Bánh Hoa Kūmara với Kem Tươi Mật Ong

Bánh Hoa Kūmara với Kem Tươi Mật Ong

(Kūmara Blossom Cakes with Honey Crème Fraîche)

(0 Đánh giá)
Khẩu phần
6
Kích thước khẩu phần
1 cake (about 80g)
Thời gian chuẩn bị
30 Phút
Thời gian nấu
45 Phút
Tổng thời gian
1 hr 15 Phút
Bánh Hoa Kūmara với Kem Tươi Mật Ong
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tháng 6 26, 2025

Nguyên liệu

Dinh dưỡng

  • Khẩu phần: 6
  • Kích thước khẩu phần: 1 cake (about 80g)
  • Calories: 300 kcal
  • Carbohydrates: 0 g
  • Protein: 4 g
  • Fat: 12 g
  • Fiber: 3 g
  • Sugar: 18 g
  • Sodium: 225 mg
  • Cholesterol: 48 mg
  • Calcium: 40 mg
  • Iron: 0.9 mg

Hướng dẫn

  • 1 - Prepare and Cook Kūmara:
    Peel kūmara and cut into 2cm cubes. Boil in lightly salted water until tender (10–12 min). Drain and mash until completely smooth. Allow to cool.
  • 2 - Mix Dry Ingredients:
    Sift flour, baking powder, sea salt, ground ginger, and allspice (if using) together in a large mixing bowl.
  • 3 - Cream Sugar and Butter:
    In another bowl, beat softened butter and brown sugar until fluffy, then mix in the egg.
  • 4 - Combine in Kūmara:
    Blend mashed kūmara into the butter mixture until just incorporated.
  • 5 - Create batter:
    Gradually add dry ingredients to wet, alternating with the milk, mixing gently. Batter should be thick, soft, and not runny.
  • 6 - Portion and Bake:
    Preheat oven to 180°C/160°C fan/gas 4. Divide batter evenly among 6 greased muffin moulds. Bake for 23–25 min or until cakes spring back on touch. Cool on rack.
  • 7 - Prepare Honey Crème Fraîche:
    Stir honey and (optionally) lemon zest through crème fraîche until smooth. Chill until cakes are ready.
  • 8 - Decorate and Serve:
    Top each cake with a generous spoonful of honey crème fraîche and adorn with an edible flower to serve.

Thông tin thêm về: Bánh Hoa Kūmara với Kem Tươi Mật Ong

Fragrant English cakes made from Kūmara and finished with edible flower blossoms.

Kūmara Blossom Cakes: A Heartfelt Celebration of English Baking & Kiwi Delight

These Kūmara Blossom Cakes represent a dazzling blend of rustic English ingenuity and the humble, vibrant kūmara—sweet potato celebrated in both Māori and British-influenced New Zealand kitchens for centuries. Infused with delicate spices, filled with the natural sweetness and moisture of kūmara, and finally crowned with edible flowers, every bite embodies harmony between English tradition and the untold, modern fusion of global flavors.

An Inspired Afternoon Treat

Adorned simply but beautifully, these cakes are built for a moment by the window, a steaming cup of English tea within reach. Their striking yet whimsical presentation—with petals scattered like confetti—will always deliver the wow factor at a brunch or high tea, whether you’re at an English country home or a cosmopolitan café.

Historical Roots & Kūmara’s Journey

A beloved crop for Māori tribes since its 14th century Pacific Ocean migration, kūmara only made it into European baking well after England’s own kitchen love affair with the potato (often dubbed 'the bread of the earth') began. Kūmara is revered across Oceania for sweeter, smooth texture and vibrant color, compared to traditional English root vegetables like parsnip or turnip; now, innovative Anglo-cuisine celebrates its presence—just as these cakes do.

Cultural Significance: Bridging Global Gardens

English cuisine, far from flat and flavorless, is comfort food at heart: sweet, spicy baked cakes, hearty scones, sticky puddings. Infusing this spirit with kūmara unlocks new moistness and faint caramel tones… and, when crowned with blossoms, an ethereal finish—something that aligns unusually, but delightfully, with British wildflower meadows and genteel tea tables alike. Edible flowers (think violet, pansy, nasturtium) reference Britain’s horticultural pride, yet also the vibrant brunch scene of modern Auckland or London. So, every layered element resonates: starchy staple, sweetened whimsy, floral edge.

Personal Touches & Unique Notes

Over the years I’ve tinkered with these: adding lots of stem ginger for zip, extra floral honey for aroma, zingy tang of crème fraîche to offset willow-silky kūmara. I’ve found roasted kūmara deepens earthiness and color (though boiling is easier and lighter). Try allspice for gentle roundness. Swap in gluten-free flour, non-dairy butter, or fragrant native NZ honey to adapt easily. If you lack crème fraîche, tangy Greek yogurt works a treat, though the true hero here is the interplay between moist earth (kūmara), airy crumb, and honeyed floral topping.

Pro Tips

  • For more intense kūmara flavor, roast ähead and mash.
  • The batter can be made advance (hold back the raising agents and keep kūmara separate for best lift).
  • Only top with edible flowers just before serving; some flowers, especially nasturtiums, wilt quickly.
  • Serve these cakes warm or barely cooled for maximal fragrance: the honey melts softly and mingles aromatic notes with moist crumb beneath.
  • Feel free to adapt the spice profile—nutmeg and cinnamon work wonders, as does a grating of orange zest through the cake mixture, tying in the honey’s floral tones.

Final Word

Kūmara Blossom Cakes astonish not just for their look, but their sense of comfort woven through clever flavor pairings—a gentle marriage of England and Oceania. Let them light up a sleepy Sunday or impress an afternoon tea crowd. This unique cake isn’t simply an experiment; it’s a new classic waiting to happen, humming where memory, sweetness, and real flowers bloom on your plate.

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