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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Getting Buzzed for Barb with Chocolate Champagne Floats @FridayCocktail

September 14, 2012 at 8:50 am | Posted in Beverages, Fruit, Ice Cream/Sorbets | 45 Comments
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I’d like to introduce you to the first alcoholic beverage on my blog.  Actually..I only have one other beverage on this blog, but..whatever.  You see..if you’ve been reading my blog for a while..particularly my Bad Boy First Love saga, you know I can’t hold my alcohol, so therefore..I don’t drink very often.  Two glasses of wine and I’m telling everyone I love them.  Any more than that and you’re likely to find me on my knees with my head over the toilet..or in bed with a waste paper basket within reach.  Sad, huh?


When Barbara of Creative Culinary asked if I would like to join in on her 1 year Friday Happy Hour Cocktail anniversary..of course I obliged.  Her Friday cocktails are pretty amazing and extremely creative.  Forget the cake or pie..some of them could be dessert!  Personally, I’ve always been quite fond of her Vootbeer.  With a scoop of ice cream, you’re all set!  Barb is quite the cocktail creator, mixer – so much so, that sometimes I call her the ‘Barbtender’ – bah dum bump.

I told her I’d never made a cocktail in my life so I would just make a drink and add booze to it.  A jigger?  What’s a jigger?

Granted..it’s not that hard to make a cocktail and of course I could figure it out..but then decided to forgo the shaker, ice and again..jiggers etc..and take a much easier route – ice cream sodas of a sort, but no seltzer here.  How about good old bubbly aka champagne or sparkling wine?!?   Apparently it can only be called champagne if it’s made in the champagne region of France.  Well..La Di Da.

That said, my inspiration stemmed from THIS luscious looking drink I pinned a few days ago.  I really love champagne, but again..more than two glasses and blah, blah, blah ad nauseam, literally ad nauseam!  However..what’s a little champagne with dark chocolate ice cream and fruit sorbet?  I couldn’t possibly get sick from that, right?

Well..I didn’t, but I did end up incredibly engrossed in an episode of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo.   Mama was makin’ ‘sketti’ (spaghetti) using what looked to be a whole tub of Country Crock shed spread and a lot of ketchup.

I was buzzed, I giggled…a lot.  I thought it was gross.

Then I realized I had no right to giggle because when I was Honey Boo Boo’s age I only ate my ‘pasgetti’ with ketchup.  Tomato sauce wasn’t sweet enough for my ‘pasgetti’.

As usual..I digress.

A bartender or cocktail maker I will never be.  Just as I was about to take the money shot photo of the raspberry sorbet – chocolate float, tapping some extra ice cream into the glass – the glass broke.  Look at the finished raspberry  – chocolate float photos..way in the back.  I tried to hide it with raspberries, to no avail.  My beautiful chocolate shavings were history, and I snapped away rapidly as it spilled out the back, thinking….just let me get two decent shots, please!!  

Well – I didn’t get decent, but at least I got photos – so I photoshopped the crap out of them and now they look even worse.  I’d definitely give something up for natural light to take photos in – just can’t decide what.  Not body parts.


Despite that disaster…I also made a float with passion fruit sorbet (which I bought) and chocolate ice cream – no broken glass this time..and that was the one I drank.  LOVED IT.

As for the recipe..it was very convenient for me because I made the dark chocolate ice cream two weeks ago, and I made the raspberry sorbet last July, so the remains of each were in my freezer.  Like I mentioned above..I cheated and bought the passion fruit sorbet – a really good brand that rhymes with Bloggin’ Bloss.

If you’re a teetotaler, use seltzer in place of the la di da champagne or sparkling wine.

There really is no method to putting these together.  One scoop of chocolate ice cream plus one scoop of your favorite fruit sorbet, then pour in the champagne until it overflows a bit.  BUT, I will link you to the recipes for the dark chocolate ice cream and the raspberry sorbet.  There, I just linked you.

Be sure to check out Barb’s Friday Cocktail Anniversary post. – @FridayCocktail on Twitter,   A lot of bloggers made cocktails..real cocktails, I’m sure – real cocktails without broken glasses.  I’ll bet my ‘ketchup pasgetti’ some even measured with jiggers!

I’m also submitting these floats to We Should Cocoa. hosted by Chocolate Teapot  and Chocolate Log Blog.

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Berries + Yogurt + Flour, Eggs, Butter, Vanilla and Sugar = Berry Swirl Yogurt Cake

August 8, 2011 at 4:56 pm | Posted in Cakes, Dessert, Fruit | 58 Comments
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Double Berry Swirl Yogurt Cake

Before we moved to the town I grew up in, from NYC, we spent a few years in another town, in a huge apartment complex surrounded by vast, beautiful meadows, streams filled with tadpoles, froggies, fish and all things cool to a young, curious, nature loving girl.  I won’t get into the huge highway overpass that roared above us in the parking lot, nor the main roadway with a constant barrage of passing cars almost 24/7, less than a mile away, I will just keep us in the place where nature loomed and bloomed, with not much time left.


My fondest memory of this Garden apartment complex of Eden nestled within the asphalt, was the wild blackberry and raspberry bushes hidden in one small area behind the pussy willows and tall stalks of wheat-looking something or others that constitute ‘meadows’.  We would sit in the middle of this circle of bushes and pick plump, juicy, berries for hours, our lips, fingers and shirts stained purple and red.  I took this for granted – surely there’s wild bushes like this everywhere, right?  When we moved into our new house, I figured I’d have a whole backyard of them!

Unfortunately, the beautiful meadows and streams were eventually demolished to build a huge, modern, state of the art, high school and more apartment complexes, but fortunately, we were already moving out when this started happening.  Once we moved into our new home, I kind of forgot about wild berry bushes.  I loved cooking, but basic stuff, I was too young to think about or dabble in preparations calling for berries, outside of fresh berries topped with cream.

Cut to many years later – now I’m baking and cooking on a pretty regular basis, inhaling cookbooks like oxygen, pouring through gourmet magazines, reading a few chapters of Larousse Gastronomique nightly, and watching hours upon hours of Jacques Pepin showing me every cooking technique known to man (at that time), over and over.  I watched numerous cooking shows, but Jacques was my mentor.

I was falling madly in love with all things food, all things sweet and savory, all things plated and lovely.

All of this food exploration renewed my intense love of two berries with a deep fervor, two berries that I used to hang with and know very well, raspberries and blackberries.  I wanted to bake with them, make sauces with them, jam them, jelly them, you name it.  However, no wild and free berry bushes anywhere near me.  My berry passion led to many trips to the market, but was diluted with pints of mediocre, somewhat squashed berries in plastic containers with holes, and if I didn’t act quick, they’d morph into plastic containers of Swamp Things doing the creepy-crawly in the back of my fridge.

You never know how good you ‘had’ it until you want to cook and bake with it.

                             Like snowflakes, no two berry swirl cakes are alike

Cut to present.  A friend of mine attended a wedding in Seattle last summer.  One morning he called at the end of his daily workout and run.  As he was walking through the parking lot of the hotel he was staying in, he let out an audible ‘wow’ type of gasp.  He told me there were tons of wild blackberry bushes around the parking lot..filled to the brim with some of the biggest blackberries he’d ever seen.  He took a photo with his cell and sent it to me.  I let out an audible ‘wow’ type of-gasp as I listened to him eat those gorgeous berries.

“Wow, theesh are the jooshiest blackberriesh I’fe ever tayshted in my life!”

This was one of the photos he sent me.  Nice lookin’ Seattle wild blackberries!

The rest of his trip led to occasional phone calls and texts about how wherever he went, there were always blackberry bushes close by.

I contemplated a permanent move to Seattle, but only for a second.  I need sun on a more daily basis, although it’s an awesome city in a beautiful and bountiful state.  My ‘Seattle Lisa’ image contained tons of buckets in lieu of a purse –  picking blackberries from every bush I saw, so much so that I would have to balance an extra bucket on my head, like the Chiquita Banana chick on blackberryroids.

My history with yogurt is a bit different.  OK, a bit is understatement.  I hated it.  To me, yogurt was a bunch of annoying, little plastic containers that dominated our fridge since my mother ate it every.single.day.  They would come tumbling out and hit the floor while I was reaching for sandwich fixings or pudding cups, cracking open –  white, fruity goo all over the floor. I would actually gag while I was cleaning it up.   I hated, Hated, HATED how it smelled.

How could she eat this crap?”,  I would think and mutter faintly under my breath.

Don’t let these skinny swirls of berry fool you, because…..

My freshman year of college, there was a little truck on campus one day that was just giving yogurt away – Dannon yogurt.  One late night, craving something sweet, and nothing but our free Dannon haul in our mini-fridge, I had no choice but to confront my yogurt demons.  I was so hungry, I didn’t care..I was eating it.  One spoonful and BOOM, an explosion of creamy/tangy with sweet strawberries swirled throughout, sort of like pudding or custard, and I love puddings and custards.

Yogurt, why did I hate you so for so long?  OK, I admit, I had never tasted you before, but it was all because of those damn containers tumbling to the floor and cracking into cream of fruity ooze – plus, my mother’s obsession with you.  My apologies and regrets!

Well..now I’m obsessed, and I eat a container almost every day, and bake with it quite often.  As mentioned above, it’s in this cake, the Greek style, which has been my new favorite for quite a while.

When I decided to take advantage of an abundance of gorgeous blackberries and raspberries that came my way, I started with a blackberry swirl pound cake recipe I had bookmarked by Martha Stewart (wow, Martha is making a lot of appearances on my blog as of late).  Of course,  I wasn’t going to leave raspberries out and of course, I was probably going to change something.  That something was my former foe, yogurt, instead of the sour cream called for, and I don’t know why, but I had the urge to mix the berry purees with some of the cake batter prior to swirling them in.  Wow, thick, berry ribbons within the cake.  Success!

Make this cake..I promise you will love it – even if you don’t like berries and/or yogurt.

….when you mix some of the batter into the berry purees before spooning it on and swirling it into the batter, then cut into a slice vertically, this is what you get.  Thick ribbons of berry.

Double Berry Ribbon/Swirl Yogurt Pound ‘like‘ Cake
adapted from Martha Stewart, with my revisions

1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, room temperature, plus more for pan (or 1/2 cup neutral oil, like canola)
3 ounces blackberries (about a scant 3/4 cup)
3 ounces raspberries (about a scant 3/4 cup)
1 1/4 cups plus 2 tablespoons sugar
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon coarse salt
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
2 large eggs, lightly beaten
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1/2 cup Greek Yogurt, room temperature

NOTE:  I split the berry puree-batter mixes in half, using half of each for swirling into both layers of plain batter.  I did this to make two cakes.  Using all the berry purees in one cake is ideal, but either way is delicious!

DIRECTIONS:
1.Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly butter a 9-by-5-inch loaf pan and line with parchment, leaving a 2-inch overhang on all sides; butter parchment. In a food processor, puree blackberries with 1 tablespoon sugar. Wipe out processor and puree raspberries with 1 tablespoon of sugar.  Pour/scrape into separate bowls and set aside (you can strain them into the bowls if you don’t like the light bit of seeds that do not break down).  In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, salt, and baking powder.

2. In a large bowl, using an electric mixer, beat together butter (or oil) and 1 1/4 cups sugar until light and fluffy, 5 minutes. Add eggs and vanilla and beat to combine, scraping down bowl as needed. With mixer on low, add flour mixture in 3 additions, alternating with Greek yogurt, beginning and ending with flour mixture.

3.  Stir two to three tablespoons of the cake batter into the bowl with the blackberry puree until uniform.  Stir two to three tablespoons of the cake batter into the bowl of raspberry puree, until uniform.

4. Pour half the plain batter into the pan and dot with 1/2 of the blackberry puree -batter mix and half the raspberry puree-batter mix – cake batter. It will seem like it takes over all the plain cake batter, but don’t worry, it all works out. Swirl/marble lightly using a skewer or knife.  Repeat with remaining batter and remaining puree-batter mixes, then again, swirl batter and puree-batter mixes together, pushing skewer or knife all the way to the bottom for a full marble.

5. Bake until golden brown and a toothpick inserted in center of cake comes out clean, about 1 1/4 hours. Let cool in pan on a wire rack, 30 minutes. Lift cake out of pan and place on a serving plate; let cool completely before slicing.

Double Berry Swirl Yogurt Cake
This cake is entered in the #cakelove bloghop! Come VOTE and/or enter your cake!

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