Baking Wishlist: Bhagsu Cake

A few years ago, my friend Sara contacted me from India. Her urgent message was about Bhagsu cake, a dessert she had tried and become completely enraptured with. She insisted that I re-create it for her Stateside so that she could prolong the joy even after her trip was over.

After some research, I found out these cakes are a localized version of a UK-born dessert called Millionaire’s Shortbread. It is really popular in Bhagsu, so they must really know what they are doing. Maybe it has something to do with those sacred cows.

This week’s Food52 contest is ‘Chocolate and Spice.’ The first thing that came to my mind was an idea I’ve had to inject some more Indian flavor into this otherwise traditional dessert that consists of three simple layers: shortbread, caramel and chocolate. Since my holiday confection’s class, I’ve had a handle on vegan, coconut-based caramel. The cookies I use for my cheesecake crust are perfect for the bottom layer, and have the added bonus of being gluten-free. The chocolate is a no-brainer. So, my goal is to get through the Vegan Shop-Up this weekend, complete my special Valentine’s orders, and somehow have a recipe submitted before the Wednesday deadline! Stay tuned.

Holiday Confections Class Recap: When a Mistake is the Missing Ingredient

Earlier this month, I taught a holiday confections class at The Brooklyn Kitchen. We made peppermint caramels, maple-glazed hazelnut halva, sugarplums (my favorite) and chocolate toffee brittle.

When I teach, it feels like I learn just as much as the students. For example, while demonstrating the caramel recipe, I became distracted (talking + cooking = sweat) and added the coconut milk all at once. It was supposed to be in two parts; one at the beginning and the rest after the mixture reached 230 degrees. So we also made a second, true-to-recipe batch.

It wasn’t necessary–the first one turned out perfectly.

I should have pretended to do it on purpose. Earlier, I’d told the class how it’s a misconception that baking/pastry/dessert-making is an “exact science.” On the contrary, my best discoveries are sometimes made through improvisation, tinkering and mistakes–and this was a perfect example.

Sugarplums (left) & maple-glazed hazelnut halva (right). Thank you to Nashville Wraps for the perfect, 100% recycled candy boxes.

Later in the class, one of the students added some whole hazelnuts to a bowl of confectioner’s sugar to make the maple glaze. I caught her just before she was going to add the syrup and vanilla. After explaining that the hazelnuts were to decorate after glazing, she fished them out of the sugar and placed them aside.

After glazing, each piece of halva was topped with a hazelnut–now coated with a light layer of confectioner’s sugar. The result was more beautiful, elegant halva. The sugar gave the candy a snowy, wintry look and a French patisserie feel.

Just like mutations create beneficial properties so that species can evolve, a chance mistake caused an unforseen improvement I never would have thought of otherwise. Next time I make this recipe, I will incorporate this new step.

Thank you students! You have no idea how much you inspire me.

Holiday Recap: Greek Rice & Seitan Pie

I love my family more than anything in the world, but after braving the gizzards and innards of Thanksgiving Day, I decided to have my own holiday feast.

A week later, the menu was set. I’d already OD’ed on the oven-charred vegetables, heavy sauces and starchy sides of the season, so I went for a light-yet-festive Mediterranean theme. The centerpiece was going to be seitan kebabs.

On feast day, I prepared a marinade and opened the packets of seitan expecting solid blocks, like tofu, that I could cut-up. What I found resembled shredded chicken. Skewer that?! I took a deep breath, stepped back, and went to my bookshelf. Read more…