It took me much longer than expected to even bake this second cupcake project, even though I had the concept nailed down weeks ago. And after the stress of attempting the Alabama cakes while filming, I decided to NEVER DO THAT AGAIN. This went much more smoothly.
My experience with Alaska comes from secondhand sources, but I do have a fascination with the wildness of it.
My maternal grandmother, whom we call "Grammie," developed an affection for Alaska after traveling there using her accumulated frequent-flyer miles out of sheer curiosity. She returned many times, once taking my older brother along on a trip to Barrow, the northern-most point in the U.S. She told us passionate stories of her experiences with the native people, excitedly detailing the Land of the Midnight Sun and cementing it into my childhood mythology as a place where improbable things happen.
Enter the Alaska cupcake.
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| Or, more accurately, three miniatures. |
The base is a sturdy rhubarb and oat cake cradling a scoop of wild berry swirl ice cream, crowned with a toasted swiss meringue, "Baked Alaska"-style.
Yes, I know. You don't have to remind me. Baked Alaska has no origins in Alaska.
I have a very reasonable explanation for why I chose to include this non-native element. I wanted to. The ice cream was the perfect vehicle for including a wild berry flavor in a way that complimented the rhubarb-oat cake and created a bit of a sauce as it melted, and the Swiss meringue was dreamy and marshmallowy on top.
I regret nothing.
Alaska is a land of wild flavors with a culinary tradition that centers more on survival than flashy cuisine. Which is totally fine with me. I like to keep it simple -- in real life anyway. This got a bit more complicated.
As I discovered through my research, Alaska's culinary traditions are focused on not dying. Use what's around, make it through the sunless winter: solid survivalism. While there isn't much room for dessert in such conditions, there are definitive local flavors that include rhubarb, wild berries, and wild game and fish. Settlers brought hardy grains like oats along, too.
Oh! And there's something called birch syrup! Much like maple syrup in its manufacture, but with a different flavor. I couldn't find a local (within 50 miles) source, and opted not to order it online for this round, but it's on my radar now. Birch syrup, you're on my bucket list.
The impetus for the Alaska cupcake was to embrace the wild flavors, the survivalist cuisine, and also the not-from-Alaska-but-still-associated Baked Alaska concept.
Here's another reason I chose to do a Baked Alaska cupcake: Aqutak.
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| It needs to be dressed up like this for tourists. |
I was NOT about to order reindeer fat online, no matter how authentically Alaskan that would make my cupcakes. Modern versions of aqutak/agutuk use vegetable shortening instead of rendered animal fat, but I still wasn't entirely convinced that this would be delicious.
To make my totally-not-wild berry sauce, I pureed about a cup of blackberries with a bit of water, then ran the whole shebang through a sieve to achieve a smooth, seedless sauce. I combined this with 1/3 cup currant jelly in a small saucepan and stirred it to an even consistency. Since a steamy sauce would liquify my vanilla ice cream, I chilled it in the freezer before combining the two.
Verdict: I found them moist and delicious, not too sweet, with the intended hearty texture from the oats. More like a muffin. But aren't all cupcakes just muffins with frosting?
Well, I'm not done yet. These muffins are getting an upgrade.
So actual ice cream was a stand in, swirled with a homemade wild berry sauce and refrozen. The necessary freezer time made this my first step.
If wild berries are your thing, Alaska has you covered with nearly 50 different varieties. The native people have been harvesting them for generations, and I felt that any dessert claiming to be a tribute to the state's food traditions needed to have a wild berry element.
Where I currently reside in California, there are decidedly fewer varieties of berries available to the average home baker. While Alaskans can enjoy such exotic wild fruits as salmonberries and cloudberries, we have to settle for their domesticated cousins, with the most exciting choices available only as jelly. I wanted to get the most tart-sweet berry bang for my buck, so I chose blackberries and currants as the local flavor stand-ins.
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| That's a LOT of seeds that will never be stuck in my teeth. |
Working into a wide freezer-safe container with a lid, I layered in about 1/3 of the ice cream (1/2 gallon size container), topping each layer with sauce until both were gone. Lid on, and back into the freezer. Done!
Note: This makes more than you'll need to top the cupcakes, but is delicious on its own or on top of a warm brownie. I'm sure you'll think of something.
Verdict: Using a pre-made vanilla ice cream and adding the wild berry sauce swirl simplified this step. I'm SO glad I opted to remove the seeds from the blackberry puree -- that would have been a detrimental texture. The punch of berry flavor from the currants and blackberries was exactly the effect I was going for. Success!
Verdict: Using a pre-made vanilla ice cream and adding the wild berry sauce swirl simplified this step. I'm SO glad I opted to remove the seeds from the blackberry puree -- that would have been a detrimental texture. The punch of berry flavor from the currants and blackberries was exactly the effect I was going for. Success!
Alaska's favorite plant: Rhubarb.
They say it grows easily and is prolific in the Alaskan climate, much like zucchini in the lower states. Which means everyone and their mother has a favorite recipe for rhubarb __________.
Me? I'm a rhubarb virgin. We had some growing in our back yard when I was young, and I knew people made pies with of it, I could even sing you the "Beebopareebop Rhubarb Pie" jingle. And yet, I was intimidated to bake with it for the first time. Also, this was California supermarket rhubarb I was working with, so I'm not sure if it was the right rhubarb or the best rhubarb. I can proudly sniff out a good cantaloupe, but choosing rhubarb from a basket of loose stalks truly seemed like gambling.
I found a recipe for rhubarb cake to use as a guide, grabbed my fistful of rhubarb, and got busy.
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| Surprisingly greenish. |
The recipe I chose was for an upside-down rhubarb cake and called for slicing the rhubarb into 1/2-inch cubes. My teeny cupcakes couldn't possibly handle chunks of rhubarb, I reasoned, so I used my food processor and obliterated it.
I also wanted to incorporate rolled oats, which appeared in every recipe for Alaskan cookies, crisps, and other modern-day-Alaskan desserts I came across in my internet searches. To use rolled oats in the batter, I first ground them into a coarse flour, also using my food processor. Much better than the mortar-and-pestle method. Such a time saver.
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| Coarse flour of rolled oats, ready to jump in the pool. |
The rest of the batter came together easily, with minor modifications to the original recipe that included skipping the ingredients (brown sugar and 1/2 stick butter) and procedure for making the caramel sauce. Not making an upside-down cake, just cupcakes. I also swapped in one cup of the above oat "flour" for one cup of the called-for cake flour. The other cup was all-purpose flour. These are hearty cakes we're making. The full 1.5 cups of sugar went straight into the batter as well.
While the rhubarb waited to make its entrance, I let it hang out in a bowl with the called-for two tablespoons of powdered sugar, just to make it good and juicy.
I experimented by putting a spoonful of the rhubarb mixture in the bottom of several cupcakes, before adding the rhubarb-less batter on top. Then I stirred the rhubarb mixture fully into the batter and filled the remaining cupcake papers. Once they were baked, there was very little noticeable difference between the two methods.
I was expecting the rhubarb to be more pink after baking, but it's clear from the pictures that no pink hue appeared. And since I'm not sure what rhubarb should taste like, I'm probably not the best judge of how my cakes would rate as a rhubarb dessert.
Well, I'm not done yet. These muffins are getting an upgrade.
I'll admit, my first thought when brainstorming my Alaska cupcake was, "Baked Alaska, of course!"
Imagine my disappointment when I discovered the non-native origin of the acclaimed dessert.
Baked Alaska is just the most widely recognized American version of a dessert that goes by many names. Norwegian omelette, glace au four, flame on the iceberg. These are all essentially the same: cake, topped with ice cream, topped with meringue and baked/flambeed. The popular American folktale is that a chef in New York created the dish to honor Alaska as a new U.S. territory, but the chef himself first called the dish "Alaska Florida," referencing the contrast in temperatures. Versions in France refer to Norway instead of Alaska, and Hong Kong just goes with "the iceberg."
Alas, no Alaskan origin.
UNLESS...
UNLESS...
Snow and ice are integral parts of the native societies in Alaska, so it only makes sense that they have multitude varied descriptors for the two in every dialect. Now, imagine the meringue atop the ice cream (or faux-agutuk) as a different kind of snow. The crunchy top layer that stays intact after the snow beneath has melted away. I'm sure they have a word for that. That's what I'm honoring.
When making Baked Alaska, or whatever we're calling it now, I'm told Swiss meringue is the meringue to use. I had never made a nationality-specific meringue, so I searched and found a recipe.
Martha to the rescue! Simple ingredients: four egg whites (room temp, fresh cracked), one cup of sugar, and one pinch cream of tartar. Combine in the top of a double boiler over medium heat and whisk constantly until sugar is dissolved. Remove from the heat and whip until stiff, glossy peaks form. Then add vanilla extract and whip to combine. Easy peasy, right?
The ingredients and the methods were familiar and generally easy to execute. The most laborious part was the whipping. Ten minutes of whipping. That's a long time with a hand mixer. Martha even specified a stand mixer in her recipe. If anyone wants a gift idea for my birthday, a stand mixer is a safe bet.
Luckily, I had help.
Mixing and tasting.
Finally, the meringue was finished. It made a TON. My taster was happy to eliminate some of the excess while I wasn't looking, and I didn't even miss it. We scooped some into a piping bag and prepared for assembly.
Before pulling the ice cream-topped cakes from the freezer, I preheated the oven to 500 degrees Fahrenheit. As quickly and neatly as I could (I can usually do one, but not the other), I piped the meringue over the ice cream. Then, it was into the oven!
This was the first time I had ever intentionally put ice cream into a hot oven.
From previous experience, I knew that meringue can go quickly from pale to black, with a teeny little window in between where it is perfectly golden brown. I watched like a hawk to hit that sweet spot and avoid the cremated look.
Once they were toasted to perfection, I pulled them from the oven and started snapping photos. Because ice cream.
Verdict: Because I followed a proven recipe without modification, the meringue turned out beautifully. Once baked, the marshmallowy texture had a bit of a crisp exterior, which is exactly what I was going for -- that "crust" atop the creamy meringue and ice cream. Perfection!
Final Results: I (sort of) learned my lesson with the Alabama cupcakes, and tried to experiment with recipes a little less this time. It seems to have paid off, with the resulting Alaska cupcakes full of the native flavors that capture the essence of America's last frontier.
The toasted meringue's crisp outer layer imparted a pleasant initial texture, while the cloudlike interior melded with the ice cream below to become one delicious über-frosting. The [domesticated] wild berry swirl ice cream and tribute to the indigenous agutuk was the flavor punch this creation needed, and it melted down into the cake and infused every bite with creamy, sweet-tart berry goodness. The rustic rhubarb and oat cake experiment was successfully tangy, moist and hearty in texture, albeit surprisingly golden (and not pink) in color.
If I attempt an Alaska cupcake again, the only things I may change are to add something crunchy to the cake for added textural interest. Or possibly order some authentic wild berries to see if it makes a significant difference in flavor.
Cheers, Alaska!
Are you an Alaskan? Do you know an Alaskan? How did I do? Tell me!
Tune in next time, where I'll be turning up the heat on an Arizona cupcake.
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| The cooled cakes were topped with a scoop of the wild berry ice cream and returned to the freezer for optimal coldness. |
This was the first time I had ever intentionally put ice cream into a hot oven.
From previous experience, I knew that meringue can go quickly from pale to black, with a teeny little window in between where it is perfectly golden brown. I watched like a hawk to hit that sweet spot and avoid the cremated look.
Once they were toasted to perfection, I pulled them from the oven and started snapping photos. Because ice cream.
Verdict: Because I followed a proven recipe without modification, the meringue turned out beautifully. Once baked, the marshmallowy texture had a bit of a crisp exterior, which is exactly what I was going for -- that "crust" atop the creamy meringue and ice cream. Perfection!
Final Results: I (sort of) learned my lesson with the Alabama cupcakes, and tried to experiment with recipes a little less this time. It seems to have paid off, with the resulting Alaska cupcakes full of the native flavors that capture the essence of America's last frontier.
The toasted meringue's crisp outer layer imparted a pleasant initial texture, while the cloudlike interior melded with the ice cream below to become one delicious über-frosting. The [domesticated] wild berry swirl ice cream and tribute to the indigenous agutuk was the flavor punch this creation needed, and it melted down into the cake and infused every bite with creamy, sweet-tart berry goodness. The rustic rhubarb and oat cake experiment was successfully tangy, moist and hearty in texture, albeit surprisingly golden (and not pink) in color.
If I attempt an Alaska cupcake again, the only things I may change are to add something crunchy to the cake for added textural interest. Or possibly order some authentic wild berries to see if it makes a significant difference in flavor.
Cheers, Alaska!
Are you an Alaskan? Do you know an Alaskan? How did I do? Tell me!
___________________________________________
Tune in next time, where I'll be turning up the heat on an Arizona cupcake.
These cupcakes are dedicated to a real-life adventure hero, Nancy Stoops.
Earlier this month, Grammie celebrated her 89th birthday, and shows no signs of slowing down. She has thus far lived an amazing, full life that includes many accomplishments (passing the bar at 70!) and great stories (a wedding at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry, multiple cross-country moves with small children in tow) and is an inspiration, no doubt, to her eight children, their many progeny (myself included), and I daresay anyone who has been touched by her kind and vibrant spirit.
Love you, Grammie! ~M
Love you, Grammie! ~M


























