Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Cake,Pork

Fragilite Roulade with Liquorice and Berries

Cake, Desserts, LiquoriceTove Balle-Pedersen3 Comments
Fragilite Roulade with Liquorice and Berries

Fragilite Roulade with Liquorice and Berries

This recipe came about due to a mini competition launched by Lakrids by Johan Bülow on their Facebook page. So off course I had to try to make a cake with the yummy marzipan with licorice.

This is my contribution to the competition.

Serves 4-6

Ingredients:

Sprinkles:

Filling and topping:

  • heavy whipping cream (whipped to medium soft peaks)

  • strawberries, cut into small pieces

  • blackberries

Directions:

Preheat the oven for 360℉ (180℃)

Mix the marzipans with one of the egg whites using your hand, it’s a bit messy, but it's the easiest way to get a homogenous mass.

Whip the other two egg whites until you have soft peaks. Add the sugar and keep whipping until you have a shiny meringue with stiff peaks. You should be able to turn the bowl upside down.

Fold the marzipan mixture in.

Line a baking pan with parchment paper and spray it.  

Spread the meringue evenly in the pan, sprinkle with slivered almonds and raw liquorice powder on top.

Bake the meringue for about 15 minutes. The top should be lightly brown.

When the cake is room temperature turn it upside down on a sheet of parchment paper. Cut of the edges of the cake, and it will roll easier.

Filling:

Whip the cream, and spread it onto the cake, except for the last inch in the top. The filling will be pressed out when you roll it.

Cut the strawberries in pieces and drizzle them over the whipped cream.

Use the parchment paper to roll the cake tightly. 

Enjoy

The Danish version:

Fragiliteroulade med Lakrids og bær

Ingredienser:

  • 75 g lakridsmarcipan

  • 25 g marcipan (Jeg brugte ren rå from Odense)

  • 3 æggehvider

  • 150 g sukker

Sprinkles:

Fyld og topping:

  • Flødeskum

  • jordbær, i små stykker

  • brombær

Vejledning:

Fragilite:

Ælt de to marcipaner med den ene æggehvide.

Pisk resten af æggehviderne sukkeret til de er helt stive. Vend forsigtigt de stive hvider i marcipanmassen. Smør dejen ud på en bradepande beklædt med bagepapir. Jeg smør altid bagepapiret for at sikre mig, at kagen slipper. Drys med mandelflager og lakridspulveret. Bag bunden ved 180 grader i cirka 15 minutter. 

Når bunden er helt afkølet, vendes den om på et nyt stykke bagepapir, så nødderne vender nedad.

Fyld: Pisk fløden stiv. Fordel flødeskummet på fragilitébunden, men undlad at komme noget på de sidste 2-3 cm i den ene ende, da fyldet presses ud, når kagen rulles. Skær jordbærene i grove stykker og drys dem over flødeskummet. Brug bagepapiret til at rulle rouladen så stramt som muligt. Skær rouladen i skiver på sned, server med friske bær.

 

Kransekage with Liquorice

Cake, New Year's Eve, Holiday, Sweets and CandyTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Kransekage with Liquorice

Kransekage with Liquorice

With all the liquorice I've been using, I had to try liquorice in the kransekage

Kransekage: 

  • 50 g almonds blanched
  • 100 g sugar
  • 1 egg white
  • 250 g marzipan (I used Ren Rå, a 60% almond paste)
  • 15-25 g marzipan with liquorice from Lakrids by Johan Bülow

Icing:

Directions:

Put almonds and sugar into food processor with the steel blade in place and process until finely pulverized. Add the egg whites and process until smooth. Be careful not to heat the mass to more than 95 - 104°F, else the egg white will cook. 

Shred the marzipan and add it and the almond/egg white mixture to a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Beat it until it's completely smooth and free of lumps. Form the dough into a ball, and refrigerate for 2-3 hours.

Preheat oven for 375℉ (190℃).

Roll the dough into logs as thick as your finger, and cut into 3 inch long pieces. Cut about 1 inch of each the pieces. Roll the 2 inch piece thinner, and flatten the log, and form a little slit where you put some marzipan with liquorice. Top the piece of with the rest of the dough you cut of.

Bake for about 12 minutes or until golden.  Allow to cool completely before decorating.

Kransekage with orange zest or chocolate

Cake, Holiday, Sweets and Candy, New Year's EveTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Kransekage with orange zest and chocolate

Kransekage with orange zest and chocolate

When I make kransekage for New Year's Eve, I always make small pieces with different flavor profiles. The classic with the danish nougat, a soft chocolate made with hazelnuts. Another flavor profile I really love is with orange zest.

Kransekage: 

  • 50 g almonds blanched

  • 100 g sugar

  • 1 egg white

  • 250 g marzipan (I used Ren Rå, a 60% almond paste)

  • zest of 1 orange or

  • 15 g nougat (the golden package on the photo)

Icing:

  • confectionary sugar

  • water

Directions:

Put almonds and sugar into food processor with the steel blade in place and process until finely pulverized. Add the egg whites and process until smooth. Be careful not to heat the mass to more than 95 - 104°F, else the egg white will cook. 

Shred the marzipan and add it and the almond/egg white mixture to a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Beat it until it's completely smooth and free of lumps. Form the dough into a ball, and refrigerate for 2-3 hours.

Preheat oven for 375℉ (190℃).

If you make the one with orange zest, add it when you mix the batter.

Roll the dough into logs as thick as your finger, and cut into 3 inch long pieces. Press the top part, making a top. 

For the ones with nougat, cut about 1 inch of the pieces. Roll the 2 inch thinner, and flatten the log, and form a little slit where you put some of the nougat. Top the piece of with the rest of the dough you cut of.

Bake for about 12 minutes or until golden.  Allow to cool completely before icing them.

 

Kransekage - Danish Almond Cake

Cake, Holiday, New Year's Eve, Sweets and CandyTove Balle-Pedersen5 Comments
Kransekage

Kransekage

Kransekage is a traditional cake served at New Year's Eve at midnight with champagne, at weddings (back in the days) or at special occasions. I like kransekage with a  sweet champagne, because the sweetness of the cake makes the champagne very sour. Served with coffee it is actually perfect, but not very festive. 

Kransekage is made from Marzipan, an almonds paste, sugar, almonds and egg whites. 

Kransekage: 

  • 100 g almonds blanched or ¾ cup slivered almonds

  • 200 g (1 cup) sugar

  • 2 egg whites

  • 500 g marzipan (I used Ren Rå, a 60% almond paste)

Icing:

  • confectionary sugar

  • water

Directions:

Put almonds and sugar into food processor with the steel blade in place and process until finely pulverized. Add the egg whites and process until smooth. Be careful not to heat the mass to more than 95 - 104°F, else the egg white will cook. 

Shred the marzipan and add it and the almond/egg white mixture to a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Beat it until it's completely smooth and free of lumps. Form the dough into a ball, and refrigerate for 2-3 hours.

Preheat oven for 375℉ (190℃).

Divide dough in 4. Roll each part into a 45 cm (18 inch) long sausage. Wet your fingers with a little water and gently press each log into a rounded triangle, continue to wet fingers as needed but careful not to get dough too wet.

For a kransekage top you'll need these lengths: 

The process

The process

  • 7 cm (2 3/4 inches) to make the top ball.

  • 8 cm (3 1/6 inches)

  • 12 cm (4 3/4 inches)

  • 16 cm (6 1/3 inches)

  • 20 cm (7 7/8 inches)

  • 24 cm (9 1/2 inches)

  • 28 cm (11 inches)

  • 32 cm (12 2/3 inches)

Form the rings on a baking sheet lines with parchment paper.  Level the top of the rings by putting a baking sheet on top. Don't press to hard.

Bake for about 12 minutes or until golden.  Allow to cool completely.

Put the icing on the baked rings. Start with the biggest. Make sure to put the next on top of it before the icing is dried. Or glue the rings together with small dots of icing.

Decorate the kransekage with flags and confetti. 

Notes: 

You can use tempered chocolate instead of the icing.  

Edit.

This year, I weighed opted for another approach.
Making a 10 tiered top, I used 4 X 165g of the dough and rolled then into 4 x45 cm logs. + 1 x 81 g for  one 22 cm log.

The logs were then cut into these lengths:

  • 8 cm

  • 10½ cm

  • 13 cm

  • 15½ cm

  • 18 cm

  • 20½ cm

  • 23 cm

  • 25½ cm

  • 28 cm

  • 30½ cm

 

 

Danish Coffee Cake - Drømmekage fra Brovst

CakeTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Danish Coffee Cake

Danish Coffee Cake

Danish coffee cake or "Drømmekage from Brovst" is one of the most well known cakes in Denmark. We might be known for the danish, aka “wienerbrød," but most danes has had this cake at school, work or at family gatherings. In the 70's and 80's this coffee cake was the go-to cake for the danish at home-bakers, and rightfully so. The soft, moist and not overly sweet vanilla spongecake, topped with a coconut-caramel is so yummy and the cake will evaporate in any home.

The cake has it's roots in the 1950s in Northern Jutland, but became known all over the country in the early 1960s when the big flour-company published the recipe in a pamphlet. 

It's not only the taste that made this cake popular, it's so easy to make, so it's a good starting cake for non-bakers.

Ingredients:

Cake:

  • 4 eggs
  • 300 g sugar
  • 250 g all-purpose flour
  • 3 teaspoons baking powder 
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla paste
  • 200 g milk
  • 50 g butter

Topping:

  • 150 g butter
  • 225 g shredded unsweetened coconut
  • 340 g brown sugar
  • 75 g milk

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 425℉ (220℃).

Melt the butter in the milk in a little saucepan, set aside to cool until finger warm.

In a stand mixer whisk eggs with sugar until light and fluffy, about 5 minutes. Incorporate the vanilla paste.

Sift the dry ingredients and fold them gently into the egg mixture. Fold the milk/butter into the batter. 

Line a baking pan with parchment paper. Pour the batter into the baking pan. 

Bake cake for about 20 minutes or until a cake tester comes out clean. 

Make the topping, while the cake is in the oven. 

Heat milk, butter, sugar and coconut in a saucepan while stirring. 

As soon as the cake comes out of the oven, add the topping, being careful to distribute it in an even layer. Put the cake in the oven for another 4-6 minutes.

Let cake cool on a rack.

Enjoy with friends or family.