High Road Artist

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June 15, 2012 by Jeane George Weigel

CAKES, CAKES and More CAKES!

I traveled to Vashon Island in Puget Sound, just outside of Seattle, to meet with family and honor my mother on her 90th birthday. We’ve had land there since my great-great grandparents and our own little cabin since the early 1960s. Mom sort of grew up there, as we all did I guess, so it was the place she wanted to be.

As you all might have guessed, CAKE was to be a big part of my mother’s 90th birthday celebration, and my niece, Amy, was in charge. And let me tell you, she was the right person for the job. Amy is a great cook and a talented baker. But beyond that, she brings heart to the task, something not every cook is able to do. She started baking on Saturday night and continued into Sunday, the day of the party. Remember, this is a cabin without all the fancy tools we’re accustomed to in our homes, so there were some special challenges.

She made Pinapple Upside-Down Cupcakes and a Vintage Southern Tea Room Caramel Cake. Sound good? They were. And she has generously agreed to share her recipes with us here. So, bakers, from Amy to you, I give you:

Pineapple Upside-Down Cupcakes
from Taste of Home, April/May 2007

6 tbsp butter, cubed
1 cup packed light brown sugar
2 tbsp light corn syrup
1 small pineapple, peeled, cored and cut into 1/2 inch slices
12 maraschino cherries, well drained
3 eggs
2 cups sugar
1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup (8 ounces) sour cream
2 tsp pure vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
Whipped cream, optional

Line greased jumbo muffin cups with waxed paper (optional); grease paper and set aside. In a small saucepan, melt butter over low heat; stir in brown sugar and corn syrup. Cook and stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves. Remove from the heat. Spoon 1 tablespoonful into each muffin cup; top each with a pineapple slice and a cherry.

In a large mixing bowl, beat eggs and sugar until thickened and lemon-colored. Beat in the oil, sour cream and vanilla until smooth. Combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Add to egg mixture; mix well.

Fill muffin cups two-thirds full. Bake at 350 for 28-32 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool for 5 minutes before inverting onto wire racks to cool completely. Garnish with whipped cream if desired.

Yield: 1 dozen jumbo cupcakes

Vintage Southern Tea Room Caramel Cake
from A Passion for Baking by Marcy Goldman

Cake
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
2 cups sugar
2 tbsp cornstarch
1 tbsp baking powder
1/8 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup unsalted butter, cut into chunks
3 large eggs
1 egg yolk
2 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
1 tsp butter extract, optional
1 1/3 cups warm buttermilk

Brown Sugar Frosting
1 cup unsalted butter
2 cups firmly packed light brown sugar
1 tsp baking soda
2 tsp corn syrup
Pinch salt
1 tsp pure vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 350. Generously spray two 9-inch round cake pans with nonstick cooking spray and place pans on a large, parchment paper-lined baking sheet.

In a mixing bowl, place flour, sugar, cornstarch, baking powder, baking soda, and salt and blend ingredients. Add butter and blend to break up butter into dry ingredients to get a grainy mixture. Blend in eggs, egg yolk, vanilla, butter extract, and buttermilk to make a batter, scraping sides and bottom of bowl occasionally to ensure batter is evenly blended.

Spoon batter into prepared pans. Bake until cakes spring back when gently pressed with fingertips, 30-35 minutes.

Cool in pans 15 minutes before unmolding onto a wire rack to cool.

For Brown Sugar Frosting, place butter, brown sugar, baking soda, corn syrup, salt, and vanilla in a 3-quart saucepan. Cook over low heat until mixture thickens and reaches soft ball stage (234* F). If you don’t have a thermometer, cook mixture 20-30 minutes until a bit of mixture seems to hold together like soft taffy when dropped on a cold plate. You can increase heat to make it cook faster, but slow and steady makes for better results.

Remove frosting from heat and let it cool and thicken. You can whip half the frosting with a mixer on medium speed 2 minutes and then on high 1 minute to lighten. Use this to frost two layers of cake together; it will spread like frosting. Pour remaining slightly warm frosting over top layer of cake and let it drip down*. This cake freezes well.

Serves 12-16

*I had an issue with the Brown Sugar Frosting turning out the correct consistency (The sugar didn’t dissolve completely and it was rather thick.). To improvise, I used about 1/3 of this frosting between the two cakes. I mixed up a buttercream frosting (recipe below) and also spread this between the two cakes (a layer on top of the Brown Sugar Frosting). Once the two cakes are assembled together, spread buttercream frosting over the top and sides. Finish off with your choice of decor – We used flowers.

Buttercream Frosting

3 cups confectioner’s sugar, sifted
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
1-2 tbsp whipping cream

Cream butter and sugar together. Add vanilla and whipping cream until consistency is easy to spread on cake.

Love to you all,
Jeane


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About Me

About High Road Artist IMG 9461 150x150I am Jeane George Weigel, a working artist living in the mountains of northern New Mexico, and I do not think you and I are so different.

Every single one of us longs to know what we ache for, to “follow our bliss” as Joseph Campbell famously put it. You may find yours as an artist, a writer, or a teacher. But I am convinced we all yearn to live what is in our hearts. Some of us spend a lifetime discovering what that is. Some never find it.

This blog is about a journey of self-discovery, yours and mine. I write about the experience of living an artist’s life and share musings and photos as this living experiment unfolds. It is my hope you’ll join in the conversation by writing to me about your lives and I dearly hope something, here, will inspire you.

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