Category General

Summer Cooking from Your Flower Garden: Parties That Cook’s Lavender Tea Cake Recipe

Fun Fact: Long, long ago, it was the Greeks who discovered that crushed lavender would release a relaxing fume when burned.

These days, lavender is not only popular for its fragrance, but also for its distinct flavor. This beautiful purple flower lends a floral and slightly sweet flavor to any dish — so light and fresh, it just screams summer! Parties That Cook’s Lavender Tea Cake recipe provides a great opportunity to use your own, fresh, home-grown lavender or dried lavender from the store. If you’re lucky, you’ll be making this delicious dessert at our upcoming Date Night Couples Cooking Classes or Sizzle & Swirl Cooking Classes!

Warm Lavender Tea Cakes with Homemade Lemon Curd
This recipe can also be found in our Dessert Recipes Section.

Ingredients
Lemon Curd:
1/3 cup lemon juice
1 lemon, zested
1/2 cup sugar
3 eggs
1 egg yolk
1/2 cup unsalted butter, cut into pieces
Ice bath

Lavender Cake:
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cup granulated sugar
10 Tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large whole eggs
2 large egg whites
2 cups plain low fat yogurt
2 tablespoons lavender flowers (not petals or stems), finely chopped
Nonstick spray
Parchment paper
Powdered sugar for dusting

Methods/Steps
Make Lemon Curd: Set up a double boiler by filling a sauce pan halfway with water and bring it up to a simmer. In a medium bowl whisk together lemon juice, zest, sugar, eggs and yolk. Add the butter.  Place bowl over the pot of simmering water.  Note: Be sure the bottom of the bowl is not touching the water below it! Whisk steadily, but gently, until curd becomes thick and pale and creamy, about 10 to 15 minutes. Remove from heat, strain into a small bowl and chill on top of an ice bath until ready to use.

Preheat oven to 350°F.

Prepare Pan: Spray a half sheet pan (12-7/8” x 17-3/4”) with nonstick baking spray. Cut a sheet of parchment paper to fit the pan and place it on the sprayed pan. Spray the parchment paper as well.
Combine Dry Ingredients: Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt into a bowl. Set aside until ready to use.

Cream Ingredients: Beat granulated sugar, butter, and vanilla until well-blended. Break eggs and egg whites into a small bowl or measuring cup and add them into the mixture one at a time. Beat well after each addition. Next, add half of the flour and mix gently. Add the yogurt, then mix briefly and finish with the rest of the flour. Stir in lavender. Do not over mix or cake will be tough. The batter will be very thick.

Bake:
Spoon the batter into the prepared pan. Use an offset spatula or palette knife dipped in hot water to spread batter into the pan. Bake for 15- 20 minutes or until a sharp knife or cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean.

Serve: Cool cake in pan for 10 minutes. Run a knife around the edge of the pan and gently invert pan onto a large cutting board. Remove parchment paper and dust the entire cake with powdered sugar. Cut cake into 4 quarters by cutting down the middle both width- and length-wise. Cut each quarter into 12 squares to yield 48 – 2 inch squares. Place onto a serving platter. Transfer the lemon curd into a serving bowl and place next to the warm cake.

Recipe created by Parties That Cook® www.PartiesThatCook.com

For a few San Francisco restaurants serving dishes featuring edible flowers, check out 7×7 Magazine’s article here.

Parties That Cook Set to Heat Up Portland Team Building Events

As Parties That Cook ramps up to launch our hands-on cooking parties and corporate team building events in Portland, Oregon this summer, learning about the city’s culture is an important step. What better way to do so than by eating our way through the city?!

On two recent trips to research this progressive, food-loving city, Bibby and Carolyn quickly learned first-hand that Portland is leading the country in food carts (it boasts one of the largest populations of food carts per capita in the U.S.), farm-to-table dining, and innovative chefs satisfying Portland’s hunger for delicious food made with local ingredients!

While Bibby and Carolyn spent most of their time meeting with clients, visiting venues, and picking the brains (and bellies!) of Portland foodies, they were still able to see what the all the buzz is about. Everyone they met with had a tip for them, and the list grew like yeast in a microbrewery!  Some wonderful restaurants they would gladly return to include:

Clyde Common (at The Ace Hotel) for fresh Arugula Pappardelle and the most “alive” salad they had ever seen
Gruner for contemporary Austrian fare
Little Bird Bistro for bar bites and cocktails
Tasty n Sons for their Chocolate Potato Doughnuts with Crème Anglaise
Beaker and Flask for spit-roasted whole goat. Every Tuesday night they spit-roast a different animal!

Lunch was more spontaneous – easy to do with food carts sprinkled on every corner and parking lot! The Grilled Cheese Grill was one of their favorites. You can choose to eat on an outdoor patio or inside the old-school school bus with bench seating and tables shellacked with 70’s yearbook pictures. Carolyn had the Meatball Grilled Cheese with Marina Sauce and Pesto – delicious! Bibby went for the Beef and Gruyere on Rye, which was equally amazing.

The rental car reminded them of their eating experiences when they returned to PDX: empty coffee cups from Stumptown Coffee, balled up Porchetta and Arugula sandwich wrappers from The People’s Pig food cart, and pastry aromas from treats at Ken’s Artisan Bakery wafted out as they sadly retrieved their belongings.

The next trip will definitely include a Farm to Table experience, a trip to the Portland Farmer’s Market, lunch at Pok Pok for Vietnamese, and dinner at Castagna… Parties That Cook’s official Portland launch is in September, but the first Portland event is on June 27, 2011 – 3 months ahead of schedule! City of Roses, here comes Parties That Cook!