I admit that I was disappointed in the result. In fairness, I think that my reaction had
more to do with the cake I had been imagining all of this time rather than any
flaw in the recipe. The cake I produced
from her recipe was firm and fine grained (rather pound cake-like, in fact) and
lightly sweet. I think I expected
something softer (honey cakes tend to be soft)…and sweeter. So
rather than adjust my expectations, I decided to try and come up with the cake
I wanted….one that kept Sinskey’s delicious flavors (honey and toasted walnut…with
just a touch of orange), but had the texture and sweetness that I had imagined.
As I began to look around, I was surprised to discover
that there weren’t a lot of honey cakes made with nut flour with which to
compare her recipe. I finally ran across
a plain honey cake at King Arthur. As I
compared the recipes it seemed to me that if I substituted walnut flour for the
whole wheat flour in the King Arthur recipe that I might have a cake that, with
the addition of a little vanilla and orange zest, would actually be the cake I wanted—loftier
from the addition of an egg…and softer and sweeter because it was sweetened
with all honey (and quite a bit more of it at that). I’m happy to report it worked
beautifully.
Neither cake in its original form is frosted. The King Arthur cake includes a scattering of almonds…and Sinskey decorates her cake with a few honey glazed walnuts. There is of course nothing wrong with this. I think that if you make this cake and serve it plainly—with maybe a light sifting of powdered sugar—that you will have a delicious little snack cake. But from the beginning, I have thought that this cake was crying out for some chocolate.
Not only does
the chocolate taste delicious with the honey and walnut flavors of the cake,
but the shiny chocolate and honey glaze I made looks fantastic as a background
for Sinskey’s honey glazed walnuts. The
cake still makes a fine afternoon snack…with a cup of tea… But with
the chocolate glaze it becomes elegant enough for a dinner party or other
special autumn occasion. And since honey
cakes have excellent keeping qualities (staying moist and delicious for several
days), you can make this cake at least a day ahead…leaving you free to work on
other things the day of your party.
Basically it’s a perfect autumn and holiday dessert….which is sort of
what I had in mind all along….
Honey & Walnut Cake
142g (1 1/2 c.) walnuts
112g (1 c.) all purpose flour
1/2 t. baking soda
1/2 t. salt
170g (12 T.) unsalted butter, at room
temperature (very soft)
Zest of 1 orange
340g (1 c.) honey
4 large eggs (at room
temperature)—beaten until smooth
60g (1/4 c.) yogurt
1 t. vanilla
Preheat the oven to 350°F. Spread the walnuts on a small baking sheet
and toast until golden and fragrant—about 8 minutes. Remove the nuts from the oven and let
cool. Using a rotary nut grinder, grind
the walnuts to a flour.
Reduce
the oven temperature to 325°F. Lightly butter
a 9-inch round cake pan (2 inches deep). Line the pan with a round of parchment. Butter the parchment. Flour the pan, tapping out the excess.
In a
medium bowl, whisk together the walnut and all purpose flours, baking soda, and
salt; set aside.
Place the butter and orange zest in the bowl of an electric
mixer. With the machine running, add the
honey. When the honey is mostly incorporated,
add the eggs in the same manner. Scrape down the sides and mix briefly until
the mixture is mostly smooth (there may still be flecks of butter visible…this
is OK.)
Fold in the reserved flour mixture. Stir in the yogurt and vanilla. Scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl to be sure everything is evenly moistened. After scraping, mix again just until you have a smooth, medium-thick batter. Over mixing will result in a dense, slightly greasy, cake.
Fold in the reserved flour mixture. Stir in the yogurt and vanilla. Scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl to be sure everything is evenly moistened. After scraping, mix again just until you have a smooth, medium-thick batter. Over mixing will result in a dense, slightly greasy, cake.
Scrape
the batter into the prepared pan.
Bake for 45 to 50 minutes, until the edge of the cake pulls back from
the edge of the pan and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out
clean. The cake will also be springy to
the touch. Remove from the oven and
place on a rack to cool for 10 to 15 minutes before removing from the pan. Cool the cake right side up on a wire
rack. The cake may be served plainly
(with a dusting of powdered sugar), or with a chocolate glaze.
Serves
12.
(Recipe
adapted from King Arthur and The Vineyard Kitchen by Maria Helm Sinskey)
Honey-Glazed Walnuts: Choose 12 attractive, walnut halves. Toast in a 350° oven until golden and fragrant (5 to 8 minutes). Remove from the oven and while still warm, place in a bowl and drizzle with 1/2 to 1 T. of honey. Stir until well coated. Transfer to a rack. Garnish the edge of the cake with the glazed walnut halves.
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2 comments:
This recipe looks great. It sounds delicious and I love the idea that you could make it a day ahead of time for a special occasion. I know from sad experience that being too ambitious with cooking plans for an occasion can result in great food, appreciative guests and a host too exhausted to enjoy either.
A few questions on details:
1) The yogurt...I presume this would be plain, full fat?
2) "Using a rotary nut grinder..." I am not familiar with this piece of gear. Could I use a blender? Spice grinder? Coffee grinder?
3) Is that whipped cream beside the slice of cake in the pictures? By the way, I love the detail of the last picture showing the slice with the first bite taken out of it.
Hi John, I don't know if my comments will be of much help at this point (although, since it's fall again...and this cake will be in season, maybe this comment will remind you to give it a try if you haven't already!). I apologize that I didn't respond at the time. Blogger quit notifying me of comments awaiting moderation over a year ago. I just recently discovered a huge backlog of comments and am trying to respond now.
So, in response:
1) Yes, the yogurt is plain (unsweetened) full fat. I make my own (have written two posts about it if it interests you), but commercial plain full fat is fine.
2) A rotary nut grinder is a pretty specific piece of equipment. It can be something that stands up on the counter...or a simple hand held item. There is a small hopper where you feed in the nuts and then a hand crank attached to a drum that finely chops/grates the nuts. If you Google "rotary nut grinder" you will see lots of models. The most similar piece of kitchen equipment is a hard cheese grater (the kind the server brings to your table and asks "would you like fresh grated Parmesan with that?"). In fact, I use mine (made by microplane) for both nuts and cheese. I wouldn't recommend using the blender or food processor. Neither of these will give you a uniform grind...and both will produce an oily mixture (and worse case scenario, nut butter). The rotary nut grinder with the finest blade will produce a fluffy, flour-like product. I haven't looked into it, but you might be able to purchase walnut flour. So many people are using nut flours as a way to replace wheat flour that they are becoming widely available. I have seen almond, hazelnut and pistachio available on line and in stores.
3) Yes--that is indeed whipped cream. My all purpose cake accompaniment. I add 2 T. of sugar and 1/2 t. of vanilla to a cup of whipping cream and whisk until I have soft peaks.
I'm glad you enjoyed the post (and pictures). Again, I apologize for my tardy response.
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