Chocolate Stout Cake with Vanilla Bean Mascarpone Frosting + 5 Stout Desserts You Should Make For St. Patty’s Day!

csc0036When you marry a Fitzpatrick and live near Boston it is necessary to celebrate St. Patty’s Day. Before we had kids, Bubba and I would head to an Irish pub and drink green beer. Before I met Bubba, I drank way to much green beer and listened to bad Irish bands at the Black Rose with my college roommate, Amy, also an Irish girl.  When I was a kid, my grandmother made corn beef and cabbage and gave us green carnations on St. Patty’s Day. I guess in some way I have always celebrated this holiday. This year with a new baby in the house, C and G to take care of, and a complete lack of energy, our celebration will be minimal. Sure I will have a beer to celebrate. I just may fall asleep shortly after I finish it. I may even attempt to make this corn beef and cabbage recipe. Maybe Bubba will help the kids make a leprechaun trap this weekend.

I am not sure how we will actually celebrate this holiday. So in anticipation of a busy weekend and not enough sleep, I made a chocolate stout cake with vanilla bean mascarpone frosting a few days early. This was my first attempt making a chocolate stout cake. I love chocolate, but I am not a huge fan of stout beer, so I was a bit hesitant to try this recipe. I am so glad I gave it a shot anyway, because it is by far one of the tastiest cakes I’ve made! The chocolate and the stout are similar in that they both add a dark, bold flavor. The sour cream keeps the cake super moist. The sweet vanilla bean mascarpone frosting adds the perfect balance of sweetness to a slightly bitter crumb. Overall, I love this cake!

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The recipe suggests serving the cake with a stout beer like Guinness. Bubba tried it and said it is a great pairing. Who knew?

csc0020I chose mascarpone (Italian style cream cheese) instead of traditional cream cheese because I had a container of it in the fridge. While making the frosting, I got distracted by N’s crying and over-beat it. The butter and cream cheese separated a bit. I almost threw it out, but Bubba said it still tasted good. I went ahead and frosted the cake, and, yes, it did still taste good. Next time I make cream cheese frosting, I’ll follow these tips by Joy the Baker.

Have a great St. Patty’s Day!

Chocolate Stout Cake with Vanilla Bean Mascarpone Frosting

recipe slightly adapted from Simply Recipes

serves 6-8

Ingredients:

1 cup stout of stout beer, like Guinness

10 tablespoons unsalted butter

3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa

2 cups superfine sugar

3/4 cup sour cream

2 eggs

1 tbsp. pure vanilla extract

2 cups all-purpose flour

2 1/2 tsp. baking soda

1/4 tsp. kosher salt

Directions:

Pre-heat your oven to 350°F. Grease a 9-inch spring-form pan with butter. Line the bottom with a round of parchment paper. Set aside.

Add the beer and butter to a large sauce pan and cook over medium-high heat until the butter is completely melted. Add the cocoa powder and sugar. Whisk together until combined. Remove from heat. Allow it to cool to room temperature.

In a separate bowl beat together the sour cream, eggs, and vanilla extract until well combined. Add the sour cream mixture to the butter & beer mixture and whisk together until fully incorporated.

In a large bowl whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt. Add the beer-butter mixture and whisk together until it just comes together. Do not over whisk!

Pour the batter into the prepared spring-form pan. Drop the pan on the countertop a few times to shake out the air bubbles in the batter .

Bake for about 50-60 minutes, but check doneness at 50 minutes. Cool completely in pan, on a wire rack. When cool, run a knife around the edge to separate the cake from the pan. Remove the ring from the pan. Carefully transfer cake to cake stand. Spread on the frosting and serve with a nice, cold stout. Happy St. Patty’s Day!

Vanilla Bean Mascarpone Frosting

recipe inspired by Simply Recipes cream cheese frosting

will frost 1 8 or 9 inch cake

Ingredients:

1/2 cup or 1 stick of unsalted butter, at room temperature

8 oz of mascarpone cheese

2 cups of powdered sugar, sifted

1 tsp. vanilla extract

1 vanilla bean, scraped

pinch of kosher salt

Directions:

Beat the cream cheese for a few minutes on medium speed. Add the butter and beat until smooth.  Scrape down the bowl.

Add the vanilla extract and vanilla bean. Slowly add the powdered sugar and a pinch of salt. (Add more powdered sugar if you want it sweeter.)

Refrigerate the frosting for about an hour to help it to firm up. Spread on cooled cake and serve!

5 Stout Desserts You Should Make for St. Patty’s Day!

If you love Guinness and you love vanilla ice cream try a Guinness Float! Gimme Some Oven has the recipe for you.

Two of Bubba’s favorite things is bacon and beer. I may need try this beer candied bacon recipe from Tide and Thyme very soon!

Do you love cupcakes and chocolate covered pretzels? Try My Baking Addiction’s stout cupcakes with chocolate covered pretzels. Sounds amazing!

Guinness. Chocolate. Pudding. Yes, it exists. Head over to Sprinkle Bakes for the recipe.

I love snickerdoodles. Heather Cristo came up with a twist on the traditional cookie just in time for St. Patty’s Day. Head over to her blog for the Guinness Snickerdoodles recipe. I hope to make them soon!

Angel Food Cake with Lemon Cream + 5 Angel Food Cakes Recipes You Should Try!

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Our sweet baby boy, Nate, surprised us all and arrived 2 weeks early. Like his big sister, he arrived just before another major snow storm hit Boston. Everything went smoothly, but it is hard to believe he is finally here. We are now a family of five. C and G are in love; Bubba and I are slowly adjusting to life with three kids. Alice, our fury fourth, seems to have this expression on her face that says: really? another one? Bubba will be home with us for the next month, which will make this transition so much easier. I can’t imagine getting through this with anyone else. The kids love to have daddy home all the time and I am so grateful for the help.

Shortly, after arriving home, G asked me to make something. Really? I just gave birth. I am so tired. I can’t do this now. C chimed in, “something sweet mama.” I needed to rest and recover, but they needed me again. They need mama, even if, mama just had another baby. So, I decided to make an angel food cake with a lemon whipped cream. The kids and Bubba love angel food cake and the lemon whipped cream seemed like the perfect topping to brighten our winter palettes. The cake and cream came together fairly quickly. Nate interrupted me a couple of times to nurse, but that is my reality, at least for now. It is ok. It passes by so fast. That saying “the days are long but the years are short” is so, so true. I remind myself of this when I up at 2am and then again at 4am.

I used Ina Garten’s lemon angel food cake recipe and adapted it only by omitting the lemon zest. Her recipe is by far the best angel food cake recipe I have tried. The cake comes out moist and airy. It is not overly sweet like many of the store-bought versions. The lemon whipped cream recipe is from Martha Stewart. I did not alter her recipe because it is perfect. Her whipped cream has the right amount of lemon flavor and sweetness. The only thing I wish I added was fresh berries but I didn’t have any in the house. Next time! Come summer when berries are abundant, I will make this again.

Ok got to get back to my 3 goosies.

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Angel Food Cake

serves about 8

recipe barely adapted from Ina Garten

Ingredients:

2 cups sifted superfine sugar, divided

1 1/3 cups sifted cake flour (not self-rising)

1 dozen egg whites, at room temperature

3/4 teaspoon kosher salt

1 1/2 teaspoons cream of tartar

3/4 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Directions:

Pre-heat your oven to 350 F.

In a medium bowl combine 1/2 cup of the sugar with the flour. Sift together 4 times and set aside.

Place the egg whites, salt, and cream of tartar in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a whisk attachment and beat on high-speed for  about 1 minute or until the egg whites make medium firm peaks. Reduce the speed to medium and add the remaining 1 1/2 cups of sugar by sprinkling it over the beaten egg whites. Beat for a few minutes until thick and shiny. Add the vanilla and continue to whisk for about 1 more minute or until thick.

Sift about 1/4 of the flour mixture over the egg whites and fold it into the batter with a rubber spatula. Keep adding the sifted flour by fourths and folding until it’s all incorporated.

Pour the batter into an ungreased 10-inch tube pan. Smooth the top, and bake it for about 35 to 40 minutes or  until it springs back. Remove the cake from the oven and invert the pan on a cooling rack. Allow to cool completelyy. Remove from the pan and serve at room temperature with lemon cream and fresh berries if you have them. Cake will last, well wrapped, at room temperature for several days. Enjoy!

Lemon Cream

Recipe from Martha Stewart

Ingredients:

1/2 cup fresh lemon juice

1/2 cup sugar

1 tablespoon cake flour (not self-rising)

1/4 teaspoon salt

1 1/2 cups heavy cream, chilled

1 tablespoon finely grated lemon zest

Directions:

Prepare an ice-water bath and set aside.

Whisk lemon juice, sugar, flour, and salt in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Bring mixture to a boil and whisk constantly for 1 minute or until it thickens.

Transfer it to a heat proof bowl set in ice-water bath to cool completely. Stir occasionally.

Whisk chilled cream in a mixer on medium speed until stiff peaks form, about 3 minutes or so. Gently fold whipped cream into juice mixture in thirds.

Add the lemon zest and gently fold to combine. Refrigerate the lemon cream until ready to serve or up to overnight. Enjoy!

5 Angel Food Cake Recipes You Should Try!

I love cupcakes. In fact I am a bit obsessed with cupcakes. I think I may need to try this recipe for angel food cupcakes very soon.

If you love chocolate and angel food cake, try this recipe for chocolate angel food cake with fruit and maple yogurt. Yum!

Like all of us, I am tired of winter. My thoughts turn toward spring and summer. Just the picture of this red, white and blueberry trifle from the blog Skinny Taste makes me happy. I can’t wait to try it this summer!

Angel food cake for breakfast? Yes please! How Sweet It Is has the recipe for angel food cake french toast. Give it a shot this weekend.

Now, what to do with the leftover egg yolks? Babble has a list of 24 ways to use up leftover egg yolks and egg whites. Check it out!