As I looked through my recipe files and
cookbooks, I was unable to find one that matched what I had envisioned (…surprising
when you consider that neither my recipe file, nor my cookbook collection, is
particularly small….). Ina Garten’s Sour
Cream Coffee cake from Barefoot Contessa Parties was a possibility. It is a big tube cake….and includes a
streusel….but has no chocolate. I was
also intrigued by Claudia Fleming’s Chocolate Marble cake in Rose Beranbaum’s Rose’s Heavenly Cakes. This one is a small sour
cream bundt cake (alas, without streusel) that features a ribbon of soft
cinnamon scented chocolate running through the middle of the cake.
Neither was exactly the cake I was looking
for, but of the two, I was more drawn to Fleming’s cake. The cake batters are actually nearly
identical, but Fleming’s has a higher percentage of sour cream and a lower percentage
of egg. These proportions make for a
softer crumb…which is what I wanted. In
the end, because I wanted a tad more structure to support a streusel, I made a
cake that struck a balance between Garten’s and Fleming’s: more egg than Fleming’s,
but less than Garten’s…and more sour cream than Garten’s, but less than Fleming’s.
And I have to say that I really liked the
resulting cake (as did everyone at the party!).
It is tender and slightly soft…but still has the nice, neatly sliceable
crumb one expects of a sour cream bundt/tube-style cake.
The mixture of cocoa and brown sugar that makes up the marbling liquefies in the oven and stays soft even after the cake has cooled. It is an unusual and delicious addition.
The mixture of cocoa and brown sugar that makes up the marbling liquefies in the oven and stays soft even after the cake has cooled. It is an unusual and delicious addition.
The streusel that I added...adapted from
another cake in Beranbaum’s book… is somewhat of a revelation. If you have made streusel-topped coffee cakes,
you know that sometimes the streusel sinks into the cake a bit. Or the cake doesn’t rise as much in the
center as it does on the edges. With this
cake, neither of these things is a problem because the streusel isn’t added
until the cake has been in the oven for half an hour. At that point, the cake has enough structure
and loft that it doesn’t sink under the added weight of the streusel. Furthermore, just enough of a crust has
formed on the cake that the streusel adheres, but doesn’t penetrate into the
cake itself. I was skeptical about the
streusel having enough time in the oven to brown properly. But I was pleasantly surprised. The streusel crisped nicely and turned a
lovely, golden brown.
Since I am a firm believer that one can
never have too many recipes for coffee cake, I am so pleased to add another “keeper”
recipe to my file. Because it is baked
in a large tube pan, it makes a cake that is big enough to feed a crowd…and
beautiful enough to set out on a buffet.
And while I love the flavor combination of chocolate, cinnamon and
pecans (it was perfect for the brunch), I have no doubt that other combinations
of flavors (different nuts, dried fruits, zests, other spices…) will make an appearance
in future renditions of this cake.
Sour
Cream Coffee Cake with Chocolate & Pecan Streusel
60 g. (4 T. plus 2 t.) golden
brown sugar
18 g. (3 T plus 1 t. )
non-alkalized cocoa
3/8 t. cinnamon
300 g. (2 1/2 c.) all-purpose
flour
3/4 t. salt
2 1/4 t. baking powder
1/2 t. baking soda
170 g. (12 T.) unsalted
butter, at room temperature
300 g. (1 1/2 c.) sugar
2 t. vanilla
3 large eggs, at room
temperature
325 g. (1 1/3 c.) sour cream
100 g. (1/2 c.) golden brown
sugar
40 g. (1/3 c.) all-purpose
flour
3/4 t. cinnamon
1/8 t. salt
2 T. unsalted butter, at room
temperature
55 g. (1/2 c.) toasted and
finely chopped pecans
Preheat the oven to 350°. Butter and flour a 10-cup capacity tube
pan. Set aside.
Combine the first three ingredients in a small bowl
and set aside.
Combine the flour, salt, baking powder and baking soda
in a small bowl and whisk to blend. Set
aside.
Cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy—this
will take 3 to 5 minutes at medium-high to high speed. Stop the mixer and scrape the bowl
occasionally. Beat in the vanilla. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, scraping
down the bowl in between each egg and waiting until the previous one is fully
incorporated before adding the next.
Stir in a third of the flour mixture.
Stir in half of the sour cream.
Fold in half of the remaining flour, followed by the remaining sour
cream, followed by the remaining flour mixture.
Dollop half of the batter (about 625 g) into the
prepared pan. Use a spatula or palette
knife to spread evenly so that the bottom of the pan is fully covered. Sprinkle the brown sugar-cocoa-cinnamon
mixture evenly over the batter, leaving a quarter inch border of batter showing
on both the inner edge and outer edge.
Dollop the remaining batter over all and spread to smooth out, making sure all the cocoa mixture is covered. Place in the center of the preheated oven and bake for 30 minutes.
Dollop the remaining batter over all and spread to smooth out, making sure all the cocoa mixture is covered. Place in the center of the preheated oven and bake for 30 minutes.
While the cake bakes, make the streusel (or, you may
make it ahead and set it aside).
Combine the brown sugar, flour, cinnamon and salt in a small bowl and whisk to blend. Rub in the butter until well distributed. With a fork, fluff in the chocolate and pecans. If the room is very warm, store in the refrigerator until ready to use.
Combine the brown sugar, flour, cinnamon and salt in a small bowl and whisk to blend. Rub in the butter until well distributed. With a fork, fluff in the chocolate and pecans. If the room is very warm, store in the refrigerator until ready to use.
When the cake has baked for 30 minutes, carefully
remove the cake from the oven
and quickly scatter the streusel evenly over the cake—a large spoon or a measuring cup makes this easier. Or, place all the streusel in a sheet of parchment and use it as a make-shift funnel to quickly and evenly strew the streusel over the cake.
However you choose to do it, work quickly and hold the spoon, measuring cup or parchment funnel close to the surface of the cake so that you can lay the streusel down lightly on the surface (rather than dropping it heavily from height). Return the cake to the oven and continue to bake until the cake is golden brown, springy to the touch and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean….another 20 to 30 minutes.
and quickly scatter the streusel evenly over the cake—a large spoon or a measuring cup makes this easier. Or, place all the streusel in a sheet of parchment and use it as a make-shift funnel to quickly and evenly strew the streusel over the cake.
However you choose to do it, work quickly and hold the spoon, measuring cup or parchment funnel close to the surface of the cake so that you can lay the streusel down lightly on the surface (rather than dropping it heavily from height). Return the cake to the oven and continue to bake until the cake is golden brown, springy to the touch and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean….another 20 to 30 minutes.
Let the cake cool for 20 to 30 minutes before running
a spatula around the outer edge and removing the sides from the pan. Let the cake cool completely before
attempting to remove the center ring of the pan.
Makes one large cake, serving about 16 people.
(Adapted from two cakes: Sour Cream Coffee Cake in Barefoot Contessa Parties by Ina Garten & Claudia Fleming’s Chocolate Streusel Coffee Cake
as adapted by Rose Beranbaum in Rose’s Heavenly Cakes)
In one photo the chocolate swirl is smiling, "make me...eat me...I'm delicious!"
ReplyDeleteNo doubt!!! I'll be making this, Paige! Thank you for a lovely post!
Ha Ha....very true. The original Fleming version (without streusel) was made in a bundt pan, so the cake is flipped over for service....and the curve is concave rather than convex. I guess you could say that by adding a streusel and baking it in a tube pan that I "turned that frown upside down!"... :)
ReplyDeleteMade the passion fruit ice cream! Divine!
ReplyDelete