The Candy Cane Cake

Years ago I found an old Pillsbury leaflet among my mother’s old cookbooks.  It was for holiday baking so I held on to it for future baking.  One recipe that I simply had to try immediately was the Pink Peppermint Angel Food Cake.  The picture looked so pretty.  The cake was adorned with crushed peppermint candies and mini candy canes, thus my calling it the Candy Cane Cake.  Also, that’s easier to say that Pink Peppermint Angel Food Cake.

I made it years ago and loved it, which is actually kind of weird.  Outside of hard candies, I usually don’t like my food flavored with mint.  It reminds me too much of toothpaste and I don’t enjoy eating it at all.  But I liked this cake.  Perhaps it was the marshmallow-y frosting or just the simple fact that I will NEVER turn down a piece of angel food cake because I love it so much.  But this cake is really good.  For your enjoyment, the recipe!

Pink Peppermint Angel Food Cake

Pillsbury Holiday Baking and Gifts Nov. 1995 Issue #177

CAKE:

1 package Angel Food Cake mix

1 cup water

½ tsp. peppermint extract

6 drops red food color

FROSTING AND DECORATIONS:

½ cup sugar

2 egg whites

2 Tblsp. water

1 (7 oz.) jar marshmallow crème

2 Tblsp. crushed hard peppermint candies or candy canes

16 (2-inch) candy canes, unwrapped

Heat oven to 350.  In large bowl, combine cake mix and water at low speed until moistened; beat 2 minutes at high speed.  Divide batter in half; fold peppermint extract and food color into one half of the batter.  Alternately spoon pink and white batters into ungreased 10-inch tube pan.  Gently cut through batter with knife, swirling to marble.

Bake at 350 for 35-45 minutes or until crust is deep golden brown and cracks on top appear dry.  DO NOT OVERBAKE!  Cool cake upside down on narrow neck glass bottle or heat proof surface until completely cool.  Loosen edges with knife or metal spatula to remove from pan.

In medium saucepan, combine sugar, egg whites, and 2 Tblsp. water.  Cook over low heat, beating continuously with electric hand mixer until soft peaks form.  Add marshmallow crème; continue beating until stiff peaks form.  Frost cooled cake.

Sprinkle top of cake with crushed peppermint candies.  Arrange candy canes around sides of cake in 8 groups of two candy canes each, placing curved end together to form hearts.  YIELD:  10 servings.

I don’t decorate the cake with hard candies.  That would drive me freaking insane to have hard candies on an angel food cake.  Sure it looks pretty for pictures.  It looks beautiful actually, but I didn’t make this cake for pictures.  I made this cake for eatin’!  No way am I putting something that might slow down my inhalation of this dessert!

Do they make packaged angel food cake?  I have never noticed.  I always make my own angel food cake here and take the recipe from there.  Angel food cake really isn’t hard to make, it’s just a little time consuming.  As long as you do EXACTLY what the recipe tells you to do, you’ll have a wonderful cloudy chunk of sugar lovin’s for your face-stuffing pleasure.

I just use the recipe from my ever present Better Homes and Gardens cookbook.  No, I’m not giving you the recipe right now because I am TIRED.  I’ve been baking all day….all week actually and I want to get a cup of decaf coffee and go to bed!  I wasn’t even going to do a post tonight until I noticed that some of my lovely internet family had, without my knowing, become a rabid bunch of angel food cake-craving zombies who were out for my blood if I did not post this recipe soon.  It all worked out in the end.  If  it weren’t for the cake zombies, I would not have touched that cake tonight, but because I needed to photograph it, I cut it open and ate a slice while writing this post.  Let me tell you, it is a cake that you actually say, “OM NOM NOM” while eating it, it’s so good.

It’s also really pretty.  That kind of pretty is hard to mess up.  That pretty pink and white marbled cake with the fluffy and shiny white icing are irresistible.  I hope you try this recipe.  It’s really quite wonderful.

Enjoy!

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Chocolate Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Icing

I saw this recipe on an episode of Barefoot Contessa and thought to myself, “Are you freaking kidding me?!?”  Why had I not come across such a simply genius recipe before?  So I got the recipe from Food Network and filed it away for another day.  Two years later I finally decided to make it.  The best thing I can say about this recipe?  Meh.

Don’t get me wrong, chocolate cupcakes are always welcome in my toothed face portal.  And peanut butter?  I have to buy that stuff in TUBS because we go through so much of it.  This should have been a great thing.  This should have made me cry little salty tears of sweet satisfaction.  I am underwhelmed, and that almost never happens with an Ina Garten recipe for me.

Here’s the recipe:

Chocolate Cupcakes and Peanut Butter Icing

2006, Barefoot Contessa at Home

12 Tblsp. (1-1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature

2/3 cups granulated sugar

2/3 cup light brown sugar, packed

2 extra-large eggs, at room temperature

2 tsp. vanilla extract

1 cup buttermilk, shaken, at room temperature

½ cup sour cream, at room temperature

2 Tblsp. brewed coffee

1-3/4 cups AP flour

1 cup cocoa powder

1-1/2 tsp. baking soda

½ tsp. kosher salt

Kathleen’s Peanut Butter Icing, recipe follows

Chopped salted peanuts, to decorate, optional

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.  Line cupcake pans with paper liners.

In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, cream the butter and 2 sugars on high speed until light and fluffy, approximately 5 minutes.  Lower the speed to medium, add the eggs 1 at a time, then add the vanilla and mix well.  In a separate bowl, whisk together the buttermilk, sour cream, and coffee.  In another bowl, sift together the flour, cocoa, baking soda, and salt.  On low speed, add the buttermilk mixture and the flour mixture alternately in thirds to the mixer bowl, beginning with the buttermilk mixture and ending with the flour mixture.  Mix only until blended.  Fold the batter with a rubber spatula to be sure it’s completely blended.

Divide the batter among the cupcake pans (1 rounded standard ice cream scoop per cup is the right amount).  Bake in the middle of the oven for 20-25 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean.  Cool for 10 minutes, remove from the pans, and allow to cool completely before frosting.

Frost each cupcake with Peanut Butter Icing and sprinkle with chopped peanuts, if desired.

Kathleen’s Peanut Butter Icing

1 cup confectioners’ sugar

1 cup creamy peanut butter

5 Tblsp. unsalted butter, at room temperature

¾ tsp. pure vanilla extract

¼ tsp. kosher salt

1/3 cup heavy cream

Place the confectioners’ sugar, peanut butter, butter, vanilla and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment.  Mix on medium-low speed until creamy, scraping down the bowl with a rubber spatula as you work.  Add the cream and beat on high speed until the mixture is light and smooth.  YIELD:  14-15 cupcakes

The above pictures inserted in the recipe should illustrate to you that things look as they ought to look.  The batter for the cupcakes was velvety and luxurious.  The fresh-from-the-oven cupcakes looked rich and moist, as they should.  Then I made the icing.

Maybe Ina used some sort of artisan peanut butter.  She does like to use more expensive and extravagant ingredients in her cooking.  But when I used my regular ol’ peanut butter and followed the recipes exactly, what I got was a globular mess.  I added a couple tablespoons of milk to try to thin it out just so I could spread it over the cupcakes, but it was still too thick.  I didn’t want to get in that battle of too much liquid/too much confectioners’ sugar and end up with something I couldn’t even use.  I tried to blob the icing on to the cupcakes, but the cupcakes were too moist and delicate that they crumbled.  So I basically just swiped on a knife-full and called it a day.  The cupcakes looked terrible.

They tasted good, though.  At least that first night they did.  Cupcakes and other confectionery treats tend to have at least a week shelf life.  These did not.  They pretty much need to be eaten fresh or they go to hell.  The cake dries out and turns into dust.  Not a good thing.

Fear not.  I will try this recipe again.  I will increase the icing recipe by 50% because it didn’t make enough for my liking and I shall have to work extra hard to make it into an actual icing consistency instead of blobular peanut hell.  I will also make sure to make this recipe when I know that I will be having company and that they will be eaten almost immediately.  I won’t give up.  This first try just wasn’t all that great.

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