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Brownie Cookie Cake

March 15, 2019 Betsy Kuller
brownie cookie cake.jpg

This cake is not a cake. It is heaven. Or better yet, it is a salted brown sugar chocolate chip cookie layered with a black cocoa brownie and covered with an espresso buttercream.

This cake is not pretending to be anything other than what it is: the richest, most decadent, gut wrenching dessert you’ve had in a long time.

Note: this recipe makes enough for two, three layer cakes. One for now and one for when you polish off the first cake and wish you had a second :).


Brownie Cookie Cake
adapted from Bake from Scratch and yours truly

 

Brownie Layers
397g (2⅓ cups) dark chocolate morsels/chips, divided
227g (1 cup) unsalted butter, cubed
300g (1½ cups) granulated sugar
220g (1 cup, packed) brown sugar
188g (1½ cups) all purpose flour
64g (¾ cup) black cocoa powder
2 tsp salt
5 large eggs
1 tbsp vanilla extract

Cookie Layers
113g (½ cup) butter, at room temperature
48g (4 tbsp) granulated sugar
184g (¾ cup + 2 tbsp packed) brown sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp vanilla extract
¾ tsp baking soda
Heaped 1/4 tsp salt
215g (1 ¾ cups) all purpose flour
225g (8 oz) dark chocolate morsels/chips

Coffee Buttercream
6 large egg whites
300g (1½ cups) granulated sugar
340g (1½ cups) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
2 tbsp espresso powder, not granules

Make the brownie layers: Preheat oven to 350°F. Spray three 6” cake pans and line with parchment paper (you can also make bake this in a 13x9 baking pan for traditional brownies).

In the top of a double boiler, add 1⅓ cups (227 grams) of the chocolate morsels and butter. Stir occasionally until the mixture is smooth. Turn off heat and whisk in sugars. Remove from heat, and let cool slightly.

In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, and salt.

In a small bowl, lightly whisk eggs. Add half of beaten eggs to chocolate mixture, whisking until combined. Add remaining eggs and whisk until combined. Whisk in vanilla. Gently mix in flour mixture with a spatula until just combined. Fold in remaining chocolate chips and spread batter into prepared pans.

Bake until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out with a few crumbs, about 18 minutes.

Make the cookie layers: Heat oven to 360°F. Spray three 6” cake pans and line with parchment paper. In a large bowl, cream the butter and sugars together with an electric mixer until very light and fluffy, about 5 minutes. Add egg and vanilla, beating until incorporated, and scraping down the bowl as needed.

Beat in salt fine sea or table salt and baking soda until combined, then the flour on a low speed until just mixed. Fold/stir in the chocolate chunks.

Evenly divide the dough into the three cake pans. Bake for 18-20 minutes, until just golden on the outside but still soft inside.

Make the buttercream: Place egg whites and sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk until combined.

Place bowl over a double boiler on the stove and whisk constantly until the mixture is hot and no longer grainy to the touch (approx. 3mins). Or registers 160F on a candy thermometer.

Place bowl on your stand mixer and whisk on med-high until the meringue is stiff and cooled (the bowl is no longer warm to the touch (approx. 5-10mins)).

Switch to paddle attachment. Slowly add cubed butter and mix until smooth. Add vanilla bean paste and espresso powder. Whip until smooth.

 

inside of brownie cookie cake.jpg
In Cake, Chocolate, Bar Tags cake, brownie, brown sugar, coffee, layer cake, cake 2, espresso, salt, black, scandinavian, chocolate, chocolate chips, chocolate chip, brownies, buttercream
1 Comment

Lefse Latke Nuggets

December 15, 2017 Betsy Kuller
IMG_4218.jpg

I stepped out of my cookie and cake comfort zone to try a recipe for something that, to be honest, is not my favorite. The Minnesota in me kept repeating, "you're a baker, you're from Minnesota, you should know how to make lefse" but the pragmatic voice in my head kept saying, "you think lefse is bland and flimsy and didn't even try it for the first time until you were 23 so the Minnesota in you shouldn't be concerned."

Before you Scandinavians shout, BLASPHEMY, I do find lefse good for one thing: getting butter and cinnamon sugar into my mouth. 

In light of all of this, I went for it...and invited a true Scandinavian to my house to help. She was useless. Not entirely. She did bake delicious soft pretzels while the lefse cooked but she was of no help when it came to turning the lefse dough into actual lefse.

Even with the perfect tools, ingredients, and company, I failed. So I did what I felt was best: stopped trying.  But what was I to do with the leftover dough? Then it came to me: latke-fy it (it is Chanukah, remember?). Add some salt, some onions, and fry it in a healthy dose of oil.

Ta-dah! Lefse latke nuggets.

If you are up for the challenge, give the recipe a try. Perhaps I needed more patience or different potatoes but I'd love to see some successful results.


Lefse
from Jul

Make the lefse: add melted butter to cold potatoes and stir until just combined. Add milk, sugar, salt, and stir until rough dough forms. Chill two hours or overnight.

Mix in flour. Form walnut-sized balls, keeping dough chilled during process: dough will rise when it warms. Use a rolling pin fitted with a sleeve to roll into thin rounds.

Use a long flat stick to transfer lefse to hot griddle. Cook until round begins to bubble up. Carefully fold edge of lefse to check for golden brown spots. Run the stick beneath the lefse and carefully flip the round, cooking in an additional minute or until the bottom side has light brown spots.

1/4 cup vegan butter, melted
4 cups riced potatoes, chilled
1/2 cup unsweetened almond milk
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp salt
1 1/2 cups all purpose flour


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This post was done in partnership with Nordic Ware who sponsored this recipe by providing the griddle that was used in this recipe. As always, all thoughts and opinions are my own.

In Other Tags Jul, scandinavian, lefse, cookbook, holidays, griddle, Nordic Ware
3 Comments

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