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Showing posts with label strawberry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strawberry. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

8th Birthday: Strawberry-Chocolate 'The Battle Cats' Tiered Cake

For s's 8th birthday, he requested this as his birthday cake. It is from a computer game called 'The Battle Cats'. He also dressed up as a Battle Cat for Halloween, and we made AI-generated trampolining Battle Cats for his birthday invitations (his birthday party was at a trampoline park, with all the boys from his class)...

I've never made a tiered cake before, so this is definitely a challenge! But at least it looks like an actual cake. And I'm hoping if I get the cat and dog figures right, it'll be a hit...  

I decided to make three tiers - odd numbers are always good, and this seemed like the minimum to make it look legit. Five seemed like a bit much for a first attempt... and would also have been way too much cake! It definitely has to involve two different types of cake (looks like strawberry and chocolate); and two different colours of icing (pink in the chocolate cake and white everywhere else). It looks like there is cream on top of each tier, but (1) I hate cream and (2) it wouldn't keep or travel at all - so I wondered about trying a cream cheese based icing instead, and putting some pink in some of it for the pink icing. The cat and dog shapes and the orange base cake will involve fondant (white, black and orange). And then there are the extras: a gold number 8, a red and gold bow, a gold bell, white candles, strawberries, and white mini meringues.

I only had one round springform cake tin (c. 21 cm in diameter), and I didn't really want to buy more. I also wanted this to be the bottom/biggest tier, as I didn't want to end up with tons of cake. I used foil and string to make a mini (8.5 cm diameter) cake tin from two crumpet rings stacked one on top of the other - for the top tier. And decided the middle tier should be c. 15 cm diameter to look right, and that I would bake it in my 21 cm diameter tin and then cut down to size. The bottom and top tiers are strawberry cake, and the middle tier is chocolate cake.

For the strawberry cake, I remembered that the mango cake I made for s's birthday last year was based on a strawberry cake recipe, and it worked quite well - so I used that one.

For the chocolate cake, my friend H who makes excellent cakes suggested this Ottolenghi cake. Initially I thought it sounded delicious for adults but perhaps a bad idea for kids as it is quite dark and had lots of coffee in it... but then had a double brainwave: (i) I could use decaf! and (2) the kids will already have plenty with the rest of the cake, perhaps I should just make what I like the sound of! Also, it looked like a good colour and texture.

For the icing, I started out with this cream cheese frosting recipe

 I made three online orders of specialist items in advance:

1) From a raw food shop: freeze-dried strawberry powder (for the strawberry cake and icing), freeze-dried strawberry slices (for the sliced strawberry decorations - winter strawberries are awful and fresh ones wouldn't have kept). 

2) From a Christmas shop: wide red and gold ribbon with wire in it (to make the bow), a little gold-coloured bell (I also bought some Christmas crackers for Christmastime!). 

3) From a baking shop: orange fondant (which turned out to be hard and no use), pack of 10 white birthday candles with white holders (used 8), a gold glittery number 8 candle, some cake dowels (to assuage my fear of tiers - I think robust plastic straws e.g. bubble tea straws or reusable plastic ones would also have been OK), some cake boards (needed 2, cut to size - for the top and middle tiers).

Then I also did a big Føtex (our nearest big grocery store) shop that included: black fondant, white fondant, orange food colouring, unsalted butter, mini meringues, and the rest of the cake ingredients.

Also in advance of starting to bake, I improvised a base board - I used a round wooden board that was just the right size (approx. 24 cm diameter), and then used four blobs of sticky tack and four Lego pieces to make little cylindrical feet about a centimetre high. This felt like an optional extra at the time, but actually was probably essential as the board was strong enough to carry the cake (which was quite heavy when done); and the feet allowed me to pick it up easily. It also made it look more like the pic! I

I made the cake over 1 1/2 days (nb it also took most of a day before that to work out everything I needed from Føtex and do the grocery shopping). On Day 1, I made the strawberry cakes and baked them in the morning; then took a lunch break, then made the chocolate cake and the icings in the afternoon. On Day 2, I assembled the cake and made the decorations (the cat and dog characters, and the bow).

For the strawberry cake (bottom and top layers):

Make sure all the ingredients are at room temperature before you begin.

10 oz / 283.5 g plain flour 
1 oz freeze dried strawberry powder  
1 ½ tsp baking powder 
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda 
8 oz unsalted butterroom temp
½ tsp salt 
10 oz granulated sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract 
zest of 1 lemon
1 tsp strawberry extract (did not have - used 1 tsp strawberry-lime juice instead)
6 egg whites, room temp (I bought the pre-separated egg whites for the first time for this, and was glad)
8 oz milkroom temp (used oat milk)
2 oz vegetable oil 
1 drop pink food colouring 
1 drop red food colouring

For the chocolate cake (middle layer):

8.8 oz / 250 g unsalted butter, room temp, cut into 1 cm cubes, plus extra for greasing
7 oz / 200 g dark (70%) chocolate, chopped into 2 cm pieces
1 tsp instant coffee (I used decaf), dissolved in 350 ml boiling water
8.8 oz / 250 g granulated sugar
2 large eggs, room temp, lightly beaten
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
8.5 oz / 240 g self-raising flour (used plain flour, including 3 generous tsp baking powder)
1 oz / 30 g cocoa powder
pinch of salt 

For the icing:

8 oz / 227 g 1 cup cream cheese, room temp
4 oz / 114 g / 1/2 cup salted butter, room temp
1 tsp (5 ml) vanilla extract
12.7 oz / 360 g / 3 cups icing sugar, sifted*
freeze dried strawberry powder
 
*I ended up using more. 
 
For the decoration and assembly:

1 pack black fondant icing
1 pack white fondant icing
1 pack orange fondant icing (nb the orange fondant icing I bought was bad so I coloured some white fondant with orange gel food colouring instead)
freeze-dried strawberry slices
white mini meringues
8 white birthday candles with white holders 
1 number '8' gold glittery birthday candle
Wide red and gold wired ribbon for the bow
Little gold-coloured bell
1 robust base board (the assembled cake was quite heavy) - used a round wooden chopping board with improvised feet - see explanation above.
2 cardboard cake boards (for the middle and top layers) - I drew circles on rectangular boards using the trimmed cake sizes and a compass, then cut down to size - slightly small is good, then they are easier to hide - I also cut a c. 1 cm diameter circular (ish) hole in the middle of each one so I could poke a dowel down the middle for max stability when assembled.
9 cake dowels (these are basically thick plastic straws - bubble tea straws seem to be recommended) - 4 for the bottom layer, 4 for the middle layer, and one longer, more robust one to go all the way down the middle.

To make the strawberry cake: Make sure all ingredients are at room temperature. Prepare your cake tins by greasing and lining with baking paper. I used one 21 cm round springform tin (bottom layer), and one improvised 8.5 cm tin (top layer). Place an oven rack in the middle position and heat the oven to 350ºF/176ºC. Put the butter in a large bowl and beat until smooth and shiny. Gradually sprinkle in the sugar, and beat until the mixture is fluffy and almost white. Add the egg whites approx. two at a time, beating in between. Whisk the flour, strawberry powder, baking powder, bicarb, salt, and lemon zest in a medium bowl. Combine the milk, oil, vanilla extract, strawberry extract (or juice) and food colouring in a separate medium bowl. Add about a third of the dry ingredients to butter mixture, followed immediately by about a third of the milk mixture, then mix until almost incorporated. Repeat two more times. When the batter appears blended, stop and scrape the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula. Divide the batter between the prepared tins so that it comes up to the same height in both. Smooth the tops with a rubber spatula. Bake cakes until they feel firm in the centre and a skewer comes out clean or with just a few crumbs on it - about 35-40 min for the big cake (or a little bit longer), and about 22 min for the small cake (or a little longer). Transfer tins to a wire rack and let cool for 10 min. Invert cakes onto the rack and pop cakes out of tins. Cool completely before assembling and icing. When completely cool, keep covered in a chiller until ready to assemble.  

To make the chocolate cake:

Heat oven to 170°C/150°C fan-forced. Grease the same 21 cm round springform pan as used for the strawberry cake with butter, and line with baking paper.

Place the butter, chocolate and hot coffee in a large heatproof bowl and mix well until everything is melted, combined and smooth. Whisk in sugar by hand until dissolved. Add eggs and vanilla extract and whisk again until thoroughly combined and smooth. Sift flour, cocoa powder and a pinch of salt together into a medium bowl, then whisk into the melted chocolate mixture until smooth. Batter will be liquid, but don’t think you’ve missed something; this is how it should be.

Pour batter into the prepared tin, tapping the base of the tin to remove air bubbles, and bake for 50-60 min, until cake is cooked and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean or with just a few dry crumbs attached. The top will form a crust and crack a little, but don’t worry, this is expected. Leave the cake to cool on a wire rack for 20 min before removing from tin, then set aside on wire rack until completely cool. 

When completely cool, keep covered in a chiller until ready to assemble. 

To make the icing:

Beat the softened cream cheese and butter together until creamy and well blended, with no lumps. 

Add the vanilla. Then add one cup of icing sugar at a time, beating gently at first, until each addition is completely incorporated. Scrape down the sides of the bowl to incorporate it all. Then beat hard to combine. 

At this point I realised that it was way less firm than normal buttercream, looked up a normal buttercream recipe and realised what it needed was a lot more icing sugar...

Split the mixture - most of it should stay white (for sandwiching the strawberry cake and making the white cream-looking stuff, but a bit should be pink for sandwiching the chocolate cake. To the white mix, I added about one more cup of icing sugar to make a sufficiently firm texture. To the pink mix, I added some freeze dried strawberry powder, a few drops pink food colouring, and some icing sugar, until it reached a similar texture to the white icing.

Store in the fridge until ready to assemble. 

To assemble and decorate:  

Trim all three cakes so that they are flat on top and about the same height. Trim around the edge of the top one so you can see the contents. Trim the middle (chocolate) one until it is a circle approx. 15 cm diameter. Cut the bottom cake horizontally through the middle and sandwich with white icing. Cut the chocolate cake horizontally through the middle and sandwich with pink icing. Cut the top cake horizontally through the middle twice, and sandwich with white icing.

Smear some icing on the base board and then stick the big cake on it. Put some icing around the edges to help stick on the fondant around the outside. Roll out the orange fondant to about 2 mm thick, and wrap it as neatly and smoothly around the base cake as you can, trimming as needed.. I need to work on smooth fondant application!

Push 4 cake dowels into the cake within the area where the next layer will sit, then trim them so their height is just below the top of the cake. Cover the top of the bottom tier with a generous layer of white icing, so it looks a bit like the cream in the pic.

Put some icing on the medium sized cake board, then stick down the middle (chocolate) cake. Place it carefully in the centre of the bottom tier. Push 4 cake dowels into the cake within the area where the next tier will sit, then trim them so their height is just below the top of the cake. Cover the top of the middle tier with a generous layer of white icing, so it looks a bit like the cream in the pic.

Put the top cake on its cake board, sticking it down with icing as for the other two. Place it carefully in the centre of the middle tier. Push a long cake dowel down the middle of all the tiers until it hits the bottom board, then trim. Cover the top of the top tier with a generous layer of white icing, so it looks a bit like the cream in the pic.

Now make the cat and dog figures. I waited until now so I could see how big they needed to be to fit properly on the assembled cake. Roll out white fondant on a clean surface until c. 2 mm thick, then cut out the shapes with a sharp knife. Make their features with black fondant and press into place. Apply the shapes to the cake in the right places, using icing as glue. 

Make the bow with the wired ribbon and tie it around the stalk of the '8' candle along with the bell, to look like the picture.

Stick the bow+8 assembly in place on top, then put white mini meringues, freeze dried strawberry slices, and white candles in place around the cake to resemble the picture.

For transport, I found a transparent plastic storage box with a flat, separate lid. I put the cake on the lid, taped on a cushion out of bubble wrap to keep it in place, then covered with the box and taped that in place with gaffa tape. It worked - the cake survived the journey to the trampoline park in good shape!


Notes: If making the strawberry cake again, put more food colouring in - the batter was nice and pink, but after baking the cake wasn’t pink enough. I need to work out how to apply fondant so it comes out nice and smooth (I think a crumb coat and a flat-edged tool?). The chocolate cake was yum and I kind of want to try the whole Ottolenghi recipe with ganache and all. Probably the most delicious part of the whole cake was the improvised strawberry icing! The kids did not like the chocolate cake but the strawberry cake went down quite well (despite the cake looking a mess once sliced). I am not sure whether all the boards and dowels were necessary, but the cake did survive two rounds of birthday singing and transport beautifully, and it would have been a mega bummer if it didn’t after all that work…

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Rhubarb, strawberry and walnut loaf

We planted our first rhubarb last year (purchased from a big kræmmermarked at Bellahøj). And then tried to ignore it for while, since I read it is better not to pick any the first year.

Having patiently waited for what felt like ages, I picked the first of it in late Spring. It was a bit pathetic: about six sticks as thick as my finger. Perhaps it needs some compost? But anyway, I was determined to celebrate it, and decided on a cake, to try and make it go as far as possible. I didn't originally intend to combine it with strawberry, but felt like the cake could maybe use a bit more fruit and we had some in the house, so strawberries got in there too, and streusel topping seemed like a good idea, so here we go. I used this recipe.

(makes one normal-sized loaf cake)

For the cake:
3/4 cup light brown sugar, packed
1/3 cup veg oil
1 egg
1 tsp ground ginger
1 tbsp honey rum
1 cup flour
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1/4 cup yoghurt
1/2 cup chopped rhubarb
1/2 cup chopped strawberries
1/4 cup chopped walnuts

For the crumble topping:
1 tbsp sugar
1/4 tsp cinnamon
3 - 3 1/2 tbsp flour
2 tbsp butter, melted
1/4 cup chopped walnut

Heat the oven to 350F / 176C. Grease a loaf tin and line the base.

Beat together the brown sugar, veg oil, egg and rum. Mix the flours, ground ginger, salt and bicarb with a fork in a large bowl. Add wet to dry, and also add in the yoghurt. Mix until just combined, stirring in strawberries, rhubarb and walnuts in the final strokes. Dollop into the loaf tin and smooth out the top.

Combine topping ingredients except the walnuts: it should be thick and clumpy. Mix in the walnuts. Sprinkle topping evenly over the loaf.

Bake for 55 - 65 min, or until a skewer comes out clean.


NB: a second harvest of rhubarb became rhubarb, strawberry, ginger and almond crumble - pretty much like this one, except using real butter and chopped whole almonds instead of flaked (again, included strawberries because didn't have enough rhubarb for crumble).

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Strawberries with tahin pekmez

I bought some mulberry molasses (pekmez) from one of the Armenian grocers in Watertown a while back, because I thought it would be ambrosia, and I wasn't disappointed: it is sticky and rich and sweet, with a touch of tang but none of the sharpness of pomegranate molasses.  I love it, but I didn't really know what to do with it.  I was buying tahini in the (nearer, but not better) Turkish store in Allston a few months later and noticed they were selling containers divided in two with two spouts: one for tahini and one for mulberry molasses - aha!  I love mixing tahini with anything sweet - I eat it off the spoon, half tahini, half honey, or strawberry jam, or anything like that (originally inspired by Seb telling me the Turkish Germans eat tahini with 'marmelade' (ie jam, but I thought he meant marmalade)) - it's like PB+J, but even more yummy.  So I tried it and loved it.  I've long been in the habit of applying my tahini-honey mixture to sliced fresh apple (I got more into this habit after celebrating Rosh Hashanah with Andrea), but the tahini-mulberry molasses mixture makes a perfect dip for fresh strawberries.  I will figure out something more elegant to do with that combination eventually, for now it is just a wonderful snack:

1 tsp tahini and 1 tsp mulberry molasses, mixed til smooth in a puddle on a plate; a handful fresh strawberries, hulled and halved; dip and chew and smile.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Strawberry, balsamic and basil jam

We stopped off at the Haymarket on the way to the beach yesterday and conducted a speedy 3-pronged attack while Greg kept the car running.  S hit up the strawberries and got a whole trayful (8 large boxes) for $6.  So then we had epic quantities of surprisingly good strawberries.  We ate some at the beach, some for breakfast, then decided I should cook up the rest.  We were running low on jam, so thought that would be a good idea.

2.3 lb strawberries, hulled and cleaned and chopped
~4 tbsp balsamic vinegar
2 lb sugar
~1-2 tbsp basil, finely shredded

Put the cleaned strawberries into a large pan with the balsamic vinegar.  Boil until the fruit is collapsed and the volume released a little.  Add the sugar and boil at a high temperature until setting point is reached (I use the saucer in the freezer / running finger through to look for wrinkles approach).  Switch off, add the basil, and cool for 10 min or so before putting into clean, sterilised jars.


For the first time ever I managed to burn jam!  Not sure why - perhaps the strawbs were too ripe so there was too much sugar in the pot?  I think it may still be ok, but I am reserving judgement til I taste it tomorrow morning (and may not be able to give any away - I wanted to pay m+g back in jam)...

Edit: It's actually fine, whew.  The pan took a bit of cleaning but the jam is good - perhaps the burning even adds some depth to the colour and flavour (it's definitely a deep ruby red, although perhaps the balsamic also contributes to this)?

Rhubarb and strawberry crumble

I had a look around Allston farmers market yesterday.  It was pretty tiny (3 stalls, one was bike fixing), but I bought garlic chives and rhubarb.  Rhubarb's one of those things where if I see it I just have to buy it.  As I was walking along after leaving the market a girl asked me if it was sugarcane sticking out of my bag - the rhubarb was big sticks - I had to disappoint her, but rhubarb is never disappointing to me.

One thing though, I always end up turning it into crumble, because rhubarb crumble is just the best.  It tastes like childhood - we always had rhubarb growing - I remember in our garden in Chatteris (we left there when I was 8) we had some we forced under a big wooden box, and I remember being sent out to pick rhubarb many times in our East Linton garden.

I thought if I was going to make crumble yet again I should at least try out a few different ideas.  In America it seems that the main use of rhubarb is strawberry-rhubarb pie.  We had lots of strawberries, so I thought I'd put some with the rhubarb in the crumble filling.  Rhubarb goes great with orange and ginger, so I bunged in a bit of each too.  And I experimented with an olive oil based crumble topping (after the success of my olive oil biscuits I'm all about using olive oil in baking instead of butter, also we are pretty much out of marg) - based the topping on this recipe.

Filling:
~1.5 lb rhubarb, cleaned and chopped into 1 cm pieces
~0.5 lb strawberries, hulled and chopped
juice and zest of 1/2 an orange
~4 tbsp sugar
~1 tbsp cornstarch

Topping:
100g flour (used ~3 tbsp wholemeal and the rest plain)
100g oats
100g sugar
80ml olive oil
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp ground ginger
zest of 1/2 an orange

Heat the oven to 350F.  Put all the filling ingredients in a 9in square oven dish or similar, and mix with your hands.  Put all the topping ingredients in a medium bowl and mix with a fork until everything is evenly distributed and it is a good, chunky-breadcrumb texture.  Level out the top of the filling and spread the topping across it, making sure it is evenly distributed to the edges.  Put in the oven (on a baking sheet in case it bubbles over), cook for 40-60 min, until lightly browned on top and the fruit is soft when poked with a fork.  Allow to sit for at least 10 min when it comes out of the oven, preferably more like half an hour - it will be bubbling hot.


This came out really good.  I like the topping a lot, and another bonus is it is much quicker to mix up than butter-based crumbles.  The filling is great too.  I am finding that I can still very much taste the strawberry, rhubarb and orange as separate elements, and together the sweetness of orange and strawberry sets off the tartness of rhubarb... but I think I prefer the rhubarb simpler, with just something warming like ginger.  Anyway, definitely a good experiment, and I'm looking forward to having more for breakfast tomorrow (perhaps the fruit flavours will have melded together differently?). Note: this makes enough crumble topping for my small, square Pyrex dish.