Coconut lime cornbread and updated regular cornbread
Adam Ragusea
0:00 I'm going to be honest and say I've
0:01 never had better sweet cornbread than my own.
0:05 I'm going to show you some slight updates
0:07 that I've made to the recipe through the years.
0:09 And then I'm going to show you a full-on dessert version with coconut and lime.
0:13 It won my neighborhood baking competition.
0:16 I'm just saying.
0:17 If sweet cornbread is not your thing, that's fine.
0:20 But it's one of the most requested items from my kitchen.
0:23 I make it for breakfast on special occasions.
0:26 This batter is super easy.
0:27 It's just an egg in a bowl.
0:29 1/3 of a cup, 80 mls of a neutral tasting oil.
0:33 If you don't want to use the highly refined oils,
0:35 I think avocado oil tastes really nice in this.
0:38 One cup, 200 g of granulated sugar on top.
0:41 Yes, this is more cake than bread, and I'm fine with that.
0:44 Better than fine, actually.
0:46 Now is a good time to do a preliminary whisk.
0:48 It's easy to break up the egg and mix it with the oil
0:51 when you have all this granular material in there for abrasion.
0:55 Time for a cup, 237 mls of liquid.
0:58 And I used to use plain milk, but lately I've been using buttermilk.
1:02 Or actually, this is kafir, which is the Indian equivalent,
1:05 generally fermented with a slightly different community of microorganisms.
1:09 But for baking, it's the same stuff.
1:11 It's thick, mildly tangy milk.
1:13 It makes baked goods more moist and flavorful.
1:16 For salt, I'm doing half a teaspoon of kosher,
1:18 which is a little less than I normally use, and I'll tell you why in just a sec.
1:22 Time for the dry stuff.
1:24 One cup of cornmeal.
1:25 And I recommend using a reasonably fine grind,
1:28 which should weigh like 150 g for a cup.
1:31 The coarser cornmeal tends to hurt your teeth in cornbread.
1:34 It doesn't hydrate enough to soften all the way.
1:37 A cup 120 g of allpurpose flour.
1:40 You can make cornbread with just cornmeal,
1:42 but it won't have any gluten, so it won't be fluffy at all.
1:46 It won't be able to retain much gas as it bakes.
1:49 On top of the dry so that it doesn't react
1:51 with the water prematurely goes one teaspoon of baking powder.
1:55 And then to neutralize some of the acid in the buttermilk,
1:58 I'll use a/4 teaspoon of baking soda.
2:01 When the pH of the batter gets too low,
2:03 it tends to bake up all gummy and it has trouble browning.
2:06 The baking soda just raises the pH a bit.
2:09 And I have for sure found that I get a lighter texture if I leave
2:13 this for 15 minutes before I bake it
2:16 to let all the particles hydrate and to get autolyis.
2:19 That's the water developing the gluten for me.
2:22 And the way that I force myself to let the batter
2:24 rest is to wait until it's done before heating up my oven.
2:28 And I will put my 10-in cast iron pan in there to heat up with the oven.
2:32 That is key.
2:33 I used to bake this at 400F, but since getting a good convection oven,
2:38 I've been adjusting my temperatures down a little to compensate
2:41 for the improved heat transfer that the fan gives you.
2:44 And once the oven is up to temperature,
2:45 I will carefully remove the hot pan and melt a lot of butter in there.
2:49 If you're not using a Teflon pan, you'll want some extra grease to make sure
2:53 this releases all the way up the sides.
2:56 Plus, the butter makes the brown crust taste amazing.
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4:01 Thank you, Wild Grain.
4:02 Anyway, butter in the hot cast iron.
4:04 I'm using salted butter because that's what I have,
4:07 which is why I adjusted the salt in my batter down a little.
4:10 With this much butter, the salt adds up and you really taste it.
4:14 If there's a lot of excess butter, you can blot some up.
4:17 In goes the batter to the hot pan.
4:19 Preheating the pan helps the crust brown.
4:21 It helps it to not stick as bad, and it gets you a fluffier bread
4:25 by helping internal steam build up before everything solidifies.
4:29 In my oven, it takes about 20 minutes.
4:32 When it's done, it starts to crack on top
4:34 and it feels bouncy in the middle rather than squishy.
4:37 This needs a couple more minutes.
4:39 You can pierce it with something to see if it
4:41 comes out clean or you can take its temperature or both.
4:45 I would pull this at 200FH 180C because it's going to bake
4:48 a little bit more in the hot pan as it cools.
4:51 You have to let it cool and solidify
4:53 in there for 5 10 minutes before turning it out.
4:56 Give it an aggressive shake to get it released from the bottom.
5:00 Then you can put a plate or a board on top.
5:03 Carefully flip it upside down.
5:05 Yay, we did it.
5:06 But it's upside down.
5:08 So, a plate or a cooling rack on top of that and then flip again.
5:12 I like to let the bottom steam out on the rack so that it doesn't get all soggy.
5:16 Then you can slice it into wedges or whatever you want.
5:19 This same recipe works in a smaller pan, by the way.
5:22 It just takes a little longer to bake,
5:23 but it would come out taller, which can be nice.
5:26 So, yeah, this is sweet,
5:27 but in a way that evokes sweet corn rather than dessert.
5:31 It's a great side for soup or chili or some such.
5:35 However, you can make a straightup dessert cornbread.
5:38 And here is my prize-winning recipe for that.
5:41 One egg as before.
5:43 Third of a cup of oil, a cup of sugar.
5:45 Everything is the same so far.
5:47 Same cup of buttermilk or kefir.
5:50 This really helps the inside stay moist cuz cornbread tends to dry out.
5:54 What we'll do different is we're only going to use
5:56 3/4 of a cup of cornmeal, like 110 g.
5:59 That's to leave room and moisture for the coconut that's coming later.
6:04 A full cup of flour.
6:05 As before, this is sweetened shredded coconut.
6:08 Unsweetened would probably be fine.
6:10 A/2 cup of this, 40 or 50 g.
6:13 It's not very dense when shredded.
6:15 Same/ teaspoon of salt for me because I like noticeable salt in my desserts,
6:20 but you can leave some of it out if you want.
6:22 Same teaspoon of baking powder and 1/4 teaspoon of baking soda.
6:26 And this is very optional, but I'm doing a little splash of coconut flavoring.
6:30 The shredded coconut mostly contributes texture.
6:33 If you want it to really taste like coconut,
6:35 you need the concentrated essential oils or whatever is in that bottle.
6:39 Do not over mix.
6:41 Just get it smooth and let it sit while heating the pan in the oven.
6:45 Same temp.
6:46 Butter that baby.
6:47 You don't have to use as much if you use a non-stick pan.
6:50 But honestly, the butter makes a super tasty crust.
6:53 And I particularly like the salted butter for the dessert version.
6:57 It balances the sweet icing.
6:59 Don't be surprised if this batter is a little
7:01 looser cuz coconut is less absorbent than cornmeal is.
7:05 Bake as before, about 20 minutes or just
7:07 until the top feels springy, not squishy.
7:10 Let solidify a few minutes and then shake hard to release.
7:13 Turn out to the board.
7:15 Turn out again to the rack.
7:16 I definitely use the rack this time because it's good for icing.
7:20 This is a lime icing.
7:22 Most of the flavor is going to come from the zest.
7:24 Plenty of zest in there.
7:26 Open up the lime and squeeze it all in if you want,
7:28 but I think that the icing will come out way too sour.
7:31 I just want like a teaspoon of juice.
7:34 1 cup, 120 g, of powdered sugar.
7:36 And the rest of my liquid I'll get from milk or water rather than lime juice.
7:41 However much you need to get a glazed texture.
7:43 No, the lime will not curdle the milk.
7:46 There's so much sugar to get between
7:48 the milk proteins and keep them from clumping.
7:50 I would go for a thinish glaze like this.
7:53 A thicker one will give you more of a frosting
7:56 vibe and make the whole thing too sweet.
7:58 Let the cornbread cool a bit before spilling the glaze over it.
8:01 Otherwise, the heat will cause it to thin out and then all run off.
8:05 You can tilt it in different directions to make
8:08 sure that it spreads over the whole cake.
8:09 And let's be honest, this is a cake.
8:12 Excess glaze will just drip through the cooling rack.
8:14 And I let it go on the counter because it's so
8:17 easy to wipe up and I need to wipe my counter anyway.
8:20 Let that glaze solidify before you slice
8:22 or it'll just smear everywhere when you cut.
8:25 There you go.
8:25 Coconut lime sweet cornbread.
8:28 Winner in the originality category at the neighborhood Labor Day picnic.
8:32 Thank you very much.
8:34 It was actually Lauren's idea, so we'll let her eat it.
8:38 It's like do a little dance cut.
8:40 [laughter]