Cassata Cake

Cassata Cake

Cassata Cake

Cassata Cake

Diets

  • Vegetarian

Ingredients

  • Produce

    • 1 pint Strawberries, fresh
  • Refrigerated

    • 6 Eggs
  • Condiments

    • 1/2 tsp Citrus oil (pure orange or lemon oil
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 tsp Baking powder
    • 2 tsp Cornstarch
    • 11 oz Flour
    • 24 oz Granulated sugar, superfine
    • 1/2 tsp Salt
    • 2 tsp Vanilla
    • 4 cups Whipped cream
  • Dairy

    • 16 oz Butter, unsalted
    • 1 3/4 cup Milk
    • 1/4 cup Ricotta cheese

Found on

epicurious.com

epicurious.com

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Title:

Cassata Cake

Descrition:

I grew up outside Cleveland, Ohio, and the cassata is the cake of my childhood. This regional specialty is a great example of how recipes take on local styles over time. Some food historians believe the cassata has its roots in fourteenth-century Arab culture. In Sicily, the long-ago homeland of the immigrants who first brought it to America, the cassata often contains candied citrus fruits, citrus liqueurs, and a glazing of chocolate or almond marzipan. The version of the cassata cake that I grew up with was quite different: a strawberry-and-whipped-cream-clad yellow sponge cake with a ricotta cheese filling. My childhood memory of the cake is that there were always leftovers that—thankfully—lasted for days. Flavorful and moist, that final piece of cake just fell apart in your mouth.

Cassata Cake

  • Produce

    • 1 pint Strawberries, fresh
  • Refrigerated

    • 6 Eggs
  • Condiments

    • 1/2 tsp Citrus oil (pure orange or lemon oil
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 tsp Baking powder
    • 2 tsp Cornstarch
    • 11 oz Flour
    • 24 oz Granulated sugar, superfine
    • 1/2 tsp Salt
    • 2 tsp Vanilla
    • 4 cups Whipped cream
  • Dairy

    • 16 oz Butter, unsalted
    • 1 3/4 cup Milk
    • 1/4 cup Ricotta cheese

The first person this recipe

epicurious.com

epicurious.com

550 0

Found on epicurious.com

Epicurious

Cassata Cake

I grew up outside Cleveland, Ohio, and the cassata is the cake of my childhood. This regional specialty is a great example of how recipes take on local styles over time. Some food historians believe the cassata has its roots in fourteenth-century Arab culture. In Sicily, the long-ago homeland of the immigrants who first brought it to America, the cassata often contains candied citrus fruits, citrus liqueurs, and a glazing of chocolate or almond marzipan. The version of the cassata cake that I grew up with was quite different: a strawberry-and-whipped-cream-clad yellow sponge cake with a ricotta cheese filling. My childhood memory of the cake is that there were always leftovers that—thankfully—lasted for days. Flavorful and moist, that final piece of cake just fell apart in your mouth.