Streusel Overkill is Good – Raspberry Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake

February 4, 2013 at 11:59 am | Posted in Breakfast, Cakes, Dessert, Fruit, Giveaway, Secret Recipe Club | 68 Comments
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I love warm rainy days in the spring and summer.  I love the scent of lilacs.  I love the smell of Fall.  I love when someone brushes my hair.  Are you gagging yet?  Well you won’t be when I tell you what I love next.

Raspberry Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake

I love streusel..lots and lots of streusel.  Who doesn’t?  I don’t think I’ve ever met a person who doesn’t love streusel.  However, I know plenty of people who hate the scent of lilacs, abhor rainy days, despise Fall because it’s the official end of summer, and can’t stand someone else brushing, much less touching, their hair.

When it comes to streusel, I go ga ga…but not ga ga enough to pull off chunks of it and leave the cake uneaten, like I’ve been known to do to NY Style Crumb Cake.  If there’s a crumb cake near me, you better grab some quickly because I’ve mastered the art of pulling off the crumb layer in one, perfect sheet of lumpy goodness, with surgical precision.

With streusel, since it’s usually paired with a moist cake,  I love the amalgam of the two..especially when there’s a strip of it running through the center of the cake, along with a good amount on top.  Butter, flour, sugar, nut or oat crumb perfection.  It must not ever be messed with… in my kooky world, that is.

How much of a difference is there between a crumble, crisp and streusel?  Butter, flour, sugar, oats and/or nuts, right?  Well..I’m pretty sure a ‘crumble’ doesn’t contain oats or nuts, but, hey..I’m just tossing out a random thought here..maybe some crumbles do (???).

For this months Secret Recipe Club, I was assigned the blog of long time blog friend, Evelyne from Cheap Ethnic Eatz.  I was excited because Evelyne is an extremely adventurous and daring cook, baker, dessert maker.  I don’t think there is anything she won’t try. cook, bake, or dessert make.  I literally marvel at her uniqueness and creativity.  Check out her Waffle Brownies,  Peanut Butter Daifukumochi Balls and Oyster Mushroom Shortbread Cookies!

SO, what did I do?  I chose probably one of the least ‘adventurous’ goodies she has on her blog.

I’m such a wuss.

Remember…I love streusel and I haven’t had anything with streusel in a long, long time, not to mention I was definitely going for a dessert this month, so, as I scrolled through her dessert category, I couldn’t help myself when I came upon this Blueberry Almond Streusel Cake.  It wasn’t too hard of a decision since I was craving streusel ‘something’, but I also considered this gorgeous Tarte Tatin with Sage, Vanilla and Clove Infused Butter and Pistachio Galettes des Rois, BUT, in the end,  and after much thought, the streusel cake won out.

Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake with Raspberries                         I love how some of the batter rose up over the streusel.

Here are some changes I made to the recipe..well, mostly the streusel since I only switched out the fruit in the cake batter (I was going to use 1 cup of Greek yogurt instead of the cup of milk-sour cream mixture, but figured I’d made too many changes already).  I browned the butter, used semi-sweet chocolate instead of white chocolate..subbed toasted pecans for the almonds and used vanilla extract because of that.  I also split the white sugar with brown sugar, but here’s the best part..I quadrupled the streusel.

Yes, I quadrupled the streusel and I like saying it.  It’s been my mantra the past week – Quadruple the Streusel!

1/4 cup to 1 cup..two tablespoons to 8 tablespoons..1/4 teaspoon to 1 teaspoon…it was very easy to quadruple.  It begged to be quadrupled.

I ended up with about three cups of streusel.  At first I was a little hesitant once I saw how much there was, but I swore I was going to incorporate every bit of it into the cake batter…center and top.  Considering this recipe uses a small amount of cake batter since it’s baked in one round or square 9-inch pan, I basically ended up with a cake that was half cake – half streusel.  I could almost hear the booming call of a carnival side show barker as I sliced into the cake;

“Come look at this dessert oddity – half cake – half streusel!. Just pennies for a peek!”

The streusel in the center of the cake melted into the batter.  I was a little disappointed because I had hoped for a beautiful strip of streusel running through the center, but after one bite..my disappointment dissipated.  The cake was not only moist, but the brown butter/brown sugar flavor was amazing with the tart raspberries, bits of chocolate and toasted pecans.  The ‘melted’ streusel inside also gave the cake a pretty dark, golden hue. The majority of the streusel was baked on top of the batter and it did exactly what a streusel topping should do..crisped up to crumbly perfection.  In my photos, you can see how far down into the cake some of it sunk..but it remained crumbly/crispy.

Score!

Raspberry Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake

Of course, there was a hitch.  There’s always a hitch when I bake or cook, isn’t there? Most of the raspberries, coated with flour so they wouldn’t sink to the bottom..sunk. I have no doubt it had to do with the streusel weighing down the cake, but what’s a little aesthetic glitch when you get something this delicious?  You still get ‘raspberry’ in most bites.  Next time I’m going to try bluberries and see if they hold up a little better.

SO, because this cake is so loaded with streusel, I decided to call it Raspberry Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake or Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake with Raspberries instead of Raspberry Cake with Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel.  I think it’s apropos in this case.

I also made one cake using white chocolate, which was just as good, if not better, just because I love white chocolate.  You can see that one in the last photo after the recipe.

Finally, this cake is also great without any fruit! If you’d rather have more of a yellow cake, cut the streusel recipe in half or quarter it, then pile it on top of the cake batter, like the original recipe, linked above and right beneath the cake recipe, was written.

Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake with Raspberries
Makes one 9-inch round or square cake, about 8 – 10 servings

Streusel
1 cup flour
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup light or dark brown sugar, packed
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 cup chopped semi-sweet chocolate OR mini chocolate chips OR chopped white chocolate
1 cup chopped, toasted pecans
1 stick of butter, browned and then chilled until slightly solid

Cake
From Cheap Ethnic Eatz via Mandoline

2 cups of flour – All-Purpose or Cake Flour..either is fine
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/3 cup butter (5 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon), melted
3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 eggs
1/2 cup sour cream *
1/2 cup whole milk (low-fat is fine) *
2 cups raspberries or fruit of your choice, such as blueberries

* You can use 1 cup Greek yogurt in place of the sour cream and milk.  Reduce the baking powder to 1 1/2 teaspoons if you do.

DIRECTIONS:
1.  Make the Streusel – Brown the butter until golden amber like as shown in link in recipe, then transfer to a bowl, cover and chill until slightly solidified, about 30 to 45 minutes..an hour at the most.  You still want it soft.  Once chilled, combine all the ingredients for the streusel in a large bowl except the browned butter.  Cut in the brown butter until the mixture resembles crumbs.  You can do this with your fingers, a pastry cutter, a food processor (just pulse) or a stand mixer.  Set the streusel aside until ready to use.

2. Make the Cake – In a medium bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.  Set aside.

3.  In a large bowl, beat together the melted butter, sugar and vanilla extract until light and creamy.  Add the eggs, one at a time until each is incorporated.  In a glass measuring cup, stir together the sour cream and milk.  While beating, start adding the flour mixure and sour cream-milk mixture, alternating..starting and ending with the flour mixture.

4.  In a medium bowl sprinkle about a 1/4 to 1/2 cup of flour over the raspberries and shake until all the raspberries are coated.  Dump the raspberries in a strainer and shake off the excess flour into a bowl and/or the garbage  Fold the raspberries, gently, into the cake batter.

5. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F..and lightly oil a round or square 9-inch pan.  If making a round cake, I recommend a springform pan.  Lightly grease the bottom and sides of whatever pan you’re using.  I also recommend placing a piece of parchment, cut to fit the bottom of whichever pan you’re using, then greasing that lightly too.

6. Scrape half the batter into the pan, then cover with 1 cup of the streusel.  Scrape the remaining batter on top of the streusel and spread gently to cover.  Top with the remaining streusel..pushing it down a bit to adhere.

7.  Place on the middle rack of your oven and bake for 55 to 65 minutes or until a skewer poked in the middle of the cake comes out clean..well, moist crumbs sticking to it is fine.

8. Remove from oven and let cool in pan 10 minutes.  Run the back of a knife or an offset spatula around the cake to make sure it will release cleanly. Remove from pan and place on a cooling rack.  Slice it up and Enjoy!

Raspberry Brown Butter Pecan White Chocolate Streusel Cake

If you get a chance, check out Evelyne’s blog, Cheap Ethnic Eatz for a treasure trove of amazing and wild recipes!  Click on the blue frog below if you’d like to see what my fellow Group A SRC’ers made from their assigned blogs.



We have a winner ladies and gents!  Random.org chose #127, which lands on Carmen!

 

Congratulations, Carmen, and thank you so much for your kind words!  I’m glad my rolls were an inspiration to get your hands back into some dough and/or batter.  Sending you an email right now to get your info!  Hope you enjoy the King Cake and Coffee as much as we did 🙂

Raspberry Brown Butter Pecan Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake

If there is no response within 3 days, another winner will be chosen.

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Last Minute Candy Gift – 30 Minutes or Less, 3 Ingredients! White Chocolate Butter Pecan Crunch Clusters

December 24, 2012 at 7:14 pm | Posted in Candy, Dessert, Holiday | 36 Comments
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This morning I swore I wasn’t going to put this post up because the photos turned out awful.  These babies do not mesh well with artificial light.  But then I thought ‘This candy is so darn good, why would I hold back over photos?’

These are normal thoughts if you have a food blog.. and completely justified since photos are the most important aspect of a food blog. You eat with your eyes online.  This is why I groan so much about not having natural light.  One more time...everyone has natural light, whyyy not meeee? :/

White Chocolate Butter Pecan Crunch Clusters - 3 Ingredients - 30 minutes or less!

Remember the filling for my Butter Pecan Thumbprint cookies?  Well, of course you do, since it was my last post…from like 5 days ago.

As of late..I’ve been a posting maniac on this blog and I’m posting like I never posted before. *off the shoulder, cut sweatshirt sopped with perspiration from all the posting*

OK, I don’t care how old you are…you have to have seen or heard of Flashdance and/or heard the song Maniac, so I’m going to safely assume everyone gets that.

Anyway…I’m posting a lot, for me.  Usually I’m lucky to get a post up every two weeks.  So, because of this, I’m straining to think of what to write.  Well, it’s not only because of my maniac posting, it also has a lot to do with things changing around here and not flowing because of it, which has led to me writing self-consciously on and off for the past 6 months or so.  It sucks.

White Chocolate Butter Pecan Crunch Clusters - 3 Ingredients - 30 minutes or less!

I miss being excited to write…my brain rife with thoughts and musings that would pour easily from my fingertips as I typed.  I used to literally ‘check out’ as I was writing, having to snap out of these zones and back into the present when I was finished.

So, because of this..I’m going to do something a little different, and then tell you about these easy and delicious chocolate clusters.  You know how some bloggers choose one day of the week to write about stuff they love..sometimes with links?  Well, I’m going to do a quick list of things that bugged or annoyed me the past week, minus links.

Bah Humbug?  Nooo, I just felt like venting – it’s all trivial, surface stuff..and no, this will not be a regular thing on my blog.

1.  I ordered two stuffed artichokes from a very reputable and amazing Italian Emporium.  They were kind of pricey, but I knew they were going to be good, and they were..until I got half-way through the stuffing in the center.  With one deep forkful, my mouth was full of stuffing loaded with prickly, dry bristles.  Yep, they left the choke in.  The stuffing was ruined and I had to rinse the heart (the best part) off, after I pulled out the remaining choke, not to mention my mouth out..like 20 times.  It was a mess and a major disappointment.  Even after alerting them to this, they continue to leave the choke in.

I imagine a disgruntled employee, with a pornstache and stained white apron, who hates his job so much, he takes pleasure in it..

“Oh, yes, *rubbing his hands together with glee* it looks and smells deeeelicious, but just wait until they get to the choke!  The artichoke and luscious stuffing will be ruined…RUINED! Mwhahaha!”

I haven’t made stuffed artichokes in a few years, but I have a fabulous recipe from Biba Caggiano that’s more than worth the time it takes to scrape out the choke before stuffing. Sayonara, Italian Emporium.

2.  Saw a photo and link for a recipe for two ingredient truffles on the Yahoo home page slideshow.  Umm…that’s what truffles are – two ingredients, chocolate and hot cream.  Yeah,. some may add corn syrup and/or butter..but it’s not a norm.  Nice lure for those who have never made truffles, Yahoo!

3.  Nice restaurants should not have microwaves.  Ordered out a side of what usually are amazing meatballs from an Italian restaurant we frequent often.  I got rubber balls.  It took every ounce of strength I had to tear them apart, completely inedible.  I had to bounce one just to see, and it bounced!  Well..just a little bounce, but it bounced!  Reheating meatballs in the microwave when someone phones in take-out – NOT a good idea.

4. I have an ear infection in my right ear.  I’m a righty..I hold my phone to my right ear – the left is uncomfortable.  If I had a nickel for every time I’ve screeched, “Whaaaaa?” or “Hehhh?” the past week, I could buy a side of rubber meatballs.

White Chocolate Butter Pecan Crunch Clusters - 3 Ingredients - 30 minutes or less!

So, these candies.  When I made my butter pecan thumbprint cookies, the white chocolate feuilletine filling was a test.  Because of this, I ended up melting 1 pound of white chocolate.  Once the two dozen cookies were filled, I had a ton left.  Then it hit me, I’ve got crunchy white chocolate and a good amount of butter pecans left in the freezer, not only from the cookies, but from this luscious stuffing I made back in November. DING!  Leftover chopped butter pecans dumped into remaining white chocolate feuilletine, spooned onto a baking sheet to set = awesome candy.

Now, the amounts are estimated, since you go by the texture and thickness when you add the feuilletine (or corn flakes) to the white chocolate (you can use dark, milk, or any kind of chocolate you prefer), but in the double photo collage above, you can see how it should look before you spoon it onto the baking sheet in rustic clumps.  Granted, you can use less feuilletine (or corn flakes) and let the chocolate dominate, but they won’t be as lumpy and rustic.  No matter..they will taste just as delicious, albeit sweeter.

In other words..this recipe is easily altered to suit your preference.

White Chocolate Butter Pecan Crunch Clusters - 3 Ingredients - 30 minutes or less!

3 ingredients, 30 minutes or less of your time.  You can make these tomorrow morning for gifts to friends and/or relatives who stop by, or you go to visit.  OR, we all end up exchanging gifts the days following Christmas, at least once…so, my point is..last minute gift?  This is the candy for you!

The hardest part is melting the chocolate, and how hard is that?  Oh, the butter pecans, you need to make those too..but toast them while you’re melting the chocolate!  Still 30 minutes or less total.  OK< I realize  that the butter in the buttered pecans should be a 4th ingredient, but you can make them ahead of time and refrigerate or freeze them, so there!

White Chocolate Butter Pecan Crunch Clusters
Makes as many as the size clusters you spoon onto the pan, about 2 dozen

1 pound good quality white chocolate
1 1/2 to 2 cups feuilletine or crushed corn flakes
1 to 1 1/2 cups buttered, toasted pecans

DIRECTIONS:
1.  Melt the white chocolate in a bowl over simmering water, or in the microwave, stopping and stirring every minute, so it doesn’t burn.

2.  Stir in feuilletine or crushed corn flakes and buttered pecans.

3. Using a spoon, drop mixture in rustic clusters onto a silpat or parchment lined baking sheet.  Let set in the fridge for about 15-20 minutes.

3.  Package up for gifts or just serve and enjoy!

White Chocolate Butter Pecan Crunch Clusters - 3 Ingredients - 30 minutes or less!

Wishing you all a Merry Christmas!

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Melt-In-Your-Mouth Butter Pecan Thumbprint Cookies with White Chocolate Feuilletine, and a Way to Help the Sandy Hook School Families

December 19, 2012 at 8:27 am | Posted in Candy, Cookies, Dessert, Holiday, Uncategorized | 29 Comments
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I know…weird, huh?  Three posts in less than two weeks.  Someone needs to take my temperature.  I have a feeling it would probably register anywhere from 350F to 375F.  OK, so the holiday baking bug bit and it keeps biting..leaving ‘welts’ of butter, flour, sugar and eggs all over me.  How cheesy can I get?  Oh, believe me, there’s more cheese where that came from.

Butter Pecan White Chocolate Crunch Thumbprint Cookies

Before I get to these cookies..I need and want to touch on the Sandy Hook shootings.  I’ve had a lump of pain in my heart since learning of it, and I can’ watch anything about it without choking up.  Little children are our lights..precious gems, untainted by the harsh realities of what can be a cruel world at times.  They show us the goodness of human beings. Killing them is killing human goodness. I can’t sleep because I keep picturing those little, innocent children shot dead, in such an aggressive, hateful manner.. by a man who was probably mentally ill, but no one did anything about it, or so it seems.  We don’t know what inner demons this man was battling, but It begs the question – what could motivate someone to do something so heinous, so cruel,  so despicable?

We may never know.

I’m not going to spout off about gun control or mental illness, but I am going to direct you to a fund set up by United Way of Western Connecticut called the Sandy Hook School Support Fund to help the families of the victims through their grief..whether it be therapy or grief counseling of some sort or just a little something to make life easier for them at this time.  It’s not going to bring back their little angels or loved ones, but it’s something and I think we’ve all felt some form of helplessness since it happened.

UPDATE:  The Daily News has put up a list of Sandy Hook funds you can donate to and linked them, from The Red Cross to personal family funds.  This gives you a lot of options to help and show your support.

Butter Pecan White Chocolate Crunch Thumbprint Cookies

Wow, it’s really hard to write about cookies after that, but I will write about cookies, thumbprint cookies laden with toasty, buttered pecans and filled with white chocolate feuilletine.  Some of you may have heard of feuilletine…if you’ve been reading my blog for a while, you know exactly what it is.

Feuiiletine (foo-ye-teen – from the French ‘feuille,’ meaning ‘leaves’) is made from very thin, crispy, sweet crepes..sort of like wafers..crushed, then added to creamy desserts for texture.  Besides the texture..they also add a delicate caramel undertone to whatever you add them to.  If you can’t find feuilletine nearby, which is like a 99.9 % probability, you can order it HERE, or make it yourself.

If you don’t want to deal with feuilletine..which can be pricey, although I think my link is a great price for it..corn flakes, placed in a ziplock bag and pounded into smaller flakes, are a decent substitution.  Corn flakes will give you a crunchier filling, since they are not as delicate as feulletine..which gives you a crispy filling.

Crispy – Crunchy?  Yes, there is a difference.

Butter Pecan White Chocolate Crunch Thumbprint Cookies

However, flavor wise…corn flakes don’t hold a candle to  feuilletine.  But, the good news is..I split the melted white chocolate and added feullitine to half and crushed corn flakes to the other half.  They were both really good and got a big thumbs up from those who tried them. So, go French or go Kellogs.  Either way is perfectly fine.

Another alternative that comes closer to feuilletine in flavor is crushed sugar cones – the ones you buy for ice cream. The texture isn’t feathery crisp like feuilletine, but it’ll give you a corn flake crunch with more flavor.

Oh, how could I forget the cookie part?  You know those melt-in-your-mouth pecan balls or crescents coated in powdered sugar?  That’s what these cookies are…plus a thumbprint and minus the powdered sugar.  Butter pecans are my ‘new thing’.  I always toast nuts before adding them to sweet or savory preparations because toasted nuts have much more flavor than nuts that aren’t toasted, but when it comes to pecans, I can’t stop coating them in melted butter before toasting them.  I’m not sure I’ll ever stop doing that with pecans because toasted is great, but butter toasted is better.  You get that lovely, rich, brown butter flavor in addition to the toasty – you know..like good old butter pecan ice cream..it simply can’t be beat.

So, to sum up these cookies..as a friend put it – it’s crispy chocolate in a nutty, buttery, toasty cookie.  Try these with milk or dark chocolate if you don’t like white chocolate, or make them using a variety of chocolate feuilletine fillings.

I hope you try them.  I hope you like them.

Butter Pecan Thumbprint Cookies with White Chocolate Feuilletine
Makes about 2 dozen cookies, but you can double the recipe..then double again, for more 

2 sticks of unsalted butter
2/3  cup powdered sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups flour
1 1/2 cupa chopped pecans
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
8 ounces white chocolate, melted
Abut 3/4 to 1 cup feuilletine or crushed corn flakes or crushed sugar cones – you want a little more white chocolate to feuilletine or corn flakes so it settles into the thumbprint nicely, and sticks.  Start with 1/2 cup and add more if you think it’s needed.  Some white chocolate brands melt more liquid than other white chocolate brands.  For example – if you use white chocolate chips..they do not melt as well as a good quality white chocolate bar like Valrhona, therefore, less feuilletine is needed.

DIRECTIONS:
!. Stir together chopped pecans and 1/4 cup melted butter. Spread in an even layer on a parchment lined sheet pan. Bake at 350° for 15 – 20 minutes, stirring them round once half way through. until pecans are toasted (you’ll be able to smell them). Remove from oven, and let cool.

2. When pecans are cool, in a medium bowl, combine with flour. Set aside.

3.  IN a large bowl beat together the 1 stick of butter, powdered sugar and vanilla until smooth.  Beat in the flour-butter pecan mixture until combined.  Line two baking sheets with parchment paper or a silpat.  Roll the dough into 1 1/2 – inch balls and place on baking sheets..12 per sheet – about two inches apart.  Refrigerate both sheets with the dough balls for 10-15 minutes.  Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

4.  Place one sheet in the oven and bake for 10 minutes.  Remove from oven and press your thumb into cookies to make a deep indentation.  Place back in the oven for 7 – 9 minutes. then remove and cool on a wire rack.  Repeat with second sheet of dough balls.

5.  Melt the white chocolate in w bowl over a pot of simmering water..making sure the bowl doesn’t touch the water.  Stir in the feuilletine or crushed corn flakes, then spoon into the centers of the cooled cookies, about a heaping half teaspoon per cookie.  Let set and then enjoy!  These are great for a holiday cookie exchange!

Butter Pecan White Chocolate Crunch Thumbprint Cookies

Note – I melted about a pound or more of white chocolate and added a lot of feuilletine, since I was experimenting.  Check back in a few days to see what I did with all that leftover white chocolate feuilletine!

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