30 Jan 2011

Purely Conceptual Cake (for 'The Raw Shark Texts')



'thought ... congealed' (p.4)
'fluid liquid concept ... waves of association and history' (p.59)

My goal this month was to create something edible that resembled the idea of a cake and tasted like the memory of cake without it actually being a cake. 

I started by asking myself: What do you mean by ‘cake’? If I were to narrow the memory of cake down to one particular type of cake it would be a basic sponge recipe. For many of us this would've been our first taste of cake, perhaps at our own first birthday party, so the psychological impact of the sponge cake must run deep...

A homage to pages 55 and 56 of The Raw Shark Texts might illustrate the 'waves of association and history' I'm aiming for:

Imagine a birthday cake.
You're in a room decorated with streamers and balloons. The lights have been dimmed and a chorus of 'Happy Birthday' is sung in time, though not in tune, by the assembled guests. A glow from the doorway announces the procession of the cake. It is set before you and a waft of wax, icing and sugary sponge invades your nostrils. The heat from the candles warms your face as you are urged to make a wish. There is a snap and flash of cameras as you take a deep breath, pause for effect, and do your best to blow out all the candles in one go. The lights are switched back on and there is a general hubbub as the guests await the cutting of the cake, anticipating it's moist crumb texture and the buttery smoothness of the filling. You are handed the knife. There is another pop and fizz of flashes as you press the blade into it's spongy centre and draw it towards the outer edge with an audible scrape of metal on crockery.

And right on that scraping sound - stop imagining.
The slightly unsettling but mundane truth of the matter is: the cake in my head has become the cake in your head. Yes, that's right. You may have thought you were imagining your own cake but I was merely using an ancient form of symbolism known as 'words' to implant my own cake-thoughts into your head. If you took a moment to contemplate the sheer number of possible combinations and permutations of sugar, flour and butter there are in this world you would be overwhelmed. Given long enough, under the right conditions, these same ingredients could bloom into a living organism of their own - a vengeful and intelligent Metacake with the ability to devour us all! Now, there's some food for thought...

***
After three failed experiments I finally hit on the idea of a birthday cake panna cotta. A molded milk-based gelatine dessert played on the congealed texture I was looking for and lent itself to a cake and ice cream effect. I like the idea of the stenciled letters because the power of the written word is an overarching theme in the book. I think the cocoa powder helps to bring out the cake flavour, which is quite subtle.


How would you interpret The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall? All cakes and commets welcome.


Purely Conceptual Cake  (Birthday Cake Panna Cotta) 
Serves 4-8

Ingredients:

For the eggless sponge cake
1/2 tin condensed milk (198g)
75ml melted butter
2tsp vanilla essence
80ml water
150g flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp bi-carbonate of soda

For the panna cotta 
500ml whipping cream or double cream
60g caster sugar
1tsp vanilla essence
3-4 sheets gelatine (or 1 sachet powdered gelatine)
125g cake batter

To decorate
A sprinkle of cocoa powder

Method:
Preheat oven to 200*C.
Butter and flour a 9in round cake pan and set aside. In a bowl whisk together condensed milk, butter, vanilla and water. Add flour and stir until smooth. Reserve 125g batter in a separate dish. Add the baking powder and soda, stir well and pour into prepared pan. Bake for 12-15min or until toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean.
Soak gelatine in cold water. Combine the cream, sugar and vanilla in a saucepan over medium heat and leave to simmer until sugar is dissolved. Do not boil. Add the gelatine to the saucepan and remove from heat stirring occasionally until dissolved.

 
Pour about 2tbsp of panna cotta into each of your ramekins or moulds (I filled eight 85ml containers but you could use 4 larger ones) and put in the fridge to set for about half an hour until firm enough to pour a second layer on top. Meanwhile, stir the reserved cake batter into the remaining mixture and set aside. Pour into molds and refrigerate for a few hours, or overnight, until set.
Turn out onto serving plates and dust with cocoa powder. Don't be tempted to skip this step. For some reason, this helps the cake flavour stand out.






 What you do with the eggless sponge cake is up to you. I chose not to serve it along side this recipe because the panna cotta is rich enough to stand on it's own.
If you have no use for a leftover 1/2 tin of condensed milk just double the batch, you'll still only need one 9in cake tin to bake it in. 
I crumbled mine up, stirred in some butter cream icing (140g icing sugar, 70g marg, 1tsp milk - double this too if you make a double batch) and rolled them into Bakerella-style cake balls. I've popped them in the freezer to be coated in chocolate later.

Modified from Del Sole
Eggless sponge cake from aditya28
Recipe, Dessert , Cake, Panna Cotta

29 Jan 2011

The c.a.k.e. Experiment


This time I made cake-flavoured milk jello by adding a packet of cake mix to condensed milk and gelatine. Then I printed stencils to cut out the c.a.k.e.


Method: Soak 2 sachets of gelatine in 1/2 pint of water. Stir 1 tin of condensed milk into 1 pint of water and bring to a simmer on the stove (do not boil). Add gelatine and stir until dissolved. In a separate bowl pour a little of the milk mixture into the cake mix to make a paste then add paste to the pan and stir until combined. Allow to cool on a flat tray and refrigerate until set.


This is when I learned an important lesson. This is probably such a no-brainer that it doesn't need to be said but have you ever noticed the lack of jello and butter cream icing recipes out there? That's because jello and butter cream icing do not mix. The first layers went together ok but by the time the second layer was added...


Disaster. Not something you would serve at a dinner party. Or even a children's party. Although there was a definite cake flavour to this the texture was more powdery than I would have liked. The icing was the only thing going for it. I had high hopes that this would be my final recipe but once again I find myself staring at a dessert gone wrong. 

I thought creating a purely conceptual cake for The Raw Shark Texts would be fairly easy. Oh, I laugh now at my naivety. It is the 'conceptual' part that is proving most difficult. 

How do you create something edible that resembles the idea of a cake and tastes like the memory of a cake without it actually being a cake? 

As you know I have been using three quotes from the novel as the criteria for this recipe:
'thought ... congealed' (p.4)
'fluid liquid concept ... waves of association and history' (p.59)
'stillness is an idea, a dream' (p.25)
To this I have added the use of words or letters as part of the representation.

23 Jan 2011

The Blancmange Experiment

So much promise...


...so much pudding.


Back to the drawing board. Again.

19 Jan 2011

The Raw Jello Experiment


It began with a simple syrup poured into ice cube trays...


I had hoped I would be able to turn these out into perfect cube-shaped bubbles of 'congealed thought' which I could then stack into a vague cake-like resemblance. I should have added more gelatin because I got a very wobbly jelly instead of a finger food 'jiggler'. Even if it had set better I still would have had to pry the blobs out with a spoon as I didn't think to grease the ice cube tray. 


 
It was also way too sweet (I'm sure the dusting of icing sugar and sprinkles didn't help). My verdict: as a dessert it was an all-round flop but as an experiment it had it's uses. I'm back to the drawing board on this one. I wonder if it's possible to add words or letters to the jello somehow... Alphabet cereal? Chocolate letters? Printed rice paper?

For now let's just call this the un-cake.



10 Jan 2011

Idea Munching: The Raw Shark Texts

To my mind, nothing is more representative of congealed thought than Jello. Making a jello cake could be as easy as pouring it into a mould (layered or unlayered) and adding some decoration on top. But I want something a bit more weird and wonderful. I'm going to stick with the jello idea though. Colour is an important consideration. What colour should it be and what would that colour mean? Or perhaps more important than colour, what flavour? What shape?

Musing on the word shark: I think of oceans, sea water, seaweed and fishy-ness. I could make a miso jello and stir in nori flakes, some chunks of white fish, maybe finish it off with a drizzle of fish oil. I could even cut it into a shark silhouette. Maybe not… Shaping it into a shark seems too literal a representation. It would certainly say ‘shark’ but it just doesn’t say cake to me... 

4 Jan 2011

The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall


I'll start with this one because I think it's the most literal example of what I'm trying to achive. I am intrugued by the following quotes from the novel:
"thought ... congealed" (p.4)
"fluid liquid concept ... waves of association and history." (p.59)
"stillness is an idea, a dream" (p.25)

For The Raw Shark Texts, I want to create something edible that resembles the idea of a cake, rather than a cake itself. In other words, I'll be 'baking' a purely conceptual cake. I'll post my interpretive recipe at the end of the month.

Read, Bake, Eat along with me!
The Raw Shark Texts is published in the UK by Canongate
Check out the author's website at steven-hall.org


How to bake an interpretive cake:


Ingredients:
One novel*
Plenty of imagination
 *Can substitute story, poem, play, film etc. for novel

Method:
Pre-heat creativity.
Read novel.
Analyse structure, themes, plot, characters, overarching emotions etc. in the manner of a literary theorist.
Imagine what kind of cake would best represent your reading.
Bake cake.