Showing posts with label Chocolate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chocolate. Show all posts

20130110

Texas Sheet Cake: lovely chocolate treat in 1 hour flat. Honest.

Two years ago I posted this recipe on FB.  Since then it has appeared on family birthday tables at least a dozen times, and soon I'll be making it for an 18-year-old I know.  It's as easy, fast, and yummy now as it was then.  You can literally bang this out in an hour start to finishConsider making one for Valentine's Day - they will taste the love.
fastest, easiest, yummiest chocolate cake ever: Texas Sheet Cake


I stumbled across a truly wonderful recipe and wanted to share it with you special people. OK, here's the scene: it's your turn to bring the cake for a party. You have to leave in an hour. You want something yummy and chocolaty, with a minimum of bowls to wash.

You may look at the recipe below and think (as I did), "This looks weird; not enough cocoa. It won't work." Give it a try anyway sometime, gobble it greedily as we did, and then pass it on to YOUR favorite bakers.

* * * * *
Texas Sheet Cake (chocolate-buttermilk sheet cake)
slightly adapted from the Better Homes & Gardens 2003 Cookbook

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

2 cups flour
2 cups sugar
1 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
1/3 cup cocoa powder - it doesn't look like enough, but it is.
1 cup water
2 eggs
1/2 cup buttermilk or sour milk (1/2 c. milk + 1-1/2 tsp. lemon juice or vinegar, left to stand for 5 min.)
1-1/2 tsp. vanilla
1 recipe Quick Chocolate Frosting (below)

1. Grease a 13x9x2 baking pan & set aside. In a large bowl, stir together flour, sugar, baking soda, and salt; set aside. (Using a 15x10x1 jelly roll pan is fine too; more like brownies).

2. In a medium saucepan combine butter, cocoa powder, and water. Bring mixture just to boiling, stirring constantly. Remove from heat. Add cocoa mixture to flour mixture and beat with an electric mixture on medium to high speed until thoroughly combined. Add eggs, buttermilk, and vanilla. Beat for 1 minute (batter will be quite thin). Pour batter into the prepared pan.

3. Bake 35 min (or only 25 min for the 15x10x1 pan) until a toothpick comes out clean.

4. Pour warm frosting (below) over the warm cake - no need to wait or poke holes in the cake - and spread evenly. Leave cake to cool in the pan on a wire rack; cool thoroughly.

Quick Chocolate Frosting

As soon as the cake comes out, make the frosting: In a medium saucepan combine 1/4 cup butter, 3 Tbsp. cocoa powder, and 3 Tbsp. buttermilk or sour milk. Bring to boiling; remove from heat. Add 2-1/4 cups powdered sugar and 1/2 tsp. vanilla. Beat with a spoon or spatula until smooth. If desired, stir in 3/4 cup coarsely chopped pecans.  We always skip the nuts and it tastes just as good.

20111030

Food: More ALDI Love: Yummy Riesling AND Fine, Fine Chocolate

I have been shouting my ALDI love from the rooftops of late.  But seriously, you need to run, not walk, to ALDI and try these two things.

4.99 Landshut Riesling from ALDI.  Fruity-tastic.
Thing 1:  Landshut Riesling, $4.99.  Classic fruity German white wine.  ALDI's Landshut Riesling knocks me out with (1) its price, (2) how ridiculously fruity it is - yes, naturellement it is very redolent of grape, but there's a big apple-pear thing going on as well; and (3) the fact that Wine Enthusiast gave it an 84% rating and a big thumbs-up, which is pretty dang good for a bottle of wine under five bucks. 

Thing 2:  Moser-Roth chocolate (German, naturlich), any of the fine bars available for between 1.79 and 1.89.  Now that the price of Lindt and Ghirardelli has gone well north of $3.00, Moser-Roth emerges as the high-quality brand with the super-deal price.  They make a wide line of chocolate with varying levels of cacao (70%, 85% for the mainliners like me, milk, chili, mint, caramel, etc.).  The large flat bar is elegantly packaged, just like the big-name guys, and in a thoughtful touch, each large bar opens to reveal five individually foil-wrapped bars, which makes it easier to avoid eating the entire bar at once, as is my natural inclination.  Candy Blog gives the 70% bar a 7/10 rating.

Bonus Points:  Moser-Roth automatically bumps up to an 8.5/10 rating in my book because of the Houses of the Holy-ish font used for the brand logo.

So for less than $7, you can walk out of ALDI mit ein big old German Weinbuzz und eine grosse Schokoladebuzz.  Good times!

Update: