Tag Archives: Butter

Sticky Toffee Pudding

Sticky Toffee Pudding 4

Sticky Toffee Cake 2

Yay! Don’t you love chancing across a new recipe that you know you are going to use again and again? I can think of no good reason this cake has never crossed my radar before, but am completely happy about meeting this charmer at a recent Christmas dinner party. Away from the table when dessert arrived, I returned to a table grown silent, my dinner companions quietly chewing and making that promising “mmmhmm” sound. You know that sound. Someone spoke at last saying, “Just try it,” and when I did, I began making the “mmmhmm” sound too.

Despite the pudding tag in its title, this is definitely a cake. A dessert tradition from the British Isles, this dish is as hard to describe as it is identifying the ingredients while eating it. It is sweet, but not overly so. The texture is best described as toothsome and chewable in the very best sense. Without a speck of chocolate in it, the flavor eludes it, along with winter and warmth, each essence sourced to the coffee-soaked dates pureed then added to the batter. The dates are responsible for the dense texture and at first bite, gingerbread comes to mind, but this cake isn’t at all spiced so the gingerbread association is all about the texture of this dish.

If this concoction isn’t already the signature dessert of a famous eatery somewhere in the civilized world, it definitely deserves the honor. The recipe below I adapted after reading the history of the cake followed by looking through a dozen recipes for it online. I used hot coffee for soaking the dates, and used light brown sugar though next time I will try dark. Having all but two ingredients in my pantry meant only a quick trip to the market for dates and heavy cream, then preparing and enjoying it with mama at our traditional New Year’s Eve supper. Mama insisted she could only eat a very small piece so I served her a nice medium piece and she ate every bite of it without one word of further protest.

I checked the cake after 30 minutes as I used a different sized baking dish than in the recipe; I wanted something smaller than a 9×13 pan so the cake would be taller, so used an 8×11″ dish. If baked in a 9×13″ dish, the baking time will be much shorter so just watch it and don’t let the edges begin to brown. I took it out of the oven when a toothpick inserted came out streaked but not gooey, about 36 minutes on my timer. The sauce is delightful; serve it sparingly, drizzled over each serving. And do go whip the cream for this and sprinkle it with just a pinch of sea salt before serving as the salt is a great contrast to the whipped cream. You’ve already figured this out surely, but the cake keeps well, covered tightly, sitting on the counter. Hello, added bonus! The bottom photo here is of the cake on Day 2, with lunch, in better light.

Sticky Toffee Pudding

Cake Ingredients

2-1/4 cups dried dates, coarsely chopped
2-1/4 cups scalding hot coffee
1-1/2 tsp. baking soda
1 stick unsalted butter, melted
3/4 cup granulated sugar
2 T. dark brown sugar
2 large eggs
1/4 tsp. sea salt
1-2/3 cups all-purpose flour

Toffee Sauce Ingredients

1 stick unsalted butter, melted
1 cup heavy whipping cream
1 cup plus 2 T. dark brown sugar
2 tsp. vanilla extract

Directions Pit and roughly chop dates and place them in a heavy bowl; pour hot coffee over them and stir in the baking soda. Cover the bowl and set it aside for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, heat oven to 350, and butter a 9×13-inch baking pan. Line the pan with parchment paper, if desired. I didn’t, and the cake turned out of the pan with no sticking at all.

Blend the date-coffee mixture in a blender or food processor until smooth. In a large bowl, combine the melted butter and sugars. Whisk in eggs, then salt. Stir in the flour, fold well, then add the prepared date puree and fold well again. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 25-30. Cool on wire rack. If you used parchment paper, invert the cake onto a serving platter and remove parchment paper from bottom of cake; finish cooling on wire rack.

When your cake is ready for serving, make the sauce: you need a large sauce pot with a heavy bottom, at least 2-1/2 quart size because the mixture increases in volume as it cooks. Melt the butter in the pan, add cream, sugar and vanilla and bring mixture to a good simmer over medium heat. Whisk continually for 10 minutes until mixture thickens slightly. Remove from heat and allow to begin cooling. To serve, cut cake into squares and drizzle with toffee sauce, top with 2 tablespoons of unsweetened whipped cream with a pinch of sea salt added to the top of the cream. Serve when the cake is still slightly warm.

An Old Favorite

shauns pistachio angel delight

One of my hanai nephew’s favorite desserts (and he has already changed the recipe and made it even more his own), Shaun’s Angel Delight is a wonderful dessert for Christmas or any time at all. The mac nuts Shaun added in lieu of the pecans I used at Kete-Yama’s are a wonderful connection as well to our island home, Maui. And, of course, he used his favorite Pistachio pudding and not my recipe’s French Vanilla. I made this dessert daily at Kete-Yama’s, my small café on Maui, and it quickly became Shaun’s favorite. The middle layer is the custard so you can be creative here (i’m thinking chocolate pudding mix and adding chocolate shavings to the top instead of flaked coconut). No matter the flavor, the texture is always complemented by the crispness of the shortbread crust. Mama’s sister, our Aunt Lou, sent me this recipe when I asked at home for good dessert recipes for the café, and it became a reliable and popular item on our menu. This one you made looks so yummy, Shaun! Hark, the Herald Angels Do Sing!

Shaun’s Angel Delight

Ingredients

1 cup flour
1 stick butter, melted
3/4 cup pecans, chopped small
1-(8 oz.) block cream cheese, softened
1 cup powdered sugar
1 cup of 12 oz. container Cool Whip, reserve extra for topping
2-(3 oz.) boxes French vanilla instant pudding
3 cups milk
Shredded coconut

Directions Preheat oven to 350. To make crust, combine flour, butter, and nuts in medium bowl. Stir well to mix thoroughly then press into the bottom of a 9×13 pan; bake 20 minutes or until lightly browned. Cool well.

When crust has cooled, make the second layer by combining cream cheese, powdered sugar, and the Cool Whip in a large bowl and stirring well to thoroughly blend. Spread on top of crust.

Prepare the top layer by combining the instant pudding mix and milk in large bowl. Beat well with electric mixer until thickened. Spread on top of the second layer and top with reserved Cool Whip, shredded coconut, and more chopped nuts if desired. Chill well before serving.

Christmas Brunch Toffee

Mamie's Toffee

Mamie’s recipe which I somehow totally missed when I was collecting recipes for the cookbook, so I am happy to share it now. Toffee Anything is a winner in my book, and this recipe combines a mixture of raw almonds, chocolate chips, and pecans with a buttery essence that just keeps your hand moving to your mouth. Mamie made several batches this year for sharing with friends as they left their annual Christmas Brunch at her home. Packed loosely in festive cellophane bags, it is a sweet way for ending a good day with good friends featuring good cheer.

1 cup raw almonds
1 cup butter, cut into 1-inch pieces
1 cup sugar
1/4 tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla
2 cups milk-chocolate chips
1/2 cup pecans, finely chopped

Measure and gather all ingredients. Place the almonds on a microwave-safe plate and microwave for 2 minutes on high, stirring once. Cook one more minute; then place on a foil-lined jelly roll pan in a single layer leaving space between.

Add sugar, butter, vanilla, and salt to a thick-bottomed 2-qt. sauce pan. Using a pan with a thick bottom will prevent the mixture burning. Stir mixture, melting over low heat, stirring continually.

Once melted, increase the heat to medium-high. Keep stirring (lots of stirring going on here) for 10-12 minutes or until the mixture turns a golden color similar to the color of the raw almonds. When it does, remove from heat and pour it slowly over the almonds in your prepared pan.

Allow to cool for 2 minutes; sprinkle with chocolate chips. Allow chips to soften then use wide rubber spatula to spread the chocolate over the nuts and the prepared toffee in your pan. Sprinkle with finely chopped pecans and allow to cool completely; set in fridge to finish chilling. After the toffee is completely cooled, break into pieces. Store in airtight container at room temperature.

Rum Cake Season

Rum Cake

I should be shot for posting this particular rum cake photo, but it is one of the 51 cakes I baked for the holidays, and it is completely right that I post the rum cake as the first recipe shared on these pages. You may think of me as “the rum cake lady”, having engaged in rum cake baking for the past 31 days of December, six cakes a day and then some. The recipe is the one I have most laid my metaphorical hands on of late (though the recipe just lives in my brain so no literal laying on of hands required). I have baked these cakes for the past 45 years and can honestly, always honestly, testify that this is a much-tried and well-trusted recipe.

A good rum cake is a beauty to behold, and, added bonus (!) if you are gifting the cake, just standing over it, wrapping the heavily foiled bundle with a glitzy bow, the cake still a few hours warm from the oven, is heavenly. I might venture as far to say that inhaling the aroma, for those few perfect minutes, is a form of meditation if you’re into that kind of thing. It smells that good (okay, fifty of them smell that good, cumulatively, for many days in a row), but experiencing even one of these beauties this way draws you back to baking another one.

Our family’s rum cake is quick and easy to prepare, with the baker’s success rate directly proportional to the number of cakes baked. The recipe, claims laid over who “saw it first” between mama and Aunt Lou, came from the Bacardi people over 50 years ago, and, to my knowledge, the recipe hasn’t changed since I baked my first one. The recipe produces a dense moist cake with a glazed top and sides; your family and friends will enjoy them any time of year, but there’s just something about a Christmas rum cake that has a way of shining up an already bright and beautiful season. Some friends slice them immediately and freeze them, two pieces in a Ziplock, to be quickly thawed when needed, other friends prefer eating their slices still half-frozen. With coffee. For breakfast. I like mine best left on the counter three days, the easier for picking up a slice while walking through the kitchen. No plate required. Shaun says using pistachio pudding mix turns the cake into a first cousin of Maui’s Takamiya Tiramisu. No shoes required for that version! Start a new tradition for enjoying this cake and make it your own.

Greer Family Rum Cake

Ingredients

1/2 cup pecans, chopped small
1 box Duncan Hines Supreme Butter Recipe Golden cake mix
1-(3 oz.) box vanilla instant pudding mix
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup Bacardi Light Rum
1/2 cup Wesson oil
5 eggs

Directions Preheat oven to 325. Grease and flour a 12” Bundt pan and sprinkle the pecans around the bottom. In large bowl, stir the cake mix and the dry pudding mix, add the water, oil, and rum. Crack the eggs into your bowl last and mix with electric mixer until batter is glossy, about 2″ on medium speed. Allow batter to breathe in bowl 5-7 minutes then scrape batter into the prepared Bundt pan. Bake exactly one hour.

GLAZE Ingredients and Directions Prepare 10 minutes before cake is finished baking. In medium saucepan, combine 1 cup sugar, 1/2 cup rum, and 1/4 cup water. Bring to a boil then add 1 stick butter. Reduce heat and boil low for 5-7 minutes. When the cake is just out of the oven, poke deep holes all over it with the tines of a fork. Pour the hot glaze into a large glass measuring cup and slowly pour the glaze over cake. Use a spatula to gently pull the cake away from the sides of the pan and pour some of the glaze around the sides so it coats the sides, flowing to bottom of the pan and adding gloss to the top of the cake. Let the glaze sink in slowly then keep pouring until glaze is good and gone. Let cake cool in the pan for 50 minutes then invert onto your serving plate. Cover it tightly with a generous piece of heavy-duty foil tucking foil under edges of platter. You can also make this well ahead and freeze, tightly covered with the foil. On the day you want to serve it, take it out of the freezer and allow to thaw slowly. Never microwave this cake or you will end up with nothing but a puddle of rum and butter. Also do not refrigerate once it has been cut; just keep covered tightly with heavy foil on counter top or well- hidden from your hungry spouse and other family members.