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Carrot cake: food of the gods

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Misuse of vegetables for glory.

Carrot cake takes misuse of vegetables to new heights. Carrots, a starchy questionable vegetable to start with, become the foundation of sweet rich lovely textured cake in this recipe from King Arthur Flour Whole Grain Baking. If you’re interested in carrots as a vegetable, try and find heritage carrots – before the Dutch made them orange and sweet. But we’re going to make them unhealthy, so the ordinary supermarket carrots are fine.

Carrot cake is a favourite wherever you take it. If I’m transporting the cake, I over bake it slightly. It changes the texture to more chewy but it’s just as tasty. You can make a vegan version of this cake as well – substitutions are below.

My recipe calls for nuts, coconut and raisins – these can all be omitted, none are essential to the structure of the cake. If you make the classic cream cheese icing, I suggest using Philadelphia Cream Cheese. I’m not a fan of American processed food but Philly has some magic ingredients that keeps the icing from getting lumpy.

No specialist equipment is required for this recipe but a mini chopper or a food processor is highly recommended for the carrots. For the best texture, I suggest fine grating the carrots. Smaller pieces makes the cake cut better.

I bake this recipe as a sheet cake in two square cake pans: 15 cms (6 inches) by 15 cms (bake for 45 mins) It also makes 2 x 23 cm (9 inch) round layers (bake for 40 mins) or a 33 cm (13 inch) by 23 cm (9 inch) sheet or single layer cake (bake for 45 mins). I line pans with parchment paper or pre-cut parchment liners – I never grease pans.

Bake away.

Recipe

Cake

  • 4 large eggs
  • 295 grams (10.5 ounces) of vegetable oil
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 295 grams (10.5 ounces) caster (white) sugar
  • 90 grams (3.25 ounces) brown sugar
  • 225 grams (8 ounces) whole wheat flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 tablespoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 250 grams (8.75 ounces) finely grated carrot
  • 100 grams (3.75 ounces) pecans or walnuts, chopped
  • 85 grams (3 ounces) shredded or flaked coconut
  • 340 grams (12 ounces) raisins

Cream cheese icing

  • 85 grams (3 ounces) unsalted butter, softened, at room temperature
  • 225 grams (8 ounces) Philadelphia cream cheese, softened, at room temperature
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 450 (1 lb) icing (confectioners) sugar, sifted
  • 90 grams (3.25 ounces) chopped candied ginger (optional)
  • 110 grams (4 ounces) chopped nuts, walnuts or pecans

Vegan option: use 260 grams of unsweetened applesauce instead of the eggs in the cake. Try this recipe for vegan vanilla icing.

Instructions

  1. Prep your pan or pans. Preheat the oven to 350F.
  2. Grate the carrots. Chop the nuts. Combine all in a bowl and put to one side (stir ins).
  3. Whisk together flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and spices in a separate bowl (dry ingredients).
  4. Beat the eggs (or applesauce) in the mixing bowl of your stand mixer. Add the oil while the mixer is running. Add the vanilla and the sugars and beat until smooth.
  5. Mix the dry ingredients into the batter until well combined. Don’t over beat.
  6. Add the stir ins. Scoop batter into prepared pans.
  7. Bake for the amount of time appropriate to the pan size. Use a toothpick to test, if it comes out clean the cake is done. Cool on a rack when done, then dust with confectioners sugar or use the cream cheese icing. Decorate the top with ginger or nuts.
Carrot cake with cream cheese icing, garnished with candied chopped ginger.

I hope you enjoy the blog. Please ask questions and send comments. If you bake any of the recipes, please post a photo and tag @mamadolson on Instagram or Twitter.

Muffins, muffins and more muffins

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It’s still January (just barely). I’m back to the King Arthur Whole Grain Baking quest after a busy and tumultuous holiday season. Also, I started my non-exec and ‘consulting’ job. But that’s in my parallel universe. Here, it’s all about that bread.

I was trying to be methodical and start at the beginning of the cookbook but I fell at the first fence. The first chapter is ‘breakfast’. It’s essentially pancakes, waffles, crepes and granola. The problem here is that the Davinator prefers savoury breakfast – unless it’s a croissant and then he’s all over it with the butter and jam. So, I parked the first chapter until I have keener ‘consumers’. Maybe pancake day…..

I’ve jumped to the quick bread chapter which has twelve muffin recipes. And decided I must go in strict order. So, it’s ‘Sour Cream Muffins’ to start. Here we go.

I have, however, a couple of minor criticisms of the KA Whole Grain Baking cookbook.

The first is that in their quest to make whole grain taste good, the recipes call for an array of specialised ingredients. A few of these are practically impossible to find in the UK – so if I can’t get it, I’m assuming readers will be unable to source. I’ve decided to ‘substitute’ those difficult ingredients. If substitution doesn’t work, I’ll punt on those recipes until I can get my hands on the real thing. One thing I couldn’t find -‘white whole wheat flour’. I tried a mix of white and whole wheat flour and that came out fine in this recipe.

The second is that the recipes are tailored to American taste buds. After I’ve made them the first time, I start reducing the sugar. In some recipes, I’ve cut the sugar by 1/3. I’m careful with this because sugar also affects the basic chemistry of baked goods, beyond making it sweet.

I made these muffins with frozen blueberries and I suspect they would be fine with any frozen or fresh fruit. My frozen blueberries (from Sainsburys I confess) were on the large size, so I would probably try smaller berries or smaller pieces of fruit the next time.

Recipe

Ingredients – makes 12 muffins

150 grams (5 ounces) whole wheat flour

140 grams (4 1/3 ounces) plain white flour (not self raising)

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon salt

55 grams (2 ounces, 4 tablespoons) unsalted butter, melted

180 grams (6 1/3 ounces) of sugar

2 large eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

225 mls (8 fluid ounces) of sour cream or full fat greek yoghurt

220 grams (8 ounces) frozen blueberries

Instructions

  1. Combine the first five ingredients; flour to salt, in a bowl. Stir together.
  2. Put the melted butter in the bowl for your mixer. Add the sugar. Beat to combine (don’t you love the melted butter trick).
  3. Scrape down the bowl, beat in the eggs one a time and combine well.
  4. Add the vanilla and the sour cream. Beat until incorporated.
  5. Add the dry ingredients from step 1. Mix on low speed until just combined. (Do not overbeat quick bread, it will punish you).
  6. Stir in the frozen fruit. Make sure that the bottom of the batter has mixed in properly.
  7. Cover the bowl and refrigerate for an hour. You could leave it longer but I think the frozen fruit will deteriorate if you leave it for too long.
  8. Preheat the oven to 200C (180C fan) (375F).
  9. Prep a muffin pan with paper liners lightly coated with non-stick spray or grease the tin.
  10. Fill the muffin pan – I use my ice cream scoop. Put a generous scoop full in each muffin cup.
  11. Bake for 22 to 26 minutes. They will look lovely and brown on the top when complete.
  12. Cool for 5 minutes in the tin, then tip out to cool on a rack or on the counter top. Don’t let them cool in the tin; that’s how they get hard crust on the sides and bottom.

Enjoy. One recipe down, eleven to go.

Blueberry muffin batter.
Muffins ready to go in the oven.

Can I cook my way through this book?

I have so many interests I’m not expecting to be bored in retirement.  But I’ve decided I need a quest.  Weed free flower beds – although laudable – are not quest worthy.  Neither is the perfectly organised linen closet . (Although also on my personal list of to dos).

My quest is to cook every recipe in my favourite baking cookbook ‘King Arthur Flour Whole Grain’.    I haven’t dared to count the recipes (yet) but it runs to 612 pages including the appendices .  It starts with granola and waffle recipe, runs the gamut of muffins, cakes, breads, scones, pies, rolls and quiches.  Any type of baked good you can imagine is in this book and made with whole grains.

My sister gave me this book several years ago and there are a number of family favourites already;  pumpkin bread, banana chocolate chip muffins, the best damn brownies ever and sunrise muffins.  TBH – I’ve never had an out and out fail using this book.   Some of the recipes require patience.  Not sure I will report every single recipe separately but I will keep a running tally.  And report back on the good, the bad and the ugly.

Cake or death!