Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Cake

Rutebiler - Chocolate Meringues

Cake, Desserts, CookiesTove Balle-Pedersen4 Comments
Rutebiler - Chocolate Meringues

Rutebiler - Chocolate Meringues

Rutebiler is a very light and airy cookie, kinda like a chocolate meringue, but rutebiler has a rising agent, and in my version you use whole eggs. Rutebiler are small crispy chocolate rectangles, with a hollow center. They will melt in your mouth with a sweet chocolaty taste, making you want another one.

We had rutebiler at birthdays, as light cookies. Well, my mom had a bad experience with meringues and rutebiler at birthday parties. At one of my brothers birthdays the boys had a big food fight with meringues, and I remember my mom cursing a lot while cleaning up the sticky mess from carpet and furniture in the living room. That was the end of meringues at birthday parties in my family. 

Makes about 100. 

Ingredients:

  • 750 g confectionary sugar (powder sugar)
  • 2 eggs
  • 2½ tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1¼ teaspoon Ammonium bicarbonate (baker's ammonia)

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350℉ (175℃).

Line baking sheets with baking paper.

Crown cookie press attachment

Crown cookie press attachment

Sift the dry ingredients together, and mix them in the eggs. The batter will be kinda thick paste, a little on the dry side.  Run the dough through a cookie press or meat grinder with cookie attachment, that looks like a crown. Each cake should be about 5 cm (2-inches) long, place them about 2-inches apart, because the cookies will expand. Bake the cakes in the center of the oven for 6-8 minutes. These cookies are light and airy, with a hollow center.

Keep the cookies in an airtight container.

Enjoy!


Romkugler - Danish Rum Balls

Cake, DessertsTove Balle-Pedersen4 Comments
Romkugler - Danish Rum Balls

Romkugler - Danish Rum Balls

This is an all-time classic Danish cake. It is actually made from leftover cake, and has been a cheap cake at most baker shops. Now I do not believe that rum balls are cheap cheap anymore, most baker shops make these from cakes baked solely to be used in the rum balls.

My version is made with good chocolate, marzipan and almonds to elevate the classic rum balls. You can use real rum, when making these, but you get more flavor by using an extract.

Makes about 50 small balls.

Ingredients:

  • 500 g leftover cake, chocolate cake, brownies and pound cakes will work
  • 50 g marzipan, grated
  • 50 g sliced almonds, toasted on a dry skillet till fragrant
  • 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder, I use Valrhona
  • 75 g melted dark chocolate, I use Valrhona 
  • 1-2 tablespoons raspberry jam
  • 4 teaspoons Rum Extract

Coating:

  • 300 g dark chocolate, I use Valrhona 
  • chocolate sprinkles

Directions:

Mix all the ingredients in a stand mixer using the paddle attachment until you have a soft dough. Roll the dough into small balls, and let them cool for about 30 minutes before coating.

Temper the chocolate, and set up a station for coating. Put the sprinkles in a medium bowl. Place a piece of parchment paper on the counter for the coated rum balls.

Coat the balls with chocolate, and roll them in the sprinkles right away. 

Enjoy!

You can also roll the dough into a log, cover it with marzipan, cut into small logs and dip the ends in tempered chocolate. Now you have Træstammer or truffle logs.

 

Citronmåne - Danish Lemon Cake

Cake, DessertsTove Balle-PedersenComment
Citronmåne - Danish Lemon Cake

Citronmåne - Danish Lemon Cake

Citronmåne or "lemon moon" is a classic Danish store bought cake. I actually think that every dane, knows this cake. Just like it's a known joke that American policemen eat doughnuts, Danish policemen are eating citronmåner. ;)

I simply love this upgraded version, by Claus Meyer, and there is no need to change anything on this perfect combination. 

Makes one 9-inch round cake

Ingredients:

  • 200 g butter, salted and room temperature
  • 200 g sugar
  • 100 g marzipan, I used Anthon Berg ren rå marcipan
  • 2 lemons, the zest
  • 1 lemon, the juice
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla paste
  • 4 eggs, large
  • 80 g potato starch
  • 100 g all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder

Icing:

  • 350 g confectionary sugar (powder sugar)
  • 1 lemon, the juice
  • hot water, till you get the right consistency, like a thick paste
  • 1 drop yellow food coloring

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 ℉ (175 ℃). 

Butter a 9-inch springform, put a round piece of parchment paper in the bottom, butter this too,  and sprinkle sugar into the pan, so it get all over the inside of the pan, pour out the excess sugar. Set aside.

Sift the dry ingredients together in a bowl, and set aside.

Cream the butter with sugar until light and fluffy. Mix in the grated marzipan, lemon zest, lemon juice and vanilla until fully incorporated. Add one egg at a time, beating  between each addition.  Gently fold in the dry ingredients into the batter. Pour the batter in the prepared pan, and bake it for about 45 minutes, until golden brown, and until a cake tester comes out clean.  

Cool the cake completely before adding the icing. 

Mix the confectionary sugar with lemon juice and food coloring, adding just enough water, to get a thick paste.

Ice the cake, and serve the cake with a good cop of tea or coffee.

Enjoy!

Elderflower Madeleines

Brunch, Cake, Cookies, DessertsTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Elderflower Madeleines

Elderflower Madeleines

This is my summerly take on the classic French Madeleine cookie. Basically it's small pound cake bites, baked in small seashell shapes, aka a madeleine pan. They are really tasty, and are perfect with a cup of afternoon tea.

You can make the batter the day before, and make them fresh for the weekend brunch. This works because the batter can rest up to 24 hours in the refrigerator before baking. 

Makes 24

Ingredients:

  • 85 g butter, salted
  • 2 eggs
  • 75 g sugar
  • 3 tablespoons elderflower syrup, I use d'arbo elderflower syrup
  • 110 g all-purpose flour
  • ½ teaspoon baking powder 
  • confectionary (powder) sugar for sprinkling

Directions:

Whisk together the flour and baking powder. In a separate bowl (for the stand mixer), beat the eggs for about 30 seconds, until they are frothy. Add sugar, and whisk for about 5 minutes, until the pale, fluffy and tripled in volume.

Slowly add the dry ingredients and the melted butter + syrup in batches, and mix them slowly in. Be careful not to over mix the batter.

Let the batter rest in the refrigerator for about an hour to chill and hydrate the flour. This will give the madeleines the classic bump on the back, if you skip this step, the batter will still rise, but not as much.

Preheat the oven to 350℉ (180℃), and spray the madeleine pans with nonstick cooking spray, set aside.

Pour about 1 tablespoon of batter into each mold and bake for 15-17 minutes, until golden brown. You want the edges to be crispy and the inside light and fluffy.

Let the madeleines cool for a minute or two. Gently use a knife to loosen the madeleines from the pans and let them cool on a wire rack. For more elderflower taste, brush the warm madeleines with some of the syrup.

Sprinkle the madeleines with confectionary sugar, just before serving.

Enjoy!

Profiterole

Desserts, CakeTove Balle-Pedersen3 Comments
Profiterole

Profiterole

Profiterole or ice cream filled cream puffs, are a classic French dessert. And it is so so good. The cold ice cream with the crispy puffs and the warm chocolate is everything you need in a dessert.

Makes a lot of small puffs

Ingredients:

Cream puffs (pâte à choux):

  • 100 g butter, salted

  • 200 ml water

  • 125 g all-purpose flour

  • a pinch salt

  • 1 pinch baking powder

  • 3 large eggs

Chocolate sauce:

  • 160 g dark chocolate

  • 250 g heavy whipping cream

  • 1 tablespoon sugar

  • 1 teaspoon espresso

  • 1 teaspoon unsweetened cocoa powder

  • ½ teaspoon vanilla paste

Filling:

  • vanilla ice cream

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 400℉ (200℃). Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

Put water and butter in a medium saucepan and bring it to a boil over medium heat. In a bowl sift flour, baking powder and salt. When the butter is all melted add all the flour at once, and stir the mixture with a wooden spoon. Lower the heat and keep stirring until a dough is formed and it pulls away from the sides of the pan and is slightly shiny. 

Keep beating the dough with the wooden spoon until slightly cooled, about 2 minutes.  

Beat all the eggs in a bowl. Add a little of the beaten eggs, incorporating it thoroughly before adding more. Add the egg in small amounts until you have a thick paste but not runny at all.

Fill a large pastry bag fitted with an open tip, with the cream puff dough. Pipe quarter-size circular mounds about 2 inches apart, onto the parchment paper. To get the best tops on the cream puffs stop pressing on the pastry bag before you lift it, make a small circular move with your wrist as you lift the tip of the puff. If you have small tips on the puffs anyway, dab the tops of each puff with a fingertip dipped in water to smoothen the tops. 

Bake the puffs for 18-20 minutes, until they are puffed up and golden brown.

DO NOT open the oven while baking cream puffs, it will cause them to deflate.

Let the puffs cool on a wire rack.

Chocolate sauce:

Heat the cream in a small sauce pan, add chocolate, cocoa, coffee vanilla and sugar, and stir while heating. You don't want it to come to a boil.

Filling:

Fill each puff with about a teaspoon good vanilla ice cream.

Serve the profiterole with the warm sauce on top.

Enjoy!