Saturday, February 23, 2013

Cakie takes on Smitten Kitchen's Salted Caramel Brownies

I noted some inspiration from Smitten Kitchen in my last post, and I've been holding onto it all week, just waiting for the weekend to arrive! My photos aren't as pretty, but these brownies are seriously, dangerously delicious.


I've never made my own caramel before, but it was surprisingly easy!


Most of the cream sold in Japanese supermarkets is whipped, and I would guess perhaps artificial. I only found two non-whipped options, and the one that I chose seems to have set fine in the caramel (although I'm still not sure if it's actually heavy cream or not!).


This looked more attractive before cooking than after.


It kind of cracked, and was a much lighter colour than Smitten Kitchen's. But cutting it into heart shapes increased the attractiveness by about 150%.


Unfortunately that left a lot of scrap edges though...


In order to avoid consuming half of the slab myself in aid of "cleaning up the leftovers," I decided to cut a large section into boring old rectangles. Once you taste them you don't care what they look like anyway. You'll be concentrating on how to sneak a second one ;)

PS. See the sneaky caramel heart? <3

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Salted Caramel and Chocolate Inspiration

It's a long while since I've checked into the blogosphere to see what my favourites have been up to.

Now that I've looked, I just have to say: how AWESOME do these salted caramel brownies by smittenkitchen look? Inspired.


Big Cake, Small Oven

My little Japanese oven can handle cupcakes quite well, although they tend to rise more evenly if I turn the tray part-way through baking.

The first time I cooked a larger cake was a learning experience. Fruit is pretty expensive here, but I can still buy peaches in a can so I decided to try making my fruit and cinnamon cake recipe (also delicious with apple, but apples are pricey in Japan!).


Peach!


I put it in to bake and all seemed well. I thought I was done. I let the cake cool a bit and then went to remove it from the pan... but alas, it wasn't cooked through and collapsed all over the place! Not to be defeated by a rebellious cake, I squeezed it back into the tin and put it back in the oven.


A bit of icing sugar helped to disguise its disfigurement and it still tasted good. Next time I bake a big cake in a small oven I'll be watching it a bit more carefully!

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Baking Supplies in Japan

Wow. I just realised how long it's been since I last posted anything. Time to bake has been scarce, and time to blog about baking has been even scarcer!

When we arrived in Japan about 6 months ago I had to start my baking supplies from scratch. Japanese kitchens don't typically have a built-in oven, but a lovely lady who'd already been here a few years very kindly loaned me the cute little oven that she hadn't been using. An excellent start to my collecting!


We don't live too far from a Costco, and they stock decent amounts of flour, cinnamon and vanilla essence.


I tracked down powdered food colouring - not something I'd used before, but worth a try. I also got some cute measuring cups, cupcake liners, some spices, and some sakura (cherry blossom) essence to try out one day when I'm feeling adventurous.


My main annoyance was that I couldn't find cocoa powder or icing sugar in any decent quantity at regular stores, so I continued to search different places looking for options. Seriously, what are you going to do with 40 grams of cocoa?


I made these lists quite a while back when I was obviously feeling a bit nerdy...

Cocoa

  • 40g for 228 yen at local supermarket --> 6 yen/gram
  • 40g for 221 yen at foreign food store near Kobe station --> 6 yen/gram
  • 226g of Hershey's cocoa for 647 yen at Jupiter foreign food store --> 3 yen/gram

Hershey's to the rescue!

Icing sugar

  • 70g for 135 yen at local supermarket --> 2 yen/gram
  • 250g for 336 yen at Tokyu Hands --> 1.5 yen/gram
  • 200g for 221 yen at foreign food store near Kobe station --> 1 yen/gram
  • 300g for 287 yen at Jupiter foreign food store --> just under 1 yen/gram


Looks like Jupiter wins for both! There are, of course, also some ingredients available here that wouldn't be so common at home. These powders, for example.


Anyway, fear not! I haven't totally abandoned my baking. And when I finally made my first batch of cupcakes they turned out pretty well :)