Chocolate Buttermilk Cake

26 03 2010

Last week I wrote about my husband’s birthday dinner and included a picture of his cake. Several people have since asked for the recipe, including one lovely reader who wants to make it for her father-in-law’s birthday tomorrow! I’ve made it more times than I can count — baptisms, surprise parties, Mother’s Day, birthdays — and it always turns out great. Every once in a while I try a new recipe, but in the end all the fussing over double boilers and unsweetened chocolate squares leaves me wishing I’d stuck with this exquisitely simple, utterly delicious cake. Note that if you’re at altitude, as I am here in Denver, you should reduce the baking soda slightly.

P.S. Kid’s in the Kitchen Tip — Because this cake doesn’t have eggs, you can let your kids lick the beaters or the bowl without fear of salmonella.

Chocolate Buttermilk Cake
Adapted from The Fannie Farmer Cookbook

1 2/3 cups white flour
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt (not kosher)
1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa (Ghiradelli’s is especially good)
1 cup sugar
1 cup buttermilk*
1/2 cup olive oil (you can use vegetable oil, too, but olive is healthier)
2 tsp vanilla

Preheat the oven to 350. Take two 8-inch cake pans and trace them on aluminum foil. Cut out the circles and put them in each pan shiny side up, then grease and flour like normal. This makes the cakes very easy to remove. Whisk the flour, baking soda and salt together, then add the cocoa and sugar and mix well. Add the buttermilk, oil and vanilla and beat well. The batter will be very thick. Spread in pans and bake 20-25 minutes. Remove from oven and let sit for 5 minutes, then put on a cooling rack to cool completely before frosting.

* If I remember correctly, the reader who wanted this recipe has a dairy-free family member. I don’t know if buttermilk will be an issue. I do know, though, that if you don’t have buttermilk you can make your own sour milk by adding 1 tablespoon of lemon juice or white vinegar to 1 cup of milk and letting it sit on the counter for 15 minutes. The acid is necessary to activate the baking soda.

Fluffy Vanilla Frosting
This frosting uses a different technique than most frosting recipes. It may look strange, but trust me, it works! The fluffing is very fluffy and much less sweet than frostings made with powdered sugar.

1 cup milk or cream
1/3 cup white flour
1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup butter, softened
2 tsp vanilla

Whisk milk and flour in a small saucepan over medium heat until mixture is very thick. You may need to whisk hard to remove the lumps. Remove from heat and let cool. Cream sugar and butter for several minutes, then add milk-flour mixture in spoonfuls, beating well after each addition. When frosting is very fluffy, add vanilla. There will be enough to fill and frost a two-layer 8-inch cake. I like to dot it with chocolate chips, as you can see in the picture. (This frosting can sit out the day it’s made, but any leftovers should be refrigerated. Doing so will change the texture of the frosting, however. It’s never as fluffy as the day it’s made.)





Mostly Seasonal Birthday Dinner

19 03 2010

Today we’re celebrating a big birthday in our house. Let’s call it 29. We traditionally have dinner at home, and given the 5-12 inches of snow that’s forecast for Denver, tonight we’re definitely staying in.

On the menu: strip steak; buttermilk chive mashed potatoes; organic herb salad; beets with goat cheese and oranges; and chocolate buttermilk cake with fluffy white frosting. This is a “greatest hits” menu, a compilation of the birthday boy’s favorite dishes (other than the beets — those are for me). The only surprise is the chimichurri, a classic Argentinean steak sauce made with parsley, garlic, salt, oil, red pepper flakes, and vinegar. I saw it at a restaurant this week and didn’t order it; since then, I haven’t been able to get it out of my mind.

With one hour to go before dinner, the oranges are sectioned, the potatoes and beets are roasting, the cake is made, and soon the steak will be taken out of the refrigerator and seasoned with a healthy sprinkle of kosher salt and cracked pepper. Now all that’s left is to wash the greens, mash the potatoes, and decide how to fit the — ahem — 29 candles on his cake.

Chimichurri

Large bunch of parsley
2-4 garlic cloves
Kosher salt
2 or more tablespoons red wine vinegar
Olive oil
1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes, if desired

Cut the thick stems off a large bunch of organic parsley and discard. Wash thin stems and leaves and dry well. Add parsley to a food processor along with two cloves of garlic (more if they’re small), a sprinkle of kosher salt, 2 tablespoons of red wine vinegar, and 2 tablespoons of olive oil or extra-virgin olive oil. Puree, then taste. Add more salt, vinegar, and oil as necessary, then process again. If you like, add 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes.








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