Browsing Tag

cake

Desserts

Fruit Trifle

After a long early morning bike ride, while we were catching our breath in a coffee shop and chatting, my good friend Alanna mentioned she was having 12 friends over for dinner and still needed a dessert that would not require a long bike ride to be guilt-free. We were too tired to start messing up her clean kitchen by flinging pots and pans around and cooking something. Besides, she is one of those marvelously organized people who has her table set, her meal organized and the kitchen clean the night before.

We came up with a brilliant idea that is also easy: a fruit trifle. This version has no custard so it’s really quick to make. Alanna went to the store and bought an angel food cake, lots of beautiful berries and a little heavy cream. I dashed home and made the citrus syrup from my North African Orange Cake recipe.

Alanna brought out a beautiful glass trifle bowl that we created the trifle in, though any glass bowl or even individual ramekins would work. It only took a couple of minutes, and, as my fiddler friend says, viola! A great looking and great tasting dessert – hardly a trifle!

Fruit Trifle

Ingredients

The amounts depend on the size of your serving bowl.

1    store bought angel food cake

3     pints of hulled strawberries (about 1½ pounds) and enough cut in half to ring your bowl and the rest roughly chopped

3   dry pints of blueberries

1   dry pint of blackberries

1   dry pint of raspberries

1    pint of heavy cream

2T   Grand Marnier or other orange flavored liquor

3T   white sugar

Citrus syrup

juice of 1 orange

juice of 1 lemon

1/3c sugar

2T    Grand Marnier or other orange liquor

2     cloves

1     cinnamon stick (or ½ tsp cinnamon powder)

Utensils

Glass bowl, measuring spoons, measuring cup

Method

Make the syrup first by mixing all the ingredients together in a small saucepan and simmer for 2 minutes. Set aside to cool while you prepare the rest of the ingredients for use.

Cut the angel food cake into 1 inch layers saving 3 layers for the trifle and using the rest to fill the center hole. To start to assembly the fruit trifle, place the first layer of cake in the bottom of the bowl, fill the center with pieces of cake then brushed the top of the cake generously with the citrus syrup. On top of this add a layer strawberries, with half cut ones pressed against the outside of the bowl to look beautiful, and the roughly chopped ones filling the inside. Brush the orange syrup over the strawberries and then add another layer of cake, orange syrup and then a layer of blueberries, building the layers. You get the idea.

The final layer at the top of the bowl is raspberries on the outside, with a ring of blueberries and blackberries inside.

Allow the fruit trifle to sit to soak in all those great flavors for 30 minutes up to a few hours.

Whip the heavy cream till it starts to thicken, adding the sugar slowly, then the Grand Marnier. Whip until soft peaks form. You can do this several hours ahead and store, covered, in the refrigerator until ready to serve.

To serve pile a good dollop of the whipped cream into the center of the trifle and put the rest in a serving bowl with a spoon for your guests to add a bit more on their fruit trifle as they choose. Continue Reading

Desserts, Gluten Free

North African Orange Cake

North African Orange Cake

I needed to make a quick gluten-free cake to take to dinner at a friend’s house. Wanting to try something a little different and a bit exotic, I looked back through my old recipe file, a large shopping bag over 20 years old. I found an easy recipe for an Orange Cake that used a few tablespoons of breadcrumbs. It is sweet but not cloyingly so. Orange, cinnamon and cloves in the syrup make a winter kitchen smell warm and cozy. Keeping my fingers crossed I substituted oatmeal for the breadcrumbs. Because the citrus syrup you pour over the cake is so sweet and orangey, I knew I could not go too wrong.

There are several great things about this recipe: It only takes a few minutes to make it, you don’t need to preheat the oven, you can make it a day or two ahead and it will stay good for several more days, it is gluten free, and the syrup is so good I use it in many other recipes: just yesterday I made a trifle with the orange syrup. Delicious!

Try this easy North African Orange Cake – gluten free

This cake takes only a few minutes to put together and can be made a day or two ahead. You don’t even have to preheat the oven.

 Ingredients

2 oz      chopped rolled oats, or another gluten free flour

7 oz      granulated sugar, minus 2 T

3.5 oz   ground almonds ( 2T are used to prepare the pan)

1½ tsp  baking powder

7oz       canola oil or any non-flavored oil

4           large eggs

zest of 1 orange

zest of 1½ lemons

 Citrus syrup

1           orange, juiced

1           lemon, juiced

3 oz      granulated sugar

2 T       Grand Marnier or other orange liquor

2           whole cloves

1           cinnamon stick (or ½ tsp cinnamon powder)

 Utensils

Measuring cup, scale, measuring spoons, 2 medium bowls, small saucepan, micro planer, 8 inch cake pan and parchment paper.

Method

Don’t preheat the oven.

Line an 8 inch cake pan with parchment paper, grease it with a shot of cooking spray or butter, then use 2 T ground almonds to coat the parchment paper.

Mix the chopped rolled oats with the granulated sugar, ground almonds, baking powder, and orange and lemon zests. Whisk the eggs into the oil. Make a well in the dry ingredients. Pour the wet ingredients into the well. Mix gently till combined well but don’t over-beat.

Pour the mixture into the pan and place in the middle rack of your oven. Turn the heat to 350F. Bake the cake for 40 to 50 min or until it is golden brown and a skewer piercing the center comes out clean.

While the cake is baking, combine the citrus syrup ingredients in a small saucepan and bring to a boil. Turn down the heat and simmer for 2 minutes.

When the cake is done, remove it from the oven and allow it to sit for 5 minutes before taking the cake out of the pan. Run a knife around the outside of the cake to loosen it in the pan, then turn the pan upside down on a plate, and tap the bottom of the pan. It should easily fall out. Remove the parchment paper. While the cake is still warm, take a skewer and poke approximately 10 holes in the cake. Spoon the syrup all over the cake.

Enjoy!