Monday, June 20, 2011

Sour Cherry Muffins and Fight Club

Everyone has a decade that speaks to them. For me, it is the 90s. I'm a child of the 90s (I turned 10 in 1999), and any mention of the pop culture from the decade is sure to send me into fits of fervent nostalgia. I love revisiting the crazy fashions in The Baby-Sitters Club books and embarrassing myself by listening to childhood favorites Backstreet Boys, N*Sync, and the Spice Girls. I was thrilled to discover that Are You Afraid of the Dark? and Sabrina the Teenage Witch are available on YouTube, ripe for some guilty-pleasure rewatching. While I'm not ready to bust out my platform shoes and butterfly clips again, I do love 90s nostalgia.

Of  course, one of the best parts of looking back at the 1990s is discovering aspects of the decade that I was way too young to know about back when I was actually living in that decade. For example, I am a huge fan of Nirvana and Oasis, two groups that did not register on my boy-band heavy radar back in the 1990s. And in terms of film, I would have to nominate 1999's Fight Club as one of the best new-discoveries-as-an-adult. I remember that even into the mid-2000s, when I was in high school, Fight Club was the cool movie to watch. At first, I had no desire to see Fight Club. I remember telling a friend of mine that I thought it was little more than a pretenious excuse to show off Brad Pitt's abs! However, once I did actually watch it, I was struck by the film...its tone, its characters, its biting script, everything. Far from the violent spectacle I was expecting, Fight Club is a sharp, darkly comedic satire about 1990s consumerism. It is one of those rare movies that you can watch over and over again, because each time, I have discovered something new to admire or analyze in its twisty storyline. Of course, it helps that it features Edward Norton, Brad Pitt, and Helena Bonham Carter, three of the best actors of our generation. So brace yourself, here are Dan's thoughts:


Fight Club:

Whoa, does Fight Club ever pack a punch! Here we have one of the weirdest, most talked-about, and most controversial movies of 1999, a year with now shortage of weird, talked-about, and controversial films.

Superficially, it can be described easily. A narrator (not named in the film, but played by Edward Norton in an outstanding performance) is fed up with life, his humdrum job, and the plasticity of the world he inhabits. In other words, he represents any one of us in the late 1990s. Enter Tyler, the free-spirited, anarchic leader of an underground fight club played by Brad Pitt. Tyler offers an alternative to life which is undoubtedly exciting and even makes sense at times, but it becomes increasingly dangerous and ultimately deadly.


What does all of this mean? I think of Fight Club as a warning. We better get off our butts, get our lives in order, and learn to live life both fully and productively, or the dangerous Tyler inside all of us will appear.

So sensational were the reactions to the film, however, that the message got lost. Tyler became something of an icon for lost young male souls and dangerous imitations began popping up. For better or worse (and it would be for better if the true meaning of the film was understood), Fight Club hit us and got a reaction out of us. People responded and, twelve years later, we are still talking about it. What bigger indicators of a great movie can you ask for?





Thanks, Dan! Now, recipe time.

So what makes sour cherry muffins appropriate for Fight Club? Well, first of all, I made these late at night in my scarcely-illuminated kitchen, and that reminded me of the scene where the Narrator and Tyler are making soap in the Narrator's kitchen (don't worry, the ingredients of these muffins are nowhere near as gross as the ingredients of Tyler's soap). Second of all, as my mom pointed out, muffins are common items in office place conference rooms, so there's a bit of the Narrator's pre-Tyler life thrown in. Finally, the taste of the sour cherry really packs a surprising punch, just as the movie does, literally and figuratively.


These muffins were adapted from the Williams-Sonoma book aptly entitled Muffins. Williams-Sonoma has never steered me wrong in the past, and I love how unique their recipes are. For example, these aren't ordinary sour cherry muffins, as they are topped with a coconut streusel! These were easy to make but, of course, everyone loved eating them even more! I only wish that sour cherries were easier to find. Next time I make these, I would like to use an even sourer kind of cherry than the one I could find for these.

Sour Cherry Muffins
From Williams Sonoma: Muffins 
Ingredients:
For coconut streusel

  • 1/3 cup firmly packed light brown sugar
  • 1/3 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup cold unsalted butter, cut into pieces
  • 1/2 cup sweetened flaked coconut

For muffins 

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 4 tsps baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/4 cup unsalted butter, melted
  • 2 large eggs, beaten (I used EggBeaters)
  • 1 cup fat-free half-and-half
  • 16 oz jarred or canned pitted sour pie cherries, drained and dried
1) Preheat the oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Grease a muffin pan with butter-flavored nonstick cooking spray.
2) For the streusel, stir together the brown sugar and flour in a small bowl. Mash in the butter pieces with a fork until the mixture is crumbly. Stir in the coconut. Set aside.
3) For the muffins, stir together the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl.
4) In another bowl, whisk together the melted butter, eggs, and half-and-half. Make a dent in the center of the dry ingredients add the egg mixture. Beat until the ingredients are combined and the mixture is thick and creamy. Be careful not to overmix (the batter will be lumpy).
5) Spoon a little of the batter into each muffin cup. Drop in a few cherries, and then cover those cherries with more batter. Drop in a few more cherries, and then cover with batter until cups are filled to the rim. Sprinkle each with a heaping tablespoon of the coconut streusel.
6) Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until the muffins are golden and spring back when lightly touched. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool for 5 minutes. Unmold the muffins. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Next week: Key lime pie and Some Like it Hot.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Macaroon Cake and Pirates of the Caribbean

I love witnessing the changing of the seasons in all their glorious, small details: the first crocus popping up under the crusty snow, a chilly late-August morning where you can practically smell autumn in the misty air, the wild geese honking away across a cloudy, early winter sky. There is something thrilling about sensing the wheel of time in motion. However, the signs of summer truly fill me with a unique sense of joy and anticipation. I love the hum of a fan on the first hot day of the year, the sound of my Old Navy flip-flops slapping against the pavement, and filling up on dessert recipes overflowing with tropical ingredients like coconut and pineapple.


That's why I chose to make a Macaroon Cake, with its subtle coconut and almond flavors, for my recipe this week. Here in Boston, it's been raining for the past two days, after we had a week of wonderful summer weather, so the tropicality of this treat was much appreciated! And what better movie to pair a coconut concoction with than the first Pirates of the Caribbean? I remember seeing that movie in the theater way back in 2003, and thinking that it felt like the personification of summer: exotic, fantastical, funny, and spontaneous. While I have not enjoyed the sequels of Curse of the Black Pearl that much (I thought that there were too many characters who faded into the background, the plots were convoluted, and their overdependence on Jack Sparrow diminshed the traits that made him so charming and original in the first film), the original stands in my mind as the quintessential summer film. So here are Dan's pirate-dialect-heavy musings on the film:


Pirates of the Caribbean:

Who would have thought that one of the most successful franchises at the movies could be spun from one of Disneyland's most iconic rides? Despite its seemingly limited source of inspiration, Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl  is a jolly yo-ho-ho rollicking good time, mateys, based on the beloved tropes of classic pirate lore. Maybe the secret is Johnny Depp, who gave life to renegade sea dog Jack Sparrow with a bit of Douglas Fairbanks and quite a bit of Keith Richards in the spirit.

Jack Sparrow himself has become a movie icon with his drunken swagger, freedom from authority, and nonetheless charming ways. Could we describe a Depp incarnation any other way? Nary a chance, me lads. But the fun doesn't stop there. The Pirates movies are filled to the brim with a wide arrangement of colorful scoundrels, aquatic hobgoblins, and mere humans. Throw in Geoffrey Rush as the nasty Captain Barbosa, Naomi Harris as a size-changing sea witch, and Pirates of the Caribbean becomes one voyage you will never forget. Ahoy and welcome aboard!

Ahoy back at you, Dan. Now for the recipe.

So this recipe for Macaroon Cake was adapted from one of my favorite cooking magazines of all time, Taste of Home: Healthy Cooking. This originally was a recipe sent in by a reader to be made healthier by the magazine's awesome Makeover staff. And they did an excellent job! The coconut flakes are integrated into the batter, lending it a sublime tropical flavor that seeps into your taste buds rather than overwhelms them. I love how surprisingly fluffy the cake is, making it lighter than a Port Royal sky. My whole family enjoyed this cake, and we agreed that it tasted even better the next day, when it acquired more flavor, especially from the almond extract. The word "macaroon" has always reminded me of pirates, probably because it sounds like "doubloon," so this is the perfect treat to munch while revisiting Curse of the Black Pearl.


Macaroon Cake
Adapted from Taste of Home: Healthy Cooking 
Ingredients:
  • 6 egg whites
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 2 1/4 cups sugar
  • 1/2 cup unsweetened applesauce
  • 1/4 cup canola oil
  • 3/4 cup fat-free milk
  • 1/2 tsp almond extract
  • 1 1/2 cups cake flour
  • 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup flaked coconut
  • 3 tsps baking powder
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp cream of tartar
  • 1 tsp confectioners' sugar
1) Let egg whites stand at room temperature for 30 minutes. After the time has passed, beat egg whites and cream of tartar until stiff peaks form. Place aside.
2) In a small bowl, combine the flours, coconut, baking powder, and salt. 
3) In a larger bowl, beat the egg yolks, sugar, applesauce, and oil until well blended; beat in the milk and the extract. Gradually beat the flour mixture into the egg yolk mixture until well blended.
4) Fold the egg white mixture into the batter until the color is uniform.
5) Spoon batter into an ungreased 10-in tube pan (*if your oven has the tendency to burn cakes easily, like mine does, you may want to grease the pan a little*). Cut through batter with a knife to remove air pockets. Bake on the lowest oven rack at 325 degrees for 65-75 minutes or until the cake springs back when lightly touched.
6) Invert the pan immediately upon taking it out of the oven and let the cake cool about 1 hour before serving.
7) Remove the cake from the pan by running a knife around the sides and center of the tube. Sprinkle cake with confectioners' suger before serving.

Next Week: Sour Cherry Muffins and Fight Club

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Mango Nut Bread and Apocalypse Now

Hi everyone! I'm Ally, and together with my older brother Dan, I'm going to be providing recipes to go along with our favorite films. Basically, the way this blog is going to work is that Dan will write a review of a film, and I will post a recipe for a baked good that fits that movie. It's the easiest way to combine our two hobbies, film and baking!


Our first film is Francis Ford Coppola's classic war movie Apocalypse Now, from 1979. I had never seen Apocalypse Now until I showed it to my History Through Film class while student teaching, and I was immediately enthralled by Coppola's vision and tone. As it charts the journey of Army Captain Willard to track down the renegade Colonel Kurtz in the jungles of Vietnam, Apocalypse Now effectively feels like a descent into madness. The bizarre soundtrack (who can forget the creepy use of The Doors' "The End" at the beginning?) and the very surreal images made this one of my my favorite war films. So without further ado, here are Dan's thoughts on the film:

Apocalypse Now:

One may be tempted to call Apocalypse Now the greatest war movie ever made. While that is not an unreasonable judgement, it feels like a bit of a short change, since Apocalypse Now is so much more than a mere war film. Sure, there is plenty of combat footage as Capt. Willard (Martin Sheen) navigates his way through war-torn Vietnam in order to find the deadly renegade Col. Kurtz (Marlon Brando), but just like Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, the literary work that provided the film's structure, Apocalypse Now's themes transcend the confines of its genre.


Few filmmakers have covered as much as Francis Ford Coppola did here. There are surface topics about imperialism, the psychological effects of war, and the devastation of villages. But there are deeper elements at work here such as who we are and who we become. What is insanity and what is evil? What standards should be applied to evaluating evil and insanity in a time of war?


Kurtz is evil. Of that there can be little doubt. He's had many people killed and commands an army of soldiers patrolling his compound. The question is, what drove him to become the monster he is? Finally, is Willard, or at least, his commanders who sent him on this mission, any less evil? Apocalypse Now's lack of easy answers to these questions, along with astounding performances from a stellar cast and direction from a New Hollywood genius, make it a masterpiece in a class of its own.

Thanks, Dan! And now for the recipe.


I was inspired by one of Apocalypse Now's most memorable scenes, when Willard and his chatty crew member Chef went looking for mangoes deep in the jungle, to make a mango nut bread. I got this recipe from the excellent Taste of Home magazine, and it can be found on their website here.


I never had mango nut bread before, just banana nut bread, so I was curious to see what this would taste like. I'm happy to report that I loved it! The bread is soft and silky, and the mangoes add a pop of texture and summery, tropical flavor. You can omit the dates if you like, but I thought they added a pleasantly tangy and nutty twist. In short, this is a great bread to eat as a snack or for breakfast along with coffee or tea. It's also healthy and really easy to make. Hopefully, you won't have any surprise encounters with tigers while making this like Willard and Chef did!


Mango Nut Bread
Ingredients:
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 cups sugar
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 3 eggs (I like to use EggBeaters because they're healthier)
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 cups chopped mangoes
  • 1/2 cup chopped dates
  • 1/2 cup chopped walnuts or macadamia nuts (I used walnuts; macadamia nuts are hard to come by where I live)
1) In a large bowl, combine the flour, sugar, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon. In a smaller bowl, beat the eggs, oil, and vanilla with an electric mixer until blended. Stir into the dry ingredients until just moistened. Fold in mangoes, dates, and nuts. (Note: Don't worry if the batter seems dry and doughy; it will freshen up once the mangoes are added).
2) Spoon into two greased loaf pans (8 x 4-in). Bake at 350 degrees for 50-55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Let cool for at least ten minutes before serving. Enjoy!

Well, I hope you liked that. Feel free to let us know what movies or baking recipes you'd like to see on our blog.