teaspoon table salt

1/2 cup (4 oz) sour cream

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a 12 cup muffin pan with baking-cup liners.

Combine butter and chocolate in medium heatproof bowl. Set bowl over saucepan containing barely simmering water; heat mixture until butter and chocolate start to melt. Add cocoa and whisk until smooth and fully combined. Set aside to cool until just warm to touch.

Whisk flour, baking soda and baking powder in small bowl to combine.

Whisk eggs in second medium bowl to combine. Add sugar, vanilla and salt and whisk until fully incorporated.

Add cooled chocolate mixture and whisk until combined.

Sift about one-third of flour mixture over chocolate mixture and whisk until combined; whisk in sour cream until combined; then sift in remaining flour mixture and whisk batter until it is homogenous and thick.

Divide batter evenly among muffin pan cups. Bake until skewer inserted into center of cupcakes comes out clean, 18-20 minutes. Cool cupcakes in muffin pan on wire rack until cool.

 

Mint Cream

1 cup whipping cream

1 teaspoon peppermint extract

Combine cream and peppermint extract in a stand mixer bowl. Whip until soft peaks form; do not overwhip.

 

Chocolate Ganache

8 ounces (210 g) bittersweet chocolate

6 tablespoons (84 g) unsalted butter

1/2 teaspoon vanilla

2 tablespoons corn syrup

Combine all chocolate and butter in a metal bowl set over a saucepan filled with simmering water. Stir occasionally until melted and combined.

Add in vanilla and corn syrup and stir to combine. (The corn syrup is to help the ganache keep its shine; if you are serving the cupcakes immediately, you can omit the corn syrup.)

 

To assemble the cupcakes: Cut the centers out of each cupcake. Fill centers with mint cream and replace the tops.

Let the ganache cool slightly so it thickens, but don't let it cool too much or it won't spread smoothly. Spoon the ganache over the tops of each cupcake, covering evenly. Let ganache set slightly before serving.

 

March 08, 2011

Sugar and Spice Brioche Buns: Everything Nice

Briocherow

 

To see the winners of last week's Blackboard Eats contest, see the bottom of this post!

We're spoilt for choice of bread in San Francisco, where there's enough artisan bread bakeries around that not having freshly baked bread with dinner almost seems enough reason to turn in your foodie membership card. I must confess that I'm not the hugest bread person, probably because there's stiff competition for Most Ardent Bread Lover in this town, and my carbohydrate of choice tends to be rice, since it was a fixture of the dinner table while I was growing up.

I will make an exception for brioche, though. I like that it inhabits some undefined but utterly delicious middle ground between bread and cake. I like it even though it's so rich because you are literally shoving as much butter as possible into the dough before it loses all structural integrity, people still tend to enjoy it by putting even more rich items on, like...more butter, or eggs, or pâté. I also like brioche because it's so very easy to make. There may be many breads that intimidate me, but brioche? You make it once and you realize, that's all there is to it? And that's the dangerous part because you'll want to make it again and again.

Briocheplate

There's many very fine brioche recipes out there, both simple and gussied up. My longstanding favorite happens to be based off of this one by Alice Medrich. But when I got a copy of pastry chef Joanne Chang's Flour: Spectacular Recipes from Boston's Flour Bakery + Cafe and saw her Sugar and Spice Brioche Buns, I figured there were worse lots in life than a surfeit of brioche recipes.

 What I like about the Flour cookbook is the clean and very modern typography, which makes the book a joy to browse, and Chang's talent for writing charming, engaging headnotes that make every recipe sound like a must-try. How many different ways can you find to say, "These cookies are delicious!"?  But she manages to avoid that trap and weaves anecdotes from her childhood and her stints at Payard and other restaurants with tales of the daily routine at her Boston bakery to provide an entertaining glimpse into her life, enticing the reader to try these milestone recipes from her career. The majority of the recipes are accessible standards of the all-American bakery, with a refined presentation from Chang's background in French pastry.

Her basic brioche recipe is straightforward; it does not rely on a separate sponge (or poolish) but rather an overnight rest in the refrigerator to allow the fermentation process to occur. Because brioche dough is so rich with eggs and butter, it slows down the development of the yeast. Having a separate sponge free of fats ensures that enough fermentation happens, but I generally have no problem with brioche doughs developing overnight, with a final rise after shaping. If it's cold in the kitchen (like mine this last rainy, blustery weekend), I'll turn on the oven and place the shaped dough near it to help it rise faster. Other people have placed the dough directly in the oven, or in the warming drawer, but be careful to keep the temperature below 140 degrees F, or else you'll kill the yeast and have prematurely dead bread.

Briochedough

The classic French form for brioche is either a loaf or brioche à tête, but the Flour recipe has you cutting the dough into little squares and piling them into muffin cups. I finally figured out that the end result was supposed to resemble the traditional cloverleaf dinner rolls, making this recipe a nice amalgam of French and American. I wish illumination had come before I baked the brioche though, so I could have arranged the squares a little more neatly; the recipe was not entirely clear.

Recall what I said earlier about brioche being best enjoyed with other non-diet-food items: These buns are brushed with melted butter right out of the oven and then rolled in a mixture of sugar and spices. The never-fail combination of cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves make these buns taste very similar to the cinnamon-sugar doughnuts from the doughnut shops of my childhood.  The knobbly, pull-apart construction of these buns also tricks you into thinking you can eat just part of it, or maybe half and a bit more, until you give up and just cram the whole thing in your mouth and think, well, I'll just eat dinner a little later. Dangerous - but brioche is one yeasted bread that's got a permanent spot in my kitchen.

Finally, thanks for all who participated in the Blackboard Eats contest and gave me a bunch of restaurants to add to my list of places to try. The two winners of a one-year membership to Blackboard Eats, chosen entirely at random, are Annie and Christyna! Congrats and enjoy!


Singlebrioche

Basic Brioche
adapted from Joanne Chang's  Flour

2 1/4 cups (315 grams) all-purpose flour
2 1/4 cups (340 grams) bread flour
1 1/2 packages (3 1/4 teaspoons) active dry yeast
1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon (82 grams) sugar
1 tablespoon salt
1/2 cup (120 grams) cold water
5 eggs
1 cup plus 6 tablespoons (2 3/4 sticks/310 grams) unsalted butter, at room temperature, cut into about 12 pieces

In a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, combine the all-purpose flour, bread flour, yeast, sugar, salt, water, and eggs. 
Beat on low speed for 3 to 4 minutes, or until all of the ingredients have come together. 
Once the dough has come together, beat on low speed for another 3 to 4 minutes. The dough will be very stiff and seem quite dry.
On low speed, add the butter one piece at a time, mixing after each addition until it disappears into the dough.  It's important to wait until each piece is fully mixed in before adding other, or you'll have a greasy mess.
Continue mixing on low speed for about 10 minutes, stopping the mixer occasionally to scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl.  It is important for all of the butter to be mixed thoroughly into the dough.  If necessary, stop the mixer occasionally and break up the dough with your hands to help mix in the butter.
Once the butter is completely incorporated, turn up the speed to medium and beat for another 15 minutes, or until the dough becomes sticky, soft, and somewhat shiny.  It will take some time to come together.  It will look shaggy and questionable at the start and then eventually will turn smooth and silky.  
Increase speed to medium-high and beat for about 1 minute.  You should hear the dough make a slap-slap-slap sound as it hits the sides of the bowl.  Test the dough by pulling at it: it should stretch a bit and have a little give.  If it seems wet and loose and more like a batter than a dough, add a few tablespoons of flour and mix until it comes together.  If it breaks off into pieces when you pull at it, continue to mix on medium speed for another 2 to 3 minutes, or until it develops more strength and stretches when you grab it.  It is ready when you can gather it all together and pick it up in one piece.
Place the dough in a large oiled bowl or plastic container and cover it with plastic wrap, pressing the wrap directly onto the surface of the dough.  Let the dough proof in the refrigerator for at least 6 hours or up to overnight.  At this point, you can freeze the dough in an airtight container for up to 1 week.

 

Sugar and Spice Brioche Buns

adapted from Joanne Chang's Flour

1/2 recipe Brioche Dough

1/2 cup (100 grams) sugar

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon ground ginger

1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg

Pinch of ground cloves

Pinch of salt

1/4 cup (56 grams) unsalted butter, melted

 

Line 10 cups of a 12 cup standard muffin tin with paper liners or generously butter and flour them.

On a floured work surface, press dough into a 10 inch x 5 inch rectangle. 

Using a bench scraper or knife, cut dough into 10 equal 1 inch x 5 inch strips. Cut each strip into 5 pieces. You should now have 50 squares of dough.

Place 5 squares in each prepared muffin cup. Cover with plastic wrap and place in a warm spot for about 1 1/2 hours, until the dough has risen and feels puffy and soft.

Heat oven to 350 degrees F and place rack in center of oven.

Bake for 25 to 35 minutes, until golden brown. Let buns cool for 5 to 10 minutes on a wire rack until cool enough to handle. Meanwhile, combine sugar, spices, and salt in a small bowl.

Brush tops of buns with the melted butter. Roll the buns in the sugar mixture to coat evenly.

Buns are best served within 4 hours of baking. They can be stored in an airtight container for up to 1 day, then rewarmed in a 300 degree oven for 5 minutes.