i’m not a seder schlimazel – almond pear-blueberry cake
When I posted my Spiced Apple Cake last year for Passover, I expressed my deepest desire to be invited to a Passover seder. (To get in the right mood, I did write the post while sampling bitter herbs.) The response was overwhelming–I received invites from all over the twitterverse. Though most of them were from far away places, I appreciated each offer.
As this year’s Passover soon approaches, this goy with a yarmulke-to-go still has no local invitation to feast over pot roast, kosher wine, and unleavened desserts. All I want is a little . . . Tradition!. Oy, I’ll probably end up at the half-emptied gym again amongst the goyim and lapsed Jews.
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about purchasing extra eggs from the Farmer’s Market. They come in handy on this occasion. Because of the lack of leavening agents in Passover desserts, eggs are the go-to ingredient for my recipes. This year, I decided to add a little bit of my Asian heritage to the dessert — the aroma of ginger and five spice. May this dessert will inspire a new fusion cuisine — HebrAsian.
Maybe if I kvetch a bit more, I’ll be accepted into the home of the chosen people for a nosh. I’m not a schlimazel. Look, I can do it: Barukh atah Adonai, Eloheinu, melekh ha’olam . . .
Almond Pear-Blueberry Cake
Ingredients:
- 5 medium Anjou pears, about 2-1/4 pounds
- 1/3 cup dried blueberries
- 1/4 cup crystalized ginger, finely chopped
- 1/4 cup brandy
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
- 1/3 cup vegetable oil
- 1 teaspoon fresh ginger, grated or finely chopped
- 1-1/2 cups granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon lemon zest, about 1 lemon, freshly grated
- 3/4 cup slivered almonds, chopped and toasted
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1/4 teaspoon five spice powder
- 3 large eggs, room temperature
- 1/2 cup matzo cake meal
- 1/4 cup almond flour or almond meal
- 1/4 sliced almonds (topping)
Directions:
1. Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position; heat oven to 350 degrees. Spray an 8-inch-round by 3-inch-high straight-sided cake pans with nonstick cooking spray; line bottom with parchment rounds and spray paper round, set aside
2. Combine blueberries, crystalized ginger and brandy in a small microwave-safe bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and microwave at 50% power for 90 seconds. Remove bowl from microwave and let sit for 20-30 minutes. Drained and set aside.
3. Stir butter, oil and fresh ginger in a separate measuring cup. Set aside.
4. Add sugar and lemon zest to a small bowl, rub with fingers until fully incorporated.
5. Combine 3/4 cup of lemon/sugar mixture, chopped almonds, ground ginger, and five spice in a medium bowl; set aside.
6.. Peeled, cored and halved the pears, cut into 1/4-inch-thick slices.
7. Add eggs to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment, beat on medium-high speed until combined, about 30 seconds. Beat in remaining 3/4 cup lemon/sugar, 2 tablespoons at a time, until mixture is thick and foamy, about 4 minutes. Reduce speed to medium, slowly pour in oil mixture until combined. Remove bowl from mixer and fold in matzo cake meal and almond flour with a spatula quickly until fully incorporated.
8. Pour a third of the batter into prepared cake pan. Sprinkle over a third of the almond mixture, then a third of pear slices, and follow by a third of blueberry/ginger mixture. Repeat until you finish all three layers. Sprinkle sliced almonds over top of cake.
9. Transfer cake to oven and bake until the sides of the cake pull away from the baking dish very slightly and topping begins to caramelize, about 75-90 minutes.
10. Remove cake from oven, and rest on rack for 30 minutes. Place a piece of parchment on top and press down lightly to compress the cake. Leave parchment on for 5 minutes, place plate on top of cake and invert to release it from cake pan. Place a serving platter on the bottom of the cake and re-invert, so the cake is right-side-up. Let cool completely, about 1 hour.
Recipe Notes:
1. If your cake pan is 2-inch high, you can make a parchment collar.
2. If you practice a strict Kosher diet. omit butter and increase the canola oil to 2/3 cup.
3. Brandy can be substitute with kosher wine or orange juice.
4. Cake can be covered tightly with plastic wrap and store at room temperature for up to 2 days, as the flavor improves with age.
Recipe adapted from Arthur Schwartz
Oy, you poor boy! Such a gorgeous cake and nowhere to go! If we weren’t going to Fire Island, we’d have you over, but you’d have to lead the seder!
Wow! This looks like my favorite type of cake- dense and eggy with interesting flavors. I can’t wait to try it, of course I’ll have to simplify it a little to make it sugar and gluten free. Yum, thanks for posting this.
Mollie
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Seriously beautiful cake, so well photographed. I wish I were having a seder, (if I were a better Jew!!!!) I’d invite ya!!
What a delightful post & the Almond Pear Blueberry cake looks divine! You are such a creative genius, Ken! Thanks for sharing. You have to write a post-Passover post & tell us where you went. See you soon :-)
I stayed in your web for over half an hour, just looking and reading your posts and beautiful pictures! I would invite you to any dinner! ;)
What a beautiful cake and it looks delicious. I definitely want a piece so I will be waiting for it at work, hint, hint, ( I’m Mitch’s friend).
Almonds in cake are such a classic and your photographs are beautiful!
If I wanted to replace 1/2 cup matzo cake meal with something else, do you have any suggestions?
Hi Amrita, thanks for visiting my blog. If it’s not for Passover, u can use AP flour. If so, then substitute w almond flour.
Wow Ken – very impressive blog. Beautiful photos and man – the treats look divine. I googled coconut cupcakes and found your post from last Easter, which I’ve bookmarked. Then I checked out your homepage and the Nutella cookies, also bookmarked. I’m pretty happy to have stumbled upon your blog!
I do have one question re: the frosting on the coconut cupcake post…one reader commented the buttercream didn’t come out right – before I make them, any suggestions?
Hi Linda, first off, thank you for visiting my blog. I think her problem might be the butter being too soft when making the buttercream. My rule of thumb w softened butter is, if you hold the stick of butter in your hand and try to bend it, it should yield a slight curve and not fall apart. Make sure you whip the buttercream for the entire 4 minutes to get it fluffy, this also helps the buttercream to set up nicely. If the buttercream does turn out too soft, place it in the fridge for 30 minutes and it should set up. Let me know how it turns out. -Ken
You are hilarious!!! I want to attend a Seder too…I’m thinking you have a way better chance then me! As usual, gorgeous cake, Ken!
Ken, funny that today would be the day I hopped on your blog to check it out. I am in dire need of some new Passover dessert ideas for this year. This cake sounds delicious and I love the photos. I also loved your Apple cake recipe from last year. And, quite a few other recipes I happened upon while looking through past posts. BTW – if you want to take a quick trip to L.A. this weekend, you are welcome at my Seder table!
The food looks terrific, as usual. Can I ask a non-food related question? Where did you get that vibrant blue tablecloth? Fantastic.
Hi Jay, thanks for visiting my blog, While I was traveling this past holiday in Asia, I found that fabric in Dali, China.
Baby, where is that Jewish husband lurking? Isn’t it his responsibilty to get you to a seder? And *sigh* I guess I do have to move to New York if for anything to make a seder for you and my own goy. But promise me a fabulous cake like this one? *hug*
WOW! This is thee most beautiful cake I have ever seen! I am dead serious-its perfect-its boarder line seductive. This is definitely on my buck list of things to make! Thank you for being so talented.
This looks so great I want to make it for Passover! We’re having a crowd so I’d make two cakes, but — I don’t have an 8″ spring form. I do have a 10″ and a 7″, which by my calculation total to area (& volume) just slightly bigger than two 8″ pans. So if I double the recipe, amount-wise it should work. But will it cook OK in a larger pan, or is there something I need to do to adapt the recipe? Thanks!!
Hi Susan, I think the 7″ pan should be about the same as an 8″-pan. The cake in the 10″-pan will have less height, so it might require less time; just keep an eye on the cake around the 50-60 min mark. Happy Baking! – Ken
Forgot to mention — I’d invite you this year, but I’m in Virginia!
Remember how I said that this year’s post was my favorite? Well… it might just be a tie with this one, for the flavors alone. Beautiful cake, Ken!
Thanks for the quick response Ken! Being in Virginia, I had a merry chase today finding “five spices” and crystallized ginger — but did find them at an Asian Grocery.
Turned out AMAZING! Worth the extra effort to find the ingredients, grind up almonds info flour, etc. I was able to double the recipe and then make one 7″ and one 10″ — watched carefully but the cook time was about what you have in the recipe for 8″.
The only thing I did differently was to increase the amount of blueberries (and brandy to soak them in.) The 10″ size worked well for our large-ish seder.
Hi Susan, I’m glad it all worked out and that you had a great seder. Thanks again for your visiting my blog and hope you’ll continue and enjoy my posts. -Ken
Oh my goodness! Waiting for it to come out of the oven. It is looking and smelling amazing. Can’t wait to see how it turns out!
Can the recipe be converted to non passover and how. Please let me know if possible. Many Thanks. Kathy
Hi Kathy, Though I haven’t tried it myself, I’m sure you can switch out the matzo cake meal and use AP flour or other flour of your choosing. Please keep me posted if you try it. -Ken
come to my passover! just outside of london. it is a wonderful time for family, food and warmth.
thank you for the beautiful recipe.
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Is the measurement for the almond meal a quarter cup? Above just says “1/4 almond meal.” Thanks.
Hi Sharon, yes it’s 1/4 cup, thank you for pointing out the error. I have revised the recipe. Happy Baking! -Ken
I just tried making this cake as I love to bake. I had a difficult time spreading the cake mixture into layers (as it was thick)when trying to pour it into the cake pan and didn’t have enough of anything (except for pear slices) to make 2 layers. Wondering what went wrong:(.
Hi Randee, There’s not a lot of batter. It’s just enough to bind the pears together during baking. The beauty of this cake is it’s mostly fruit. Happy Baking! -Ken
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Is there any other liqueur I can substitute for the brandy? Looking at some Triple Sec in my pantry, but not sure how that would affect the overall taste of the cake…..
Hi JB, Triple Sec is fine, it’ll lend a slight orange scent to the finish cake. Happy Baking! -Ken
Made the cake for the Sedar. Here are my changes:
1. Used half the amount of sugar and it was still very sweet.
2.I did not add the 5 spices and used half the ginger in order not to scare off people that do not like spices.
3. Soaked the blueberries in Amaretto for more almond flavour.
4. Used only finely ground almonds and not Matza flour.
5. Used only almond chips.
There was enough batter for the entire three layers. It was very easy to spread.
Got tons of compliments. Worth the work
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I’m trying to make this for passover this year and did a trial run yesterday but it turned out super mushy and undercooked – the obvious thing is to bake it for longer but do you have any other suggestions? Maybe more cake meal or add potato starch? I was super excited about this and would love for it to be a success!
Thank you so much for your help!!
Just wanted to add that i did bake it for a long time and it seemed OK from the outside (that’s why i took it out of the oven) but then the center was a runny mess :(
Hi there, apologies for the delayed response. Anjou pear can sometimes get too juicy, you may sub half of the pear with Bosc to lessen the watery level. You also need to let the cake sit for a few hours to set before unmolding. Hope this helps, thanks for trying my recipe. – Ken
Thank you very much for getting back to me the same day! I will go ahead and try with some firm bosc pears. The family is very picky/sensitive so we might omit the crystallized ginger unfortunately and just add a extra blueberries unless you have any other suggestions? Again thanks so much!
Great recipe, like I read from the other comments, I would probably skip the trying to do 3 layers. Depending on how it goes with mixing the egg mixture when you add the cake meal, the batter can become thicker, causing the batter to be harder to evenly spread into 3 layers. When I make this again, I will also use riper pears, mine were as ripe as they could’ve been, making for the pears to not being as soft as I would’ve like. The seder I took this, everyone enjoyed. Thank you for a great recipe!