Sunset+201810

(Tina Meador) #1

‹—


oil). Swirl oil gently until
seeds stop sizzling and leaves
crisp up but are still green,
30 to 45 seconds. Remove
from heat, add ginger, and
stir 10 to 15 seconds.


  1. Scatter shredded vegetables
    and green onions over yo-
    gurt. Swish a spoon through
    yogurt a few times to partly
    blend (avoid overmixing or
    red beets will turn entire
    dish pink). Using a spoon,
    drizzle seasoned oil mixture
    over yogurt and vegetables.
    Serve immediately.
    *Mix shredded golden beets with
    1 tsp. lemon juice to prevent
    discoloring.


PER SERVING 74 Cal., 51% (38 Cal.)
from fat; 2.9 g protein; 4.3 g fat (1.6 g sat.);
5.8 g carbo (0.7 g fiber); 382 mg sodium;
9.1 mg chol. GF/LC/V


(^1) ⁄ 4 tsp. each baking soda and
fine sea salt
1 tbsp. Chai Masala (above)
2 large Fuji or Granny Smith
apples
11 ⁄ 4 cups packed light brown
sugar
4 large eggs, at room
temperature
2 tbsp. powdered sugar



  1. Preheat oven to 350°. Butter
    a 9-in. round baking pan
    and line bottom with parch-
    ment paper.

  2. Grind tea leaves to a fine
    powder with a mortar and
    pestle or in a clean coffee
    grinder. In a large bowl,
    whisk tea with flour, baking
    powder, baking soda, salt,


and chai masala. Peel and
core apples, then cut into

(^1) / 4 -in. dice. Put in a medium
bowl and toss with 2 tbsp.
of the flour mixture.



  1. Using a stand mixer fitted
    with the paddle attachment,
    cream butter and brown
    sugar on medium-high speed
    until light and fluffy, 2 to
    3 minutes. Add eggs one at a
    time, beating after each addi-
    tion. Stop mixer, add flour
    mixture, and beat on low just
    until no streaks of flour are
    visible, about 1 minute. Re-
    move bowl from mixer and
    fold in apples.

  2. Pour batter into prepared
    pan and level it with an off-
    set spatula. Bake, rotating


halfway through, until cake is
golden and a skewer inserted
into center comes out with
some crumbs adhering, about
40 minutes. Cool in pan on
a wire rack 5 minutes. Run a
thin knife around inside of
pan to release cake, then in-
vert onto rack, remove parch-
ment, and cool completely.


  1. Before serving, dust liber-
    ally with powdered sugar.
    MAKE AHEAD Up to 3 days
    at room temperature, in an air-
    tight container lined with a
    clean kitchen towel to absorb
    moisture.


PER SLICE (^1 ⁄ 9 OF CAKE) 451 Cal.,
35% (158 Cal.) from fat; 6 g protein; 18 g
fat (10 g sat.); 68 g carbo (2.1 g fiber);
253 mg sodium; 123 mg chol. LS/V

APPLE MASALA

CHAI CAKE

MAKES ONE 9-IN. CAKE (8 OR
9 SLICES) / 1 HOUR, PLUS TIME
TO COOL
This rustic, aromatic dessert
requires nothing more than
a dusting of powdered sugar
to decorate it. Because I call it
a chai cake, it must, of course,
have tea in it; I grind Darjeeling
leaves into the flour.


(^3) ⁄ 4 cup unsalted butter, at room
temperature, cubed, plus
more for pan
2 tbsp. loose-leaf Darjeeling
or other black tea leaves
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 tsp. baking powder
Sunset Test Kitchen tip:
Simple and not too sweet, this
cake is especially delicious
served with steaming, milky cups
of actual chai.
Chai Masala
MAKES 2 TBSP. / 10 MINUTES
Chai is Hindi for “tea,” and Indi -
ans often add a masala (spice
blend). Although you can find
packaged chai masala at Indian
grocery stores, making your
own takes minutes: In a clean
coffee grinder, whirl 10 green
cardamom pods, seeds from
1 black cardamom pod (or
use 2 whole green cardamom
pods), 6 black peppercorns,
4 cloves, and a 2-in. cinnamon
stick until finely ground. Add
1 tbsp. ground ginger and whirl
to blend. Store airtight in a cool,
dark place for up to 1 month.
SUNSET ❖ OCTOBER 2018 53

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