King Cake
(as given to Kathleen Stancliffe from Althea Marino)
3 packs yeast 350°
- 20 minutes
2 cups very warm
water
1 cup butter (2
sticks) – I use real butter – almost melted
½ cup sugar
1 ½ teaspoons salt
4 eggs
7 – 8 cups flour
(divided)
Combine 2 cups of the flour,
sugar and salt in LARGE mixing bowl.
Soften butter in microwave to ALMOST melted stage and add VERY warm
water and butter to the flour/sugar/salt mixture. Stir with wire whisk. Add 3 packs yeast (add it dry) and stir until
dissolved. Add 1 egg at a time, mixing
well after each one. Add 2 more cups of
flour. Exchange wire whisk for spoon
here (and rinse off whisk immediately to avoid hard, dried-on flour
junk!). Add enough more flour to make
dough easy to handle (I usually add about 2 ½ more cups), and then dump out
onto floured counter and knead until flexible, but not hard. Rinse out bowl, dry, and then oil it lightly
with vegetable oil. Put dough in bowl,
cover with towel and let rise until it reaches the top of the bowl (sometimes
this takes an hour; sometimes it takes 2 or 3 depending on how warm your house
is!). Punch down dough (kids love to
help with this part!), and let rest for about 10 minutes.
Brown sugar/cinnamon
filling:
Mix brown sugar and cinnamon
to your taste (should taste more like cinnamon than brown sugar). Store in zip lock bag to keep from getting
hard.
Cherry/Apple/Strawberry/Blueberry/Raspberry/Blackberry
filling
1 can cherry pie filling
(blended for 2 seconds in food processor) – not too long because you still want
pieces of the fruit – my daughter tried blackberry and said it was delicious,
but didn’t enjoy the seeds! I have
recently (08) tried freezer jam (needs to be frozen when used) instead of canned
pie filling, and have enjoyed the fresher taste that brings (especially the
strawberry). I have a friend who uses
lemon pie filling and it’s their favorite.
I’ve not tried it yet.
Continuing . . . . .
Melt another stick of butter
completely and stir well. Divide dough
into 2 equal amounts. Roll out dough
(this is tricky – use your sixth sense!
- if it’s too thin it will tear; if it’s too thick, it won’t cook
thoroughly). Using a knife or pizza
cutter, cut the rolled out dough into 3 pieces lengthwise. Using a pastry brush, “paint” melted butter
on the 3 cut pieces.
For the brown sugar-cinnamon
variety, generously sprinkle the brown-sugar mixture down the middle of each
cut piece and spread just a little, then pat down and sprinkle a little bit of
flour over the top. For the cherry or
other fruit variety, spoon the briefly blended pie filling down the middle of
each of the 3 cut strips. Spread
slightly, but not too close to the edge.
Be careful not to overfill because it tends to leak out when
rising/baking. With the cherry and apple
filling, I sprinkle some of the brown sugar-cinnamon mixture on top of the
filling and then sprinkle a little flour on the top of that as well. Fold the short ends over just slightly and
then fold the long ends in a tri-fold (like folding a letter) from the top down
to the middle and then the bottom up and over the top. Bring the 3 pieces close together (don’t be
afraid of the dough!). Pick it up and
gently swing it back down to the counter, giving it a little bit of a
stretching as you do. Begin braiding in
the middle; work to one end then go back to the middle and braid to the other
end. Carefully place on huge cookie
sheet, shape into oval or circle and pinch the ends together where they meet. Cover and let rise again. Bake at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes (I
always set the timer for 12 minutes and monitor until it’s done). When cool, tuck small plastic baby wherever
you want! Cool completely before
frosting. I frost a small section at a
time so the frosting won’t dry out before sprinkling the sugar on top. Alternate the colored sugar (purple, green,
yellow). I usually get each color on
twice per cake. Enjoy!
Frosting:
Soften 1 stick of butter. Add powdered sugar and milk alternately. Add
about a teaspoon or two of vanilla (to taste) and a pinch of salt. It usually
takes ½ - ¾ of a 2-lb bag of powdered sugar.
Stir to desired consistency.
Variation:
I use a cream cheese frosting
for the cherry-filled and blueberry-filled (or any kind you choose) king
cake. Blend a package of room-temperature
cream cheese with a half stick of butter, softened. Add powdered sugar a little bit at a time
until the right consistency. I do not
use vanilla or milk for this frosting unless it becomes a little too thick.
Colored Sugars:
Pour 1 cup of granulated
sugar each into 3 ziplock bags. Add several drops of food coloring to get the
desired color of sugar (the traditional Mardi Gras colors are
purple/yellow/green); squeeze out air, zip bag and squish sugar until drops are
mixed in with the sugar. Add more as needed.
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