Recipe

Blood Orange Olive Oil Cake with Candied Pistachios

Community Pick!

Blood Orange Olive Oil Cake with Candied Pistachios

Photo 1 of 3
by raspberryeggplant

Blood Orange Olive Oil Cake with Candied Pistachios

Photo 2 of 3
by raspberryeggplant

Blood Orange Olive Oil Cake with Candied Pistachios

Photo 3 of 3
by raspberryeggplant

  • This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Italian Dessert
    This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Recipe with Citrus & Olives
    This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Citrus Recipe
  • A&M's Testing Notes: The cake came out moist, not too sweet, lightly flavored with orange notes, and genuinely original in concept. Note: I only needed two oranges (6 ounces each) to achieve the amount of juice...

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  • Chef

    raspberryeggplant's Notes: I was inspired to make this cake after being disappointed by the highly regarded olive oil cake at a nearby coffeeshop and also by the plethora of out-of-the-ordinary citrus fruits available...

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Serves 1 9" x 5" loaf

  1. Make the cake: Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. Grease and flour a 9” × 5” loaf pan with a little bit of olive oil and flour and set aside.

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  2. Finely grate the zest of two oranges and set aside. Zest the third orange into a separate bowl and save the zest for another use.

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  3. Supreme two of the oranges over a large bowl and cut each segment in half, reserving the pieces in a separate small bowl. Squeeze as much juice as possible out of the remaining orange membranes into the bowl. Cut the remaining orange in half and juice it into the bowl. Pour all of the juice into a glass measuring cup – you should have a little more than ¼ cup.

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  4. Add whole milk to make ¾ cup of liquid and whisk to combine. Add the olive oil and whisk well to combine.

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  5. If using a large measuring cup, add the eggs, sugar, and zest and whisk well to combine. If using a small measuring cup, transfer the juice mixture back to the original bowl before adding the eggs and sugars.

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  6. Add the flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt to a large bowl and whisk to combine. Pour in the wet ingredients and whisk until all the flour is incorporated and the batter is smooth.

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  7. Transfer the batter to the prepared pan and bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, about 65 minutes.

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  8. Cool the cake in the pan on a wire rack. Remove the cake from the pan after 20 minutes and cool completely on the rack.

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  9. Make the candied pistachios: Put the sugar in a small heavy saucepan set over medium heat. Cook until the sugar is dissolved and has turned a medium amber color, about 5 minutes.

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  10. While the sugar is heating, toast the pistachios by spreading them in a single layer on a large plate and microwaving on high power for 1 minute. [Alternately, you can toast the pistachios in the oven after the cake is done – toast at 325 for about 5 minutes, just until the nuts are fragrant.] When the pistachios are cool, coarsely chop them.

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  11. When the sugar has turned amber, remove the pan from the heat, stir in the pistachios, pour the mixture over the cake, and spread with a silicone spatula. You will need to work quickly otherwise the sugar will set. Let the cake rest for at least 20 minutes before serving. [Note: the pistachios will be very crisp the first day, but within a few days, they will soften up from the moisture from the cake – they still taste great and the cake is a bit easier to cut.]

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6 Comments on Blood Orange Olive Oil Cake with Candied Pistachios

Reply

Wait so do you ever add the blood orange segments back in ?

Rkm_profile Reply

Thanks for the pick!

Also, thanks for pointing out that I left out the instructions for the zest - it should be mixed in with the wet ingredients (but I'm sure you figured that out!).

As for the juice, I've found that one orange isn't *quite* enough for 1/4 cup of juice which is why I also squeeze the remaining membranes after cutting the segments from the 2 oranges.

Img_0336 Reply

You're welcome! Ate the last slice this morning with coffee and it was the tastiest piece of the whole delicious loaf. Congrats!

Img_0336 Reply

Thanks bunches! I could get lost for some time in those videos but will make sure to visit when I need concise answers!

Img_0336 Reply

Please define your concept of "supreme an orange" for me. I thought that term was used for chicken breasts!

Rkm_profile Reply

Here's a video on how to supreme citrus http://www.chow.com/stories/12002 and here are step-by-step photos http://chefinyou.com/2010/01/how-to-supreme-fruits/

Hope that helps!

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