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Cake pops. Is there anything cuter?

I first discovered these tiny pops of joy a few years back when a friend sent me a link to Bakerella’s red velvet cake balls, and we both spent a good portion of our workdays drooling over the images. Since then, cake pops have been something of a rage ever since someone decided to stick a lollypop stick in cake ball and call it a day. Now there everywhere from Starbucks to local bakeries, and they are simply all over the food blogosphere. And it’s pretty easy to see why. Bite-sized, perfectly portioned cakes, dipped in a luscious chocolate coating and decorated to make the most adorable treat you’ve ever eaten. They’re hard to resist.

Last week, Cara and I threw a party to celebrate. Cara had just finished running her second half marathon, and I had my first weekend free in three months! It just so happened that we had even more of a reason to celebrate when our best friend got engaged, throwing our festivities into over drive. And the main edible attraction for all this celebrating? Cake pops!

But not just any cake pops. Homemade funfetti cake pops. You see, in our apartment, Funfetti cannot be beat in terms of cake preference. Anyone whose had a funfetti cupcake or cookie knows what I’m talking about. Something about that fluffy vanilla cake laced with colorful sprinkles just puts any other cake out of its league. But, since Cara and I are taking this whole “no artificial ingredients” thing for a spin, I decided to make “funfetti” cake pops without using the Funfetti Cake Mix! That’s right, all from scratch.

By using an all-organic, whole wheat cake mix from Whole Foods, homemade vanilla frosting, and organic semi-sweet chocolate chips for the shell, I was able to keep these about 98% all-natural (I wasn’t about to hunt down organic sprinkles, something had to give). And if I can do it, so can you.

But hey, cake pops are definitely a treat, and I can attest that using Betty Crocker boxed cake mix to save some time will not let you down. These cake pops will still come out as sweet, moist, flavorful and delicious as the all-natural ones. Give it a whirl!

Homemade Funfetti Cake-Pops – Makes 50 pops

Ingredients

For the cake

  • 1 box of all natural organic cake mix, like Dr. Oetker Organics Vanilla Cake Mix
  • Additional ingredients listed on cake mix package, like eggs, milk, oil
For the frosting
  • 2 cups of confectioners sugar
  • 2 tablespoons of butter
  • 2 tablespoons of skim milk
  • 2 tsp all natural vanilla extract

Additional ingredients

  • 1 12-ounce bag of organic semisweet chocolate chips
  • Mixed variety of sprinkles, including nonpareils
  • 50 white lolly-pop sticks

Method

1. Start by baking the vanilla cake according to the package instructions. Once the cake has finished baking, remove from the oven and allow to cool completely.

2. While the cake is baking, make the vanilla frosting. Combine all frosting ingredients in a large bowl and beat on high with a hand or standing mixer until the frosting is light and fluffy.

3. Once the cake has cooled, crumble the cake into a large bowl. The crumbled cake should have an even texture. Add the vanilla frosting to the crumbs, as well as sprinkles – as much or as little as you like. I used about 2 tablespoons of sprinkles.

4. Mix cake, frosting and sprinkles with your hands until well combined. Using your fingers, form walnut-sized balls from the cake mixture. At this point, you can move to dipping them in melted chocolate, or you can freeze them. I usually freeze them as it makes them easier to dip.

5. When you’re ready to dip your cake balls, set up a double boiler and fill the top bowl with the chocolate chips. Set out a tray lined with parchment and have your nonpareil sprinkles ready. Stir the chocolate as it’s melting to ensure it is smooth.

6. One at a time, drop each cake ball into the chocolate. Roll the ball through the chocolate using a small spoon. Once ball is completely coated, use one or two spoons to lift it out of the chocolate. Let excess chocolate drip off for a moment, then set on parchment. Immediately sprinkle with sprinkles. Repeat with remaining cake balls.

7. Once all of your cake balls are dipped and decorated, put them in the fridge for at least an hour to harden. Once they are hardened, peel them off the parchment and insert a lolly-pop stick in the base of each one. Enjoy!

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Right now I’d like to talk about something that is high on the minds of me and my fellow classmates at ICE; something those not familiar with the culinary world may have never even heard of. Stages.

No, not like the kind you danced on during you’re four-year-old ballet recital. Pronounced stah-jeh, a stage, or a trail, is essentially a day-long interview / try out that most culinary professionals must do before securing a job, or an externship in a kitchen. Right now, my classmates and I are getting into the full swing of stages as we visit various kitchens and try to determine where we’d fit the best for our externships, which will begin in January!

This week I had my very first stage in, not a restaurant, but a test kitchen for a food magazine here in New York City. Again, I won’t name it, but let’s just say this publication has been in print for over 50 years, publishes around 60 recipes in each issue, and inspires its readers to “enjoy their meal.” I was exceptionally lucky to get to spend the day learning about and helping out in their test kitchen, and can honestly say it was one of the best experiences I’ve ever had.

So what exactly does a stage entail? Well, it really varies from kitchen to kitchen. Some places, you might just be shadowing a chef or cook, observing and learning about what they do. Other places, you might help with prep work, stocking the walk-in, or other low-level tasks. If you’re very lucky, you might get to actually cook a dish, though I hear this is rare. On my trail, I learned the ins-and-outs of the test kitchen, got to know the team, helped prepare for a tasting with the magazine’s editors, and did the “mise en place” for several recipes the kitchen was testing that day. It was a long, labor intensive day on my feet, but I loved every second of it, and the day truly reaffirmed that this is what I want to do with my life – s0mething I’ve never felt after any of my interviews in the marketing world! I mean, what could be better than spending the day in the kitchen, trouble-shooting fabulous recipes, tasting, analyzing and adjusting until you get them just right? I’m sure it’s not for everyone, but for me, it seems like a dream job!

After my trail, still riding high off of my experience, I headed straight to ICE for an amazing class –  cake decorating! On Monday night we had prepared lemon, sponge, and chocolate cakes, as well as plain, milk and semi-sweet chocolate whipped cream and swiss meringue – so many luscious sugary confections that we stored in the ICE walk in as the building blocks for Tuesday night’s class. Then, armed with our offset spatulas and piping bags, we set to work.

I’ve always loved to bake, but in all honestly, I’ve always stayed in my comfort zone – cookies, muffins, cupcakes, even pies. Something about cakes, especially ones made from scratch, seemed complex and intimidating to me – heck, even my cousin who sells her elaborate, beautifully decorated multi-tiered cakes for parties uses boxed cake mix because it just tastes so darn good! But after Monday and Tuesday night, cake-baking and decorating has been completely demystified for me, and I stand corrected at how easy it was. With Chef Sim doing his usual job of eloquently simplifying techniques that look complicated, cake decorating wound up being easily my best class of pastry, and here’s what we accomplished:

First up was the tender, moist lemon cakes from Monday. We each prepared a nine-inch cake, which we cut in half using a serrated knife. Then, we beat down some Swiss Meringue butter cream and flavored it – I chose lemon oil to flavor mine, because I’m pretty much a lemon junkie when it comes to dessert. We also set some raspberry jam to melt in a sauce pan to decorate the cake, rather than using chocolate like other classmates opted to.

The lemon cake layers were doused with a rum-simple-syrup to moisten them (a must for refrigerated cakes), and then in between the layers went a thick smear of lemon butter cream. Then, we frosted the sides and top of the cake with more butter cream, and pressed the sides into candied slivered almonds. The top was decorated with butter cream florets, raspberry dots, and macadamia nuts. I decided to dub this my “Sailor Moon Cake” (I date myself) because of its whimsical appearance. It’s super girly, and I’m super proud of it.

Next up was a Torta de Spana, or the Italian version “Spanish Bread” – a flavorful three-layer sponge cake filled with semi-sweet chocolate whipped cream, raspberries and strawberries. The sides of this towering confection were pressed with shredded coconut, and it was topped with candied almond slices and powdered sugar. Overkill? Perhaps, as my partner Leigh Ann dubbed this my “Yeti Cake.” Still, my roommate Cara brought it to work the next day and her coworkers went crazy for it, so appearance isn’t everything. And I still think it was cute, in a retro sort of way.

The grand finale was, most appropriately, a rich, dense low-laying chocolate cake with feathered chocolate ganache. Making this cake highlighted two pastry techniques that are much easier than they seem: a) making ganache, and b) feathering designs.

So… ganache is basically heavy cream and chocolate. That’s it. Really?! Seriously!?! The fact that I didn’t know this is sort of depressing, because knowing this means you can easily make some of the most impressive truffles, cakes, and chocolate desserts ever in record time. To make this very chic cake, we brought one pint of heavy cream to a boil, poured it over one pound of semi-sweet chocolate disks, and let it sit for a few minutes before whisking it smooth. Working quickly, with the cake on a cooling rack, we poured the ganache over the cake, a la Chocolat, and smoothed it with a small offset spatula. Before the ganache set, we streaked the cakes with white chocolate, and, using a paring knife, gently dragged the blade through the chocolate in opposite directions to create the signature swirls. The result was pretty fabulous.

And then, I had three cakes to eat! With one that’s already been devoured by Cara’s hungry coworkers and two to go, I’m counting my blessings that I’ll have guests in town this weekend and an apartment full of hungry Halloween party-comers on Saturday. Happy Halloween!

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Sunday was a day full of family, fun and most of all food! Since a picture is worth a thousand words, and it’s still quite early in the week, I’ll save us all some reading and let the photographs speak for themselves!

My cousin Danie’s jaw-dropping home-made cake for her sister-in-law’s baby shower. Yellow and chocolate cake, buttercream, fondant.

The appetizers – tomato, roasted red pepper, fresh mozzarella, thyme, balsamic

Panko-breaded creamy cheesy risotto cakes

French Toast: challah bread, egg custard, blue berries, brown sugar, cinnamon

Quiche Lorraine

Tortellini, ricotta, pesto, sundried tomato, pine nuts

Marachino Cherry Parfait

Braising: Lamb shank, rosemary, thyme, merlot, veal stock, rondeau

Monkfish (the ugliest of all fish) searing in hot olive oil

Balsamic braised chicken thighs with a porcini-portobello-oyster-cremini-shitake mushroom cream sauce

After the oven: Fully braised lamb shanks emerge in a red wine reduction

Braised lamb shanks plated with red wine sauce and braised mirepoix

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May is only a few days away, and I for one can’t wait for all the May flowers these April showers will bring (and hopefully, too, the end of April showers). Spring is finally here, and last weekend was a celebration of all that mild weather, a whimsical season, and of course, Easter!

I celebrated the holiday up in Connecticut at my boyfriend’s parent’s house with him and some friends, and as every trip to their home always is, the weekend was filled with deliciousness and decadence, lots of sweet treats and home cooked meals and wine, oh the wine.

For Easter, Adam’s mom made an oustanding Coconut Cake with Toasted Coconut frosting, and was nice enough to offer that I help frost and decorate it. For those who don’t know, baking runs neck in neck with cooking as one of my favorite things to do; I only steer clear from it as much as I do for the sake of my own and my friends’ waistlines! But in this case, it completely made my day to spend a leisurely half an hour spreading thick, creamy frosting over two layers of moist walnut-studded cake, gently toasting shredded coconut until it was warm and golden and fragrant, and sprinkling it from a distance onto the soft white peaks of icing.

My friend Graham is an amazing photographer, and happened to capture some of the cake decorating process…

Photograph by Graham Garvie

Photograph by Graham Garvie

Once the cake was frosted and decorated, we chilled it so the icing and coconut would set, and when we broke it out later, it was center stage of the dessert spread. The cake itself was soft, moist, lightly perfumed with coconut flavor, having the slightest touch of texture and crunch from the walnuts. Raw coconut in the filling between two layers of cake added even more chew, and the toasted coconut on top added layers of buttery richness and a different note of coconut flavor that contrasted but still complemented the flavors of the cake itself.

Sort of like a Piña Colada in cake form… And you had just been thinking about a beach vacation, hadn’t you?  
 
Totally refreshing and the perfect spring or summertime cake – let this recipe guide you through any special occasions you celebrate during these warmer months! 

Courtesy of myrecipes.com

Toasted Coconut Cake

From AllRecipes.com

You’ll need:

  • 1 (18.25 ounce) package yellow cake mix
  • 1 (3.5 ounce) package instant vanilla pudding mix
  • 1 1/3 cups water
  • 4 eggs
  • 1/4 cup vegetable oil
  • 4 cups flaked coconut
  • 1 cup chopped walnuts
  • 4 tablespoons butter
  • 2 teaspoons milk
  • 3 1/2 cups confectioners’ sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 (8 ounce) package cream cheese

Method:

Start by preheating your oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour two 9 inch round cake pans.

Blend the cake mix, pudding mix, water, eggs and oil in a large mixing bowl. Beat at medium speed for 4 minutes. Stir in 2 cups of the coconut and the chopped walnuts. Pour the batter into the prepared pans.

Bake at 350 degrees F for 35 minutes. Let cakes cool in pans for 15 minutes then remove and finish cooling on rack.

While the cake is cooling, make the frosting. Start by toasting the remaining 2 cups of flaked coconut in a toaster oven or saute pan over low heat until golden brown. Transfer the coconut into a new bowl to cool.

Cream the remaining 2 tablespoons butter or margarine with the cream cheese. Add the milk and confectioners’ sugar alternately, beating well. Add the vanilla and stir in 1 3/4 cups of the toasted coconut.

To assemble the cake, start with the first layer. Using a serrated bread knife, you may choose to cut the top of the bottom cake layer off to make it flat, if it has puffed up slightly. Using a flat knife or spatula, spread the top of both cake layers with an even coating of frosting, about 1/4 of an inch thick. Stack them and then frost the sides of the cake. Sprinkle the cake on top with the toasted coconut, and gentle sprinkle the sides or use the palm of your hand to gentle press the toasted coconut into the sides. Chill to set frosting before serving!

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