Blog Archive

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Recipe: Chocoflan by Marcela Valladolid



Chocoflan
by Victoria Challancin
Flavors of the Sun International Cooking School
San Miguel de Allende, 
Mexico

Serendipity.  Great word.  Great concept.  Here is my latest experience with it.

Because I have so many Mexican cookbooks, I rarely buy them anymore.  Recently, however, I perused a lovely new Mexican cookbook called Fresh Mexico:  100 Simple Recipes for True Mexican Flavor by Marcela Valladolid and felt inspired by the brightness and freshness of the recipes.  Feeling a renewal of inspiration, I bought it.  Three days later I received a call from the oh-so-amazing HIP Entertainment Group (they had filmed me some years before for Castaways San Miguel for Fine Living Chanel),  asking me to be Culinary Producer for the filming of Marcela's Second Season of Mexican Made Easy for Food Network.  What a wonderful surprise!  I wasn't able to accept the role of Culinary Producer, however, because I was leading a group of seven women to Morocco during the time scheduled for the shoot.  I was able to go to LA and work as a pre-production consultant though, and that was a delight.  Marcela and everyone at HIP Entertainment were fabulous to work with and the entire experience was rewarding at countless levels.

Just a week before I had ever heard of this talented chef, I had used one of her recipes in my cooking class quite by accident.  Serendipity?.  When I first discovered this recipe on the Food Network website, I knew my Mexican students would love it.  While I usually focus on international cuisine, I knew I had to try this recipe with them.  So many times my students have asked me to make what is often called pastel imposible, a layered cake/flan concoction.  Usually, it is made of boxed cake mixes and other ingredients that I simply don't use.  When I found this recipe...well, what can I say?  It was a hit.  Justifiably so.  Check out more of Marcela's recipes on the Food Network--they are simple, fresh, easy, and interesting!

The original recipe can be found here.  







Chocoflan

(Recipe courtesy Marcela Valladolid, 2009)

Makes 10 servings

12-cup capacity Bundt pan
Softened butter, to coat pan
1/4 cup cajeta or caramel sauce

For the cake:
10 tablespoons butter, room temperature
1 cup sugar
1 egg, room temperature
1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/3 cup cocoa powder
1 1/4 cups buttermilk

For the flan:
1 (12-ounce) can evaporated milk
1 (14-ounce) can sweetened condensed milk
4 ounces cream cheese, room temperature
3 eggs
1 tablespoon vanilla extract

For garnish:
1 /4 cup cajeta or caramel sauce
1/4 cup chopped pecans


Put an oven rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 350 degrees F.

Coat a Bundt pan with a little butter, then coat the bottom with 1/4 cup cajeta and put it in a large roasting pan. (The roasting pan will serve as a water bath during baking.)

For the cake: Add the butter and sugar to a bowl and using an electric hand mixer or stand mixer, beat until light and fluffy, then beat in the egg. Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and cocoa in a medium bowl. Beat 1/3 of the flour mixture, and 1/2 of the buttermilk into the egg mixture. Repeat, ending with the flour mixture. Blend until well incorporated.

For the flan: In a blender, combine the evaporated milk, condensed milk, cream cheese, eggs and vanilla. Blend on high for 30 seconds.

Scoop the cake batter into the prepared Bundt pan and spreading evenly. Slowly pour the flan mixture over the cake batter. Cover with foil and add about 1-inch of hot water to the roasting pan.

Carefully slide the pan into the oven, and bake 1 hour, until the surface of the cake is firm to the touch, or an inserted toothpick comes out clean. When cake is done, remove from the water bath and cool completely to room temperature, about 1 hour.
Invert a large, rimmed serving platter over the Bundt pan, grasp tightly together, jiggle a little and flip over. Remove the pan and scrape any remaining cajeta from the pan onto the cake, garnish with chopped pecans and serve! 

Cook's Notes: The batters may appear to mix when you pour them into the pan, but they completely separate while baking, with the flan ending up on the bottom when it's inverted. I like eating it warm, but traditionally, it is chilled 24 hours before serving.


chocoflanfile:

Cooking Class --a Bit of Indian Cuisine

Spiced Lentils with Cucumber Yogurt



A Bit of Indian Cuisine
by Victoria Challancin
Flavors of the Sun International Cooking School
San Miguel de Allende,
Mexico

Educating palates to new flavors and ingredients is part of what I do in my international classes designed for Mexican cooks.  It isn't enough to just teach recipes--I like to offer techniques and flavor sensations that jar the senses and demand attention, as in the following Indian dishes.  


Cilantro-Mint Chutney with Yogurt

Spiced Chickpea Salad






Another photos of the chutney that I can never get enough of!


Mango and Curried Chickpea Salad, based on a recipe  by a Yotam Ottolenghi (my newest inspiration)  found here


Curried Barley Salad with Dates and Carrots

Cooking Class Photos May 2010

Watermelon Gazpacho

Cooking Class Photos May 2010
by Victoria Challancin
Flavors of the Sun International Cooking School
San Miguel de Allende,
Mexico

Those of you that follow my blog know that I love to post photos of my cooking classes with Mexican
cooks. They love to see their efforts on the internet. I love to show them off. I am lucky enough to
teach talented cooks who want to learn. We generally focus on international cuisine. Here are some photos from the latest 8-week course.


Pan-Grilled Fish with Herb Remoulade


Favorite Flavors Salad from Food and Wine Magazine, recipe found here


Baked Hush Puppy Muffins




Carrot Cake Cookies...oh, my...

Salads Galore! (with recipe links)

Salads include:  Beet and Cabbage Salads from Navarre Restaurant in Toulouse, France, Carrot-Asparagus-Almond Salad, Lebanese Chicken Salad, and Mediterranean Shrimp and Pasta Salad

Salads Galore!
by Victoria Challancin
Flavors of the Sun International Cooking School
San Miguel de Allende,
Mexico

As the weather heats up, more and more main dish salads appear in my classes.  Here are a few we have made recently.


Asian Chicken Salad with Sesame Dressing



   My version of California Pizza Kitchen's Moroccan Chicken Salad with Medjool Dates





Lebanese Chicken Salad


Wolfgang Puck's Mediterranean Shrimp and Pasta Salad (I found the recipe here)

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Flavors of the Sun Cooking Classes: The Cooks




Flavors of the Sun Cooking 
Classes: The Cooks
by Victoria Challancin

To honor the cooks and their efforts, a few photos.



Elena

Gina

Mari



Chila

Dulce

                                                                            Rocio                                                 


Mari, in focus


Elena


                                                                        Ramona 


Dulce, sweet Dulce, again

Mari and Ramona


Chila

Moroccan Restaurant Food


























Moroccan Breakfast


Moroccan Breakfast
by Victoria Challancin

Moroccan breakfast...always a treat.


Breads/Khobz  (msemmen, mlawi, beghrir,  wholegrain harsha and a variety of European-style pastries), olives, olive oil, olive paste, homemade-jams, local honey, yogurt (homemade and purchased, including flavors such as pistachio), American-style cereals, mint tea, café au lait, "Liptons" (what the locals often call "black tea"), hot chocolate, fresh fruits, and fresh orange juice.  Always delicious fresh orange juice.  Whether humble or grand, it is always a dazzling display.