Chef Asha Gomez (Southern and Indian Food Combined) Featured in Garden and Gun .... Three Spice

Wow, that is a LOT of eggs! Also a lot of oil again, but she uses more baking powder & less baking

soda. SP version only uses 1 TBL of baking soda.

I love that mixture of spices she's using.

 
I don't particularly like spice cakes and don't think carrot cake needs to be a spice cake.

So I use smidgens of cinnamon or clvoes so this would suit me just fine.

 
Melissa, the best carrot cake I ever had...

was a mad dash baking carrot cakes for a wedding cake. Madness erupts, door bells, telephones, Jehovah's Witnesses, water meter readers, thunderstorm, power outage, and lightening strikes the pear tree in my front yard splitting it into sunder and sending the pieces into the driveway, the front lawn, the porch, and against the living room windows.

Meanwhile. I am lighting the grill. I have cakes to bake and that is the only option left to me.

Between running to the front to survey the damage, trying to calm down my German Shepherd, Mrs. Fricka Wotan, who did not like guns, fireworks, and thunderstorms, my daughter helping me with the cakes, and actually thanking Jesus for the Jehovah's since they pulled my German Shepherd out of her thunder funk and put her on guard duty, we managed to put the cinnamon in the cake batter FOUR times. We figured this out later. (What did you do? Did you add the cinnammon? Yes. Did you? Yes. Then when the lightening struck, Yes., etc.)

It was the best damned carrot cake I've ever made. We assembled layers of the wedding cake, then made a mad dash from Cincinnati to nowheresville Indiana about 45 minutes away, in August, at 105F. Cream Cheese Icing be Damned!.

The carrot cake layers were in the trunk of my '87 VW Golf, we had the backseat ski door open (did I mention this was my first car out of college and I had no air conditioning???). I had boxes of ice on the sides in the trunk and daughter was in the backseat with a cooler and a funeral parlor fan on a large popsicle stick fanning cold air in through the backseat ski door across a chest of ice to keep the disaster at bay.

So we arrive at West^&%$&^%*&, Indiana*, the cream cheese icing still clinging to the cake, and we ran in with the layers into the air-conditioned oasis of this god-forsaken backwater. The cake was assembled and all chortled in glee: Cinnamon Carrot Cake!!!

Now? I add 2 tablespoons of cinnamon to my carrot cakes. People go nuts. It is the cinnamon!!!

* Or as we in Cincinnati say, the giant cornfield between Cincinnati and Chicago.

 
hahahahahahahahaaa. Thank you. My eyes are swollen shut from allergic reaction to something in my

yard, but I cans still read.

Thank you, Richard. This was almost as good as Claritin.

 
Funny you mentioned German Chocolate Cake. I loved this style of cake growing up. I made one from...

...the CI recipe and took it to our fellowship/Bible study a few weeks ago.

We have a wonderfully diverse group of people we meet with. Several naturalized citizens attend who were not born in the US, so they weren't familiar with this style of cake and had never had coconut-pecan frosting. A former Brit, a man from Poland, another from Uganda who is here on a student visa, and a guy born and raised in Taiwan are regulars.

You would think I had plated up something from another planet! They were cautious at first, but with encouragement from some of our US-born attendees, they went for it. It was a huge hit, and I'm getting requests to "bake it as often as you are able"!

Love it!

Michael

 
RICHARD, that is one very typical catering experience. Let me know when you'd like another, & I'll

hire you for one of my backwater Indiana orders! What you went through is so funny (looking back at things, that is) and so very true. LOL. Thanks for the great laugh this morning....wigs

 
CI German Chocolate Cake w/ Coconut-Pecan Filling from Jan/Feb 2005 by Dawn Yanagihara

German Chocolate Cake with Coconut-Pecan Filling
Serves 12 to 16

When you assemble the cake, the filling should be cool or cold (or room temperature, at the very warmest). To be time-efficient, first make the filling, then use the refrigeration time to prepare, bake, and cool the cakes. The toasted pecans are stirred into the filling just before assembly to keep them from becoming soft and soggy.

FILLING
4 large egg yolks
1 can (12 ounces) evaporated milk
1 cup (7 ounces) granulated sugar
¼ cup (1-3/4 ounces) packed light brown sugar
6 Tablespoons (3/4 stick) unsalted butter, cut into 6 pieces
1/8 teaspoon table salt
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2-1/2 cups (7 ounces) sweetened shredded coconut
1-1/2 cups (6-1/2 ounces) finely chopped pecans, toasted on baking sheet in 350-degree-F oven until fragrant and browned, about 8 minutes

CAKE

4 ounces semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, chopped fine
1/4 cup Dutch-processed cocoa, sifted
1/2 cup boiling water
2 cups (10 ounces) unbleached all-purpose flour, plus additional for dusting pans
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
12 tablespoons (1-1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
1 cup (7 ounces) granulated sugar
2/3 cup (about 4-1/4 ounces) packed light brown sugar
3/4 teaspoon table salt
4 large eggs, room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 cup sour cream, room temperature

1) FOR THE FILLING: Whisk yolks in medium saucepan; gradually whisk in evaporated milk. Add sugars, butter, and salt and cook over medium-high heat, whisking constantly, until mixture is boiling, frothy, and slightly thickened, about 6 minutes. Transfer mixture to bowl, whisk in vanilla, then stir in coconut. Cool until just warm, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate until cool or cold, at least 2 hours or up to 3 days. (Pecans are stirred in just before cake assembly.)

2) FOR THE CAKE: Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position; heat oven to 350 degrees F. Combine chocolate and cocoa in small bowl; pour boiling water over and let stand to melt chocolate, about 2 minutes. Whisk until smooth; set aside until cooled to room temperature.

3) Meanwhile, spray two 9-inch-round by 2-inch-high straight-sided cake pans with nonstick cooking spray; line bottoms with parchment or waxed paper rounds. Spray paper rounds, dust pans with flour, and knock out excess. Sift flour and baking soda into medium bowl or onto sheet of parchment or waxed paper.

4) In bowl of standing mixer, beat butter, sugars, and salt at medium-low speed until sugar is moistened, about 30 seconds. Increase speed to medium-high and beat until mixture is light and fluffy, about 4 minutes, scraping down bowl with rubber spatula halfway through. With mixer running at medium speed, add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition and scraping down bowl halfway through. Beat in vanilla; increase speed to medium-high and beat until light and fluffy, about 45 seconds. With mixer running at low speed, add chocolate, then increase speed to medium and beat until combined, about 30 seconds, scraping down bowl once (batter may appear broken). With mixer running at low speed, add dry ingredients in 3 additions, alternating with sour cream (in 2 additions), beginning and ending with dry ingredients, and beating in each addition until barely combined. After final flour addition, beat on low until just combined, then stir batter by hand with rubber spatula, scraping bottom and sides of bowl, to ensure that batter is homogenous (batter will be thick). Divide batter evenly between prepared cake pans; spread batter to edges of pans with rubber spatula and smooth surfaces.

5) Bake cakes until toothpick inserted into center of cakes comes out clean, about to 30 minutes. Cool in pans 10 minutes, then invert cakes onto greased wire rack; peel off an discard paper rounds. Cool cake layers to room temperature before filling, about 1 hour. (Cooled cakes can be wrapped in plastic wrap and stored at room temperature for up to 1 day.)

6) TO ASSEMBLE: Stir toasted pecans into chilled filling. Set one cake on serving platter or cardboard round cut slightly smaller than cake, and second cake on work surface (or leave on wire rack). With serrated knife held so that blade is parallel with work surface, use sawing motion to cut each cake layer into two even layers. Starting with first cake, carefully lift off top layer and set aside. Using icing spatula, distribute about 1 cup filling evenly on cake, spreading filling to very edge of cake and leveling surface. Carefully place upper cake layer on top of filling; repeat using remaining filling and cake layers. If necessary, dust crumbs off platter; serve or refrigerate cake, covered loosely with foil, up to 4 hours (if refrigerated longer than 2 hours, let cake stand at room temperature 15 to 20 minutes before serving.

GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKE WITH BANANA, MACADAMIA, AND COCONUT FILLING
If you cannot find roasted unsalted macadamis nuts, substitute salted ones, but first remove excess salt by spreading them on a clean kitchen towel and giving them a good rub.
1) Follow recipe for German Chocolate Cake; in filling reduce vanilla to 1 teaspoon, add 2 teaspoons dark rum with the vanilla, and substitute roasted unsalted macadamia nuts for pecans.
2) Just before assembling, peel and cut 4 medium bananas into ¾-inch-thick slices. Arrange one quarter of banana slices on first cake layer, then spread filling evenly over; repeat with remaining cake layers, bananas, and filling.

GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKE WITH COFFEE, CASHEW, AND COCONUT FILLING
Follow recipe for German Chocolate cake; in filling, add 2 teaspoons ground coffee with sugars; substitute roasted unsalted cashews for pecans.

 
It has to be the original

I don’t wan’t improved and messed around with. I am not a deep chocolate cake girl, and specifically like the original because it is not very chocolatey. It has to be the one my granny made.

 
My Mom would have been the only one to bake that cake for me growing up, but she didn't.

I always ate the store-bought versions, or maybe a homemade one at a picnic. I understand what you mean though. I have a soft spot in my heart for certain dishes I grew up with that are not exactly gourmet versions.

CI's recipe has been my go-to since I started making it, about 10 years ago. The boys loved it as teenagers.

Michael

 
My sister makes it at Christmas and I get to bring a big hunk home.

It is one of those “sacred” things that has to taste exactly like you remember them. It was also my husband’s pick for groom’s cake at our wedding, made by his sister. I made it annually for his birthday. Can’t mess with tradition.

 
Yup, this was my grandmother's "signature" cake and she used the

recipe on the German's Sweet Chocolate package. No other will ever be allowed. This cake was at every Christmas, Thanksgiving, Easter, and Birthday dinner (of course, being my grandmother, there were also Blackberry Jam and Red Velvet cakes as well as three kinds of pie).

 
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