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Submitted by Urchina on February 5, 2012 - 10:11pm ITJB Week 9: Sour Cream Coffee Cake (2/4/12 - 2/11/12)You know what I love about coffee cake? It's not special-occasion cake. It's "coffee cake," which means it's "any time of the day or night and for any purpose except possibly a wedding" cake. Which makes it an excellent type of food, the all-purpose workhouse of happy snacking. Add sour cream and you get tender, light, delightfully most -- so I'm really looking forward to this one. Hopefully it will also have enough yumminess to launch me out of the Onion Rolls orbit I've been in for two weeks (Two weeks! I've been making Onion Rolls for two weeks, they were that good!) And maybe I will actually get pictures posted. (we keep eating the evidence before I can get the camera out, as it turns out.) Looking forward to seeing everyone's results! Submitted by breitbaker on October 5, 2010 - 8:02am Yeasted Continental Coffee Cakehttp://www.brightbakes.wordpress.com The latest bake...I used an overnight starter with a pinch of SD, then finished off the dough the next day. Nothing complicated, but this sure was tasty! Love, cathy b. @ brightbakes Submitted by dmsnyder on March 3, 2009 - 11:16pm Cheese PocketsIt was 1 year ago that I last made cheese pockets. I've been good, even if the scale disagrees. So, prompted by Norm's posting his Crumb Buns, I made my annual indulgence. These are made with a sweet, coffee cake dough and filled with a mixture that is mostly hoop cheese, which is a non-fat cheese somewhat similar to ricotta. (Recipe follows.) For some background on these pastries, please surf to my previous blog entry: http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/6215/cheese-pockets I won't repeat all the history, but I will mention of few differences in this bake which resulted from my prior experience and helpful tips from Norm (nbicomputers). But, first, the recipe: Cheese Pockets
Coffee Cake Dough (Formula thanks to Norm) Other flavors can be added such as lemon or orange rind grated Note: Using other size eggs or other flours will result in substantial changes in the dough consistency require adjustments in flour or water amounts. Cheese Filling Mix all ingredients well. Refrigerate until needed, up to 24 hours. Egg Wash Streusel Topping 1. Cream the sugar and butter. Mixing and Fermenting the Dough Making up the Pastries Baking Note: The pastries can be refrigerated overnight or frozen at this point. If refrigerated, allow them to rise at room temperature to 3/4 double, and proceed as above. If frozen, thaw at room temperature, allow to rise to 3/4 double, and proceed as above. One thing I learned last time was that under-proofing these pastries results in exuberant oven spring, with the pastries bursting open. So, I really proofed these puppies. Maybe a little bit more than was necessary. But maybe not. Another thing I changed was to pick up on a suggestion for speeding up proofing by putting the made-up pastries in a humidified, warm oven. I found that my KitchenAid conventional/convection oven has a proofing setting! It is actually a "dehydrating" setting, but I set it for 100F and put a pan of just-boiled water in to create a humid environment. This probably cut my proofing time in half, compared to my 70F kitchen. As you can see, the pastries had just a bit of oven spring, which is good in this case, and they did not burst, which is also good. Previously, I had topped the pastries with streusel. This time, I just egg washed them and sprinkled on a few sliced almonds. I skipped the painting with syrup to make them shiny. So, I could tell my wife these are the "low-cal version." I had only one for dessert. Pretty good stuff. It will be even better with coffee for breakfast. David
Submitted by dmsnyder on February 29, 2008 - 10:52pm Hi, Norm! Please look at this ...Hi, Norm. I've taken your coffee cake dough formula and scaled it down, added your streusel topping formula and a cheese filling recipe I've used before. I am planning to make Cheese Pockets tomorrow to test the formula and make adjustments to my taste and so the dough, filling and streusel quantities more or less match up (which they probably don't now). |
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