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Just a Pinch

Showing posts with label Banana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Banana. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2015

White Hot Chocolate Gone Bananas

I have always liked bananas and banana flavored items.   Do you remember the Banana Flip snack cake?   




Or these Banana Flavored Suckers?  

They were both a couple of my favorite banana items when I was growing up. 

How would you like to reminisce that banana flavor profile,   You can with this ......



White Hot Chocolate Gone Bananas

1 pkg. of your favorite White Hot Chocolate Mix, made with milk or water
2 heaping teaspoons of Cook and Serve Banana Flavored Pudding Mix
1/2 tsp Banana Flavored Extract
Whip Cream 
Banana Chips
Cinnamon or nutmeg


Make a mug of your favorite White Hot Chocolate.   Stir in two heaping teaspoons of dry pudding mix and 1/2 teaspoon of banana extract.   Top with whip cream, sprinkle with cinnamon or nutmeg  and top with banana chips.   


Notes  and Swaps
  • Try using unsweetened almond, soy or coconut milk 
  • Replace the banana extract with a Banana flavored liquor (adults only)





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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Going Bananas


Who doesn’t purchase bananas when their green and still end up with a few over ripe ones in a few days?   No one ever seems to eat the last two or three bananas so they end up turning speckled brown and over ripen.   For a while I was just tossing them in the garbage.  Then I got smart and started peeling them and placing them in baggies to freeze them.  Then I got lazy and stopped peeling them. I just toss them into a Ziploc bag and freeze them.   I have my father-in-law freezing bananas now too.   About once every other month or so, I go to his house and load up on frozen bananas.   I bring them home defrost them and make us both some banana bread for eating and some for gifting.   




Before you throw away that banana, try freezing it. Ripened bananas, although soft and very sweet, are still good for a variety of uses in the kitchen.   You can use them in baking, making smoothies or dipping in chocolate to create frozen pops.   


You can even use the peels.  They make a great fertilizer for rose bushes.  Put the peels in the blender with some water and whir away until they are smooth.   Use this mixture to water your rose bushes. 
Bisquick Banana Bread
1 cup sugar
3 eggs
1/3 cup oil
1 tsp. vanilla
3 bananas (1 1/2 cups mashed)
2 1/3 cups Bisquick baking mix
1/2 cup walnuts, chopped and toasted (optional)
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Spray bottom of loaf pan.   In a medium sized bowl.  Mix ingredients in the order they are given.   Do not over mix.  Pour batter into loaf pan.   Bake in oven for 45-60 minutes.   Remove from oven when toothpick comes out clean.  Let cool ten minutes in the pan.  Run knife around the edge of the pan and remove to rack to finish cooling.


Notes/Swaps
  • Try toasting a slice and serve with butter.
  • Cut a slice and spread with canned vanilla frosting
  • Use banana bread to make French toast and serve with fresh whip cream




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Thursday, February 23, 2012

This Cake is Da Bomb

Cakes of all kinds are a tried and true dessert for many of our family gatherings.  This one is sure to be a hit at your next gathering.  It' delicious creamy layers has something to satisfy everyone.   It's origin is from a bakery in Chicago and is named after the atom bomb (a time when everything was being named after the bomb). 


Atomic Cake
Whether you make cakes and pudding from scratch or use a boxed mixes it up to you. You can make all the elements of this cake one day, then assemble the next. You will want to allow time for the cake to chill completely; this helps the layers and fillings stay together as you slice and serve the cake.


Cake layers
1 box banana quick bread mix or cake mix
1 box yellow cake mix
1 box chocolate cake mix

Vanilla cream
1 box (3 ounces) vanilla pudding mix
2 small bananas sliced 1/4-inch thick pieces (about 1 1/2 cups)

Strawberries
1 cup hulled, sliced fresh strawberries
¼ cup strawberry glaze (or jam)

Strawberry Bavarian cream:
½ teaspoon powdered gelatin

2 tablespoons water
½ cup hulled, sliced strawberries
2 tablespoons sugar
½ cup heavy cream

Ganache:
¼ cup heavy cream
⅓ cup semisweet chocolate chips
1 tablespoon butter

Topping
3 1/2 cups nondairy whipped topping (such as Rich's) Or Stabilized Whipped Cream

1. For the cakes, prepare each boxed mix in two 8-inch cake layer pans, following the directions on the packages. You will use only 1 layer per cake. If using banana bread mix, the entire box will make one layer cake in an 8-inch pan. (Use the water method for mixing as listed on the box.) Wrap remaining layers well and freeze for another use. (They will keep up to six weeks.)

2. For the vanilla cream layer, make the pudding according to package directions. You will need about 1 cup; save leftovers for another use.

3. For the strawberries, mix the fresh berries and the glaze in a small bowl.

4. For the strawberry cream, bloom the gelatin in the water in a small bowl until it dissolves, 5 minutes. Cook the strawberries and sugar in a small saucepan over medium heat, stirring frequently, until berries are soft, about 5 minutes. Puree in a food processor and return berries to the pan. Stir in gelatin mixture. Simmer over low heat, stirring frequently, until gelatin is clear, 2 minutes. Set aside to cool. Meanwhile, whip the cream to soft peaks; gently fold in the cooled strawberry mixture.

5. For the ganache, heat the cream in a microwave-safe bowl to a simmer, about 45 seconds. Stir in chocolate and butter, whisking until smooth. Allow to cool to room temperature, stirring occasionally, about 50 minutes. Whip with a handheld mixer until light and fluffy, about 8 minutes.

6. For the topping, whip the nondairy whipped topping in a large bowl with a mixer on high speed until you have stiff peaks, about 6 minutes. Makes about 7 cups.
Assembly

7. Place a 9-inch cake circle on a cake stand (a rotating one, if you have one). Spoon some of the whipped topping into a pastry bag (or plastic bag with a hole cut at one corner) with a star tip. Settle the banana cake layer on the cake circle. Pipe an edge of whipped topping around the perimeter to act as a dam. Fill the center of the cake with 1/2 cup pudding. Top with banana slices, pushing them gently into the pudding to make a smooth layer.

8. Settle the yellow cake layer onto the banana filling. Pipe whipped topping around the edge to make a dam. Spread with the strawberries in glaze. Top with strawberry cream, leveling the filling smooth with an offset spatula.

9. Place the chocolate cake layer onto the filling. Pipe whipped topping around the edge to make a dam. Fill with the ganache, smoothing the top. Cover the sides and the top with the whipped topping. Refrigerate overnight for easier serving.

Notes
·      This recipe used a banana bread mix, rather than a banana cake mix, as the former was more readily available. But you may use either.

·       Rather than using nondairy whipped topping, I made Stabilized Whip Cream.

·      You can swap out the strawberry glaze with Seedless Strawberry Jelly.

·      I also made this in a trifle dish and added a layer of Chocolate Pudding and topped with whipped cream. As you can see I also made a straw berry cake layer rather than vanilla.


Born in the optimistic Atomic Era for which it is named, a recipe from the Chicago area.

Recipe Adapted from the Chicago Tribune.

Here is a photo of this cake in a trifle dish using a strawberry cake and missing the whip cream but adding a layer of chocolate pudding.




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