Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Pink Cakes and Freeze-Dried Strawberries


My ingredient obsession of the moment: freeze-dried strawberries. Have you tried them yet? You may have had them in your breakfast cereal. They're light as a feather and seem to dissolve instantly on your tongue, and they taste like…well, imagine if you crammed an entire pint of super-ripe strawberries into your mouth along with a couple of strawberry Jolly Ranchers—that's how they taste.

Perhaps it's because strawberry season is three long months away or perhaps it's because freeze-dried strawberries really are that good, but I've been grinding them up and putting them in everything. I love how they turn buttercreams and cake batters technicolor pink. It's like when Dorothy found herself in Oz and suddenly the world was in brilliant color. But with flavor! Three quarters of an ounce of strawberry powder plus a little tinkering transformed my regular financier batter into these lovely treats.


I'm thinking of making pink angel food cake or pink yellow cake frosted with pink whipped cream next.

Strawberry-Almond Teacakes
Printable Recipe

¾ ounce freeze-dried strawberries
5 ½ ounces sugar
2 ½ ounces all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting the tins
2 ½ ounces almond meal
5 ounces egg whites, at room temperature
5 ounces (1 ¼ sticks) unsalted butter, melted, plus more for greasing the tins

Grind the freeze-dried strawberries to a fine powder in a blender, spice mill, or clean coffee grinder. Whisk together the strawberry powder, sugar, flour, and almond meal in a large bowl. Whisk in the egg whites until thoroughly combined and then whisk in the butter until thoroughly combined. Cover with plastic wrap and let rest for 1 to 2 hours.

Preheat the oven to 375˚F. Butter and flour a standard 12-cup muffin pan or line with paper liners and divide the batter among the muffin cups. Bake for 24 to 26 minutes, or until golden brown and the edges of the teacakes start to shrink away from the pan. Let the teacakes cool in the pan for about 10 minutes. Invert onto cooling racks and finish cooling completely.

Makes 1 dozen teacakes. Both the unbaked batter and the finished teacakes have good keeping qualities.

6 comments:

Emma said...

I love this idea. I always want to incorporate strawberries into baked goods, and I was grandfathered a bottle of strawberry oil that nobody wanted (not surprised)... but for some reason its smell creeps me out so much that I've never used it.

This option is much better!

Gareen said...

What a great idea! I never knew freeze-dried strawberries could be used for baking. Perhaps my next Tasty Tuesdays post will be inspired by this recipe! Thanks!

xoxo,
La Petite Gigi

Irina said...

Looks so appealing. I smell strawberries looking at the picture.

Daryl E. said...

I attempted to make freeze dried strawberries once. HUGE disaster! It might have been because I used frozen strawberries instead of fresh. What method did you use to make them?

Lucy Vaserfirer said...

Daryl E.,
My freeze-dried strawberries are from the store. They're not something you can make at home.

Deeba PAB said...

Gorgeous tea cakes. Such a pity we cant make freeze dried strawberries at home. I love the idea!!

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