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The Cake Slice Bakers

Chocolate St. Honoré Cake

January 20, 2019 by sblades 15 Comments

Chocoate St Honore Cake

It’s January and The Cake Slice Bakers group is starting a new cake cookbook – “The European Cake Cookbook” by Tatyana Nesteruk. This isn’t a run-of-the-mill everyday cake cookbook. It’s a trip around the world, beginning with Chocolate St. Honoré Cake.

I have to admit that when I think European cakes, I think of dryer cakes with no frosting – maybe with a layer of raspberry jam somewhere on them. That’s certainly not the case with this cake!

Chocoate St Honore Cake

I can see already that the cakes from this book are going to present more of a challenge for my lowly cake baking skills. I chose this Chocolate St. Honoré Cake because it uses puff pastry, which I’ve never used in anything before. Of course, it’s store-bought puff pastry, but still.

Then, on top of the puff pastry, you add a layer of pate a choux. Pate a choux (pateh ah shoe) is easier to make than you would think, so don’t let it scare you away.

After the pastry is baked, it’s layered with luscious whipped cream and from-scratch chocolate custard. Oh wait, let’s make a few profiteroles (mini round eclairs) also filled with chocolate custard and mound them on top the cake.

Chocoate St Honore Cake

What you end up with is a big ole’ French pastry that makes you feel like you’re sitting in an outside cafe eating a little slice of heaven.

Grab a cappuccino, sit back and enjoy. This is an incredible cake.

Chocoate St Honore Cake

Stretch your baking wings and try this fantastic, impressive Chocolate St. Honoré Cake.  Give yourself plenty of time to make this.

Make sure and take note of the ingredient changes I made in the Tips and Stuff section of the recipe below.

Chocoate St Honore Cake

Chocolate St. Honoré Cake

Yield: 8 - 10
Prep Time: 1 hour
Cook Time: 1 hour
Inactive Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 2 hours 30 minutes

Awesome French pastry "cake" loaded with whipped cream, dreamy chocolate custard, and profiteroles.

Ingredients

  • 2 sheets puff pastry, thawed
  • 1 C water
  • 1/2 C (113 g) unsalted butter
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1 C (125 g) all-purpose flour
  • 4 large eggs
  • Chocolate Custard:
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1/2 C (67 g) sugar
  • 2 tbsp (18 g) cornstarch
  • 2 tbsp (30 ml) water
  • 1 1/2 C (355 ml) milk
  • 1 tbsp (8 g) all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 C (90 g) semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1/4 C (57 g) unsalted butter
  • Chocolate Dip:
  • 1 C (175 g) chocolate melts, melted
  • Cream:
  • 8 oz (227 g) mascarpone cheese, softened
  • 2 tbsp (30 ml) cognac
  • 2 C (473 ml) heavy cream, chilled
  • 1/2 C (100 g) sugar

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 425°.  Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
  2. Transfer the thawed pastry sheets onto the baking sheets and cut out two 9" circles with a knife.  Refreeze the scraps for future use.  Pierce the puff pastry circles all over with a fork to prevent air pockets and set aside.
  3. To make the pate a choux:  In a medium saucepan over medium heat, combine the water, butter and salt, and stir until the butter is melted and the mixture comes to a simmer.  Add the flour all at once and continue cooking and stirring until a dough ball forms (30 seconds to 1 minute). 
  4. Transfer the dough into a mixing bowl and let cool for about 10-15 minutes until just warm to the touch.  After cooled, add the eggs, one at a time and mix well between additions, scraping down the sides of the bowl if needed.  Transfer the sticky dough into a pastry bag tipped with a large, round tip.
  5. Pipe the dough over the unbaked puff pastry, creating three concentric rings.  With the remaining dough, pipe out 1 to 1 1/2" dollops for the profiteroles.  Wet the tips of your fingers and smooth down the top of the dollops slightly.
  6. Move your oven racks to middle and mid-upper levels if needed.  Bake the layers at 425° for 10 minutes.  Switch the pans to the opposite level, turning the pan front to back as you do. 
  7. Reduce heat to 350° and bake for an additional 35 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown.  Remove from oven and use a small filling tip (or chop stick) to punch a little hole in the bottom of each profiterole. Cool completely, approximately 30 minutes. 
  8. For the custard:  In a medium bowl, whisk together the egg yolks and sugar until thick and pale.  In a small cup, combine the cornstarch and water to create a smooth slurry and add it to the egg yolk mixture and set aside.  In a medium saucepan, whisk together the milk and flour.  Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until steaming hot.
  9. Temper the hot milk into the egg yolk mixture by drizzling the milk in very slowly while constantly briskly whisking.  Pour the mixture back into the saucepan and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture thickens into a custard, 4-6 minutes. 
  10. Remove the custard from the heat, and whisk in the chocolate and butter until smooth.  Pour into a medium bowl and cover with plastic wrap, then cool in the refrigerator for 30 minutes.  Once the custard has cooled, transfer it into a pastry bag and fill each profiterole.  Melt the chocolate melts and dip the tops of each profiterole in the chocolate, then place on a rack to set.
  11. In a small bowl, whisk together the softened cheese* and cognac for 1 minute until creamy.  In a mixing bowl, combine the chilled heavy cream and sugar.  Using the whisk attachment, whisk the cream on high speed for 2-3 minutes, until soft peaks form.  Add the cheese and whisk again until creamy and stiff peaks form (45 seconds to 1 minute).  Transfer the whipped cream into a pastry bag tipped with a star tip.
  12. Generously pipe dollops of cream on the outer rim and between the outer and 2nd ring of the layer you'll use as the bottom layer.  Then, fill the center with a generous amount of chocolate custard.  Place the top layer on top of the other and finish off with rings and dollops of whipped cream and the chocolate custard.   Top with profiteroles if desired and drizzle with any leftover melted chocolate.
  13. Store in the refrigerator if you have any leftover.

Notes

Tips and Stuff:

Changes I made to the ingredients:

I used salted butter.

For the chocolate dip, I used chocolate chips.  After I melted them, I stirred in a couple of tablespoons of the whipped cream to make it a creamy lighter profiterole chocolate dip.

*Instead of mascarpone cheese, I used softened cream cheese.  In place of the cognac, I used 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract.

If you don't have pastry bags and/or tips, use a zip lock back with the corner snipped.  (Filling the profiteroles, though, works better with a long thin tip.)

Nutrition Information:
Yield: 10 Serving Size: 1 slice
Amount Per Serving: Calories: 298Total Fat: 17gSaturated Fat: 8gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 7gCholesterol: 143mgSodium: 260mgCarbohydrates: 25gFiber: 1gSugar: 2gProtein: 12g

Nutrition Values are Approximate

© The European Cake Cookbook
Category: Cakes

Filed Under: All Recipes, Cakes Tagged With: cake, chocolate, fancy cakes, pate a choux, puff pastry, St. Honore Cake, The Cake Slice Bakers, The European Cake Cookbook, whipped cream

Maple Layer Cake (#TheCakeSliceBakers)

October 20, 2018 by sblades 12 Comments

Updated: September 2020

I zeroed in on the Maple Layer Cake from The Perfect Cake for The Cake Slice Bakers’s choice this month.

There were three other great choices: Spiced Pumpkin Cheesecake, Cider-Glazed Apple Bundt Cake, and Pear-Walnut Upside Down Cake, but I just love anything maple!

Maple Layer Cake

 

The second time I made this cake, I doctored ATK’s (America’s Test Kitchen) recipe a little because I wanted more maple flavor.

The end result – a fantastic maple cake with maple cream cheese frosting.

Maple Layer Cake

You whisk the batter ingredients together by hand and it’s unbelievably quick to come together. ATK provided a maple cream cheese frosting for the cake, but I wasn’t very impressed. The frosting isn’t sweet at all to me and has no maple flavor whatsoever.

I love cream cheese on bagels but unless sweetened, it isn’t so great on a cake! I ended up adding almost a half cup of powdered sugar and over a half teaspoon of really good maple flavoring to make it a nice creamy, still barely-sweet, maple-flavored frosting.

Since the frosting they offered wasn’t up to par, on my second cake bake I used a different ATK cream cheese frosting from another recipe of theirs. I included it on the recipe card below instead of the original. It’s great!

Maple Layer Cake

We’re enjoying the cake with the new and improved frosting. The sponge of the cake is moist and so very soft.

It’s kind of strange that after using 1 1/4 cups of maple syrup in the cake from the original recipe, it still had no maple flavoring. Maybe we don’t get the best quality maple syrup in Texas – go figure.

Will I make this cake again? Yes, using the updated recipe. This Maple Layer Cake will be a nice addition to holiday tables and a definite must for pot luck get-togethers.

Looking for more great cake recipes?

    • Blueberry Lemon Ricotta Tea Cake  (one of my favorites!)
    • Amaretto Creme Cake
    • Blum’s Coffee Crunch Cake
Maple Layer Cake

Maple Layer Cake

Yield: 10-12 slices
Prep Time: 25 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Total Time: 50 minutes

Soft, tender maple layer cake with a tasty cream cheese frosting.

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 C (10 oz)   Cake Flour
  • 2 tsp  Baking Powder
  • 1/2 tsp  Salt
  • 3/4 C plus 2 tbsp  Vegetable Oil
  • 1 1/4 C  Maple Syrup
  • 3 large  Eggs
  • 1/2 tsp  Maple Extract
  • 3 1/2 tsp  Vanilla Extract
  • For the Frosting:
  • 1 1/4 lb   Cream Cheese, softened
  • 12 tablespoons   Butter, cut into 12 pieces and softened
  • 2 tbsp  Sour Cream
  • 1 1/2 tsp  Maple Extract
  • 1/4 tsp  Salt
  • 2 1/2 C (10 oz)  Powdered Sugar

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Spray two 9" round cake pans, line the bottoms of the pans with parchment paper, then spray the parchment. Lightly flour both pans.
  2. Whisk the flour, baking powder and salt together in a small bowl. In a large bowl, whisk the oil, maple syrup, eggs, maple extract, and vanilla extract until smooth.
  3. Divide the batter between the two prepared pans. Bake until the cakes are set and the center is firm to the touch, 22 to 25 minutes, rotating the pans halfway through baking.
  4. Remove cakes to cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes. Remove cakes from the pans, peeling off the parchment paper, and let cool completely on the wire rack, about 1 hour.
  5. For the frosting: Using a stand mixer, beat the cream cheese, softened butter, sour cream, maple extract, and salt on medium-high until smooth, about 2 minutes. Reduce the speed to low and gradually add the powdered sugar. beat on medium until the sugar is fully incorporated and the frosting is smooth, about 4 minutes. Increase the speed to medium-high and beat until the frosting is light and fluffy, about 4 more minutes. (Should yield about 5 cups)
  6. Place one layer of the cake on your cake platter. Spread 1 1/2 cups of the frosting evenly over the top, right to the edge of the cake. Top with the second layer and press down lightly. Spread the remaining frosting evenly over the top and sides of the cake.

Notes

Tips and Stuff:

Be sure and use cake flour for this cake. If you don't want to buy a whole box of cake flour, see if your local store (Central Market, Whole Foods, etc.) has bulk flours and just buy the amount you need.

I use salted butter in the frosting because that's what I have. I just use a pinch of salt in the frosting instead of the 1/4 tsp it calls for to make up for the salted butter.

I stored the leftover cake in the refrigerator. Before serving the refrigerated cake, I set it out on the counter to get it back to room temperature.

Nutrition Information:
Yield: 12 Serving Size: 1
Amount Per Serving: Calories: 497Total Fat: 32gSaturated Fat: 18gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 11gCholesterol: 126mgSodium: 489mgCarbohydrates: 46gFiber: 1gSugar: 23gProtein: 7g
© America's Test Kitchen
Category: Cakes

Filed Under: All Recipes, Cakes Tagged With: America's Test Kitchen, Fall cakes, maple, Maple Cake, The Cake Slice Bakers, The Perfect Cake

Peanut Butter and Jam Cake (#thecakeslicebakers)

August 20, 2018 by sblades 12 Comments

Peanut Butter and Jam Cake

The August selection for The Cake Slice Bakers is a wonderful array of jam/jelly cakes and I chose Peanut Butter and Jam Cake (#atkcake). What a novel idea – a peanut butter and jelly sandwich made into a layered cake!

I’ll tell you the quick instructions, then….below the second photo the REAL story!

First you make two square 8-inch cakes and slice each into two layers. A four-layer cake sounds enormous, but it really wasn’t because the layers didn’t rise all that high.

Generously spread jam on the bottom layer, then top with its corresponding top layer. Spread a cup of the luscious, light, and fluffy peanut butter frosting on that layer, then top with the bottom of the second cake. Repeat with the jam, top with the final layer, then slather that wonderful frosting all over the cake.

Toss peanuts on the sides of the cake and finish with thin lines of jam to finish off the look! Easy, right?  Continue on dearies….

Peanut Butter and Jam Cake

OK, so let’s start with slicing the cake. Ack! Even though I put two toothpicks evenly measured on each side of the cake, the knife went on its merry way up and down when slicing through it. So…I ended up with a wavy, generally not-even cake. No problem. I’ll cover it up with frosting.

I evenly spread the jam over two of the layers, spread the frosting in the middle (covering up a few of the waves in the cake) and topped it off with the rest of the frosting. Except that, because of the slippery jam, it slid around while I was trying to frost it. Ack, again!

I got the frosting under control and the Peanut Butter and Jam Cake was starting to look like a cake. The next part was pressing the chopped peanuts into the sides of the frosted cake. I ended up with frosting all over my fingers, a little in my hair, and peanuts everywhere. My dog appreciated the snackies that fell on the floor.

No time to dwell on the peanuts floating around in the frosting. I’ve got to warm up the jam, put it in a baggie, snip the corner and draw straight lines on top of the cake. See photo above with non-straight lines. Drag a knife across the jam lines to make a pretty decoration. Again, see photo above with non-pretty decoration.

Peanut Butter and Jam Cake

Et voila! It’s finished. All that angst and the cake actually came out pretty well. It wasn’t a fluffy cake like I’d thought it would be – more of a tight crumb. However, it didn’t slide away like I thought it would and it was quite tasty (especially that marvelous frosting)!

Would I make this peanut butter and jelly cake again? Maybe. I would try to come up with a couple of different techniques for the peanut plastering and line drawing. All-in-all, quite a nice tasting cake which was even better the next day.

Peanut Butter and Jam Cake

Peanut Butter and Jam Cake

Yield: 10 to 12 slices
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Additional Time: 2 hours
Total Time: 2 hours 45 minutes

A different spin on peanut butter and jelly! Great flavors dense cake, marvelous frosting!

Ingredients

  • For The Cake:
  • 1 C whole milk, room temperature
  • 6 large egg whites, room temperature
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 1/4 C (9 oz) cake flour
  • 1 3/4 C (12 1/4 oz) sugar
  • 4 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 12 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into 12 slices and softened.
  • For the Frosting:
  • 16 tbsp unsalted butter, cut into 16 slices and softened
  • 1 C creamy peanut butter
  • 3 tbsp heavy cream
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 C (8 oz) powdered sugar
  • 1 1/4 C seedless raspberry jam
  • 1 C dry-roasted peanuts, chopped

Instructions

  1. For the Cake: Heat oven to 350°. Grease two 8-inch square baking pans and line each with parchment paper. Grease the parchment paper and lightly flour the pans.
  2. Whisk milk, egg whites, and vanilla together in a bowl.
  3. In a stand mixer, mix the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt on low speed until combined. Add the butter, 1 piece at a time until only pea-sized pieces remain, about 1 minute. Add all but 1/2 cup of the milk/egg mixture, then increase speed to medium-high and beat until light and fluffy, about 1 minute. Reduce the speed to medium-low and add the remaining 1/2 cup milk/egg mixture. Beat until incorporated, about 30 seconds (batter may look curdled, but that's OK). Give the batter a final stir by hand to get the stuff up off of the bottom of the bowl.
  4. Divide the batter between the two prepared pans. Bake until toothpick inserted in center comes out virtually clean, about 25 minutes, rotating the pans about halfway through baking. Let cakes cool in the pans on a wire rack for about 10 minutes. Run a thin knife around the edges to loosen from the pans and remove cakes from pan, peeling off the parchment paper. Let cakes cool completely on a lightly greased rack, about 2 hours.
  5. For the frosting:
  6. In a stand mixer, beat butter, peanut butter, cream, and vanilla on medium-high speed until smooth, about 30 seconds. Reduce speed to medium-low, slowly adding the powdered sugar. Beat until incorporated and and smooth, about 1 to 2 minutes. Turn the speed to medium-high and whip until light and fluffy, about 5 minutes.
  7. Using a long serrated knife, cut each layer into 2 even layers. Spread 1/2 cup jam on two of the layers, then lay one of those on your cake plate. Top with the second layer of cake, then spread 1 cup of the frosting on that layer. Place the third layer (the 2nd one with the jam on it) on top of the frosted layer, then place the fourth layer on the very top.
  8. Spread the remaining frosting evenly over the top and sides of the cake. Press the peanuts onto the sides of the cake.
  9. Microwave the remaining 1/4 cup of jam in a bowl until melted and smooth, about 20 seconds. Pour the jam carefully into a zip-lock bag and snip 1 corner off about a 1/4" from the corner. Pipe the jam in straight lines over the top of the cake, then lightly drag a knife through the lines to create a marbled appearance.
  10. Refrigerate leftovers. When ready to serve leftover cake, let it sit at room temperature for at least 30 minutes to soften the frosting.

Notes

Tips and Stuff:

Read the text of my blog post - it'll give you a lot of tips!

Be patient putting the butter into the cake. It helps blend it in.

Have fun!

Nutrition Information:
Yield: 10 Serving Size: 1 slice
Amount Per Serving: Calories: 783Total Fat: 55gSaturated Fat: 25gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 25gCholesterol: 93mgSodium: 613mgCarbohydrates: 61gFiber: 4gSugar: 24gProtein: 16g
© America's Test Kitchen
Category: Cakes

Filed Under: All Recipes, Cakes Tagged With: America's Test Kitchen, ATKcake, cake, desserts, four-layer cake, jam, peanut butter, peanut butter and jelly, The Cake Slice Bakers

Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake (#thecakeslicebakers)

July 20, 2018 by sblades 6 Comments

Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake

July’s Cake Slice Baker’s options for our challenge include this Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake from the wonderful cake cookbook The Perfect Cake by America’s Test Kitchen. I’m loving this book more and more every month!

At first I thought, oh gee another lemon cake, but after making this I’ve decided this is my favorite lemon cake ever. Really. Ever.

Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake

The instructions from The Perfect Cake are excellent each step of the way. I love the way the sugar and lemon zest are mixed together first of all, bringing out the lemon aroma and flavor to the extreme.

But wait – there’s more lemon! Fresh lemon juice and more zest (fresh only, please – no green-bottle lemon juice) are mixed in along with buttermilk, eggs (3 whole, plus 1 yolk), and butter. They recommend the eggs, buttermilk, and butter be at room temperature as it really helps the mixture come together and results in a more creamy batter.

Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake

Not enough lemon? Let’s top it off with lemon zest-sugar mixture sprinkled across the top. The result is a light, spongy lemon cake finished off with a nice lemon-buttermilk glaze and a crunchy sugar topping. Heaven for lemon lovers!

A change I made to the recipe is that I made my own buttermilk (one cup of 2% milk and one teaspoon vinegar, stir and let sit while other ingredients come to room temperature). It worked great as I don’t usually have buttermilk in the fridge. I also made an 8×8″ cake and 3 mini-loaves instead of a 13×9″ cake so I could give some of the cake to friends more easily. Besides that, this Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake works perfectly by ATK’s instructions.

If you love lemon…..here you go!

Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake

Lemon Buttermilk Sheet Cake

Yield: 12-15 pieces
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 45 minutes

Outstanding lemony cake with a lightly sugar-crunch lemony glaze.

Ingredients

  • For the Cake:
  • 2 1/2 C (10 oz) cake flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 3/4 C buttermilk, room temperature
  • 3 tbsp grated lemon zest, plus 1/4 C juice (about 3 lemons)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 3/4 C (12 1/4 oz) granulated sugar
  • 12 tbsp butter, cut into 12 pieces and softened
  • 3 large eggs plus 1 large yolk, room temperature
  • For the Glaze:
  • 3 C (12 oz) powdered sugar
  • 3 tbsp lemon juice
  • 2 tbsp buttermilk

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 325°. Spray and flour a 13x9" baking pan.
  2. Whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. In another bowl, combine the buttermilk, lemon juice, and vanilla.
  3. In a stand mixer bowl, beat together the sugar and lemon zest on medium speed until moist, fragrant, and fully combined, about 1 minute. Scoop out 1/4 cup of the sugar/lemon mixture and place in a small bowl; cover and set aside.
  4. Add the butter to the sugar mixture in the stand mixer bowl and beat until pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes. Add the eggs and egg yolk, one at a time, and beat until combined. Reduce speed to low and add the flour mixture in 3 additions, alternating with the buttermilk mixture in 2 additions, and mix until smooth, about 30 seconds (don't over mix). Remove the bowl from the stand and stir by hand to make sure there's no flour on the bottom of the bowl.
  5. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top with the back of a spoon. Bake until the cake is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with just a few crumbs clinging to it, 25 to 30 minutes. Rotate the pan halfway through baking. Let the cake cool in the pan on a wire rack for 10 minutes.
  6. For the glaze, whisk powdered sugar, lemon juice, and buttermilk in a bowl until smooth. Spread the glaze over the still-warm cake and sprinkle evenly with the reserved lemon sugar mixture. Let cool completely, at least 2 hours.

Notes

I made my own buttermilk (stir together 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon vinegar and let sit for at least 15 minutes). It's a nice trick if you don't have buttermilk in the fridge.

It's important that ingredients are at room temperature, so don't skip that. Sometimes ingredients will look (and be) curdled if ingredients are too cold.

Nutrition Information:
Yield: 12 Serving Size: 1 square
Amount Per Serving: Calories: 238Total Fat: 14gSaturated Fat: 8gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 5gCholesterol: 93mgSodium: 338mgCarbohydrates: 24gFiber: 1gSugar: 3gProtein: 5g
© America's Test Kitchen
Category: Cakes

Filed Under: All Recipes, Cakes, Fruit Tagged With: America's Test Kitchen, buttermilk, lemon, lemon buttermilk cake, lemon cake, lemon glaze, The Cake Slice Bakers

Perfect Summer Peach Cake

June 19, 2018 by sblades 3 Comments

Summer Peach Cake

If you’re like me, peaches are always on your Summer fruit to-buy list. The last couple of years fresh peaches from nearby farms haven’t been so good; kind of small and not juicy or sweet. I think this year is going to be different, though.

I picked up some peaches at the grocery store yesterday to make this Summer Peach Cake and found them juicy, sweet and very, very good. The next few weeks will be peak peach season and I’ll be at the store with bells on my toes, picking out the good ones!

I renamed this Summer Peach Cake to Perfect Summer Peach Cake because it is! The vanilla-almond base cake itself is so flavorful and delicious and then there are the fresh peaches all the way through the cake, then finished off with a crunchy almond-sugar topping. It’s really amazing.

This peach cake is one of the four challenge cakes we got to choose from this month in The Cake Slice Bakers from America’s Test Kitchen’s The Perfect Cake. I’ve been so pleased with the cake choices and ATK has done a great job getting “perfect” cakes to turn out.

Perfect Summer Peach Cake takes a little time to put together. Peeling and cutting the peaches into wedges took awhile and was a bit messy, and then you roast part of the peaches and let them cool for 30 minutes before continuing with the cake.

The cake takes almost an hour to bake and then they recommend 2 to 3 hours to cool (which I didn’t – I dug in after hour 1). I really recommend that you make this cake, but be sure and set aside the time to do so.

I’m posting this photo, not because it’s so great, but because it reminds me of Pac-Man. Right?

America's Test Kitchen Peach Cake

This is a fantastic cake and I know you and your family will love it. Read the recipe thoroughly before starting and have all your ducks (or peaches) in a row, and putting the cake together will go smoothly.

Enjoy!

Perfect Summer Peach Cake

Perfect Summer Peach Cake

Yield: 8-10 slices
Prep Time: 1 hour
Cook Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 2 hours

Terrific fresh peach cake!

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 lb peaches, peeled and cut into 1/2" wedges
  • 5 tbsp peach nectar
  • 4 tsp lemon juice
  • 3 tbsp granulated sugar
  • For the Cake:
  • 1 C (5 oz) all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/4 tsp baking powder
  • 3/4 tsp salt
  • 1/2 C packed (3 1/2 oz) light brown sugar
  • 1/3 C (2 1/3 oz) plus 3 tbsp granulated sugar
  • 2 large eggs, room temperature
  • 8 tbsp butter, melted and cooled
  • 1/4 C sour cream
  • 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 3/8 tsp almond extract
  • 1/3 C panko bread crumbs, finely crushed

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 425°. Line a rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil and spray with cooking spray. Grease and flour a 9" springform pan. Stir 24 peach wedges with 2 tablespoons of the peach nectar, 2 teaspoons lemon juice, and 1 tbsp sugar in a large bowl; set aside
  2. Cut the remaining peach wedges crosswise into 3 chunks and gently toss with remaining 3 tbsp of peach nectar, 2 teaspoons of lemon juice and 2 tbsp sugar in another medium bowl. Spread these peach chunks onto the prepared baking sheet and bake until juices begin to thicken and caramelize at the edges of the pan, 20-25 minutes.
  3. Remove the pan from the oven and let the peaches cool completely on the pan, about 30 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees.
  4. For the Cake: In a small bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, and salt together. In a large bowl, whisk the brown sugar, 1/3 cup of the granulated sugar and eggs until thick and thoroughly combined.
  5. Whisk in the sour cream, vanilla and 1/4 teaspoon (only) of the almond extract until combined. Add the flour mixture and whisk until just combined (don't over mix).
  6. Pour half of the batter into the prepared pan and spread evenly to the edges.
  7. Sprinkle crushed panko over the cooled, roasted peaches and toss to coat the peaches. Arrange those peaches evenly in the batter and press down gently. Spread the rest of the batter on top, smooth with a spoon, then arrange the reserved peaches over the top of the batter, making sure to get wedges in the middle also.
  8. Combine the remaining 3 tbsp granulated sugar and the remaining 1/8 tsp almond extract in a small bowl, then sprinkle it evenly over the top of the cake batter.
  9. in the 350 degree oven, bake the cake until golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with just a few crumbs (not completely dry), 50 minutes to 1 hour, rotating the pan halfway through baking.
  10. Remove the pan from the oven to a wire rack and let cool for 5 minutes. Run a knife gently around the edges of the baked cake to loosen it, then remove the sides of the pan (bottom will still be attached).
  11. Let the cake cool completely on the rack, 2 to 3 hours. Slide a thin metal spatula between cake bottom and pan to loosen it, then slide cake onto your cake platter.

Notes

Tips and Stuff:

The original recipe calls for peach schnapps, but I used peach nectar. If your peaches are farm fresh and ultra juicy, you can skip the nectar/schnapps.

It also calls for unsalted butter, but I used what I have - salted butter.

Read the recipe thoroughly before beginning, as there are unusual instructions for dividing the peaches and soaking/roasting them.

Nutrition Information:
Yield: 8 Serving Size: 1 slice
Amount Per Serving: Calories: 338Total Fat: 15gSaturated Fat: 8gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 5gCholesterol: 81mgSodium: 443mgCarbohydrates: 48gFiber: 3gSugar: 31gProtein: 5g
© America's Test Kitchen
Category: Cakes

Filed Under: All Recipes, Cakes, Fruit Tagged With: America's Test Kitchen, cake, dessert, fruit, peach cake, peaches, Summer Peach Cake, The Cake Slice Bakers

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