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Sunday, December 25, 2022

Reindeer cake and merry Christmas!



Signing off 2022 with one last post for the year. 

Because, how could I fail in wishing you on the greatest season of all? 

For a child is born to us!

So, rejoice in celebrating the most significant event in history. 

May Jesus be your portion and hope in the days to come. 

From our Christmas table to yours, a very merry Christmas, friends🌲




******
"He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give him the throne of his father David." Luke 1:32

Sunday, October 23, 2022

Leopard print pumpkin cake



It seems like an insurmountable echo of time has passed since I've had a coherent group of words push through my fogged and fatigued mind. They sometimes seem few and far between, a lag I don't take much pride in. Although the words I type today, for my entertainment and not as much yours, rush in like rain. For what I can make out now, it's a mild storm, misted in spurts, albeit cloudy here and there. In short, let me deliver what needs to be said before my summary hazes into oblivion. Am I getting old? Let's not answer that.

The hunk of a cake displayed is one I made a year ago, consisting of three layers and a takeaway of my most favorite cake in the world. There's a symphony of eggs, butter, spice, flour and pumpkin which beautifully orchestrate into a browned, softly plush endeavor. It's abounds in a scent so heady- a mix of cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger and cloves-something known to this part of the world as pumpkin spice. Take me seriously when I tell you you're spot on for air freshener, come the next 24 hours. 

A fascinating point to note is the 14 ounce can of squashed vegetable that pulls in for a flavor pretty high up the rank in the dessert world. My annual Thanksgiving spin on the same, complete with four layers,  and drizzles of caramel interlaced with cream cheese frosting, make second/ third /fourth serving comebacks simply mandatory.

Canned pumpkin is what I'd recommend in this recipe. It supplicates a fair amount of fluff and moistened tight crumb which is hard to replace. As for the more industrious of you who'd want to manually make your own puree, I  can't vouch for a similar outcome.

Give it a try. Or stare at the beauty laid out for you now; decked in hand-done leopard print decor and marshmallow paste flowers.

I'm linking to the recipe there↓ 
since a second edition of this recipe is rather unnecessary.




******
"The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit."-



Wednesday, September 7, 2022

Broken wheat payasam/kheer/pudding

I am a little bit obsessed with this subject here. Could it be that's it's served to balance the monumental spread popular to a part of the world I call my own? You know, those times when I spoke of food fit for kings and 15 inch leaves that serve as plates. Or is it special in that it can either be sipped or scooped, eaten hot or cold(?)...both anomalies in the dessert world. 

For those of you worried on pronunciation, payasam is pie-uh-sum with not much emphasis on any of the three syllables. It's a type of wet pudding and kind of rolls through the mouth as the word rolls off the tongue. Smooth as silk, you'll see.

Often marked by grandeur, payasam is the cap item of a meal; a cereal/grain staple slow cooked in some kind of milk and the paramount ending to festivities and celebrations alike. Instances on where you'd encounter it could be at a birthday party, wedding, and, no doubt, the event it's commemorating today, Onam, Kerala's most beloved holiday. A tumbler of payasam is as much a part of regional folklore as it is a ritualistic culmination to many a lavish feast.  

The harvest merrymaking not only beckons a multitude of condiments, sides and rice, but also a fair amount of payasam, two or three in the least, each occupying a rightful place on curry studded banana leaves.

Crushed grains, burrowed in coconut milk, ghee and drenched in jaggery, finish into the most blissful porridge. Some might think this a glorified bowl of Cream of Wheat, because basically, when the rest of the world boils grains in milk and sugar, it's breakfast. However, the same simmered at length with smidgeons of spice and ghee are duly reminiscent of old world Kerala cuisine, and can be quite unforgettable.

Start to finish, payasam prep and process should not take more than forty minutes using a pressure cooker, even less in the Instant Pot. A notable point to mention is the efficiency rendered by my I. Pot on cooking a montage of curries, rice and a sweet dish, in quick succession, all while I watched the season finale of Stranger Things. Again.

The custard like quality of kheer/payasam is what gives it its universal appeal. Combined with the velvet lush of coconut milk, and nutty flavors cracked wheat yields, sweet nourishment takes on a whole new meaning.

In conclusion, If you're at loss for a lavish dessert, look no further.

So also, if you ever you need to adopt a holiday...you get the point.

Happy Onam folks🌴

May your joy be boundless and your bellies full. 
 


Ingredients:
  • 3 tbsp ghee
  • 2 tbsp frozen coconut slices
  • 2 tbsp cashews
  • ¾ cup broken wheat
  • 3 cups water
  • 350 gms. jaggery, shaved or broken into small pieces
  • 1 can unsweetened organic coconut milk
  • ½ tsp cardamom powder (or 2 cardamoms crushed)
Directions:
  • Select saute feature on Instant Pot and set to high. Pour ghee into the pot.
  • Add coconut slices and cashews and lightly brown, about 1 minute. Using a slotted spoon, skim  pieces from the ghee and set aside.
  • Place broken wheat into the same pot and saute using the leftover ghee until slightly roasted, not more than a minute.
  • Add 2 cups water, and the jaggery. Keep on saute mode until jaggery is melted and it becomes a uniform sauce.
  • Add remaining 1 cup of water. Turn off saute mode
  • Secure the lid, close the pressure valve and cook at high (manual) pressure for 10 minutes.
  • Allow the IP to naturally release steam.
  • Open the lid, mash and stir until the wheat is slightly crushed and tender.
  • Pour in coconut milk. Again, with saute turned on, bring everything to a steady boil, continuously stirring, until contents become slightly thick, about 10 minutes. 
  • Once you reach an almost loose pudding consistency, switch off the heat.
  • Stir in the cardamon powder.
  • Sprinkle cashews and coconut slices over kheer.
  • Serve warm or chill in refrigerator a couple of hours and serve cold.
* Optionally, you can add more spoons of ghee- totally depends on what you're feeling for the day- no one's passing judgement and I highly recommend this approach.


Payasam/kheer recipes~
******
"I will make you a great nation; I will bless you and make your name great; And you shall be a blessing." Genesis 12:2

Friday, September 2, 2022

Strengthened marshmallow fondant




As I'm cycling through quite the stack of half finished texts, adding to and waking up the few which have been laying in perpetual draft mode, I realize how grateful I am for this space I've spoken from for more than ten years- on food, methodical recipe sharing and ...ahem...unwelcome periodic life lesson snippets.

A record of recipes require stories, in the least, general descriptions of what and why. Pictures brighten the storytelling. In my case, the several piled in cue, waiting to see light, should take me through a good hundred days worth of narrative content.

Likewise, the need to articulate, animate, level the imbalance of unspoken thoughts and recite fragments of life/mind/kitchen remains a steadfast one. A lack I shouldn't wax over much since the fur child who wanders our empty rooms takes in my every word like it's nobody's business.

Perhaps this piece is for posterity and the Two People that regularly lived under my roof. You know, those once Littles, who liked making samosas and chocolate sandwich cookies with me, whom I read favorite  books to and whose days were played back during downtimes and dinner. 

Nevertheless, there's something to be said over the bliss of not having dirty clothes on floors, corners -everywhere besides the laundry room (hooray!). 

In the natural progression of life stages, the baby adults I once beget are in their away-at-school stage, far from our minute to minute dialogue and end of day conversations. I wonder, however, who else but mom can cheer you on while being the sounding board to daily rants? Therein lies point Number One on invaluable uses of the cell phone.

Not complaining...because even though it seems like loss, I am not lost. The excitement of new seasons brings ideas, directives, and images which I hope fall in flow from my fingers through blog doors. 

Above all, I'm not going to downplay the vainglory in showing off cake photography I did nearly a year ago. You think the real reason I'm penning down this post with fury?

I've spoken at length on the intricacies of homemade fondant. This underestimated type of icing can be used in a list of ways. In fact, with the right flexibility, stretch and tools, your sculpt-and-mold skills reach higher levels than countless pottery classes ever could. There's no dearth to the mastery fortified edible clay can yield. 

Hands down, dough made from marshmallows and sugar is the tastiest alternative to store-bought fondant. It gives pastries a fine finish, and can often be the best plan B in circumstances a buttercream job goes awry.

The fine white powder known as tylose/Gum-Tex/CMC is a dream in that it provides a hastened drying process to this decorator's medium. Your ability in punching out not less than a dozen sugarpaste superheroes and the assorted bouquet of flowers will make many a birthday child squeal in delight. 

If anything, I feel driven to run through an instructional on perfect projects using mmf. It's a plus both ways: I display more pictures and your expertise soon rivals Michelangelo's.

Ingredients:
  • 4-6 tbsp vegetable shortening 
  • 1 16 ounce bag white mini marshmallows
  • 3 tbsp water
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • pinch salt
  • 32 ounces (2 pounds or 8 cups) confectioner's sugar
  • ½ tsp tylose powder( Tylopor or CMC)
  • gel food color(optional)
Directions:
  • Grease a large heat safe bowl and rubber spatula with shortening. Place marshmallows in the bowl and microwave for 1½ to 2 minutes. Stir and heat for an additional thirty seconds if unmelted pieces remain in mixture. Mixture should be melted and flowy.
  • Grease the bowl and dough hook of your stand mixer with shortening, place 1 cup confectioners sugar into the bowl, along with the vanilla and salt.
  • Add 1 tbsp water to the marshmallow mixture and gently ease out of the bowl using a greased spatula and pour into the stand mixer bowl. Add 2 tbsp of shortening, and gently mix on low, using the bowl shield to catch any flying sugar as you  combine ingredients. 
  • After a minute or until mixture seems combined, stop and add in a half cup of sugar and the tylose powder and mix on medium speed. Continue adding half cup fulls of sugar until mixture is elastic and smooth. Be careful not to use all the icing sugar as too much icing sugar can make the fondant dry. It is ready when dough feels pliable and ready to roll. 
  • If you need different colors from one batch, divide into pieces and knead in desired gel coloring, using your hands. Smooth and shape into discs. Add in small amounts of sugar if dough starts feeling tacky.
  • Coat each disc with shortening and wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Place in an airtight container.
  • Allow fondant to sit overnight(12-24 hours) for the texture will firm up. 
*If you need some of your fondant soft, take out the desired amount before adding the tylose, cover and set aside. Sprinkle in tylose to the remaining batch. You may not need the full half tsp, since the portion is smaller. Tylose makes fondant harden fast, so be sparing with it. You can always add more, depending on the project.
*Can be stored at room temperature for two weeks. After that, refrigerate for upto four months.
* To soften after taking out of refrigeration, place fondant in microwave and heat for 10-15 seconds.

This was probably my most adventurous project per date. The logo and stand up toppers needed time and much detail oriented cutting.



A strong MMF's merit lies in the fact it can transform meh into marvelous, making jaws drop, guaranteed.

Sunset and sand with The Two
******

"And [I pray] that the eyes of your heart [the very center and core of your being] may be enlightened [flooded with light by the Holy Spirit], so that you will know and cherish the hope [the divine guarantee, the confident expectation] to which He has called you, the riches of His glorious inheritance in the saints (God’s people)..."~ Ephesians 1:18-23 AMP

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Sponge cake


It's 106°F outside. As I'm sitting here, in the comfort of my home, I contemplate on the handful ways I should not, but most probably will, be altering the temperature inside to match the stinging inferno outdoors. Can I mention again it's 106?

It's a battle. A dilemma where you absolutely know flourish and countenance exponentially rise near heat emitting appliances. That breakthrough experiments in the kitchen, fueled solely by fiery passion, can in no way be stalled by three digit forecasts. It's the lifeline-tasks involving the stove, oven, air fryer on occasion, and the act of following recipes, deliberating on cake orders and manufacturing details going on those orders, which bask in a strange sweat inducing, labor intensive sanity. 
So what if, most of the time, the kitchen is as hot as my Southwest backyard?  

Though today's update needs no present action, except the fact it might be tonight's dessert after I get done typing this spiel. Gleaning through my desktop, perusing old recipes and cataloguing pictures brought a few jewels to my attention, not to mention the fact I really should publish my own book. Don't you think?

It would be exactly a year ago this cake was created for a 11 year old affectionate for tyedye.  On viewing every how-to video Youtube suggested, and breathing through the panic, I took a brush and painted a flawless cake completely psychedelic.

What's inside the 10 inch wonder might amaze you more, though. A soft, unassuming stack of tender sponge, bedded amongst caramelized goodies and satiny buttercream. Constructions that might take pages to gloat over, but, I'll digress, and offer only the next few sentences.

A dire mention should be the silk feel, almost wholly dependent on whipping eggs-sugar to dreamy ribbons, something you keep in mind at the start as you come to a finish such as this.

Don't let the fluffy crumb fool you. Sponge build here is super solid and optimally lends itself to a much greater good. You'll see ample opportunity to extend this baked glory in any project your heart is set on. 

You can use it in structured, layered pieces as in the pictures shown. 
You can strew multiple fruits and cream in a bevy of chaotic ensembles. 
You can cut it up and trifle pudding it. 
You can whip up coffee gateau and tiramisu.  
You can pair naked slices with hot coffee. 

Indeed, it's the perfect shapeshifting blueprint, customizable for countless possibilities, even flavors.

Say hello to your new superhero of pastries, wherein all surety, you wear the cape.

Ingredients:
  • 8 large eggs
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • pinch salt
  • ¼ cup melted butter
  • 2 tbsp hot water
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
Directions:
  • Preheat oven to 325° F.
  • Whip eggs in a stand mixer on high speed until light and airy.
  • Gradually add sugar and continue to beat until thick and fluffy, about 8 minutes. The mixture should ribbon off the whisk and fade into batter in 1-2 seconds.
  • In a separate mixing bowl, sift flour, baking powder and salt.
  • Combine melted butter and water in a large cup.
  • With mixer on low speed, fold in the dry ingredients and liquids alternatively to the egg mixture, in three increments, beginning and ending with flour. Do not overbeat. Mix in vanilla extract.
  • Bake in prepared(greased and floured) pans. This yields 2 round 8" cakes.
  • Bake for 25-30 minutes or until center is done.
  • Allow to cool in pans for 5 minutes, then invert onto wire racks and cool completely.


Notes:
Bake immediately- don't allow the cake layers to sit too long after the flour is folded in.
Once cooled, wrap layers in plastic cling film and freeze for 24 hours before assembling into layers. It will hold much better and not crumble. Unfrosted cake will freeze well for up to two weeks.
This particular project had four layers of sponge, which means I doubled the recipe. Frosting was the easy SM buttercream recipe and the decorations, marshmallow fondant . Lollipops, spheres and rounds were chocolate melted and placed in molds.





******

"The way of the righteous is like the first gleam of dawn,
    which shines ever brighter until the full light of day." Proverbs 4:18


Friday, June 3, 2022

Lemon lavender cupcakes

Using floral ingredients in cooking was never really appealing to me. In all truth, when biting into a piece of pastry, the last thing I'd want is it to have mouthfeels tantamount to a spring bouquet. And yet, inevitably, here we are.

On reaching the discovery that small intentions can lead to greater experiences- the bigger life lesson spurring its way into this bold project- I digressed. What if I toned down the floral component and leveled in a bit of citrus? Nonetheless, those minor adjustments and a judicious hand, remembering a little goes a long way, gave way to a recipe many and their mothers would approve of.

The first batch of lemon lavender cupcakes were part of a custom order I did a year ago. Dialing down what was prescribed, in this case, lavender buds, brought about the mild level exotic to an indulgently fresh cupcake, one which can be terribly addicting.

The combination is a charming one. Bright notes of lemon leveled amidst lavender sprinkles create a cupcake so beautiful, with an admirable amount of intensity, having you crave for more than just one.

The pictures shown are with Swiss meringue buttercream, but a good cream cheese frosting would work just as brilliantly.

Ingredients:
(recipe adapted from The Cake Blog)
  • 1 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 1 tsp dried lavender buds, lightly crushed
  • 6 tbsp unsalted butter, room temperature
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 6 tbsp sour cream
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tbsp grated lemon zest
  • 3 large egg whites, room temperature
  • ¼ cup milk
  • 2 tbsp water
  • 1½ tbsp fresh lemon juice 
Directions:
  • Preheat the oven to 350°F and line your cupcake pan with cupcake liners.
  • Mix the flour, baking powder, salt, and crushed lavender buds in a mixing bowl together and set aside.
  • In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy, about 3-5 minutes. 
  • Add the sour cream, vanilla extract and lemon zest to this mixture.
  • Beat in the egg whites and thoroughly combine.
  • In a measuring cup, whisk together the milk, water, and lemon juice
  • In three increments, alternate adding the dry ingredients with the milk mixture to the butter/egg batter, starting and ending with the dry ingredients. Be careful not to overmix. Scrape down sides of bowl with a spatula between additions.
  • Fill cupcake liners about ¾ full. Bake for 17-20 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean, slight crumbs are ok.
  • Remove cupcakes from oven and allow to cool for 2-3 minutes, then place them on wire racks to finish cooling.
  • Frost as desired.


******
"When anxiety was great within me, your consolation brought me joy." -Psalms 94:19


Saturday, April 16, 2022

One bowl chocolate cake



Apologies in admitting that this is nothing precisely new. And it's not because I am in lack of ideas to share-not in the least. But the fact it's been repeated as a dessert/snacking/I want it now cake, flecked in- aaahhh- the fiercest of battles on who gets the last slice, gave me no other choice than to have you share in on our joy.

There are many plusses to having a cake so versatile. Honorable mention would most certainly be the minimal effort means in reaching an end of absolute bliss.

It's in the rarest of circumstances you come across desserts of such caliber, replete with indulgent richness, astounding chocolate flavor, delicate crumb, all from the simplest of instructionals.

Decor specifics -ganache topped, buttercream stacked, simply sans- are further ways to amp the blueprint and make it your own. 

Moreover, the fact your start bowl is the same as your end bowl should be incentive enough to gather ingredients and preheat that oven.

Meanwhile, the fuss in completing an Easter table is perhaps made a notch more gratifying with a chocolate cake recipe worthy of the call, carrying an intention to make your Resurrection Sunday as special as was always meant to be.

Happy Easter friends❤️

Ingredients:
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 2 cups sugar
  • ¾ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 ½ tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 cup buttermilk, shaken
  • ½ cup vegetable oil
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 cup hot water
Directions:
  • Preheat oven to 350°. Prepare cake pans ( either 2 -9 inch pans or 4 -6 inch pans) with butter and lightly dust with flour.
  • Stir the flour, sugar, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer with the paddle attachment on low speed until combined. 
  • Carefully add all the wet ingredients from buttermilk to vanilla extract. Scrape down bowl and beat on medium speed until just combined.
  • Reduce speed and carefully pour in hot water. Stir with a spatula and thoroughly mix through.
  • Pour batter into prepared pans and bake for 30-35 minutes, or when a cake tester comes out clean. 
  • Cool in pans for 20 minutes before inverting them onto cooling racks to cool completely.
  • Frost with icing of choice.
Easter recipes:

Rocky the dog. Always on guard duty🐶

******
"Jesus said to her, "I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die. Do you believe this?' " John 11:25-26

Saturday, April 9, 2022

Vanilla panna cotta with strawberry gelée

Prolonged workdays and late afternoon lethargy (commencing right about midmorning) grant me little time to glance at this space I so fiercely hold dear to my heart. 

Such instances call for a well meaning recipe to save myself from unmitigated burnout and the horror of not being enthralled at what's on my plate. Believe me,  reveling in slack is a scary predicament, in my case, with an even scarier potential for diminished satisfaction, on doing things which, well, satisfy me most. 

Looking to the bright, and there is one, is the scintillating side of the coin. Because, you see, there really could never be a dearth of recipes/pictures/ food/ relentless gluttony under my roof and the ambitious things I bring to the table.
All in all, I do think we have a fair chance of survival.

Apart from the fact this lovely blueprint is enough reason to be sitting here today, it did awaken every dormant tastebud in me and for it, I am grateful. 
And like I've done for the past 10 years- 🙌🏼 yes, we passed BFMK's 10th birthday- I felt it appropriate in sharing with you, so your screens can light up on par to my extreme cravings for a dreamy cup of dairy.

Despite that it easily classifies into the "fancy collective" of confections, panna cotta is a non laborious, cooked pudding. Instructional relies solely on a known, foolproof method of thickening cream thus creating a gloriously luxe texture which belies its very simplicity.

Layering possibilities are endless, where largely fruit laden jellies are top brass contenders. Here, strawberries remarkably balance their velvet fundament. A slight jiggle creme and berry studded translucence partake in the appeal, on sight and in flavor. In short, a brilliant compilation bearing stunning culinary harmony. 

Considering how elemental assemblage is, your chief concern rests mainly on the time frame in which one tier holds the other, sans seeping or breakdown.

A little bit of foresight and cautious condiment engineering will steer you to a dessert you'll want to pull out many times of the year. 
One worthy of the fine napkins, and tops on your list of things to eat while catching up on Netflix "recommended".

It's not the exact recipe, but as you can see, it's a beaut in presentation and it surely stirred some wild cravings in me.

Vanilla panna cotta~
Ingredients:
  • 1 packet unflavored powdered gelatin
  • 2 cups cold heavy cream
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Directions:
  • Sprinkle gelatin over 1 tbsp cold heavy cream.  Stir  to combine and set aside 3 minutes to soften. Heat in microwave for 5-10 seconds until gelatin is dissolved.
  • Heat the remaining cream mixture with sugar over medium heat. Do not boil. Once the sugar is dissolved, remove from heat. Add vanilla.
  • Pour the gelatin and milk into the hot cream mixture. Stir to dissolve all the gelatin.
  • Allow surface to become cool to the touch, approximately 30 minutes.  
  • Pour cream mixture into two ounce glasses or custard cups . Chill until slightly firm, about 2-4 hours. In the meantime, make your strawberry layer.

Strawberry gelee~
Ingredients:
  • 1 ½ tsp unflavored powdered gelatin
  • 2 tbsp cold water
  • 1 cup strawberries, cut into small pieces
  • ¼ cup
  • ¼ strawberries quartered (optional)
Directions:
  • Sprinkle gelatin over cold water. Heat in microwave for 5-10 seconds until gelatin is dissolved.
  • Place 1 cup cut strawberries and sugar in a small saucepan over medium high heat until strawberries and sugar have become a pulp-like and liquid in form. Remove from heat.
  • Stir the gelatin into the strawberry mixture. Combine well.
  • Strain mixture and allow to cool to room temperature, making sure mixture doesn't set.
  • Divide the cooled gelee over the set panna cottas. Angle in the fridge for assymetrical effect.
  • Add in one or two quartered strawberries into the top layer(optional).
  • Chill 6-8 hours or preferably overnight.




More puddings here:
******

"Gracious words are like a honeycomb, sweetness to the soul and health to the body."- Proverbs 16:24


Monday, January 31, 2022

Sponge cake


It's kind of a disadvantage that a cake made In December of the previous year comes up for view at the close of January 2022, i.e, the following year (timeline specifics meant for prospective grandkids)
More importantly, since I haven't wished you yet- happy 2022, reader🎊 Although I fumble much, I truly appreciate your audience.

That being said, I really don't intend on delays. In a perfect world, I'm the consummate recipe writer/blogger, publishing as fast and furiously as the promptings in my belly. And since we know this hasn't been the case, we can only hope the perpetual reel unwinding in my brain arrives typed on screen in greater frequency.

So, today, as you gaze upon the dolled up images, it's the content within that stands pretty tall in the story. A protagonist that cannot be downplayed, and a blueprint that's worked to near perfection in the several years I've been baking/eating/serving/selling cake.

While it's as crazy as fluff, with a lightness that can only be taken on as other-worldly, sponge cake does not lack in flavor bomb quality. You simply can't stop at one piece, with or without adornment.

Moreover,  it stood up in an ambitious 4 layer display with strawberries and whipped cream indelibly hoisted within. All for a commemorative 80th birthday.

I shall desist on expanding at length. The fact that this is a combination of several recipes I've been keen on from the time I'd realized one can never have enough of vanilla cake should suffice for the end -of-month post.

Therefore, without further adieu, let's cut some cake.

Nearing Valentine's Day, could there be a sentiment any more perfect than this? 

Sponge cake:
  • ½ cup unsalted butter
  • 1 cup milk
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • 2½ tsp baking powder
  • ⅛ tsp salt
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 ½ cup sugar
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • 3 tsp vegetable oil
Directions:
  • Preheat oven to 350°F with the rack centered.
  • Place butter and milk in heatproof bowl or measuring cup and microwave until hot, but not boiling. Keep aside to cool slightly.
  • Sift dry ingredients, from flour to salt.
  • Whip eggs for thirty seconds on high until foamy. Stream in sugar and beat mixture until thick, white and tripled in volume, about 5-7 minutes. 
  • Gently add in flour in thirds, mixing gently between additions.
  • Add vanilla extract and oil to milk mixture,
  • Use a scoop of the batter to lighten or temper the milk mixture, Whisk the mixture and slowly add it back into the batter. Beat at low speed until incorporated. Scrape down sides and beat on medium for another 20 seconds.
  • Pour cake batter into prepared pans. Bake for 25-30 minutes or until toothpick inserted comes clean. Cool in pan for 10 minutes. Flip over onto wire rack and allow to cool completely.
  • Decorate as desired or serve dusted with powdered sugar.

Similar recipes:

******
"You love him even though you have never seen him. Though you do not see him now, you trust him; and you rejoice with a glorious, inexpressible joy. The reward for trusting him will be the salvation of your souls." 1 Peter 1:8,9