I got an email the other day from one of those high school renunion websites, and as I was marking it as spam, it occurred to me that it’s been nearly fifteen years since I graduated from high school. It feels like another lifetime, and yet I feel too young to be that old. In high school I was the quiet type that never really got into too much trouble. Sure, I served my fair share of time in detention (I was even suspended once), but I was never the rebellious experimental type. You know, those kids that always questioned authority, and would smoke, snort or otherwise ingest anything, just to see what would happen?
Times have changed and I’m not the quite the straight-laced nerd that I once was, but I’m still not much of a rebel. Get me around food though, and all bets are off. In the kitchen, I become that hormone fueled, out-of-control teenager that will violate taboo, just to be different. It’s why the food that shows up on this blog seems so eclectic. I can’t imagine sticking to one cuisine, and the thought of following directions out of a book is tantamount to sitting through a four hour standardized test.
Perhaps as a Yin to the Yang of my savoury chocolate pasta from last week, I decided that it’s high time that bell peppers be used in a dessert. I was having guests over and knew I should be making something safer, but my inner voice compelled me to make this cake. “Besides,” I told myself, “anyone who get’s invited over to dinner at my place knows the inherent risks associated with the invitation anyway.”
This red bell pepper and saffron upside-down cake turns notions about what should and shouldn’t go into a dessert upside down. The roasted bell peppers absorb the caramelized sugar and butter, taking on a slightly chewy caramel texture, while retaining their sweet smoky essence. The sweet and spicy cinnamon compliments the lightly acidic pepper, and the saffron not only punches up the colour, but it also adds a marvelous meaty flavour that harmonized beautifully with the peppers.
For the batter, I used masa harina in place of flour because it makes a nice dense crumb, while remaining paradoxically tender due to the utter lack of gluten. To play up the corn texture, I added some polenta, which gives the cake a nice bite. As a whole, the flavours, textures and colours work beautifully together, and if you can get over the oddity of seeing a vegetable between your scoop of ice cream and your cake, it actually tastes pretty good.
So the next time you’re feeling a little uninspired in the kitchen, I urge you to tap into those rebellious instincts that have laid dormant for so many years and try something wild! You may find yourself pleasantly surprised.
Units
Ingredients
- 2 large red bell peppers
- ½ teaspoon saffron
- 1 tablespoon water
- 4 tablespoons cultured unsalted butter
- ¾ cups light brown sugar (packed)
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 cup masa harina
- 1 tablespoon polenta
- ¼ teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 113 grams cultured unsalted butter (1/2 US cup)
- ½ cup light brown sugar
- ¼ cups evaporated cane sugar
- 2 large eggs (room temp)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ¼ cups milk
Instructions
- Chop the top and bottom off the bell peppers and quater the pepper lengthwise, trimming any seeds or white membrane from the inside. Lay the strips of bell pepper on a baking sheet skin side up. Move your oven rack to the top position and turn the broiler on high. Put the sheet of bell peppers directly under the heating element and broil until the skins are charred almost solid black. This gives the peppers a nice smokey flavour. Once charred, put them in a ziplock bag, and seal the top and allow to cool. The steam escaping from the hot pepper dislodges the charred skin so it is easy to peel.
- Crumble the saffron into a bowl and cover with the water.
- Peel the roasted peppers and cut them into thin triangular strips. Butter the bottom of a 9″ round cake pan and lay the strips down in a circular pattern. It’s okay if there are small gaps between the peppers. Make the caramel by adding the butter, sugar and cinnamon in a pot over medium high heat. Cook until the sugar is melted (there shouldn’t be any granules of sugar left), but be careful not to burn it. Pour the mixture over the prepared bell peppers. The hot mixture may spatter, so please be careful.
- Turn the oven on to 350 degrees F and move the oven rack to the middle position.
- Whisk the masa harina, polenta salt and baking powder together in a bowl. Put the butter, light brown sugar and sugar to the bowl of an electric mixer and beat until smooth and creamy. Add the eggs one at a time and beat until incorporated. Add the vanilla, saffron and soaking water and continue beating then slowly add the milk until fully incorporated. Add the flour mixture in all at once, then beat until smooth.
- Pour the batter in to the pan with the peppers and caramel and flatten off the top. Bake for 35-40 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Remove the pan from the oven and let it cool enough to touch. Put a plate on top of the pan and flip it over to invert the cake onto the plate. If any of the peppers stay stuck to the pan, just remove them and put them back into place on the cake. Allow the cake to cool to room temperature then slice and serve.
my little expat kitchen says
This is a truly innovative recipe. I haven’t seen anything like this before. I think I’ll give this a try. Magda
Xiaolu @ 6 Bittersweets says
A gorgeous cake if I ever saw one! Thanks for inspiring us with your adventurous creations :).
my little expat kitchen says
This is a truly innovative recipe. I haven't seen anything like this before. I think I'll give this a try. Magda
We Are Never Full says
loving a bit of the spanish influence in this… pequillo peppers and saffron (ok, so they are reg. red bell, but it’s similar). very nice – i’d totally love to try this.
We Are Never Full says
loving a bit of the spanish influence in this… pequillo peppers and saffron (ok, so they are reg. red bell, but it's similar). very nice – i'd totally love to try this.
citraetcetera says
this is a great idea – wonder if I could not find masa harina where I live, what do you suggest to use instead? can’t wait to try this recipe. thanks for your fantastic idea!
Marc Matsumoto says
Thanks! You could substitute wheat flour, but I think the proportions
might be a little different. You might have to experiment a little to
figure out the right amount.
Loren says
This looks amazing, and I’m planning to make it for an all-pepper dinner this weekend! Should the polenta be dry or prepared? Thanks!
Loren says
This looks amazing, and I’m planning to make it for an all-pepper dinner this weekend! Should the polenta be dry or prepared? Thanks!
Marc Matsumoto says
Thanks! The polenta should be dry. It gives a little texture to the cake.
BEL says
that s so cool … im looking for a unique recipes for our food experimental, can u help me ? do you know some recipes for rose petals ?
Marc Matsumoto says
I don’t really know of any recipes for rose petals, but you can use rose water in a lot of desserts. It goes especially well with raspberries and lychees.
—
Marc Matsumoto
https://norecipes.com
https://wanderingcook.com
Twitter: @norecipes
Celine says
I tried this recipe and it is very interesting. The taste of the pepper is really softened by the caramel. I replaced Masa Harina by classic wheat flour as I could not find any in Sainsbury’s. And it worked out fine. I surprised everyone with this so thank you very much!
kpayne says
This is the worst recipe ever just nasty. I was trying it for the fair and just tasted it tonight it was terrible just nasty. I say its not a recipe thats worth wasting 20 bucks on to buy a stupid spice, you may never use again.
Marc Matsumoto says
Hi kpayne, sorry to hear you didn’t enjoy the dish. I could see how this isn’t a flavor profile that will work for everyone, but one thing I wanted to clarify is whether the you had a problem with the recipe and it didn’t turn out right, or if you just didn’t like the taste? If it was the former, I’m happy to try and figure out what went wrong if you can give me a bit more detail. As for the saffron, it’s great in paella (https://norecipes.com/paella/) and biryani (https://norecipes.com/chicken-biryani/).