Servings 6small cakes (use six 4-ounce ramekins to bake)
Ingredients
Juice from 1 whole lemon
2medium baking apples (such as Braeburn, Cortland, Jonathan, Gala, Granny Smith)
4ouncesunsalted butter, cut into pieces
4½ouncesall-purpose flour (plus some for coating ramekins)
1/3teaspoonbaking soda
1/3teaspoonbaking powder
1/3teaspoonsalt
1/3teaspoonground cinnamon
¼teaspoonground ginger
¼teaspoonground nutmeg
2ouncesgranulated sugar
1½ounceslight brown sugar
1whole egg
3½ouncesbuttermilk
1½ounceslight vegetable oil, such as canola, avocado or light olive
1teaspoonvanilla extract
Instructions
Preheat oven to 450°F.Fill a bowl with cold water; add the lemon juice.
Peel apples and dice them into ½-inch cubes; you cut, add them to the lemon water to keep them from oxidizing.
Strain apples and place on a baking sheet in single layer.
Bake 10–12 minutes; apples should hold their shape but be knife tender.
Reserve apples.
Turn oven down to 350°.
Prepare ramekins with cooking spray or butter and flour.
Place butter in a medium saucepan over medium heat and bring to a slow boil; allow to boil for several minutes until you start to see the milk solids browning on the bottom of the pan. Adjust heat to low and continue to swirl pan (or stir butter with a heat-safe spatula) until the liquid is brown and you smell a nice nutty aroma. Reserve the brown butter.
Sift flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt and spices into a bowl.
Stir in both sugars and brown butter until well combined.
Stir in egg, buttermilk, oil and vanilla, one addition at a time, until incorporated.
Fold in the majority of your roasted apples, reserving a few for garnish.
Portion into ramekins and bake for 16–18 minutes
Cakes should bounce back when pressed gently.
Remove cakes from the ramekins and serve on a dessert plate with your favorite vanilla ice cream and reserved roasted apple pieces.
Notes
Chefs’ tips: If you don’t have buttermilk, substitute with whole milk mixed with 1 teaspoon of white vinegar. Chef used apples from Windy Hill farm in GB, and butter and ice cream from High Lawn Farm, Lee.