I'm a big fan of cranberry paired with orange. My cookies four years ago were a big hit......well, at least with me. So this time, I tried for bread. Or "bread". Let's be honest, it's cake or cake-like.
Unlike the cookies that used dried cranberries, this used full ones, which are more tart. Granted, I used frozen, but finding fresh here in December isn't the easiest thing.........not that I looked all that hard. I'm very impulsive when it comes to a baking idea and its execution. I want what I want when I want it.
Ingredients
Baking powder – 1 tb
Milk – 1/4 cup
Orange zest and juice – zest of one orange 1/4 cup of squeezed juice. Reserve a teaspoon of zest for the glaze
Butter – 6 tb unsalted at room temperature Adds moisture to the loaf. Use unsalted butter softened at room temperature.
Sugar – 1.5 cups
Eggs – 2 at room temperature
Cranberries – rinsed and dried then tossed in 1/2 Tbsp of flour to keep them from sinking in the batter (see substitution options in common questions section)
Instructions
Combine dry ingredients – whisk together flour, baking powder and salt.
Combine wet ingredients – in a measuring cup, stir together milk, orange juice and zest.
Cream butter and sugar together in a large mixing bowl
then beat in eggs until well combined.
Combine batter – Add flour mixture in 2 additions, alternating with the milk mixture, mixing just until combined.
Flour cranberries – rinse and dry cranberries then toss them with 1/2 Tbsp flour to coat.
Fold in cranberries just until incorporated.
And yes, you can do the entire "fold in the cheese" script in your head while you do this. .....though I helped out a bit.
Spread batter into buttered and floured 8.5×4.5 bread pan.
Bake the bread for 45-50 minutes until golden on top and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
Cool in the pan for 10-15 minutes then transfer to a rack to cool completely.
I forgot to take pics regarding of making the glaze, but you know, it's confectioners sugar and some freshly squeezed orange juice. I should have had more sugar, as it was more of a syrup and less of a glaze. But it worked.
The 'bread' (read: cake) was moist and flavorful. Pretty easy to make. Real easy to eat.
I was wondering what to do with the bag of cranberries in the refrigerator.
ReplyDeleteOh how you torment us with your delicious baking.
ReplyDeleteI was thinking this is the time of year fresh cranberries would be more readily available . Or at least at Thanksgiving.
ReplyDelete