Recently in Desserts Category

Hey, Nola, want a cookie?

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A while back, Nola was carrying on about how she had to explain "black and white" cookies to a yat barista at a local Starbucks. Seems like they don't have this particular goodie at the New Orleans stores anymore. When i stopped for my quad venti white mocha this morning at 90 Park Ave., these were on the counter by the register:



Then, when I stopped at Cafe Charlie (9 E. 40th St.) to pick up some sushi, I saw these:



I had already bought the Starbucks cookies, but these look pretty good as well. :-)

single-layer doberge from Zuppardo's

happy new year, everyone!

King Cake!

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King Cake Dolls! In addition to the traditional plastic baby that's actually baked into the king cake, Haydel's Bakery (on Jefferson Highway) has been doing a series of specialty dolls each year. The series has included a maid in full costume, mardi gras indians, members of St. Aug's band, a streetcar for the Phunny Phorty Phellows, well, you get the idea.

This year, Haydel's has three dolls, and we've gotten two of them so far. On the left is a FEMA trailer decorated for Carnival. On the right is "Katrina," a girl wrapped in a blue tarp. The third is a male Carnival masker, dressed as the superhero, "Blue Roof Guy."

:-)

Make your own Doberge cake...

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There are two things I usually don't make at home, gumbo and doberge cakes. My reasons are simple--I can easily go down the street to Zuppardo's grocery and buy wonderful versions of either one. (Well, there are more reasons for gumbo. Our restaurants do a wonderful chicken-andouille gumbo, and I just don't have the patience needed to do a decent roux. It's a real struggle for me. But this post isn't supposed to be about gumbo...) For those of you who are either more adventurous than me, or don't have a fantastic supermarket a mile away, here's a recipe.

The classic New Orleans doberge cake consists of alternating layers of cake and the pudding-like filling that makes the cake so delicious. Essentially, you bake a single layer cake and slice it into four or six very thin layers. The cake is assembled by laying down the base, then a thin layer of filling, then another cake layer, then filling, etc.

Chuck Taggart has a great recipe at the Gumbo Pages that unfortunately involves baking the cake and slicing it up into the component doberge layers. There's no way I'd be able to evenly slice a classic single-layer cake so I'm offering here a recipe for baking individual thin layers, the chocolate filling from Chuck's site, then a lemon filling as well.

STAGE 1 - the cake layers

Rather than cook an entire single-layer, 9" cake and slicing it up, let's bake the thin layers separately.

3 cups flour
2 cups sugar
1 cup butter
1 cup milk
4 eggs, separated
Pinch of salt
3 level teaspoons baking powder

Cream sugar and butter; add beaten egg yolks. Then alternately add flour, to which 2 teaspoons baking powder has been added and the milk. Fold in beaten egg whites, to which 1 teaspoon baking powder has been added. Add extract. Bake in 9 inch pans allowing 6 tablespoons of the cake batter for each layer. Bake at 350 degrees F. for approximately 30 to 40 minutes. Remove from pans and let cool slightly before adding filling.

STAGE 2 - the filling.
Doberge cakes are usually chocolate, lemon, caramel, or strawberry. One of the more popular cakes made by Gambino's Bakery or Zuppardo's Supermarket is the half-chocolate, half-lemon version. If you feel that adventurous, when spreading the filling between the layers, do half of each!

Chocolate

2-1/2 cups evaporated milk
2 (1-ounce) squares semi-sweet chocolate
1-1/4 cups sugar
5 Tablespoons flour
4 egg yolks
2 tablespoons butter
1-1/4 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 teaspoon almond extract

Put milk and chocolate in a saucepan and heat until chocolate is melted. In a bowl, combine sugar and flour. Make a paste by adding hot milk chocolate by Tablespoons to the sugar and flour, then return to saucepan. Stir over medium heat until thick. Add 4 egg yolks all at once and stir rapidly to completely blend. Cook 2 or 3 minutes more. Remove from heat, and add butter, vanilla, and almond extract. Cool and spread on cake, layering as you go. Do not spread on top layer.

Lemon

4 lemons
4 tablespoons butter
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
Pinch of salt

Measure sugar and add grated rind and juice of lemons (fresh) and stir. Add beaten eggs, butter and salt. Cook until thick. Cool filling and spread between the cake layers.

STAGE 3 - the icing

Some homemade doberge cake recipes will say you don't need to bother with frosting, and to just spread the filling on the sides and top of the cake. That's no fun! One of the best parts of the doberge cake experience is the sugar orgy. Make a hard-shell icing and do it right!

chocolate icing

1-1/4 pounds sugar (about 3 cups)
1 cup evaporated milk
2 ounces bittersweet or unsweetened chocolate
4 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon vanilla

Combine sugar and milk in a heavy saucepan, and bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Reduce heat and simmer for 6 minutes without stirring. Remove from heat and blend in chocolate. Add butter and vanilla and return to medium-low heat, cooking 1 or 2 minutes. Place in refrigerator to cool. Beat well, then spread on top and the sides of the cake.

lemon icing

3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
3 1/2 cups confectioners' sugar
2 tablespoons heavy cream
2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest

in the large bowl of the electric mixer, using the paddle attachment or beaters, beat the butter on medium speed until creamy, about 30 seconds. Gradually beat in the confectioners' sugar on low speed. Add the cream, lemon juice, vanilla, and lemon zest. Increase the speed to medium-high, and beat for about 3 minutes, or until the frosting is light and fluffy.
10. To assemble the cake, place 1 cake layer on a serving plate. Pile the lemon filling onto the center using a small offset metal spatula, and spread it into an even layer, leaving a 1-inch border around the edge of the cake layer. Top with the second cake layer. Frost the top and sides of the cake with the lemon frosting. (If some of the filling oozes out from the middle, just blend it with the frosting around the sides of the cake.) Serve the cake immediately, or refrigerate and bring to room temperature before serving.

Hansen's Sno-Bliz on NPR

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"Morning Edition" this morning included a neat segment on Hansen's Sno-Bliz, the uptown snowball legend. It's worth a listen:

A Tasty New Orleans Tradition Lives On

by Jeff Brady

Morning Edition, July 25, 2006   "Snowballs" are a summer-time obsession in New Orleans. Snowballs are shaved-ice treats with flavored syrup that are sold from corner stands. One of the best is Hansen's Sno-Bliz. Ernest and Mary Hansen started their business during the Depression. Both died soon after Hurricane Katrina and their granddaughter, Ashley, has taken over.

The Hansen's sno-ball machine is the model for almost every other stand in town.

Randazzo-y Goodness

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King Cake #2 for us this season was from Manny Randazzo's:

Last year, there were four Randazzo's bakeries making king cakes: The original Randzaao's and "Randazzo's Good Children," in Chalmette, Randazzo's in Slidell, and Manny Randazzo's in Metairie. The original bakery started the recipe, and the others opened up as the market grew and the family branched. Post-k, only the Metairie branch, Manny Randazzo's, re-opened.

Manny Randazzo's uses purple and green candy sprinkles, but otherwise it's the original Randazzo recipe:

Not my favorite, but I'm outvoted by the rest of the family. :-)

It Begins...

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Twelfth night was the last of the "Yats of Christmas," but it was also the first day of king cake season. We waited until this morning do to king cake, however. Little-kid basketball and construction workers in the house until 9pm put a damper on last night's festivities.

Our first king cake of the season was from Haydel's:

that's a "medium plain." Medium in terms of small/medium/large -- this size theoretically serves 10-12 if you cut thin slices. We make it last for breakfast and dessert on the same day for our greedy family of four.

Haydel's king cakes have both icing and granulated sugar. It's a much more sugary icing than Randazzo's, however. We're split between the two. Justin and I prefer Haydel's. Of course, I prefer the old McKenzie's king cakes the best, but I'm alone on that one.

Every year, Haydel's puts a neat ceramic "baby" in their king cakes. They've all been various carnival-themed dolls, like a Rex king, or a Shriner on a motorcycle, or a peanut vendor. This year's is "Joyful," a masker walking on the street...

Doberge!

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my 11-year old's photo technique needs a bit of work, but the cake was still yummy. This was a single-layer-sized chocolate doberge cake from Zuppardo's. It was part of the dessert spread at my mother-in-law's dor Christmas dinner yesterday.

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YatPundit is the nom de blog of Edward Branley, author, streetcar enthusiast, computer consultant/trainer, and procrastinator extraordinaire.

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