Cakespy: An Educaketion Recipe
- 1 cup butter
- 1 teaspoon Madagascar vanilla
- 3/4 cups sugar
- 2 eggs
- 1 1/2 cups white flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/4 cup of milk, approximately
- Red food coloring
- 1 ounce amaretto (optional)
- 1/4 cup of apricot jam or your choice of preserves
- 1/4 cup vanilla buttercream frosting (optional)
- 11 ounces almond paste or fondant to cover
- Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees.
- Line a shallow square cake tin (9x9 inches works well) with parchment paper.
- Cream the butter, vanilla and sugar until light and fluffy.
- Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition.
- Sift the flour, baking powder and fold into the creamed mixture.
- Add sufficient milk to give the dough a soft consistency, kind of like that of a drop cookie.
- Separate the dough into two equal parts. In a bowl, mix half of the dough with 1 ounce amaretto. If you don't like amaretto, this step is optional. Place the dough into one half of your prepared cake pan. It should be stiff enough that it won't drip into the other half.
- Add a strip of parchment paper to the middle of the pan, along the edge of where your white-colored dough ends at the halfway point. This will help keep the dough colors divided while you bake.
- Add a few drops of red food coloring to the remaining mixture to turn it a pink color, then spoon this into the other half of the prepared pan.
- Bake for 30-35 minutes or until the cake has risen and is lightly brown on the edges and has a dull finish on top.
- Turn out on a wire rack and let cool fully.
- Trim the edges of the cake so that both pieces are of uniform size; then cut each half in two so that you have four equally sized strips.
- Gently heat the apricot jam in a small pan and stick the stripes of cake together, one plain piece next to one colored one, and then vice versa to make a checkerboard effect.
- Brush the top of the assembled cake with apricot jam.
- Roll out the almond paste into a rectangle the length of the cake and wide enough to cover both sides.
- Invert the cake on to the almond paste, then brush the remaining three sides with apricot jam. If you want an extra dose of decadence, I found that adding a thin layer of buttercream frosting in addition to the apricot jam was quite a nice addition.
- Press the almond paste neatly around the cake; serve in slices.
butter, vanilla, sugar, eggs, white flour, baking powder, milk, red food coloring, apricot, vanilla buttercream frosting, almond paste
Taken from www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2010/02/cakespy-an-educaketion-oscar-movies-foods-cake-recipe.html (may not work)