I’d like to introduce you to the brown butter banana cake, your new BFF (or should I say, BBBCwCFF?) It’s surprisingly light for a banana cake, with the perfect balance of sweetness and ripe banana flavor that’s enhanced by toasty nuttiness of brown butter. Best of all, both the cake and frosting can be mixed by hand, no electric mixer needed.
The fudge frosting is deeply and intensely chocolate—made with both melted chocolate and cocoa powder—with a silky smooth texture and shiny finish that stays soft even after being refrigerated. It’s the perfect fudgy compliment to the moist and tender banana cake, without the overpowering sweetness of other frostings (no powdered sugar in sight!)

When it comes to developing recipes, which comes first, the cake or the frosting? Normally, for me, it’s the cake, but not here. No, this recipe started from the top—luscious swirls of deeply chocolate fudge frosting—and the cake soon followed.
Would you believe that this fudge frosting was a complete accident? I found myself with a few random bowls of ganache/fudge left from my candied orange fudge swirl ice cream recipe (getting a fudge swirl that stayed soft and chewy even when frozen solid took a few tries to get right).
Not wanting to waste the remnants, I combined the bowls of ganachey fudge and fudgey ganache, added a splash of cream, and whipped it with an electric mixer to smooth it all out. The result made a surprisingly delicious whipped fudge frosting, which I then slathered on top of a thrown-together-because-those-three-overripe-bananas-need-to-be-used-stat banana cake to bring to ceramics class, which my classmates promptly devoured.
But despite the accidental awesomeness that was the first test cake, I somehow found myself sitting on this recipe for upwards of a year. Why? I can’t quite explain it. At first it was just about not wanting to post two square-ish bakes in a row, or posting too many cake recipes back to back, but when I finally revisited it, enough time had passed that the accidental frosting didn’t quite pass my exacting standards. It was close, but I knew I could make it better.
(more…)from Love and Olive Oil https://ift.tt/z1AymNk

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