Saturday, March 5, 2011

Peanut Butter Chocolate Banana Cake

Is there a better combination than banana, chocolate and peanut butter?
I've been craving peanut butter and bananas recently, and I've settled for just smearing fresh bananas with the creamy goodness. But my new job at the bakery has left me wanting to make cake all the time, surprisingly enough. So when I got to work this morning and saw all the bananas, I decided on Banana Cake with Peanut Butter Frosting.

I went to open the fridge and saw a batch of chocolate frosting I had made the previous weekend, and was initially bummed I hadn't yet thought of a way to use it.

While the residents were going over the menu, one mentioned that peanut butter in frosting did not sound good. I told her that I had some extra chocolate and I could frost her piece with that instead, but that peanut butter and bananas are delicious together. She said that was true, and that she'd give it a try.

Once again, my chocolate frosting goes unused. I leave it out at room temperature, just in case.

It was not until the cakes are out of the oven and my peanut butter icing is made that I decide to use the chocolate. I used it as the filling between the two layers of cake, then frosted the outside with the peanut butter, and garnished with chocolate chips to tie it all together.

Yummmmm!

Banana Cake
makes 4 8'' cake rounds, or 2 finished cakes

ingredients:
1/2 cup butter
1/2 vegetable oil
1 cup water
2 1/4 cup flour
2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/3 plain yogurt
1 1/2 teaspoons apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup whole milk (minus 1 1/2 teaspoons- I put the apple cider vinegar in the measuring cup, then fill it up to the 1/2 cup mark with milk)
3 large bananas, pureed in a blender

preparation:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line 4 8-inch round cake pans with parchment paper and spray lightly with cooking spray.

If you haven't already, combine apple cider vinegar, vanilla and milk together to curdle.

Melt butter in small saucepan with oil and water.

Sift and combine flour, sugar, salt and baking soda in the bowl on an electric stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Turn on low speed to mix.
Slowly pour melted fat mixture into bowl with paddle running at low speed. Scrape bowl and paddle, mix again briefly.

Combine the curdled milk mixture with the eggs and yogurt, and pour into mixer, running at low speed.
Scrap down sides of bowl, add banana and mix again, just to combine thoroughly. (Do not over-mix- this will form gluten and make your cake tough.)

Divide evenly amongst your 4 pans, place in pre-heated oven and bake for about 20-25 minutes, until a toothpick inserted near middle comes out clean.

When cool, un-mold and place one round on a plate, slather with chocolate frosting and stack on the next layer. Frost the entire cake with peanut butter frosting, decorate as you wish. Repeat with second cake.

 Frostings

I didn't follow a recipe or write one down for the frosting. They are easy to make up as you go.

For peanut butter, I used equal parts butter and peanut butter (about 1 cup each), and mixed until smooth, then added a teaspoon of vanilla, and powdered sugar until the desired consistency and flavor was reached.

For chocolate- same thing, just no peanut butter, add about 1/2 cocoa powder, and a few teaspoons of milk



Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Portion Size

The thing that shocked me the most when I first began working with the elderly was the portion size of their meals. Maybe it's because I belong to the super-size-me generation, that portion sizes really were that tiny 60 years ago, or maybe when you get old you just eat less. I suppose the baby boomers and the next aging generations will tell us more, but I suspect it is a combination.
 
The elderly folks (that I work with) don't do much, so their caloric needs are much less than that of an active adult. They get up, they shower, they use their walkers to shuffle to the dining room for breakfast, then to the TV room until lunch, then back to the TV until dinner, maybe a game of scrabble, then to bed. A day in the life of a senior at XYZ assisted living revolves around meal time.

Everything is smaller: appetites, plates, bowls, bagels
The entree plates we use at the old folk's home are not a common size. They are in between the sizes of a small hors d'ourve plate and the (present) standard dinner plate. Paper plate size. The perfect size to make a little portion still fill it up and look like an adequate meal, which it is.

Old people can be very particular. The current ones came from an age where food was not in abundance, where they ate everything on their plates, when they couldn't get any ingredient on the planet like we can today.  Many of them get very overwhelmed by the amount of food I sometimes load onto their plates, so overwhelmed that instead of working away it it and eating what they can, they don't touch it. So my ignorance to their preferred portion size results in their skipping of a meal. Respect their portion control. Use a small plate, give them one scrambled egg for breakfast, half a sandwich for lunch, I know it doesn't seem like much, but it's enough.

I've got a list of my "big eaters" and my "small eaters". The big eaters get a whole sandwich for dinner! The smaller or half-portion eaters get, well, a half sandwich. Even the so-called big or "good" eaters eat much less than your average American these days. It becomes very apparent when I feed the staff- their plates are often 1.5 to 2 times larger than the "good eaters." I'm not saying that all non-seniors eat too much, we are much more active in our youth and have higher metabolisms (especially in Boulder, Colorado), and require more calories.

Their little appetites are another reason seniors should be fed nutritious foods; they are only going to eat so much, so there is a much smaller opportunity for them to get all their required nutrients. It is recommended that seniors take a multivitamin, and most do, in addition to their other numerous pills and medications.
...but that's a topic for another day.

The one thing most of my seniors don't skimp on is dessert. I send out the daily menu and receive half orders for the entree, salad and soup, and double orders of dessert! But I like to believe it's because they love my baking.