Calling all crumb cake fans - this almond-pine nut-apricot crumb cake from AliceRecipes is an absolute must try! This delectable treat features a moist and flavorful almond cake base, topped with a generous layer of sweet apricot filling and a crunchy crumb topping made with a combination of almonds, pine nuts, and oats. The result is a perfect balance of flavors and textures that will tantalize your taste buds. Along with the main recipe, this article also includes a collection of other crumb cake recipes to satisfy any sweet craving. From classic crumb cakes with seasonal fruits like blueberries or apples to indulgent variations like chocolate chip or streusel crumb cakes, there's something for everyone.
Let's cook with our recipes!
ALMOND CAKE
Provided by Giada De Laurentiis
Categories dessert
Time 55m
Yield 6 to 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
- Butter and flour an 8-inch round cake pan.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the cornmeal, cake flour and baking powder. Using a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, beat the butter and almond paste on high speed until smooth, about 3 minutes. Reduce speed to low and add vanilla extract and slowly pour in confectioners' sugar. Mix until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Raise speed to high and add the egg yolks and whole eggs, one at a time. Reduce speed to medium and add the sour cream and dry ingredients and mix until just incorporated.
- Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan and smooth the surface with a spatula. Bake in the lower third of the oven for 35 minutes, or until the cake is golden and pulls away from the sides of the pan. Transfer pan to a wire rack and let cool. Remove from pan and dust with confectioners' sugar.
APRICOT ALMOND CAKE WITH ROSEWATER AND CARDAMOM
This is my idea of a perfect cake: simple, beautiful, fragrant and beguiling. I've been making this sort of cake, in one form or another, since my clementine cake in "How To Eat," and I can't help but feel, with a certain calm excitement, that it has reached its apogee here. This is invitingly easy to make, and while I love the poetry of its ingredients, the cake doesn't overwhelm with its Thousand-and-One-Nights scent. Rosewater can be a tricky ingredient: a little, and it's all exotic promise; a fraction too much and we're in bubble bath territory. One of the things that makes this so easy, is that you can throw all the ingredients into a food processor. But if you don't have one, simply chop the prepared dried apricots and cardamom seeds very finely and then beat together with the remaining cake ingredients.
Provided by Nigella Lawson : Food Network
Categories dessert
Time 20m
Yield 8 to 10 slices
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Put the dried apricots into a small saucepan, cover them with the cold water, and drop in the cracked cardamom pods with their fragrant seeds. Put on the heat, then bring to the boil and let it bubble for 10 minutes--don't stray too far away from the pan, as by the end of the 10 minutes the pan will be just about out of water and you want to make sure it doesn't actually run dry as the apricots will absorb more water as they cool.
- Take the pan off the heat, place on a cold, heatproof surface and let the apricots cool. Preheat the oven to 180 degrees C/gas mark 4/350 degrees F. Grease the sides of your springform cake tin and line the bottom with baking parchment.
- Remove 5 of the dried apricots and tear each in half, then set aside for the time being. Discard the cardamom husks, leaving the seeds in the pan.
- Pour and scrape out the sticky contents of the pan into the bowl of a food processor. Add the almond meal, polenta, baking powder, superfine sugar and eggs, and give a good long blitz to combine.
- Open the top of the processor, scrape down the batter, add 2 teaspoons of lemon juice and the rosewater, and blitz again, then scrape into the prepared tin and smooth with a spatula. Arrange the apricot halves around the circumference of the tin.
- Bake for 40 minutes, though if the cake is browning up a lot before it's actually ready, you may want to cover loosely with foil at the 30-minute mark. When it's ready, the cake will be coming away from the edges of the tin, the top will feel firm, and a cake tester will come out with just one or two damp crumbs on it.
- Remove the cake to a wire rack. If you're using apricot jam to decorate, you may want to warm it a little first so that it's easier to spread; rose petal jam is so lusciously soft-set, it shouldn't need any help. Stir a teaspoon of lemon juice into the jam and brush over the top of the cake, then sprinkle with the chopped pistachios and leave the cake to cool in its tin before unspringing and removing to a plate.
ALMOND-APRICOT FOOD PROCESSOR CAKE
This wonderfully moist almond cake easily goes gluten-free if desired. The cake comes together quickly in the food processor, with some apricots puréed and some folded into the batter, which infuses the whole cake with apricot flavor.
Provided by Anna Stockwell
Categories #CAKEWEEK Cake Wheat/Gluten-Free Apricot Summer Almond Amaretto Dessert Bake Food Processor Vegetarian Pescatarian Peanut Free Soy Free Kosher
Yield Serves 8-10
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 325°F. Butter cake pan, then line bottom with parchment paper. Butter parchment, then sprinkle evenly with 1/4 cup almonds.
- Pit and coarsely chop 6 oz. apricots. Pulse salt, 1 1/2 cups sugar, and remaining 2 1/4 cups almonds in a food processor until finely ground. Add eggs, vanilla, 6 Tbsp. butter, and half of the chopped apricots; process until very smooth. Add flour and baking powder; pulse until combined, then fold in remaining chopped apricots. Transfer to prepared pan.
- Bake cake until golden brown and the center no longer jiggles when shaken, 60-70 minutes. Transfer pan to a wire rack and let cake cool completely.
- Meanwhile, pit and slice remaining 10 oz. apricots. Toss apricots, amaretto, if using, and remaining 2 Tbsp. sugar in a medium bowl. Let sit at least 10 minutes or up to 1 hour. Using a whisk or an electric mixer on medium-high speed, whip cream to soft peaks in a large bowl.
- Run a knife around edges of cooled cake and invert onto a platter.
- Serve with macerated apricots and whipped cream alongside.
- Do Ahead
- Cake can be baked 3 days ahead. Cover and chill. Let come to room temperature before serving.
ALMOND CAKE
Provided by Giada De Laurentiis
Yield Serves 8 to 10
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter and flour an 8- or 9-inch springform pan.
- Dissolve the yeast in the lukewarm milk, and let proof until foamy.
- Spread the almonds on a baking sheet and bake until they are lightly toasted, 2 to 3 minutes. Let cool, then place them in a food processor fitted with the metal blade, add 2 tablespoons of the sugar, and pulse until the almonds are very finely chopped but not pulverized. Set aside.
- In a large bowl, beat the egg yolks with 3/4 cup of the sugar until pale yellow. Beat in the butter. Add the honey, yeast mixture, liqueur, and almonds, and beat to combine. Add the flour in two or three additions, mixing thoroughly.
- In a large bowl, beat the egg whites with the remaining 2 tablespoons sugar until stiff. Gradually fold the whites into the almond mixture. Pour the batter into the prepared pan, shaking the pan to distribute the batter evenly.
- Place the pan on the middle rack of the preheated oven and bake for about 40 minutes, or until a thin knife inserted in the center of the cake comes out clean.
- Let the cake cool for about 10 minutes, then remove the sides of the pan and let the cake cool on a rack completely before serving.
ALMOND-PINE NUT MACAROONS
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Line 2 cookie trays with parchment paper or aluminum foil. Spread the pine nuts onto a jelly-roll pan lined with waxed or parchment paper.
- Break the almond paste into chunks and place in the bowl of a food processor. Add the sugar and process until the mixture is homogenous, stopping once to scrape down the bowl using a rubber spatula. Add the egg whites and process until smooth. Scrape again and process for a few more seconds.
- The mixture will be sticky, but with a light touch and moist hands it can be gently rolled. Keep a damp towel nearby to wipe and wet your hands. Using damp hands, round the mix into scant 1-inch balls and drop the balls onto the tray of pine nuts. Once you have 3 to 4 balls formed, roll them in the nuts to cover completely. Place about 16 balls 1 1/2-inches apart on the prepared baking sheets.
- Bake the first tray while preparing the second, until the cookies are pale golden, and puffy, about 25 minutes. Place the baking sheets on wire cooling racks and cool the cookies completely before lifting them off. Store in an airtight container for up to 2 days, or freeze for up to 1 week.
ALMOND, PINE NUT, AND APRICOT COFFEE CAKE
Make and share this Almond, Pine Nut, and Apricot Coffee Cake recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Starshine Michelle
Categories Dessert
Time 1h5m
Yield 1 Coffee Cake, 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 350*F. Butter and flour a 9-inch cake pan.
- Combine 1/4 cup of the almonds and 1/4 cup of the pine nuts in a dry skillet and place over med-high heat, stirring occasionally, until lightly browned and toasted, about 10 minutes.
- Transfer to a food processor and cool for a few minutes, then pulse until the nuts are finely ground.
- Transfer the nuts to a medium bowl, add the flour, baking powder, and salt.
- Stir to combine. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl, use an electric mixer to beat the eggs and the sugar until the mixture is thick and pale yellow.
- Add the butter and milk and combine, then stir in the almond extract and apricots by hand.
- Gently stir in the dry ingredients.
- Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan.
- Sprinkle the top of the cake with the remaining 1/4 cup almonds and 1/4 cup pine nuts.
- Bake until the cake is cooked and a toothpick inserted comes out clean, about 50-55 minutes.
- Let the cake cool on a wire rack.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 516.4, Fat 30.7, SaturatedFat 12.7, Cholesterol 152.9, Sodium 263.7, Carbohydrate 54.8, Fiber 2.5, Sugar 36.6, Protein 9
Tips:
- For the best flavor, use fresh apricots. If fresh apricots are not available, you can use dried apricots that have been soaked in hot water for 30 minutes.
- If you don't have pine nuts, you can use chopped walnuts or pecans instead.
- Be sure to toast the nuts before adding them to the cake batter. This will bring out their flavor and make them more fragrant.
- Don't overmix the batter. Overmixing will make the cake tough.
- Bake the cake until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Overbaking will make the cake dry.
- Let the cake cool completely before serving. This will allow the flavors to develop and the cake to set.
Conclusion:
This almond-pine nut-apricot crumb cake is a delicious and easy-to-make dessert that is perfect for any occasion. It is made with fresh apricots, toasted nuts, and a sweet crumb topping. The cake is moist and flavorful, with a crunchy topping that adds a nice textural contrast. This recipe is sure to be a hit with everyone who tries it!
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