In celebration of the week leading up to Valentine's Day and my friend Angela's birthday, I made red velvet cupcakes. It's so very in-theme of this week's mood. (Also, please don't be intimidated by the length of this blog. It's mainly recipes... but make sure you go to the end so you can see all of the pretty pictures.)
But before I get to the velvety cupcakes, you must know about the dinner I helped cooked with Kelsey and her boyfriend, Shawn.
Tuesday night, Shawna and Kelsey invited me over to Furnald for "Pesto Pasta". I met them at Morton William's, our local market, and bought ingredients.
We got:
-1 package ground turkey
-1 package whole wheat penne
-parmesan
-whole wheat bread
-garlic
-cilantro
-salt and pepper
-pine nuts
-olive oil
With this, we made garlic bread with parmesan and pesto pasta with turkey and pinenuts. It was a simple spontaneous meal that turned out quite well. So well, that almost all of Furnald 7 stopped by for a sniff, and sometimes a taste. (Forgive me for the bad quality photos. They were taken on a friend's iphone.)
Garlic Bread with parmesan
-You want to start up the broiler for this recipe
-lay whole wheat bread on a baking pan and drizzle olive oil over the whole pan.
-smash garlic (to release its flavor) and cut up into small pieces.
-Then spread the garlic over the bread. Sprinkle some parmesan over the bread.
-Broil for 2-3 minutes. Et Voilà!
Whole Wheat Pasta with Pesto, Turkey, and Pinenuts
We made the whole wheat pasta according to the box. Except we put some oil and salt in the water before it boiled.
We then chopped up the cilantro and put in in the ground turkey, as well as with some garlic, salt, and pepper. We mixed it all up, and put it to the side.
In a pan, we warmed up mashed garlic in a very little amount of oil. Allow the garlic to heat up in the oil first, as it will infuse its flavor with the oil (thus adding it to the meat as a whole). Allow the pinenuts to roast in the oil and garlic. Then add the meat. Watch closely as you stir and flip the meat. Make sure every piece is fully cooked. It should take about 7 minutes.
Then take out the pasta and drain. Put in the pesto, and the meat/pine nut mix (from the stovetop). Mix it up and serve with some parmesan.
(feeds 6-7 people) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This was quite the delicious meal, as usual. This week I could feel the oozing love in the air. The very next night I was invited to eat again. Paul made some delicious pasta and steak. The steak was very simple, but incredibly rich in flavor. He cooked it on the stovetop in a mixture of butter and oil, after marinating it in cayenne pepper, herbs, and oil. That's all it took for a delicious steak. I don't mean to overwhelm you with recipes, so Paul will have another post dedicated to him making a delicious steak. So now you have something to look forward to...
The rest of my cooking this week involved baking.
I don't only love to cook, but I also love to bake.
I made red velvet cupcakes, funfetti cupcakes, chocolate cake, and brownies. The last three were out-of-cardboard-boxes, made-for-bakesale material. I had a waterpolo bakesale which was pretty successful. Five hours of public hassling and begging later, we made a satisfying amount of money to begin to help make up for the fact that Columbia University Club sports has suffered from the nation wide necessity for budget cuts. But no worries, we understand.
The red velvet cupcakes were for a less-wholesome-more-selfish--but nonetheless important--reason: Angela's birthday. But because the recipe I usually use was given to me by my best friend's family, I feel like I do not yet have the right to distribute their recipe. Copyright issues.
However, here is an incredibly delicious recipe for red velvet cupcakes that should blow your valentine's mind. (This is the recipe I tested out for the cupcake campaign pictures... with a few of my personal touches) (Don't worry. I put them in the recipe... )
Red Velvet Cupcakes (makes 24+ cupcakes)
- 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 cups sugar
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon cocoa powder
- 1 1/2 cups vegetable oil
- 1 cup buttermilk, room temperature
- 2 large eggs, room temperature
- 5 tablespoons red food coloring
- 1 teaspoon white distilled vinegar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 package Cream Cheese
- 1 stick unsalted butter
- 1 tsp vanilla
- 1 tsp rose water (or citrus zest, or whatever suits your fancy)
- 1 16oz package powdered sugar
-Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
-In a medium mixing bowl, sift together the flour, sugar, baking soda, salt, and cocoa powder.
-In a large bowl gently beat together the oil, buttermilk, eggs, food coloring, vinegar, and vanilla with a handheld electric mixer. (It makes things easier to have an electric mixer, but it is possible by hand... It just requires a little more effort)
-Add the dry ingredients to the large bowl. Mix until smooth and thoroughly combined. (WARNING: Do NOT overmix the batter... This causes your batter to get tough)
-Bake in oven for about 20 to 25 minutes. You can turn the pans once half way through, but I never do... (Some argue they cook more evenly. depends on your oven).
-The cupcakes are done once you can remove a clean toothpick from the middle. Remove from oven and cool completely before frosting.
Frosting
-Mix the butter and cream cheese until they are smooth and creamy. Slowly add powdered sugar and mix. This is easiest with an electric mixer (my broken hand mixer and sore arm muscles can prove that).
-Add the vanilla and rose water (or zest). If the icing is too thick, try adding milk (1 tbsp at a time) until it's the right consistency.
Et Voilà!! Red Velvet Cupcakes... or "mo-cakes" as Angela has now coined.
I have yet to introduce you to Angela. (Hint: She has a headband on in the last post...) She has been taking my deliciously beautiful food photographs. So the day after her birthday, Columbia University and Barnard College cancelled all classes due to a blizzard. Now my Angelino self has never actually experienced this thing called a "snow day," so I took advantage of this day to have a Cupcake Campaign Photoshoot.
We popped a bottle of Martinelli's from Angela's birthday celebrations (oh, the life of an underaged college student...)
Well here are the beautiful pictures that Angela took that will soon adorn lovely posters across Barnard and Columbia's campus.
Good food is delicious, so that's my current adjective for life. And as always, live well. Eat well. And in the spirit of ValenTHYME's day, please love well.
Im enjoying your blog alot morgz. Why would you want to sit in the snow? Arent you from cali girl? Anyways please continue with this blog or else i will be forced to actually take notes in class instead of reading this and wishing we were together in the kitchen again. And if you ever let me do a post i know what im doing, and if you dont ill just hack ur account and do it anyways. PEACE OUT, Love you baby!
ReplyDeletehaha alright!
ReplyDeleteJamila, you know you can do whatever you want. You are JAMILA. I think that makes sense...
I want you to have one post IN THE VERY LEAST.
The snow was fun... but I'm over it.
ahh I miss you and love you lots! xoxo