I like to think of myself as the exclusive caterer for my young friend Alexander, who just turned five. I've had the privilege of making baked goods for Alexander's birthday every year. Last year, when he turned four, he was finally old enough to make a specific birthday baked goods request. This year, not only did he decide what I would bake, but he also was able to take on some of the decorating duties.
With regard to birthday cake, Alexander requested a carrot cake after learning that it is his Great-Uncle Mike's favorite cake. (I should mention that Alexander's taste preferences are somewhat unusual for a five-year old. He doesn't like chocolate, and he doesn't particularly care for frosting, either. At another child's birthday party last month, I saw every other kid in attendance sporting blue lips, tongues, and teeth after eating the Spiderman-themed birthday cake with dark blue frosting. Alexander decided to skip the cake entirely and was completely content to snack on some fresh fruit instead.) I decided to try a recipe from the Los Angeles Times Culinary SOS column, Riva's Carrot Cake.
You make the cake batter in a stand mixer, by whipping together eggs and sugar until they are thick and light, adding in oil and beating until light and fluffy, and then mixing the egg-sugar-oil mixture into the dry ingredients (flour, cinnamon, baking soda, baking powder, salt, and more sugar), and folding in grated carrots and currants. The cream cheese frosting is made from cold butter, cream cheese, and powdered sugar. I was a little skeptical about using cold butter (instead of room-temperature butter) to make the frosting, but it came out completely smooth, with a wonderfully thick, creamy texture. The recipe also produces a lot of frosting, so the entire cake was covered with a very generous amount.
Cake decorating is not my strong suit, so I limited decorations to some piped borders and festive candles. The cake itself was dense, very moist and very carrot-y. I liked the fact that the recipe called for currants; I preferred them over the usual raisins, since I find the chewiness of larger raisins to be a bit distracting in a carrot cake. I did find the cake a little sweet, and the frosting a lot sweet -- and the huge quantity of frosting only magnified the sweetness level. My favorite cream cheese frosting recipe (which I use on carrot cake, carrot whoopie pies, and red velvet cake and cupcakes) calls for 1/3 cup butter, 6 oz. cream cheese, and 1 cup powdered sugar. I use a triple batch to frost a two-layer, 9-inch cake, so that would mean a total of 1 cup butter, 18 oz. cream cheese, and 3 cups powdered sugar. The frosting recipe for Riva's carrot cake calls for 1 cup butter, 1 lb. cream cheese, and five cups of powdered sugar. Thus, Riva's frosting recipe is almost the same as the one I normally use, with the glaring distinction that it contains two additional cups of powdered sugar. I thought the sweetness was a bit much, but I was flattered when Alexander told me that he liked the cake (and he ate not only the cake, but also the frosting, too!). I would absolutely make this cake again, but I would definitely reduce the sugar in the frosting to three cups.
Since the single 8-inch carrot cake was not going to be large enough to serve everyone at the birthday party (and because I sort of suspected that carrot cake might not be so popular with the rest of the pre-K crowd), I asked Alexander to pick out a variety of cupcakes, and he chose red velvet. I made two batches of my standard red velvet cake recipe from Cakeman Raven, which yielded 40 cupcakes. Of course, for the cream cheese frosting, I used my normal recipe from the epicurious.com recipe for pumpkin-raisin bars (I needed four batches of the frosting to cover all of the cupcakes). I baked the cupcakes and then invited Alexander over to help with the frosting and decorating. We mixed the frosting, and Alexander picked out the colors for each batch. As you can see in the picture below, he went with neon yellow-green, lavender, light blue, and mint green. I pulled out all of my sprinkles and decors and let Alexander have free reign to use anything he liked -- so the cupcakes were topped with all sorts of different colored sugars and decorations.
Not surprisingly, the technicolor frosting and sprinkles were a hit with the kids (and even the parents!) at Alexander's birthday party. I can't wait to see what baking ideas Alexander comes up with next year!
Recipes:
With regard to birthday cake, Alexander requested a carrot cake after learning that it is his Great-Uncle Mike's favorite cake. (I should mention that Alexander's taste preferences are somewhat unusual for a five-year old. He doesn't like chocolate, and he doesn't particularly care for frosting, either. At another child's birthday party last month, I saw every other kid in attendance sporting blue lips, tongues, and teeth after eating the Spiderman-themed birthday cake with dark blue frosting. Alexander decided to skip the cake entirely and was completely content to snack on some fresh fruit instead.) I decided to try a recipe from the Los Angeles Times Culinary SOS column, Riva's Carrot Cake.
You make the cake batter in a stand mixer, by whipping together eggs and sugar until they are thick and light, adding in oil and beating until light and fluffy, and then mixing the egg-sugar-oil mixture into the dry ingredients (flour, cinnamon, baking soda, baking powder, salt, and more sugar), and folding in grated carrots and currants. The cream cheese frosting is made from cold butter, cream cheese, and powdered sugar. I was a little skeptical about using cold butter (instead of room-temperature butter) to make the frosting, but it came out completely smooth, with a wonderfully thick, creamy texture. The recipe also produces a lot of frosting, so the entire cake was covered with a very generous amount.
Cake decorating is not my strong suit, so I limited decorations to some piped borders and festive candles. The cake itself was dense, very moist and very carrot-y. I liked the fact that the recipe called for currants; I preferred them over the usual raisins, since I find the chewiness of larger raisins to be a bit distracting in a carrot cake. I did find the cake a little sweet, and the frosting a lot sweet -- and the huge quantity of frosting only magnified the sweetness level. My favorite cream cheese frosting recipe (which I use on carrot cake, carrot whoopie pies, and red velvet cake and cupcakes) calls for 1/3 cup butter, 6 oz. cream cheese, and 1 cup powdered sugar. I use a triple batch to frost a two-layer, 9-inch cake, so that would mean a total of 1 cup butter, 18 oz. cream cheese, and 3 cups powdered sugar. The frosting recipe for Riva's carrot cake calls for 1 cup butter, 1 lb. cream cheese, and five cups of powdered sugar. Thus, Riva's frosting recipe is almost the same as the one I normally use, with the glaring distinction that it contains two additional cups of powdered sugar. I thought the sweetness was a bit much, but I was flattered when Alexander told me that he liked the cake (and he ate not only the cake, but also the frosting, too!). I would absolutely make this cake again, but I would definitely reduce the sugar in the frosting to three cups.
Since the single 8-inch carrot cake was not going to be large enough to serve everyone at the birthday party (and because I sort of suspected that carrot cake might not be so popular with the rest of the pre-K crowd), I asked Alexander to pick out a variety of cupcakes, and he chose red velvet. I made two batches of my standard red velvet cake recipe from Cakeman Raven, which yielded 40 cupcakes. Of course, for the cream cheese frosting, I used my normal recipe from the epicurious.com recipe for pumpkin-raisin bars (I needed four batches of the frosting to cover all of the cupcakes). I baked the cupcakes and then invited Alexander over to help with the frosting and decorating. We mixed the frosting, and Alexander picked out the colors for each batch. As you can see in the picture below, he went with neon yellow-green, lavender, light blue, and mint green. I pulled out all of my sprinkles and decors and let Alexander have free reign to use anything he liked -- so the cupcakes were topped with all sorts of different colored sugars and decorations.
Not surprisingly, the technicolor frosting and sprinkles were a hit with the kids (and even the parents!) at Alexander's birthday party. I can't wait to see what baking ideas Alexander comes up with next year!
Recipes:
- "Riva's Carrot Cake," from the June 10, 2009 Los Angeles Times.
- Red Velvet Cake from Cakeman Raven, recipe available here.
- Cream Cheese Frosting recipe from "Pumpkin-Raisin Bars," from epicurious.com.
- "Alexander Turns Old Enough to Make a Baked Goods Request," September 29, 2010.
- "Alexander Turns Three!," September 15, 2009.
- "Alexander's Birthday Party," September 21, 2008.
Comments
I almost missed the brownie finale because I didn't look at your blog for a couple of days as I was just too busy. :-(