I don’t usually post recipes, here, but today I’m making an exception. Strawberries have started to appear in stores and, while it’s still early in the season, the temptation is there to make something of them. This recipe would be a nice in-between step between now and when spring and summer shortcakes come around.
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Company was coming for dinner and we’d picked up some early-season (but so fresh you could smell their sweetness as you walked past the flats) strawberries with a vague plan that they would comprise dessert.
But a vague plan only gets you to a few hours before dinner. What to do with them?
Sure, there’s the usual pie, shortcake or cobbler but I wanted something more cake-like.
For Christmas Eve I’d made the Caramel Apple Cake from Food Network Magazine, which was similar in concept to a pineapple upside-down cake and we really enjoyed the combo of dense cake and moist fruit. To make a strawberry-friendly version, I headed to Joy of Cooking for a basic Sour Cream Coffee Cake recipe (skipping the streusel) and added in a layer of strawberries between each half of the dough.
The addition of the strawberries and the change in baking pan from the original recipe meant it took twice as long for the cake to bake. And I worried that skipping the streusel topping would result in a blah cake.
Thankfully, our guest proclaimed it a very successful experiment.
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Hidden Strawberry Cake
Cake (adapted from Joy of Cooking) 4 Tbsp unsalted butter |
Strawberry Filling
1 pint fresh strawberries Strawberry Topping 1 pint fresh strawberries |
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and prepare an 8-inch square pan.
In a stand mixer, beat together butter and sugar until light-colored and fluffy.
Meanwhile, combine flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt in a medium-sized bowl and stir until combined.
In a small bowl combine the Greek-style yogurt and vanilla.
Scrape down the mixing bowl and then, on low, add the dry and wet ingredients in batches to the creamed butter and sugar: 1/3 dry, 1/2 wet, 1/3 dry, last of the wet, last of the dry. Scrape down the bowl and mix in the beaten eggs.
Stem, hull and slice 1 pint of the strawberries for the filling.
Spread half the batter into the bottom of the prepared pan. Scatter the sliced strawberries in an even layer over the batter, sprinkling with cinnamon and brown sugar. Carefully spread the remaining batter over the top of the strawberry layer.
Bake for 45-55 minutes, until the cake is golden brown, the edges pull away from the sides of the pan and a knife inserted into the center comes out clean.
While the cake bakes, take the remaining pint of strawberries and stem, hull and slice them. Place them in a bowl with the demerara sugar (or other raw sugar), cover and refrigerate for 1 hour or until you’re ready to serve the cake.
Let the cake cool in the pan for 10 minutes and then unmold to a serving plate to cool completely.
When ready to serve, top each slice with some of the sugared strawberries.
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The strawberry layer does sink a bit, instead of staying firmly in the center but the flavor is just fine regardless of the shift. The hint of cinnamon is just enough to spice the whole cake and the extra strawberries on top (along with the juices the sugar helps draw out) add a touch of moisture to the top of the cake. If anything, a little freshly whipped cream might also be added, but it’s certainly not necessary to enjoy the cake as-is.
Oh, my goodness, I am so strawberry-obsessed. I love them. I buy them frozen in the winter so I can eat them all year round, but frozen just aren’t the same. This cake looks amazing. I can’t wait to try it!
Hope you like it!
It’s been a long time, but I do remember walking through my grandfather’s strawberry fields in Louisiana when I was younger. The best thing out-of-season were my grandmother’s strawberry freezer jam: we’d eat spoonfuls like pudding (not to mention on toast, waffles, pancakes and anything else carb-o-rific that would sit still long enough). She’d send us home with several pints of it when we’d go home to visit.
I miss strawberries. I’ve seen them in the grocery store but wondered if it was too early. I didn’t want to take a chance and end up with berries that are a bit tasteless. Your recipe looks delicious. I love it when a little strawberry juice is spooned over cake. So good! I may have to pick up a pint the next time I go shopping.
It is pretty early in the season (my maternal grandfather was a strawberry farmer) but if they smell sweet from 2 feet away, it’s a safe bet they’re ready to eat. The ones I bought came from Plant City, Florida, and they must be having a good year already!