RECIPE: Georgia Peach Truck tomorrow! REC:Sherry Yard's Peach Coffee Cake

RECIPE:

colleenmomof2

Well-known member
We loved this cake! Cake quarters froze well and were enjoyed by our older son for breakfast birthday cake! Cool idea to "coat fruit" with cocoa instead of flour! Expecting to have a couple of days before new batch of peaches are perfect to eat/freeze BUT planning (hoping) to make another cake today to use up remaining whole frozen Georgia peaches from last year at this time (skins rub right off peaches) and whole milk yogurt (this time in place of sour cream). Will be freezing cake for family share and treat after we lose a few pounds smileys/smile.gif Colleen

"This is the densest, moistest coffee cake you’ll ever eat, made of alternating layers of rich sour-cream cake and a filling consisting of peaches mixed with cinnamon-cocoa sugar. We always served it in our breakfast basket."–Sherry Yard

***Colleen's - Check directions for layering. Cake shows 3 but directions are for 2? Need to portion cake batter better if you do try for Yard's 3 layers - starting with much less on the bottom (top). I ended up with a thin fruit streusel layer and a thick one. Still wonderful! ALSO, I layered the peaches between streusel, sprinkling a thin layer under and over.

Sherry Yard's Peach Coffee Cake

For the cake

3 cups all-purpose flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

6 ounces unsalted butter, softened

1 1/4 cups sugar

3 large eggs, at room temperature

2 cups sour cream

For the filling

1/4 cup sugar

1/4 cup packed light brown sugar

1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

1 tablespoon unsweetened cocoa powder

1/4 cup slivered almonds, toasted and finely chopped (optional)

12 ounces peaches (4 small or 2 large), peeled, pitted, and cut into 1/2-inch pieces (12 ounces of frozen is fine)

Make the cake

1. Place a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Spray a Bundt or kugelhopf pan with pan spray.

2. Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt three times and set aside.

3. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or in a large bowl with a hand mixer, cream the butter and sugar together on medium speed for 5 minutes, or until light and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time. Scrape down the bowl and paddle after each addition. In 3 additions of each, add the sour cream and the sifted dry ingredients, alternating the wet and dry ingredients, and beat on low speed until all of the ingredients are blended.

Make the filling

4. In a medium bowl, mix together the sugar, brown sugar, cinnamon, cocoa powder, and almonds (if using).

5. Scoop 1 1/2 cups of the cake batter into the prepared Bundt pan and, using a small metal spatula, spread it evenly to cover the bottom. Sprinkle on 1/4 cup of the sugar mixture and dot with one third of the peach chunks.

6. Scoop in 2 cups of the batter and spread evenly. Sprinkle with the remaining sugar mixture and dot with the remaining peaches. Spoon in any remaining batter and spread over the peaches.

7. Bake for 35 minutes. Rotate the pan from front to back and bake for another 20 to 25 minutes, until a tester inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Allow to cool in the pan on a rack for 30 minutes, then invert, remove the pan, and allow the cake to cool completely upside down on the rack.

https://leitesculinaria.com/427/recipes-peach-coffee-cake.html

 
Got two gorgeous baskets of Red Havens to "sell" at our retirement community. I think

red havens are the best peach for any and everything.
I sell peaches and tomatoes on Fridays to residents (today's were 2 for a dollar), many of whom no longer drive and can't go to the store. Anything over cost goes to our Community Fund. Folks REALLY love it and I get to visit with many people I wouldn't otherwise.
Can't "afford" heirloom tomatoes yet but people here seem to prefer the big red tomatoes--and they are still "summer tomaotes".

 
Red Haven are in at our Farmers Market, they are the best. Prices are so high at the

growers booth the past three years, I am sick about it. I used to go with one 20$ bill, and an assorted amount of other paper currency and lots of change which I put aside all winter long. It was rare for me to spend that 20 bill. Now I go through $40,00 plus more. Tomatoes are 5$ a pound, cherries are $3,00 a pound. The produce is all excellent and lasts a long time in my fridge, so I have no complaints with quality. I know their prices have gone up too. Just this last winter, because of all the fires around us, meat eating bees came into the area and attacked the bee hives in many of our growers property. They had to bring in outside bees until they could get their hives going again. Product for them has increased also.
I have been going for 46 years am not planning on giving it up. I love the experience.

 
Oh, that is awful about the bees. they are already under SO much pressure--this

last year was the worst for the colony losses.
I went back this morning and my FM friend had picked me two quarts of green cherry tomatoes for making tomolives. AND also gave me 2 quarts of Sun Globe (I think)--sweetest of the sweet cherry tomatoes He is super nice. Gave me the tomatoes for exchange of some tomolives to see what they are like!!

 
OMG, I used to buy pickled Tom Olives all the time, where have they gone? I actually forgot about

them. My favorite olive right now is Armstrong Olives, Garlic Stuffed from Porterville CA. Big fat crisp green olives stuffed with a fresh, fat garlic clove. Superb in a martini, potato salad, or green salad. I keep a jar in the fridge at all times.

 
Whole frozen peach?

How do you freeze your peaches? I was assuming I'd have to slice and sugar them.

 
Yep, whole!

Let them defrost slightly to rub off skin and slice frozen to use - or eat. After they fully defrost they are mushy. We ate most of the 25 pounds with juice running off our chins smileys/wink.gif Only 10 of the 65 made it into the freezer. Colleen

 
I doubt I could find those here but may take a look for DS--he is the martini

specialist--and I do love his!! LOL
His fave is blue cheese stuffed olives.

 
The Peach Truck from GA is hitting our area. I went yesterday to buy a half bushel. The fruit is

currently all lined up on our dining room table ripening. Can hardly wait to start cranking out the peach & blueberry cobbler and peach pie and raspberry sauce for peach melba ice cream parfaits!

 
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