Tag Archives: daring bakers challenge

The road to Snickers is paved with nougat

The Daring Bakers' ChallengeThis month’s Daring Bakers’ Challenge was to make nougat, which isn’t something that I’d ever even thought about making before. I’ve never eaten nougat outside of a candy bar. And I figured this was no time to start, so I decided to make a peanut nougat to go inside a homemade Snickers bar.

I spliced my recipe together from a couple of sources. I used the Bon Appetit ‘Snickers’ bar recipe for the base and the nougat, and I followed the How Sweet It Is homemade Snickers recipe for the caramel layer. I ended up just melting a lot of chocolate chips and, after I got tired of dipping the individual bars, pouring them over the top of the nougat and caramel layers. It wasn’t very pretty, but it tasted marvelous.

The homemade Snickers bars took far more effort than the homemade Butterfingers, but I think they tasted better, too. And I should know, because I ate a ton of them.

Homemade Snickers

The March 2014 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Rebecca of BakeNQuilt. She challenged us to learn to make classic nougat and to make it our own with our choice of flavors and add-ins.

In which I use a basting brush to make a cake

The first Daring Bakers Challenge of 2014 was a cake I’d never heard of before, a European confection called a baumkuchen. It has lots and lots and lots of layers, and it’s usually prepared on a spit. Like a rotisserie chicken, but with cake batter instead of fowl. I had a very hard time picturing exactly how that worked until I found a slideshow that shows how baumkuchen is made.

And then last week, Rockford snapped this picture at a department store in Yokohama, Japan:

Rotisserie Cake

It’s called baumukūhen in Japan, and according to Wikipedia it’s one of the country’s most popular pastries:

It was first introduced to Japan by the German Karl Joseph Wilhelm Juchheim. Juchheim was in the Chinese city of Tsingtao during World War I when Britain and Japan laid siege to Tsingtao. He and his wife were then interned at Okinawa. Juchheim started making and selling the traditional confection at a German exhibition in Hiroshima in 1919. After the war, he chose to remain in Japan. Continued success allowed him to move to Yokohama and open a bakery, but its destruction in the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake caused him to move his operations to Kobe, where he stayed until the end of World War II. Some years later, his wife returned to help a Japanese company open a chain of bakeries under the Juchheim name that further helped spread baumkuchen’s popularity in Japan.

Daring Bakers KitchenThe DBK recipe didn’t require a rotisserie for the cake’s prep, which is good because I don’t have one handy. The at-home version calls for painting the batter onto the bottom of the cake pan, broiling it, painting on another layer, ad infinitum.

I followed the baumtorte recipe at GlobalTableAdventure.com pretty closely, but I was missing a few things and had to improvise. I didn’t have quite enough almond paste, so I mixed a quarter cup of Trader Joe’s crunchy cookie butter into the almond paste before I added the butter. I also discovered that I didn’t have enough cornstarch, but I was too far into things to run out for more so I used what I had and compensated with extra flour.

Making the baumkuchen/baumtorte is a laborious process. I thought my arm might fall off while I was folding in the beaten egg whites, and painting on the layers of batter seemed to take forever. I cheated and made the first several layers thicker than they’re supposed to be, which was a bad idea. The cheatery was evident when we sliced into the cake, and the thicker layers were less tender than the others.

All in all, is was a tasty and pretty impressive-looking cake, and I would show you my attempt at it if we hadn’t eaten it all before I remembered that I needed to take a picture. Which speaks to the tastiness, I suppose. I don’t know that I’d make another one, but I’d definitely try a slice if I were ever somewhere where they made the authentic version.

The January 2014 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Francijn of “Koken in de Brouwerij”. She challenged us all to bake layered cakes in the tradition of Baumkuchen (tree cake) and Schichttorte (layered cake).

We represent the Tres Leche league

Tres Leche Cake

Long, long ago — just before young Douglas Mason was born — I made September’s Daring Bakers Challenge. And then the rest of September happened, with its kidney stones and travel and conferences etc., and suddenly it was October and I’d forgotten to tell you about cake.

Sometimes it’s like I don’t even know me anymore.

I tried to make Tres Leche Cake once before, and it was OK but not delicious. It never absorbed all of the milk mixture, and it ended up just kind of tasting like soggy cake.

This time I baked the cake in two round pans. I poured the milk mixture very gradually over the first layer, until it wouldn’t absorb any more. Then I put whipped cream and strawberries on it, applied the second layer and repeated the pouring-o-the-milk procedure. I topped it all off with the rest of the whipped cream and some more strawberries, and the next day there was milk everywhere.

I was pretty sad.

But this time instead of being soggy the cake was custardy and scrumptious. If I make this one again — and I probably will — I’ll make it in a 9×13 baking pan so the milk doesn’t have anywhere to go.

Tres Leche Cake
Recipe Type: dessert
Author: Paulina Abascal / Inma of la Galletika
Ingredients
  • Ingredients for the vanilla sponge cake
  • 5 large eggs, separated
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour, sifted
  • For three milks syrup
  • 1 can sweetened condensed milk
  • 1 can evaporated milk
  • 1 cup heavy cream (or 1 cup of half & half or 1 cup milk)
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 2 teaspoons rum
  • Topping and filling
  • 2 cups of whipping cream
  • ½ cup sugar
  • Canned or fresh fruit (to fill and decorate the cake)
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Prepare a square 9×9 pan or 9-inch round cake pan
  2. Separate the egg whites from the yolks. Beat the egg whites on medium speed, 3 to 5 minutes. When soft peaks form slowly add the sugar in small batches. Whip until stiff peaks form about 5 minutes. Set aside.
  3. In a medium bowl beat egg yolks at medium-high speed for about 5 to 6 minutes, or until the egg yolks become pale colored, creamy and puffy. Stir in vanilla.
  4. Pour the egg yolks over the egg whites, gently fold until just combined trying not to lose any volume from the mixture.
  5. Fold in the flour little by little “in the form of rain” (I sprinkled a little flour over it, folded, etc. and so on until all the flour was in). Mix until just combined; over-beating will result in a denser, flatter cake.
  6. Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan. Bake in the preheated moderate oven for 25 minutes or until the toothpick comes out clean
  7. Let it cool. Once cool, split the cake in half, flip the top of the cake and place it on a base. Poke using a fork holes all over the cake to better absorb the three milk soaking liquid.
  8. To make the three milks syrup: In a saucepan add the sweetened condensed milk, evaporated milk, heavy cream and cinnamon stick, bring to a boil, reduce the heat and continue boiling for 5 minutes. Remove it and let it cool. Once it is cool, add the rum or any other flavoring you are using.
  9. Gradually brush all the milk soaking liquid into all sides of the cake (including the cut surfaces) until all absorbed. Best to rest the cake in the fridge overnight to complete the soaking process.
  10. For the topping: Whip the cream, when soft peaks form add the sugar little by little, continue whipping until stiff peaks form about 2 minutes.
  11. Layer some whipped cream on the bottom layer and cover with canned or fresh fruit and decorate the top layer with whipped cream and the fresh or canned fruit.

Inma of la Galletika was our Sept. 2013 Daring Bakers’ hostess and WOW did she bring us something decadent and delicious! Pastel de Tres Leches or Three Milk Cake, creamy yet airy, super moist but not soggy.. just plain delish!