Monday, September 7, 2015

Dragon cake

I was recently given ThinkGeek's dragon cake pan as a present, and finally had an excuse to use it.

I've never used a molded cake pan before, and this one doesn't come with instructions, so I read up on some advice for how to use them: grease well, and flour to keep the batter from sticking in the tiny crevices; cook about 25 degrees Fahrenheit lower than the recipe calls for, and for longer; and make sure the batter settles well into the pan and sets up before you remove it.

Having some leftover ingredients, I went back to one of my favorite recipes, a pumpkin gingerbread dough that normally makes 2 bread-sized loaves.  I make a few modifications to it, though - use 1/2 cup applesauce and 1/2 cup oil, instead of a full cup oil, and at least double all of the spices listed, or it will be far too bland.  You can also throw in some fresh grated ginger, along with the dried ginger.

Not knowing quite how much batter should go into the mold, I hedged at about 3/4 full, and put the rest into muffin tins.  I cooked it at 325 degrees F, instead of 350; the muffins came out after 20 minutes, while the cake itself cooked for almost 1 hour 45 minutes, but could probably have come out a bit sooner if I was in a hurry.


Turns out, for this recipe at least, I could have fit the whole 2 loaves' worth of batter into the tin, but now I know that for the future.  It also turns out this pan is super non-stick, and I probably would have been just fine with oiling it and not dusting with flour, which turned into the yellow highlights you can see as it came out of the mold.


Since I was planning on glazing it anyway, the unsightly flour didn't make much difference, but if it doesn't upset the flavor balance, you can dust for darker-colored cakes with cocoa powder rather than flour.



I find this gingerbread works best with an orange glaze to set off the spices, but getting the right consistency of glaze is more important for a molded cake than a regular one, where you want to keep the features visible.  I settled on this icing recipe, with about 1/4 of a large orange's zest grated in to give it the right flavor.  I needed to use almost twice as much milk as the recipe called for to get it to the right consistency, where it would pour and stick but not flow down into all the hollows on the cake.


After the icing sets up, it's time to paint!  I just used regular, liquid food coloring that you can get in any store.  I squeezed the food coloring directly onto a small paintbrush, and then painted in the details that I wanted.


It took longer than I expected, and the food coloring softened the icing and made it a bit runny again, but it wasn't hard to work around.


Having only 4 colors limited my palette a bit - using gel food coloring would give much brighter colors, and would allow you to mix them on a plate to produce different combinations.


Still, it turned out better than expected, and I now have a feel for how to do it next time - I just need another excuse to use it.

Edit: I've made it a few more times, trying out different recipes and colors.  Moist cakes (like the one above) seem to take extra long to cook; standard cakes, like from cake mixes, take a bit longer than the posted recipe; drier cakes, like pound cakes, you need to watch to keep from overcooking, as they don't take as long as you would expect.  I suppose that's one of the joys of working with cake molds: the standard recipes do not apply.


Sunday, August 30, 2015

Grandmother's Cookbooks & Old-Timey Recipes

My grandmother recently got her first computer and, taking advice to learn how it works, was transcribing some of her old recipes.  While I was visiting, I offered to digitize some of the shorter cookbooks for her, which she was glad to accept.  We didn't have access to a scanner, mine being some 2,000 miles away, so I apologize in advance for the potato-quality photos from my old phone.  I touched up the contrast to make them a little more legible, but some are blurry.

First up is the Occident Photo-Method Recipes for Bread, Rolls, and Fancy Breads.  I believe the cover and last page are missing, since it ends on 30 instead of 31.

occident photo-method for baking

Equipment & utensils

Bread ingredients

Important techniques

How to knead dough

4-loaf bread recipe

4-loaf bread recipe

4-loaf bread recipe

4-loaf bread recipe

4-loaf bread recipe

4-loaf bread recipe

6-loaf bread recipe

Occident photo-method for rolls

Basic roll dough

Basic roll dough

Basic roll dough

Basic roll dough

Other uses for roll dough

Speedie rolls, dessert breads, and danishes

Quick-bread dough

Fan Tans and Pecan Roll-Ups

Orange Twists and Kolackys

Coffee Cake and Bubble Ring

Tea Ring

Danish pastry

Danish pastry

Danish pastry variations

Danish pastry variations

Next is a pie-making pamphlet.  The first 4 pages of this one are missing, and I can only assume the last 4 are also, so I don't have enough information to identify it.

Pie-making techniques

Pie crusts

Pie crusts

Pie crusts

Pie crusts

Pie crusts

Other pie crusts

Pie crust tips

Apple pie

Berry pie

Rhubarb pie

Little pies

Grape pie, Cranberry pie, Pear pie

Strawberry pie, Peach pie

Canned fruit pie

Mincemeat pie

Custard pie

Pumpkin pie

Pecan pie, Walnut raisin pie, Chocolate pie

Baked Alaska

Pumpkin pie

Meringue pie

Meringue pie

Cream pie

Cream pie

Chiffon pie

Chiffon pie

White Christmas pie, Black Bottom pie

Tarts

Tarts

Dumplings

Meat pies

Meat pies

How to freeze pies

Pies and pastries

America's pies

The last two pamphlets were both published by Proctor and Gamble, the creators of Crisco, sometime after World War II.  The first one, Pie: America's Favorite Dessert, is about, obviously, pies.  The signature, Janie Bliss, is my great-grandmother's.

Pie

Pie ingredients

Pie equipment

Pie equipment

Mixing pie dough

Mixing pie dough

Pie do's and don't's

Butterscotch tarts

Meat pie, apple pie

Pumpkin pie, Lemon Meringue pie

Chocolate meringue pie, Apricon chiffon pie

End of Pie

And, last but not least, is Cakes and Cookies, also signed by my great-grandmother.  Back then, the singular of cookies was "cooky," so it's not a typo.

Cakes & Cookies

Cookie methods

Cake ingredients

Cake method

Baking equipment

Baking equipment

Cake Do's and Don't's

White cake, Yellow cake

Chocolate cake, Spice cake

Icing

Cookies

Rolled cookie

Raisin bars, Brownies

Oatmeal cookies, Orange Drop cookies

End of Cookies

These recipes were the staple of my grandmother's baking, and she still uses some of them today (as you can tell by the stains and splatters), so if you're looking for some old-fashioned baking, try out one of these.