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Sweet

Pavlova Cake

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Pavlova

Pavlova cake is my new favorite dessert. It is the single most elegant, delicate, graceful dessert I have yet encountered – more so than soufflé, macaron, or profiterol. It is crunchy and mallowy, creamy and mildly sweet, and very customizable. Its cloud-like cream topping rests on a pillowy meringue base, topped with the fruit, chocolate, or accent of your choosing. Best made in low humidity, I give you, (Australian) Pavlova. Also check out this post for mini pavlovas with cardamom cream and pistachio!

🌻🌻🌻

what you need

1 cup white sugar + 2-3 more tablespoons extra

4 large egg whites

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/2 teaspoon cream or tartar (sub arrowroot, rice wine vinegar, or lemon juice)

1 teaspoon corn starch

1 pint heavy whipping cream

Fruit of choice, maple syrup, chocolate shavings, cocoa powder, cinnamon, etc. for topping.

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how to make it

Preheat the oven to 350 and prepare a baking sheet with parchment paper.

Base. Beat the egg whites until peaks are stiff and stand upright when the beaters are inverted. Add in the sugar and continue beating until the peaks are stiff and glossy. This should take just under 10 minutes. Stir in the cream of tartar and cornstarch.

Spoon meringue onto parchment paper and smooth with a spatula using a circular motion. The meringue should form an 8-9 inch circle with a dip in the middle and higher edges.

Bake. Place in oven and immediately reduce oven temperature to 200. Bake the large Pavlova for approximately 90 minutes or until edges become golden and the top cracks slightly. 

Top. Beat the heavy whipping cream (I use just under a pint) until soft peaks form. Add desired amount of sugar for sweetness and beat until medium peaks form. Pro-tip: try adding cinnamon and/or maple syrup to the whipped cream to sweeten and flavor. Spoon whipped cream onto meringue base and use a spatula to spread it and smooth it to desired aesthetic. 

Decorate. This is the fun part. Sprinkle on your fruit of choice, cinnamon, chocolate shavings, or anything else that occurs to you. Some of my favorite combinations are listed to the left!

Slice and serve immediately. Pavlova will keep overnight in the refrigerator. You can easily make the meringue base and whipped cream in advanced, and assemble the Pavlova at the last minute for serving.

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Categories
Sweet

Hot Chocolate

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Mexican Hot Chocolate

Valentine’s Day is so controversial. Dinner reservations are made and flowers are purchased. Anti-Valentine’s Day parties are planned among groups of single women. Me, I like the concept of a day to stop and acknowledge the uniqueness of your partner and the things you love about them. But I’ve always thought the day best celebrated with something representative of the couple, whether that’s a meal, an activity, or a favorite movie. My Valentine’s days have been filled with videogames and pizza, homemade dinners, and elaborate chocolate selections (because any excuse to buy gourmet assorted chocolates, even if purchased by yourself, for yourself, amiright?). 

If you are making a dinner at home and are worried about dessert, I’ve got a solution for that. Making full dinners is time consuming, so the last thing you want to do is have to worry about making dessert on top of a full spread. Dessert should be something easy or something you can make in advance. The magic of this dessert is its simplicity. And while it makes for a beautifully elegant Valentine’s Day nightcap, it serves just as well on a Tuesday night. This is all-purpose, every day, delicate, creamy, spicy, chocolate deliciousness. And yes, we’re going to follow the chili in chocolate and chocolate in chili rule. However or whenever you choose to test drive this unique conceptualization of cocoa, I promise it will be among the best cups of hot chocolate you’ve ever tasted. Whipped cream or marshmallows… you choose. 

Afterthought: Allow me to take a moment to highlight three of my favorite chocolatiers in case you are looking for last-minute gift ideas. SOMA Chocolatemaker is top of that list, headquartered in Toronto. Check out their cherries tumbled in dark chocolate, their truly artful chocolate bars, or some gingerbread ninja cat cookies (because whynot?).  For chef-quality chocolatemaking, check out NYC-based Kreuther Handcrafted Chocolates.  The pricetag is exorbitant on the Valentine’s Day Chef Selection but the chocolate connoisseur will not be disappointed.  They also have macarons (see below). Finally, the Swiss Teuscher Chocolates has several US-based locations (I discovered it in San Francisco).  The assorted truffles (emphasis on the champagne truffles) are extremely fresh. 

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what you need

1/2 cup heavy whipping cream (or 1 cup mini marshmallows)

2 cups whole milk or dairy-free milk of choice (cashew or macadamia work pretty well)

2 generous tablespoons fresh, local honey

Ground cinnamon

Ground chili pepper or cayenne pepper 

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 tablespoon sugar or maple syrup

1 cup semisweet chocolate chips or chocolate chips of choice (I prefer 60% or more cocoa content… 100% makes the hot chocolate a little too thick)

how to make it

Makes two small cups of hot chocolate.

Before you begin, whip the cream into soft peaks adding the maple syrup or sugar to sweeten and a dash of cinnamon at the end. 

Place a small pot stovetop over medium-high heat. Make two dollops of honey on the base of the pot. Add the vanilla and healthy dashes of cinnamon and chili pepper. You will use a larger quantity of chili pepper or a smaller quantity if using cayenne; either way, adjust to your desired level of spiciness. 

Using a fork, blend the spices into the honey until just combined. Add the chocolate chips and stir as they begin to melt, being careful not to let them stick to the base of the pot. Add the milk.

Using the fork as a whisk, whisk the chocolate continually making sure to get all the chocolate off the base of the pot blended into the milk. Whisk continually as the milk heats until you see steam rising off the top of the chocolate. At sign of the first bubble, remove from heat. Do not boil. If the hot chocolate boils, the chocolate will separate from the milk and the chocolate will acquire a frothy (in a bad way) texture. 

Pour into mugs, top with a dollop of whipped cream, and a dash of chili and/or cinnamon. If using marshmallows, place mallows in cup first and pour hot chocolate over top. Serve with a truffle, a cherry, or a particularly good walnut on the side and you’re golden. 

Categories
Sweet

Maple Dutch Baby

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Maple Dutch Baby

maple dutch baby pancake recipe oneandahalfslices

This recipe came to me verbally over a campfire and some slow-roasted shrimp and pineapple skewers. Two of the coolest people I know just moved out to Colorado and their parting gift to me was to tell me about the incredibly simple, unique beauty that is the breakfast Dutch Baby pancake. “Just whisk the milk, flour, and eggs, and make sure your pan is really, really hot.” Okay, fair enough. Thank you Mike and Sherry. 🥰

what you need

3 eggs

3 tablespoons butter, preferably salted

1/2 cup milk

1/2 cup flour

1 tablespoon sugar 

Cinnamon & nutmeg

Cast iron skillet

Topping options: powdered sugar, maple syrup, fruit (stewed apples or berries), fresh whipped cream

A note on humidity: I make this all the time in Virginia and it comes out beautifully. But I have made it several times in Florida with little success (even during the winter months). Humidity has a huge impact on this dish. Cutting down on the sugar can help since sugar retains moisture. 

how to make it

Preheat oven to 425.

Blend all ingredients except the butter in a blender until smooth. 

Place butter in cast iron skillet and transfer to oven until the butter has just melted. 

Remove skillet from oven and slosh (technical term) the butter around until it coats most of the bottom of the skillet. Then pour in the batter and return to the oven. 

Cook for 20 minutes. The pancake should become puffy and golden. Then, lower the temperature to 300 and bake for 5-10 more minutes. During this entire process, try to avoid opening the oven at all. 

Remove, decorate, cut into slices, and serve. Drizzle with maple syrup and fruit. Or top with powdered sugar, fresh whipped cream, and a compote. Get creative!

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Medovik (Honey Cake)

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Medovik - Russian Honey Cake

First off, while I am not Russian in the slightest, I am an avid lover of honey, molasses, maple syrup, and most things stickily sweet (See Moravian Spice Birds). I also favor both cookies and pie over cake, so the fact that this cake is comprised of multiple cookies is a plus. Russian Honey Cake is … delicate. Its flavor is gentle; mildly tangy and mildly sweet. And its form gives way to a slightly haphazard layering that gives this cake an artistry that the traditional vanilla-with-chocolate-frosting simply does not have. While it is best made over a 24-36 hour period, it also keeps much longer than most cakes, and gets better with each day that it rests in the fridge. Without further ado, I give you Medovik

what you need

1/2 cup local, fresh honey

1/4 cup sugar

1/2 cup butter

1 teaspoon baking soda

3 large eggs

1/4 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon vanilla

3 1/2 – 4 cups flour

A healthy supply of parchment paper

 

> > > Filling

2 cups plain Greek yogurt

2 cups heavy whipping cream

2-4 tablespoons sugar

1/2 cup honey

> > Backstory,

or “Why This Russian Cake Has A Snake On Top.”

Clubs. I have never been a big “club” person (referring both to rage-y modern-day college brothels and organized groups for social exchange around a shared interest). Yet here I am, 30 years old, a member of a club.

I am joined together with a group (alright, three) esteemed women who have all had to endure a modern hardship of the highest degree:

a snake… in the house.

In the year that would not end (2020), all three of us somehow ended up with one snake varietal or another in our living rooms (also, on the stairs, on the dining room table, pretty much everywhere a snake should never be). From garden snakes to black racers, snakes of all sizes (4 inches to 4 feet) penetrated the otherwise sanctimonious confines of our respective homes and left us each, in turn, sleepless, squirmy, and unable to cross the room without ALL the lights on for several weeks.

We held our inaugural Snake Sisters meeting in my little kitchen nook on the 12th day of October on a particularly gloomy Virginian day. In a brazenly delicious show of solidarity, and to represent the suffering we each been forced to endure, I set out to make a “snake cake,” which somehow became a Russian Honey Cake with a grahammed-up stencil snake on top.

Of course, you are free to use whatever stencil you want… it is my deepest hope that someday we will live in a world where snake cakes are no longer required to uplift the weary. And when that day comes, I will simply tell everyone that this cake opens the Chamber of Secrets if you speak to it in Parseltongue.

how to make it

Make cookies. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Combine sugar, honey, and butter over medium heat until it darkens and bubbles slightly (~ 5 minutes). Remove from heat and let cool slightly while beating the three eggs. This part is tricky. You need to incorporate the eggs into the honey mixture slowly, otherwise the eggs will scramble. One tiny pour at a time and continuous whisking will do the trick. Stir in flour, salt, and vanilla. This dough is going to be stiff… super stiff. You may need to add flour if the dough isn’t coming together enough to handle. 

Once you can handle the dough, divide it into 8 hunks (yes, “hunks,” technical term). On a piece of parchment paper, roll out each hunk into an 8 or 9 inch round, flouring as you go. The round will be thin… super thin. Place an 8 or 9 inch plate on the dough and cut out the cookie with a sharp knife, saving the little fringe bits as well (you will need these for the topping). Bake each cookie until the edges begin to darken, ~7-8 minutes. After you bake each cookie, bake the fringe bits until crispy, ~5 minutes. Let the cookies cool completely. Note: you can make these cookies the day before if convenient. 

Make filling. Beat the heavy whipping cream to medium peaks and sweeten slightly with sugar. Mix honey together with Greek yogurt, then fold in whipping cream. 

Make cake. Prepare your cake plate with little wedges of parchment paper (wedges, not one whole piece). When the cake is complete, you can pull each wedge out from underneath the cake leaving a spotless cake plate for presentation. Place a dollop of filling in the center of all pieces of parchment and place a cookie on top. Working iteratively, place dollops of filling on the top of each cookie, spreading the filling out to 75% of each cookie before placing another cookie on top. 

When all 8 cookies are in place, spread filling generously on the top, then whatever is left on the sides (you likely won’t cover all of the brown cookie on the sides. It’s okay. This cake looks good messy).

Decorate cake. Grind the cooked crispy bits from the sides of the cookies into a crumble. Sprinkle over cake in desired pattern or use a stencil (see notes below). If the filling begins to separate or becomes runny, simply place the cake in the fridge for an hour or so to harden up. I left the cake in the fridge overnight before decorating it. Ideally, it will sit in the fridge for several hours before consumption so the filling will have ample opportunity to soften the cookies.

Adjustments: Some recipes call for an all sour cream filling sweetened with condensed milk. Some recipes call for sour cream be mixed with whipping cream. To me, the idea of sweetening a honey cake with condensed milk doesn’t sit well, so honey it is. As for the cream, I favor whipped cream as a topping and, wherever possible (most places, it turns out), Greek yogurt as a substitute for sour cream or heavier cream products. 0% Greek yogurt has a clean, tangy flavor and is pure protein. Also, the condensed milk option gets messy quickly owing to the extra liquidity the condensed milk introduces. You are free to play with the filling.    

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