Now, my family loves maple syrup, but it seems we don’t make enough pancakes, because each year when she brought us a new bottle we still had half of last year’s left. Over the years my mom devised several recipes to whittle down our supply, a maple-glazed salmon is still a favorite. However, it seems we’ve been lax once again because between my mom and myself, we’ve got three bottles of maple syrup. Oh, the difficult problems we face. I briefly considered giving one of them as an emergency Christmas gift, but this stuff is so good that even with our surplus I couldn’t bear to let it go. After all, if I had only one bottle in the pantry I might start to get a little nervous, it’s a long way to next August.
I love doing a fancy dessert on New Years, when you can serve some cute appetizers, skip the entree, and head straight for the sweet stuff with your glass of Champagne in hand. After all, it’s only tomorrow that you swore off sweets and committed to salads. Until then, why don’t you have another piece of cake?
Maple-Chestnut Layer Cake
This layer cake is best the first day it's made, that is, if you can resist the smell of the cake coming out of the oven. The frosting is delicious, but you could also use a maple buttercream frosting if you prefer.
1/2 cup (4 oz) unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 1/2 cups flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ginger
1 1/2 cups pure maple syrup
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup chopped cooked chestnuts
Chestnut Cream Cheese Frosting, recipe follows
1. Preheat oven to 350 F. Grease two 9" cake pans. Place chestnuts in a food processor and pulse to make a coarse meal (alternately, if you don't have a processor, you can chop them as finely as possible). You should have 3/4 cup chestnuts.
2. Sift together flour, baking powder, salt, and ginger.
3. Beat butter and maple syrup together until combined. The mixture may look slightly curdled, that's ok. Beat in the eggs and vanilla. Add the flour mixture in two additions, stirring to combine. Fold in the chestnuts.
4. Divide batter between prepared pans. Bake 40 minutes. Let cool on a rack.
5. Place bottom cake layer on a platter. Spread the top with some of the chestnut frosting. Top with second cake layer, frost top and sides of cake with remaining frosting.
Chestnut Cream Cheese Frosting
12 oz cream cheese
4 oz (1/3 cup) chestnut puree
2 tablespoons butter, softened
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 cups sifted powdered sugar
1. Cream together the cream cheese and butter until smooth. Add the chestnut puree and vanilla to combine. Slowly sift in the powdered sugar until the desired consistency is reached.
11 comments:
Oh Mercedes, I think you've outdone yourself! This maple cake looks so divine. I love the idea of a whole cake sweetened with maple syrup. No refined sugar. Yum, I'm definitely copying this recipe down for some future excuse to make it.
For years now I've been fighting with the boyfriend over maple syrup. He claimed to hate it, I told him he was insane. We stopped at a place Upstate that sells bulk, real maple syrup and I bought some. I tried to get him to try it, he refused, and then one day, I'm sitting in the living room and he bursts in saying "Hey, you know what? That's real maple syrup! That's delicious! It doesn't taste anything like Mrs. Butterworth!"
It took all my strength to bite my tongue!
I am most certainly bookmarking this recipe now that I have a reliable source for "the good stuff." Thanks!
Mercedes, I love maple syrup and enjoy hearing about innovative recipes like this one. I wonder how substituting some of the powdered sugar with maple sugar would work in the frosting...?
I also empathize about not wanting nuts in my cake. Interrupting the eating experience is a perfect way of describing it!
Sairuh- I'm not sure that subbing maple sugar would work- the powdered sugar helps give the frosting the proper spreadable consistency, and I'm afraid the maple sugar would be granular and the frosting too runny. You could try grinding your maple sugar along with a spoonful of cornstarch in a food processor to make it more like powdered sugar, but since I haven't tried it I can't say what the results would be. Maybe do a small test batch first? Let me know if you try it.
This looks SO good. There's a maple sugar farm down the highway from my house (it's Nova Scotia)...I'm going to see if they have any maple cake on the menu next time I'm there.
Wow, that sounds really good. What a great way to use up maple syrup.
Everything on that plate looks amazing!
Mercedes,
Thank you for this recipe. I am now seconds away from biting into it :D It looks gorgeous, and from being a lover of cooking/baking I can already sense that the turn out is tasty. I didn't find chestnut in my supermarket, so I used roasted hazelnuts for the frosting. You'll laugh at me, but while processing the hazelnut, and finding out that it actually turns liquidy, I started jumping up and down in amusement. Ah, what aroma, what beauty ^_^ !!
Thanx for a wonderful/rich/flavorful blog.
that looks just stunning. i had maple candy at the farmer's market yesterday and it reminded me how much i love the flavor! i bet this would be delicious.
What a problem to have - and what a solution! Maple is now one of those things which has fallen into "treat" category for us, as it's nowhere near as easy (or cheap) to get, living in Scotland!
That looks amazing! Living in Nova Scotia is a plus, as there are maple sugar farms everywhere. I may have to go for a drive and buy some real syrup. And Maple Butter, can't forget that.
Unfotunately, since it is so easily available no one else in my house really likes maple (maple overload maybe?) and I might have to eat the whole cake by myself. What a tragedy! Yum
Post a Comment