Ok Ladies,
I was printing a book over the weekend at work and came across a couple interesting recipes for cakes. Since you guys seem to be the resident bakers. I thought I would let you have a whirl at one of them, BEFORE SD's inner HAZEL comes out and he try's it. I'm think it should be renamed as Fart Cake or Whistle Berry Cake. If you try it let us know how it turns out.
Baked Beans in Tomato Sauce Cake
1 Cup white sugar
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 large egg and 1 egg white
1 8-ounce can vegetarian baked beans in tomato sauce
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/2 cup chopped walnuts (optional)
1/2 cup chopped raisins (optional)
1, Preheat oven to 325*. Lightly grease and flour an 8.5x4.5 loaf pan, or spray it with nonstick cooking spray.
2, Empty the can of baked beans (with Sauce) in a large bowl, and mash the beans. Then stir in the sugar, oil, eggs, and vanilla extract. Mix until smooth.
3, In a separate bowl, combine flour, cinnamon, baking soda and baking powder and mix thoroughly. Then add the mixture to the bean batter, and mix thoroughly until smooth. If you're adding walnuts and/or raisins, do so and mix the batter again.
4, Pour the batter into the prepared loaf pan. Bake for 55 to 60 minutes, until toothpick inserted in the center of the cake comes out clean.
5, Place the pan on wire rack until the cake cools. When it has cooled, frost it with the Cream Cheese Frosting.
Cream Cheese Frosting
1 3-ounce package cream cheese
1 tablespoon milk
2 1/2 cups sifted confectioners' sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Blend cream cheese and milk. Add sugar and blend well, then stir in the vanilla extract. Spread frosting on cooled cake.
Regardless of my inner Hazel, I can tell you that that does not even sound like something I would do. No disrespect intended, but bean cake with a cream cheese topping doesn't make me say Yummmmmmmm.
Of course, as always, I include the caveat that I have always been horribly wrong before ;D
Dang, here I thought again that Deb and carolyn were golfers ;D
Duck I could always send you the recipe for Cherry Cola-Chocolate-Mayonnaise-Sauerkraut Bundt Cake!!! If that would be more to your liking!!!
10.5
I do not know where you got that cookbook but I'm with SD here. Neither of those sound appitizing at all. But then again, I have been known to whip up some pretty odd stuff myself. :P
I'd give it a try. Tomato sauce cake I've heard of. The beans, who knows. Cream cheese frosting ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D makes everything right.
The sauerkraut cake I'd also try. Maybe trade vanilla coke for the cherry. The kraut flavor pretty much will cook out.
10.5 -- I don't know - even though I'm trying to eat healthy and incorporate more beans in my diet I don't think I want them in my cake. Thanks for thinking of me though ;D.
Quote from: Smoking Duck on January 19, 2009, 12:58:55 PM
Dang, here I thought again that Deb and carolyn were golfers ;D
I have a dusty set of clubs. I'm terrible but love it. I haven't been in about 5 years but told my husband Saturday that was going to change this summer - that we had to make time.
Quote from: deb415611 on January 19, 2009, 02:33:15 PM
10.5 -- I don't know - even though I'm trying to eat healthy and incorporate more beans in my diet I don't think I want them in my cake. Thanks for thinking of me though ;D.
Then I quess you won't be making any bean pies. :)
I think it sounds interesting! I think it is half sister of the carrot cake, a lot of the ingredients are similar.
I have to agree with with HCT, cream cheese frosting may be akin to the lipstick on the pig! ;)
I'm not sure if I'm a resident baker but I did made rice krispie treats yesterday for my daughter's sleep over.
Speaking of interesting ingredients, I remember a cookie recipe that had crushed potato chips in it that my friends mom used to make, but I was 18 then and didn't take any notes! But they were good.
Carolyn
I always keep vegetables next to the beef and fruits next to the breads, cookies etc and never the twain shall meet ;D
Carolyn and Deb,
When I get time and the pain killers wear off I will type up the other recipe for you.
Pain Killers = trashed knee at work waiting for MRI approval from work Ins. Co. Probably surgery to fix.
Sorry to hear about your knee 10.5.
Hope you don't need surgery, but that is sometimes the only way to fix em.
You know I was looking at my canning recipes and there are jams that contain tomatos.
So, maybe tomatos can be paired with sweet.
I think the recipe would be worth trying...I'm gonna try it sometime soon.
Carolyn
I hope the knee gets better soon 10.5
There is a brownie recipe floating around the baking blogs that has black beans in it. I think I would try that before the cake. I have been baking healthier lately but have gone towards using reducing the fat with applesauce, using canola oil instead of butter etc.
10.5 - hope the knee gets better
10.5
sorry to hear your hurting. hope everything gets better for you.
nepas
10.5 Wishing for the best for your knee. Bad knees are not fun.
For healthier baking, might try some soy flour. Definitely not a 1 to 1 replacement ratio, and does affect taste, but can be quite good. My wife and daughter tried one time to make some soy flour brownies with carob and Equal. They did not eat them, but I thought they were ok. Recipe definitely needed work, but I thought it had some definite possibilities. Not like the cheesecake topped brownies that I was tempted with the other night, but possibilities nonetheless. Years ago, I made a figgy pudding that included tomatoes. Added a tartness that went well with the whisky infused sauce I served over it. I looked for the recipe last night, but couldn't find it. Had a bean pie a couple of times while doing service work for a small church in East Texas. I thought it was a pumpkin or a sweet potato pie, but it turned out to be beans - quite tasty. I bet that baked bean cake - a la - Whistleberry Cake has a high probability of tasting better than some of those candied loquat, peanut butter, kiwi/mango with hazelnut blueberry cinnamon icing combinations that seem so popular now in the mags.
Shakespeare
The Bard of Hot Air
Quote from: Caneyscud on January 20, 2009, 06:31:32 AM
For healthier baking, might try some soy flour. Definitely not a 1 to 1 replacement ratio, and does affect taste, but can be quite good. My wife and daughter tried one time to make some soy flour brownies with carob and Equal. They did not eat them, but I thought they were ok. Recipe definitely needed work, but I thought it had some definite possibilities.
Caney,
Have you tried white whole wheat flour? It is whole wheat, a different type of wheat berry than traditional whole wheat, with a milder taste. Depending on what I am baking I sub 50 - 100% for all-purpose.
Deb
10.5, hows the injury today? How you're getting some relief.
Quote from: HCT on January 20, 2009, 09:21:57 AM
10.5, hows the injury today? How you're getting some relief.
Not too bad. A soak in the tub with epsom salt did wonders. No physical therapy today so there won't be as much stiffness.
As promised here is the other recipe.
Cherry Cola-Chocolate-Mayonnaise-Sauerkraut Bundt Cake
2 cups all-purpose flour
1/3 cup unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
3 eggs
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup light mayonnaise
1 cup cherry cola
1 cup sauerkraut, washed, drained and chopped
1) Preheat oven to 350*F. Spray Bundt pan heavily with vegetable cooking spray
2) Sift flour, cocoa, baking soda and baking powder together on a sheet of wax paper.
3) In a large bowl with mixer on high speed, beat eggs, sugar and vanilla extract. Reduce speed to low and beat in mayonnaise. Add flour-cocoa mixture alternately with cola. Stir in drained sauerkraut.
4) Bake in prepared Bundt pan for approximately 45 minutes. Cool 10 minutes. Remove from pan onto serving plate.
10.5,
With some vanilla icing drizzled over the top I think it would be a decent cake.
I agree HCT. I'm not that picky of an eater, but if it has a different ingredient. Don't tell me till after I tried it. I might figure it out on my own. Course I would probably still try it if you told me what it was. Heck I knew what Rocky Mountain Oysters where when I tried them the first time.
By the way the book I got the recipes from is Best-Ever Kitchen Secrets by Bottom Line publishing. Not sure when it will be for sale or where. We just print the books.
I'll give them a try in the next few weeks, maybe sooner. I'll pretty much try anything once, taste it twice. Otherwise you can't really say you don't like it. :D
I have to say I have never seen sauerkraut in a cake before!
Glad to hear the knee is feeling a little better 10.5.
Carolyn
My dad always said that his mother used to make them 'potato candy' when he was a kid. I never heard of that before but I guess it was good.
Couldn't help myself, I had to Google that one Pens
found this at Cooks.com
POTATO CANDY
1/2 cup mashed potatoes
powered sugar
peanut butter
Combine 1/2 cup mashed potatoes and power sugar till is firm enough to roll. The mixture will become very wet; just keep adding powdered sugar. roll out on powdered sugar like noodles. Cover with peanut butter. Roll into jelly roll cut into small pieces. Very rich!
Carolyn
Wow! No wonder they loved it as kids. That would send my blood sugar to the moon! ;D
Just got to make sure it's not recalled PB!
Carolyn
Quote from: deb415611 on January 20, 2009, 08:14:50 AM
Quote from: Caneyscud on January 20, 2009, 06:31:32 AM
For healthier baking, might try some soy flour. Definitely not a 1 to 1 replacement ratio, and does affect taste, but can be quite good. My wife and daughter tried one time to make some soy flour brownies with carob and Equal. They did not eat them, but I thought they were ok. Recipe definitely needed work, but I thought it had some definite possibilities.
Caney,
Have you tried white whole wheat flour? It is whole wheat, a different type of wheat berry than traditional whole wheat, with a milder taste. Depending on what I am baking I sub 50 - 100% for all-purpose.
Deb
Deb,
No I haven't. Actually don't think I have even heard of it! However, I was trying to find some deserts with low carbs and good taste and with the nice addition of the isoflavens. Doubt if the white whole wheat has any less carbs than regular. I am a big fan of whole wheat though. When I do add wheat products to my eating - it is usually in the form of whole wheat and particularly whole wheatberry. The only thing that I don't like about the whole wheat products normally available is that there is usually added sweeteners of some type added - for me destroying any gain in nutrition of the whole wheat. I like whole wheat without sweetness and I wish some company would take note!
Shakespeare
The Bard of Hot Aire
Threadkiller Extraordinaire'
Interesting, Shake............I like sweetness without whole wheat and it seems as if most companies have taken notice of that ;D
This is a very interesting thread....very creative....kool...