1 Sketchy's Kitchen: April 2009 Archives

April 2009 Archives

The April 2009 challenge is hosted by Jenny from Jenny Bakes. She has chosen Abbey's Infamous Cheesecake as the challenge.

I thought about this for a while and asked some friends what type of cheesecake they would like.  I offered up two options.  Chocolate passion fruit or honey lemon lavender.
 
DSC_0065.jpgI checked Whole Foods and they actually had passion fruit.  It was the first time in two years I have found actual passion fruit in Richmond.  Usually you can only find a juice blend.  The actual fruit is much tarter then the juice - which is cut with apple juice.  This worked very nicely with the bittersweet chocolate.  To alter the texture of the cheesecake, I used half cream cheese and half marscarpone cheese.  The cheesecake was quite dense and solid.  It cut very well, and held its shape.  The crust stayed dry and had a really good texture.  Three quarters of the cheesecake was distributed to neighbors.  I Think I gave too much away.

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Since the cheesecake came together so easily, I decided to make a second one.  This time I made a honey lavender lemon cheesecake. I decided to experiment with this one. I made a lemon shortbread crust.  This was one of the easiest crusts I have ever made.  I made a little on the thick side, and I think that was a good idea.  Once cooked, the crust had a wonderful lemon taste, with the dry crumb of a shortbread cookie.  I used some lemon curd I had sitting in the ice box, mixed it with a small amount of the cheesecake mixture to prevent a bad memory from reoccurring.  I once made a cheesecake with a lemon curd swirl - when  I unmolded it, all the swirls separated and it fell apart.  Cooked cheesecake and liquid lemon curd. Adding some of the batter lets the lemon curd fully incorporate/cook with the rest of the cheesecake, while still keeping the swirl look.

DSC_0402.jpgThis cheesecake held its shape quite well, but was 100% creamier then the chocolate one.  It even won over the neighbor who said that lavender would taste like cleaner.  She loved it.  I think it is the best cheesecake I have ever made.  My wife even liked it, and she usually doesn't like cheesecake.

Unfortunately, I forgot take any pictures of the finished product


English Muffins

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DSC_0146.jpgBy request of on of Jen's friends, I'm going to make a post about my English muffins.  In an attempt to save some money, I started making English muffins for breakfast.  I wasn't sure how they would turn out at first, but they are quite easy to make, and can be completed in one day, which is always nice.

I'm using a recipe from A Bread Bakers Apprentice.  It has a handful of ingredients, and is very easy to complete.  I've made three batches of muffins, and they get easier each time.  No special equipment is needed, well.. you will need a cast iron griddle or skillet to cook them, besides that, it's all straight forward.

Ingredients are flour, butter, milk, yeast, salt, sugar, and corn meal.

DSC_0047.jpgThe recipe makes six large English muffins, the tops and bottoms are crispy, while the center is soft and full of nooks and crannies (if you open them correctly).  The corn meal is used for dusting, otherwise, they would never release from the parchment paper when you go to cook them.

To cook them - warm up a griddle and oven to 350 degrees.  Once it is up to temperature, drop three of the muffins on the griddle and cook for seven to eight minutes.  Flip them over and cook fro the same amount of time.  When you put them on the griddle, you may hear they crackle and pop, this is normal and nothing to be concerned about. The goal is to get a nice dark crust on the bottom before flipping.  They will come to a medium brown in two to three minutes, but may take up to eight minutes to get the nice rich brown you are looking for.  They are very resilient to burning, so if you keep an eye out for the color after 5 minutes, you should not have any problems.

DSC_0124.jpgOnce cooked on both sides, place the muffins in the oven for 8 minutes to insure the centers are cooked through.  Then cool on a rack until room temperature.  We keep ours chilled, and fork separate them before toasting in the morning.  To get the expected texture when toasting, you really need to use  fork to separate them, otherwise, you get a uniform smooth cut with no where for the butter/lemon curd/cheese/etc to go.

These can easily be completed in an afternoon.  When the little chef gets a little bigger, I think he would have fun helping me make these.  Since everything is done on the griddle, they are easy to shape, drop, and flip.

DSC_0130.jpgRecipe after the break ---

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This page is an archive of entries from April 2009 listed from newest to oldest.

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