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Any Day All-Occasion Apple Snack Cake (Flo Braker)

Any Day All-Occassion Snack Cake

I love snack cakes as much as I love Downton Abbey. I'm a bit late to the party and have been watching marathons of the first season. Oh, that Thomas...you are vile. And Bates and Anna? So perfect...if it weren't for that crazy pesky wife. Anyway, Miss Patmore might not make this, but you can make a quick cake any morning.

This recipe is from Flo Braker’s Baking For All Occasions - pick up the book, it is filled with lots of yummy recipes.

All Occasion Snacking Cake collage
This cake uses oil and no butter, even for the topping. Mix most of the dry ingredients together with oil and then pull out some of it. Add nuts (I used chopped walnuts from Trader Joe's) and some cinnamon to finish off the topping.

In the headnote, Flo says you can add a cup of fruit or veggies to the mix...it's very versatile. I shredded an apple (skin on).

Any Day All-Occassion Snack Cake
Any Day All-Occasion Apple Snack Cake
(adapted from Flo Braker’s Baking For All Occasions)

2 1/3 cups (300 grams) all-purpose flour (I used King Arthur all-purpose unbleached flour)
3⁄4 cup sugar (150 grams)
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon - divided (I used Penzy's cinnamon)
1 cup firmly packed light brown sugar (200 grams)
3⁄4 cup vegetable oil (I used Wesson's canola oil)
(I added 1 cup shredded apple with skin on)
1 cup chopped walnuts, pecans or hazelnuts (I used Trader Joe's Walnut baking pieces)
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 cup buttermilk
1 large egg

Prep: Preheat oven to 350 F. Prep a 9 x 13 pan.
You don't need a KitchenAid mixer...just a couple bowls and a whisk.

1. Sift together the flour, sugar, salt and 1⁄2 tsp cinnamon into a large bowl.
2. Mix in the brown sugar with a whisk.
3. Stir in the oil. (By this point, my batter was a little dry and in crumbles - this worked out fine).
4. Crumb topping: Remove enough of the flour mixture to measure 3⁄4 cup loosely packed. Add the remaining 1 tsp cinnamon and blend well with your fingertips until the mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs. Set aside.
5. To finish the cake batter, stir in the baking powder and baking soda. Add the buttermilk and egg and whisk until the mixture is smooth.
6. Stir in your added fruit or veggies (if adding). I added one shredded skin-on apple.
7. Pour the batter into pan, then sprinkle the crumb topping evenly over the batter.
8. Bake for about 35 mins until toothpick comes out clean.
9. The instructions say to depan the cake after 10-15 minutes and let cool completely. However, I just left it in the pan to cool off.

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Kenya 2012

Recently returned from an 8 day trip to Kenya I will try to dot down a few thoughts while they are fresh in my memory. I’ve decided to split this into two blog posts. The first is a bit more general about how things work in Kenya, trying to perhaps clear up some confusion that I’ve notice exict amongst both consumers and baristas. I also wanted to touch on prices this year.

Structure of farmers in Kenya
There’s some confusing about the different names of coffees coming out of Kenya, so I’ll try to explain it briefly.

Society
You might have seen names like Mugaga, Tekangu and Gikanda on coffees. These are societynames. Each factory is a member of a society. In a lot of cases you can de-code the society name. For example Gikanda is made up from Gichathaini, Kangocho and Ndaroini. Tekangu is Tegu, Karogoto and Ngunguru. Mugaga is an exception to this with Kieni, Gatina, Kiamambara and Kagumoini.

Factory
Factories are wet mills. They’re just called factories in Kenya. This is where the members, or smallholders as they’re also called, deliver their freshly picked cherries. The factory manager decides when the members should pick. At some factories it’s every week, others every 10 days. Each member is paid 50 ksh pr kilo of cherry upfront and can even get an advance on their expected delivery of cherry, if they have bills to pay before the harvest. After the coffee has been sold the factory know how much they’ve earned, the profits are paid out to the members. By law at least 80% has to be paid out to the members, so running the factory can cost 20% at the most. New drying tables of repairs of machinery will of course make it more expensive to run the factory, but a lot of the better factories are only taking 10-15% of the profits. Last year the members of Kieni was paid a total of 138 ksh pr kilo cherry. Please note that this is cherry of all sizes and densities, and even though they are picked ripe there will still be a lot to sort out. The price paid to farmers at Kieni was some of the highest in Kenya last year.

Members
Typically the factories we visited had between 600 and 1000 members. Each member is typically a farmer and his family and can have anything from 40 up to several hundred trees. Some of the larger members hire work for picking, and others manage to pick their own trees themselves with help from the family.

It’s the members that choose the board and chairman of the factory. In the Mugaga society (and many other societies) the managers change between the factories every two years.

We've decided to identify the coffees we buy with the factory name, as that's the most precise identification of where that particular coffee came from. Naturally, with 900 small farmers delivering cherry we can't identify further where it came from. If you would like to know more certain you can guess it's within an approximate 3 km radius of the factory.


Two farmers at Kieni

Processing
The fresh picked cherry is delivered at the factory, where each member’s amount is weighed and they are given a receipt for final payment once the coffee is sold. The cherries are then depulped and put into fermentation tanks. The cherries are delivered in the afternoon and depulping is finished in the early evening. The first fermentation goes on over night while it’s cooler and in the morning the coffee is washed to remove most of the mucilage. It is then moved into a second fermentation tank. Here it stays for 12 to 48 hours for the second fermentation. After that the coffee is washed in channels with lots of clean water to remove the last mucilage and ensure it is clean. Then the coffee is put in soaking tanks for 10 to 18 hours before finally going to the drying tables.

At this point the beans are around 50% moisture and over the course of approximately 10 days it is dried to around 11% moisture (10% if you count the parchement). It’s important that the beans aren’t exposed to hard direct sun light, as they will then crack from too fast drying. The rasied beds used in Kenya unsure good airflow from underneath and turning the coffee often will help a uniform drying.

Some mills use a moisture meter to determine when the coffee has dried. But much like an un-calibrated Extract Mojo this can be dangerous to trust. Properly calibrated it can be a great tool though. Lots of millers will determine it by look and feel, though, and can get it just as precise. After drying the coffee needs to rest for about 2 weeks before it is delivered at the Dry Mill.

Drying at Gichathaini

Central Kenya Coffee Mill
This is our hub for quality coffee from the central region in Kenya, including of course Nyeri. The coffees we’ve cupped come through this mill and we like to do a lot of cupping here. It means we can evaluate the coffees close to the facotories and cup them as soon as they arrive.
At the dry mill the coffee is hulled, sorted for size and density - AA, AB, C, PB, T, TT and UG (Un.Graded), and finally sorted for defects. We pay an extra premium for an additional hand sorting on top of the electronic sorting, as well as for vacuum packing in stead of jute bags. All these costs are on top of the price we pay directly to the farmers, on a separate contract to avoid any confusion.


Cupping at Central Kenya Coffee Mill

Prices 2012
Last years prices were at an all time high, due both to very high global market price, but especially because of the unusual low harvest last year. Low supply and high demand simple drew prices up.

This was good news for farmers, who would otherwise (with a low harvest) have lost a lot of money. In stead it turned out to be invigorating news for many smallholders. Once again they could see that it can be profitable for them to produce coffee.

Many farmers we talked to on the trip have told us that a few years ago they were uprooting coffee trees and changing to other crops, like banana or maize. But with last years high prices they feel that coffee can be a profitable crop and more importantly young people can see a future in growing coffee. This of course is significant for us as coffee roasters, and once again stresses why roasters need to make sure that the farmers are paid well for their coffee.

This year the prices will probably go down quite a bit. The harvest is more than double of last year and there are lots of AAs (the largest size beans, which fetch a higher price). I do hope prices won’t drop all the way back to what they used to be a couple of years ago. Even though we paid a high price back then, it’ll be a blow to the feeling of economic rise that the farmers have seen in the horizon. On the other hand the price for the top lots last year, were so high that many roasters didn’t feel that was sustainable for them as well. I believe that we need to prepare our customers to pay that kind of prices for that kind of quality. We cannot expect farmers to produce quality if consumers are not willing to pay for it. 

Pictures
You can view pictures (with titles and description on some) on a little Flickr slideshow here:

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Balloons or Saucers - UFOs



Roswell, New Mexico in 1947? What really happened? Car shopping with Willy but who is going to pay for it? Phoebe asks the question, Did curiosity kill that cat? In this funny show, UFO's, Flying Saucers, mystery, cats and cars. Also a special addition of "What's My Crime" about a 66 year-old grandmother who gets busted for something in her garden.
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New Espresso Blend and Fresh Daterra

It seems we have forgotten to share a pretty important detail with you good folks that follow our blog and Facebook site:  We have received and started roasting the new crop of Daterra Sweet Collection. As always a fresh coffee that has just arrived tastes better than the year-old crop and it gave us a chance to dial in the roast profile further. We hope you’ll enjoy it. We roast this coffee with espresso in mind. That’s where we think it tastes the best. But many of our customers enjoy it on french press or filter, where the low acidity and heavy mouthfeel also has its place.

More freely growing  coffeetrees

See all the pictures from Linus’ visit to Daterra last summer in this Flickr set or in the slideshow below.

At the beginning of the new year we have also changed our espresso blend. We wanted to do try out something new and have decided to make it a blend of four coffees from two producers. Again it’s the Daterra Sweet Collection making up the majority of the blend. There’s just no way around how much we love that coffee for espresso. But we’ve added 15% of Daterra’s Organic Reserve which is a bit more fruitful. Then we have two different week lots from Kieni in very different roast profiles. One is roasted with the same profile as our old blend, which for espresso is relatively fast (relative to our Daterra roast profile anyway). This brings out the floral and light fruit notes in that coffee. The other lot is quite the opposite. A much slower roast with a different temperature curve that lowers the acidity quite a bit but keeps the darker berry notes of blackcurrant and cherries adding a very oily mouthfeel to the espresso.

The blend consists of:
55% Daterra Sweet Collection, Brasilien
15% Daterra Organic Reserve
15% Kieni Lot 15, Kenya
15% Kieni Lot 17, Kenya

Both coffees are available in our coffee shops and webshop.

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Vegan Cocoa Cake with Cinnamon Sugar Topping

Vegan Cocoa Cake
Vegan Cocoa Cake

Happy New Year! How is 2012 treating you?

I sort of missed the first half the month... sick on New Year's Eve with days of sinus infection...and a Z-Pack that killed my stomach for a couple days. Then I almost broke my 4th toe (what's that called? The "ring" toe?) yesterday hiking up a mountain. Well, you can replace "hiking up a mountain" with "in my house, moving junk around." Sigh.

Vegan Cocoa Cake collage
Why don't you start of your 2012 with some vegan cocoa cake with a light cinnamon sugar topping. I found this recipe in Hawai'i's Best Local Desserts by Jean Watanabe Hee. The fact that it's vegan isn't mentioned in the cookbook, but as I started to assemble the ingredients, I noticed it was vegan! The resulting cake is very moist. I cut it when it was still warm so the edges are all ragged...but it was still enjoyed at the library!

Vegan Cocoa Cake
Recipe:
Vegan Cocoa Cake
Adapted from Hawai'i's Best Local Desserts by Jean Watanabe Hee

2 1/2 cups flour (350 grams)
1 1/2 cups sugar (300 grams)
1/2 cup cocoa (40 grams Hershey's cocoa)
2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2/3 cup oil (I used canola oil)
2 Tablespoons white vinegar
1 Tablespoons vanilla
2 cups cold coffee or cold water (I used two packages of Starbucks Via. I dissolved the coffee in 1/2 cup boiling water and then added ice and cold water to get 2 cups of cold coffee)

Topping (combine together in a small bowl):
1/4 cup sugar (50 grams)
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

1. Prep: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9 x 13 pan.
2. Sift together the flour, sugar, cocoa, baking soda and salt into a large bowl. Whisk to combine.
3. Add oil, vinegar, vanilla and coffee/water to the bowl. Stir together with a whisk - but be sure you don't overbeat. Do not make this in a KitchenAid mixer or electric mixer - a fork or whisk are just fine. You'll see bubbles because of the reaction of the baking soda and vinegar.
4. When combined, immediately pour into the 9 x 13 pan. Sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar topping.
5. Bake until toothpick comes out clean, about 30-35 minutes.
6. Let cool and cut into squares.

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New Year or Last Year?


Did the Mayan's really predict the end of the world this year? Does anyone really know? Jeff thinks he does. Willy goes on the road to check out Muddle of Mud and Phoebe thinks about the New Year! All this and a special greetings from Terry. So sit back and have a laugh and cup of coffee with Jeff and the gang.


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