Unfortunately, I forgot to bring the syrup to the party. BUT, I did manage to bring the cake, which ended up being incredibly difficult to transport by myself while driving and balancing it on a cake stand. I basically ended up holding the base of the stand in between my legs in my lap while I was driving. Then, when I had to brake suddenly, the cake lurched forward just enough to smear a bit of frosting on my steering wheel, and because I couldn't stop on the highway to clean it off, it smeared all over the wheel while I was steering. I made it to the valley though, cake intact! And it was well worth it. Galaxy Quest = awesome.
Blue Velvet Cake
1 and 1/4 Cups Cake Flour, sifted
1 and 1/4 Cups Ultra-Fine Sugar
11 Egg Whites, room temperature
2 Teaspoons Vanilla Extract
2 oz. Blue Food Coloring
1 and 1/2 Teaspoons Cream of Tartar
1 Tablespoon Cocoa Powder
1/4 Teaspoon Salt
1 and 1/2 Cups Blueberries, fresh not frozen
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. In a medium-sized bowl, sift together the flour, 1/2 cup of the sugar, and the cocoa powder. In a large bowl, beat together the egg whites, vanilla extract, cream of tartar and salt until they begin to hold soft peaks. Then beat in the remaining 3/4 cups sugar and the blue food coloring until the mixture begins to hold stiff peaks, about 4 minutes or so.
Slowly fold in 1/4 cup of the flour mixture at a time. Use a spatula and take care not to stir the mixture, just keep folding until all of the flour mixture is incorporated. Pour one cup of blueberries into the batter and fold them in as well. Pour the batter into two well-greased 9-inch cake pans and bake in the oven for about 30 minutes.
While the cake is baking, make the Cream Cheese Frosting Recipe below. Once the cake is done, remove it from the oven and allow to cool for about 15 minutes. Shake the pan a little bit to loosen the grip of the cake, then place a plate on top of the pan and, wearing oven mitts, flip it over so that the pan is on the top and the plate is on the bottom. Gently remove the pan and place the plated cake layer in the refrigerator for 30 minutes. Repeat this process with the second cake pan as well.
While the cake layers are cooling, make the Blueberry Syrup recipe below. Once the cake layers and the frosting have finished cooling, place the bottom cake layer onto the display surface, (i.e. a cake stand or pretty plate that you will serve it off of), and begin evenly frosting the top of the bottom cake layer. Then, center the second cake layer on top of the bottom cake layer so that they line up perfectly. Now frost the sides and top of the cake so that the entire cake surface is frosted and no cake surface is visible through the frosting. Place 1/4 cup of the frosting in the center-top of the cake in a dollop. Take the remaining 1/2 cup of blueberries and arrange them on top of the dollop in the center of the cake. Serve at room temperature with a drizzle of blueberry syrup over each individual cake slice.
Cream Cheese Frosting
10 tb butter, softened
16 oz cream cheese
3 cups powdered sugar
4 Teaspoon vanilla extract
Mix the cream cheese, vanilla and butter together until they are completely combined. Add the powdered sugar and mix until blended. Refrigerate for 15 minutes to help solidify the texture.
Blueberry Syrup
1 Cup Blueberries, fresh not frozen
1/2 Cup Granulated Sugar
1/4 Cup Water
1 Cup Blueberry Jam, good quality
In a small saucepan, cook the blueberries, sugar and water over low heat for about 8 minutes, or until the sugar has completely dissolved, breaking the blueberries apart with the end of a wooden spoon when they begin to soften. Pour the mixture into a food processor, add the jam, and blend until the mixture is smooth. Pour into a serving bowl and place in the refrigerator to chill until serving time.
Hey Eva! Can I snitch your blue velvet cake picture to use in my blog (I was going to plug your genius)? By the way, Im totally loving your cooking, and cant wait to get back to a kitchen to steal all of your ideas!
ReplyDelete-Sarah Lennox
Yes definitely!!! Let me know how it turns out for you :o)
ReplyDeleteI'm living in a bit of Limbo at the moment... but as soon as I have a kitchen of my own again. In the mean time I've plugged you on both my blogs.
ReplyDeletehttp://sarahmaelennox.blog.com/2010/03/06/adventures-in-cooking-velvet-cake/
http://littlestitchesfromsarah.blog.com/2010/03/07/adventures-in-cooking-blue-velvet-cake/
Thanks Sarah!!! Your blogs are awesome, btw. Just subscribed via RSS :D
ReplyDeleteWhat a dazzling recipe, and sounds like so much fun! I enjoyed the driving story to go along with the recipe. I think I'll give this a whirl. Thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteAll i have to say is DROOOOOLLLLL..... this is something to try and devour on your own with a glass of milk while watching the stars... Thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteDavid Lynch cake! David Lynch cake! RIP Dennis Hopper...
ReplyDelete"Never give up, never surrender!"
ReplyDeleteMy son comes home from the U.S. Navy on June 18, 2010. He has sent me this recipe with a note that read, "I want it." Needless to say, he's gonna get it :-)
ReplyDeleteThat warms my heart, I truly hope he enjoys it!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the kind words everyone :o)
Its loook very fantastic but lovely! Your cook experience is gooood:)
ReplyDeleteOh my. Am I the only one who thinks this recipe would be fun to use for Cookie Monster cupcakes?
ReplyDeleteOoooooh! That is a truly fantastic idea, kids would absolutely love them!
ReplyDeleteOh. My. Goodness. That looks fantastic.
ReplyDeleteJust made it!! Minus the syrup...Substituted store bought blueberry syrup because I didn't have time to make the syrup. It's still in the fridge but it looks and smells delicious.
ReplyDeleteSo, I "stumbled" upon your blog and I LOVE IT. I'm starting to realllly get into cooking and baking, and when I saw this cake I said, "I WANT." SO I'm making this for Fourth of July! I can't wait! Thank you so much for the recipe!
ReplyDeleteAw thanks Aly and Michelle! I'm happy to hear it's going to be enjoyed :o)
ReplyDeleteI love the look of this cake! What fun! I think I might try it. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteHi Eva! I have been gawking at this cake for weeks now and just finally made it. However, my cake layers turned out burnt on the outside. The top, bottom and sides are brown even though the inside is beautiful. I only baked it for about 30-35 min. Do you have any idea what might have gone wrong? I would appreciate anyone's thoughts on this.
ReplyDeleteDid you use a metal cake pan? I use glass cake pans so it doesn't tend to burn the edges and cooks the cake more evenly.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip, I did use metal. I will try glass next time, Also, did you grease the sides of your pans?
ReplyDeleteYep, I greased them :)
ReplyDeleteI'm making this beauty this afternoon for my preggo sister-in-law! We are both excited about how it's going to turn out.
ReplyDeleteI linked your recipe and photo within my blog.
I can't wait!!!
ChuckRefreshed
Thanks Chuck! I hope you both enjoy it :D
ReplyDeleteI never thought Galaxy Quest was even worth watching, let alone throwing a theme party in honor of it. However, you have just made David Lynch fans very happy.
ReplyDeleteI tried to make a cupcake version of this, and it came out unfortunately play-dough like. I think I did something wrong. It wasn't holding the peaks you said it would even after I beat it for a long time. Do you think this had something to do with it?
ReplyDeleteP.s. the cream cheese frosting was GOLDEN!
Hi Catherine! Yes, you definitely need to wait until it makes peaks because that helps create the rigidity of the cake, which would explain why yours was mushier. It takes a reeeeaaallllllly long time to beat until the peaks form. I have a hand-held mix master and I kept having to switch arms because it was killing my tiny muscles. But be patient, it will eventually get stiff enough to hold a solid peak. Hope this helps!
ReplyDeleteThis looks delicious! My boyfriend works at a camp called Camp Rainbow and they always have a staff bake off. We had the idea of making rainbow cup cakes, each row being a different color, but I think using this recipe to make them each TASTE different will help us win for sure!
ReplyDeleteI just stumbled upon this blog and this looks absolutely decadent! My parents have an annual Fourth of July party and I think I'm going to make a cake platter this year with slices of this cake, coconut cake and red velvet cake...
ReplyDeleteAlso, we are having a Winter themed party around Christmas and this will be the perfect color combination for that!
Thanks so much for this fabulous recipe!!!! :)
Oooooh that cake platter sounds amazing! I'm glad you'll be enjoying it :o)
ReplyDelete...most beautiful cake ever. may i post it on my blog? alwayssnacking.tumblr.com?
ReplyDeleteYes, most definitely! I'm so glad you like it :)
ReplyDeleteThis is awesome!!! I am definitely going to try this!! I may re-name it Smurf Cake though....its totally what I thought of when I saw it!! Thx for sharing!! :)
ReplyDeleteHaha, thanks Michelle! I hope you like the Smurf Cake :D
ReplyDeleteI am strongly considering making this cake... it is absolutely beautiful! But I am confused ... no butter in the cake? I've never made a cake without butter... how is this possible? I rushed to the store and got all the ingredients, came back home re read the recipe and started panicking when I realized there was no butter in the actual cake....
ReplyDeleteYep! No butter in the cake, I think the excessive whipping of the egg whites and the cream of tartar helps replace the need for it. It's also part of why the cake tastes so light and fluffy :)
ReplyDeleteI just made this cake for a potluck for work, and it was a total hit! It did overcook a bit with 10 minutes still left on the timer, so I'll have to adjust the cooking time in the future. It still tasted AMAZING! And the syrup is extra good for pancakes later!
ReplyDeletePerhaps I will adjust the timing in the recipe, I was always suspicious of the oven at my old apartment and the accuracy of its temperature reading. It had several breakdowns and sometimes if I made the same recipe twice it would take longer to cook on some occasions and less time on others. Thanks for the info :)
ReplyDeletedelicious!
ReplyDeleteI tried to make a cupcake version of this.
Great, glad you liked it! Perhaps I will try making cupcakes of this myself :)
ReplyDeleteBy Grapthar's Hammer, I must try this...
ReplyDeleteEva, this looks absolutely amazing! I've almost fell of the chair seeing the first photo :)
ReplyDeleteThis cake looks amazing!! This if my first visit to your blog and I am loving it! I googled recipes for blue velvet cake and finding this was a highlight of my day.
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to rummage through all of your posts and find amazing things! :)
Lol- my boyfriend made blue velvet cake once (he's a David Lynch fan) and I learned a very valuable lesson about how my stomach reacts to large amounts of blue food coloring ;-P (And that it doesn't digest, making for hilarity later.)
ReplyDeleteThe halves are cooling at the moment but unfortunately they're not very blue at all :/
ReplyDeleteMore like pale greyish beige. I replaced the cream of tartar with baking powder. I could have us bicarbonate of soda but I can't imagine that making a difference colour wise! Perhaps I let a teeny bit of egg yolk into the mixture.
Oh well, it smells delicious! I also made the frosting blue for blue overload :)
@Louise: I am not sure if that would make a difference color-wise, but I don't see why it wouldn't be bright blue if you put all two ounces of food coloring into the cake mix. 2 ounces is an entire dropper container of blue food coloring. Did you divide the 2 ounces of blue food coloring between the frosting and the cake mix? If so, that might account for the less intense blue color of the cake mix part. Let me know :)
ReplyDeleteI made this cake today and it absolutely delicious, I used just a tad less food coloring but it came out beautiful nonetheless . Thanks for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteSo happy you enjoyed it! Thanks for letting me know :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, I'll have to try this! There's a local place that has blue velvet cake with blueberries and I love it, but I also like the idea of something a bit lighter.
ReplyDeleteI just made this cake and the bottom half of both cakes came out hard... almost like gelatin. The top half is beautiful. I'm going to cut off that part and still make the cake. Do you have an idea of what I did wrong? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteYou might not have whipped the egg whites enough, or you could have over beat them. After you add the cream of tartar, it usually takes about 10 minutes of beating to get the egg whites to the right stiffness where they will hold peaks and are relatively shiny. It also depends on the type of pan you are using. I just bought a new octagon-shaped cake pan, but the metal is thicker than a normal cake pan so it gets really hot and overcooks the outer rim of the cakes I have made with it :( It is tough to say exactly what might have happened without being there, but those are my best guesses.
ReplyDeleteEva, thanks so much. I will try this cake again and let you know how it turns out. I did end up cutting off the bottom half and iced the cake (wonderful icing by the way). It turned out very good! I'll let you know what happens the second go around!-Kendra
ReplyDeleteYou could also serve this Mexican mince in taco shells. Take a trip around the globe with our range of international recipe collections. Start with our French recipes, Thai recipes, Turkish recipes and Spanish recipes.Pizza Equipment
ReplyDeletei would've NEVER thought of this!! did you hear on that new show extreme chef this sunday they have to make rattlesnake for breakfast?? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3J824ZuGXA sounds right up your alley LOL ;)
ReplyDeleteI really want to make this! I am thinking either the 4th of July or to celebrate the birth of our baby boy in July :-) I am trying to avoid artificial colors and sweeteners these days...any natural blue coloring ideas? Have you ever tried making it without the food coloring? Maybe the blueberries would give it enough color? I just don't want it to look gray.
ReplyDeleteAww, congratulations on your coming son! I know red beets can be used to dye eggs blue during Easter, but I am not sure if it would work with a cake. If you wanted to try it, you could boil the beets in water for an hour with a teeny bit of vinegar, then remove the beats and continue boiling the water until it boils down a lot and more of the water evaporates so that the dye is very concentrated. Then add the dye to the cake. I am not sure exactly how much you would need to add, but adding too much would probably affect the stability of the cake. Blueberries can be used as a natural dye, but it would make the cake purple, not blue. Best of luck with your natural dye attempt :)
ReplyDeleteThis looks fantastic. I posted a link from my blog. We have a similar name, too.
ReplyDeleteI love this!!! So great!
ReplyDeleteThank you both! And thanks Evie for the link :)
ReplyDeletejust made this for my birthday (yes, I took the birthday bull by the horns) and then got sick before I had a chance to eat/taste it....but I'm told it was delicious, it was gorgeous and I added some silver sugar sprinkles on top for a little bling. I'll be making it again soon and might just NOT share.
ReplyDeleteAwww I'm sorry you weren't able to eat it! Definitely make it again when you have the chance, I'm happy to hear everyone else liked it :-)
ReplyDeleteEver since I came accross your blog with this beautiful cake I have been waiting impatiently for the blueberries to ripen so that I can try it out. Your blog is a real inspiration!
ReplyDeletever since I came accross your blog with this beautiful cake I have been waiting impatiently search engine optimisation specialistscool website designs
ReplyDeleteI just tried to make this cake, but it barely made enough to fill half a 9" cake pan, much less two of them. I double-triple-quadruple checked to make sure I had all the quantities correct, and I'm baffled.
ReplyDeleteAny idea what might have gone wrong?
@Knickerbocker: You probably didn't beat the egg whites long enough. When air is whipped into the protein of the egg whites they expand and become bigger and flufflier, which makes the batter bigger and fluffier when you mix in the other ingredients.
ReplyDeleteEva,
ReplyDeleteThis seriously looks delicious!!! I have been getting quite a few orders for Tangled cupcakes and you gave me an awesome idea to incorporate into that! Thank you so much :)
Found via pinterest. I love red velvet, and I love blueberries. This is definitely a cake to try for the holidays. Looks yummy!
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure what I did wrong!!! I love the look of this cake! The first time I tried to make it I could NOT get the egg whites to peak!!! So I went and got MORE eggs and STILL couldnt get it to work... then I went and BOUGHT egg whites and it stiffened a little better... maybe I wasnt patient enough....idk...the cake only took FIFTEEN minutes to cook! And I was cooking at 375 degrees... the cake was tough and didnt rise well. :( I wanted this cake to work SO baddd!!! Help! I used ALL purpose flour...is there a difference between that and CAKE flour???
ReplyDeleteEgg whites are very tempermental, if you separate the whites yourself and even get a bit of the yolk in it it can affect how well they will be able to stiffen. And yes, cake flour is different from all purpose flour. It is much finer, kind of like the difference between normal sugar and powdered sugar but not as extreme. Basically cake flour makes cake fluffier and lighter in texture, which explains the texture of your cake.
ReplyDeleteAhhhhh.... I looked alll in my grocery store and they didnt have "cake flour". :( They had other flours....like "bread flour" and "baker's flour", but not "cake". :/ I baked the cake twice! haha and I read in an above comment that you posted that it takes about TEN minutes of beating the eggs! I'm new at this baking thing so I wasnt sure what I was looking for! I'll try it again with different flour next time and I'll beat the egg whites longer! :) The cream cheese icing and blue-berry syrup turned out GREAT though!
ReplyDeleteGlad the rest turned out well for you :) Yeah cake flour can be kind of tricky to find if you've never used it before. It is actually in a box, not in a bag, and is usually closer to the boxed cake mixes than the flours, which is confusing. But I recommend Swan's brand for cake flour, they've never let me down :)
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely BEAUTIFUL!!! I want to make this just because of the color!
ReplyDeleteIf you don't want to use the bluberry syrup, Try using the blue jello,mix as directed not adding extra water or icecubes,poke holes in the cake and pour over top.
ReplyDeletehey. this didn't work at all. i tried it twice and both times it came out flat and weird. what did i do?
ReplyDeletejust to be clear i did use cake four and ultra fine sugar and beat the eggs into peaks and added the four mixture like the recipe said. it just didn't rise. :(
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like you might have mixed the dry ingredients in instead of folding them in. Folding them in helps keep the air bubbles nice and poofy, stirring them in or folding them in incorrectly pops and deflates the bubbles, which may explain your flat cake problem. There is a helpful article on how to fold things into egg whites here: http://www.ochef.com/241.htm
ReplyDeleteWorking with egg whites in a cake is very temperamental and can definitely be frustrating, (trust me, I have had many a difficult time with meringues and angel food), but when it turns out that light angel food cake texture is just wonderful.
Thank you!
ReplyDeleteexactly how many egg whites does this recipe call for? I think it say 11 but I want to be sure.
ReplyDeleteYes, it is 11 :)
ReplyDeleteFound this on pinterest.com and can't wait to try it this weekend!
ReplyDeleteFound on pintrest ... Totally going to make cupcake version for my sons scout bake sale!!
ReplyDeleteAnd possibly also a cake for there Blue and gold cake raffel . Awsome recipe
Aloha! This cake looks amazing and a friend has asked me to make it for her birthday; I'm very excited about it; but I have a question about the blueberries - do they HAVE to be fresh not frozen? Living on an island means a lot of fruits are considered "specialty" since they have to be flown in and when I can find them, they're pretty expensive! I always try to get fresh foods whenever possible but this cake uses a lot of blueberries. It will easily run me $15 -$20 for the amount I need. Do you think it would work if I rinsed the frozen berries REALLY well? At least for the syrup? Mahalo! (Thank you.)
ReplyDeleteYes it would be fine. For the cake, just make sure to defrost them in a strainer so that the excess liquid can drip out so the cake doesn't get too watery from them. For the syrup, it should be totally fine defrosted any way you want :)
ReplyDeleteWould it be possible to omit the fresh blueberries without changing the outcome of the cake?
ReplyDeleteAlana Jackson
Yes, the cake should still turn out fine without the blueberries, they just add a nice burst of blueberry flavor to it :)
DeleteDoes that say 11 egg whites?
ReplyDeleteYes, it does
DeleteI made your cake recipe and frosting...linked to your blog. Thanks for the fun recipe! http://kyrogrrl.blogspot.com/2012/02/foodie-adventures.html
ReplyDeleteAwesome, it looks beautiful! So happy you guys are enjoying it :)
DeleteOh, and I only used .25 oz of blue...I couldn't find whole containers so I had to buy a 4 pack, which had 1/4 oz of each color. Still came out pretty blue!!
ReplyDeleteinstead of useing food coloring couldn't we just use blueberry juice from frozen blueberries? would make it nice and blue as well and it well be much more healthier. :)i'll try it that's for sure. mom has cancer and she can't eat anything with food coloring.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry to hear about your mother, you could definitely use blueberry juice but it would turn the cake a more purple shade than blue. Also you would need a higher amount of liquid than you would with food coloring because food coloring is more concentrated, so it might make the cake more watery and affect the chemistry of the cake depending on how much you put in, so I'd be careful about adding too much. Maybe just 2 ounces of juice or so for a nice lavender color?
DeleteJust a funny sidenote. When I was young my Mother was very cautious about using red food color so she used blue in a red velvet cake instead. Needless to say, the next day we all had blue poo! hahaha... Bakers beware!
ReplyDelete