More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Ellen Kanner

GET UPDATES FROM Ellen Kanner
 

Meatless Monday: Sticky Fingers' Doron Petersan Of Cupcake Wars Discusses Sweets

Posted: 02/ 6/2012 8:18 am

"Anybody who says they don't have a sweet tooth is a total liar," says Doron Petersan, defending champ of Cupcake Wars and the head of Sticky Fingers Sweets & Eats. A DC institution since 1999, Sticky Fingers is the bakery of your childhood fantasies, with eye-popping arrays of outrageous cupcakes, ooey-gooey brownies, whoopie pies, mile-high layer cakes swirled with buttercream, sticky cinnamon buns -- and they're all vegan.

Did your face just fall? Fear not. Sticky Fingers' cupcakes bested them on all on Food Network not because they're vegan, but because they're "fun, exciting. Flavor comes first." Sweet and decadent follow close behind.

Petersan grew up in Queens and upstate New York, the daughter of an Italian mom who fed her family healthy, wholesome food. "She baked a lot of bread, made healthier things like banana muffins, zucchini bread."

Very nice, but what Petersan craved was "chocolate-covered chocolate." As the tatted temptress writes in the introduction of her brand new book Sticky Fingers' Sweets, "We all know how to make carob-covered frozen bananas and applesauce flaxseed bulgur muffins. You won't find those here."

Sticky Fingers' Sweets reveals all the bakery's secrets, including recipes for the cupcakes that won the war, like chocolate banana Gilbert Ganachefried cupcakes and the George Caramelin, chocolate-spice cupcakes with bourbon caramel and bourbon and vanilla bean frosting. Fun, definitely, but there's more than a little science behind it, and in Petersan's hands, science is sweet and sexy.

Having worked in restaurants throughout her teens, Petersan got a degree in nutrition at the University of Maryland. The way the body metabolizes different ingredients, well, that's good to know, but what she liked best was "the science behind food," the chemical interactions enabling her to make the fluffy, sweet, baked goods she craved without using animal products.

Petersan had been working as a veterinary tech and went meatless the first time she audited a dog in surgery. "The inside of the dog was like the inside of the chicken breast I'd had the evening before," she says. "That was it for me." She knew giving up meat was right. She just wasn't happy about it. "I was sad because I thought I was giving up all my favorites. I learned it was not that way at all."

Being vegan "is more fun," she says. "It's opened up my palate, made me more creative with my cooking and baking. It's our mission to be make fun food that is vegan, that is friendly to the animals and the environment, but first and foremost, it's great food."

The best thing she learned from Cupcake Wars is "to think outside the flavor box, to come up with good, fun flavor combinations, not to be afraid." She and her team of fabulous baking buds continue to push the limits of what sweet science can do. They've been working at perfecting two elusive vegan treats. "Eclairs and macaroons -- we play with them constantly. But until we can do it perfectly, we won't do it."

There are no so-so sweets at Sticky Fingers. What you will find are amazing animal-free goodies including a Champagne cake (watch Paterson make it tomorrow on The Today Show) and their new chocolate pepper cupcakes with salted caramel and bourbon smoked salt.

Petersan stands by the creed she quotes in her book -- "I refuse to sell anything I won't eat myself." Sweet.



Choco Raspberry Dream

from Sticky Fingers' Sweets by Doron Petersan

Looking for a sexy sweet for your Valentine's Day sweetie? This Sticky Fingers cake is all that and vegan, too.

"You can never go wrong with chocolate," says Petersan. "It just screams love right in your face."

Makes one 9-inch round two-layer cake or 18 cupcakes

2 cups (10 ounces) all-purpose flour
1-½ cups plus 3 tablespoons sugar
¾ cup cocoa powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1-¼ cups coconut milk (recommended: So Delicious)
â…“ cup vegetable or canola oil
½ cup brewed coffee, cooled
4 ounces good-quality dark chocolate, melted
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 teaspoons vinegar (recommended: apple cider vinegar)

Raspberry Frosting (recipe follows)
Chocolate Ganache (recipe follows)

1 cup fresh raspberries for topping

Preheat the oven to 350°F.

Line two 9-inch round cake pans with parchment paper, or lightly oil and dust with flour.

Whisk the flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt into a medium bowl. Set the bowl aside

In a small bowl, whisk together the coconut milk, oil, coffee, melted chocolate, and vanilla.

Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and whisk until just incorporated.

Fold in the vinegar until you begin to see streaks. Do not overmix the batter.

Distribute the batter evenly between the 2 pans. *

Bake for 20 minutes, or until the cakes spring back to the touch.

Place the pans on a cooling rack to cool completely, then run a knife or plastic dough scraper around the edges of the pan to loosen the cake from the sides. Turn the pans upside down onto the rack to remove the cakes.

* If you are making cupcakes, fill 18 lined cupcake cups three-quarters full and bake for 16 to 19 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Place the cupcake tins on a cooling rack to cool completely, then turn the tins upside down to remove the cupcakes.

Frost your cake with the raspberry frosting.

Make sure your ganache is pourable but not hot to the touch, as you don't want to melt your frosting. With a spoon or a glass measuring pitcher, pour the ganache in the center of the cake until it reaches the sides. Pour a small amount along the edge, enough so you get a few drips running over the sides. Let the ganache set before moving the cake around or you risk losing your frosting and your ganache in a topping avalanche. Top with fresh raspberries.

If you are making cupcakes, frost them however you like, with a round or star tip, or even by hand. You want those ridges! Then fill a piping bag one-quarter full with ganache, cut a small part of the tip off , and drizzle the ganache over the cupcake. More chocolate is what you desire? Then dip the entire top of the frosted cupcake into the ganache. Chocolate-covered raspberry heaven.

Raspberry Frosting

Makes enough to frost one 9-inch round two-layer cake or 18 cupcakes

1 cup plus 2 tablespoons nonhydrogenated vegetable
shortening (recommended: Earth Balance)
¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons nonhydrogenated vegan margarine (recommended: Earth Balance)
â…“ cup raspberry puree (store-bought or homemade; see Note)
4-1/4 cups powdered sugar
1-½ tablespoons lemon juice


In the bowl of a stand mixer, combine the shortening and margarine and whip with the paddle attachment until completely combined. Scrape the bottom of the bowl to ensure that the ingredients are mixed thoroughly.

Add the raspberry puree and mix until incorporated. Scrape the bottom of the bowl to ensure that the puree is mixed thoroughly.

On low speed, slowly add the powdered sugar a little at a time.

Add the lemon juice and mix to combine. Scrape the bottom of the bowl and mix on medium-high speed until all the ingredients are combined and the frosting is fluffy, about 2 minutes.

NOTE

To make homemade berry puree: Heat 1-1/2 cups fresh or frozen berries in a medium heavy-bottomed saucepan over medium-high heat, stirring constantly until they break down, about 15 minutes. Remove from heat and blend with an electric hand blender, then return to the heat and cook down until most of the liquid is evaporated, about 15 minutes. Let cool completely before using.

Chocolate Ganache

Makes 2 cups

1/2 cup coconut creamer (recommended: So Delicious)
8 ounces 70% dark chocolate, chopped, or pistoles

Heat the coconut creamer in the top part of a double boiler over medium heat until steaming. Do not boil.

Place the chocolate in a heatproof bowl, pour the hot creamer over the chocolate, and let sit for 30 seconds.

Whisk the coconut creamer and chocolate until the chocolate is melted and the two ingredients are completely combined. The ganache should be thick but still pourable.

 

Follow Ellen Kanner on Twitter: www.twitter.com/edgyveggie1

"Anybody who says they don't have a sweet tooth is a total liar," says Doron Petersan, defending champ of Cupcake Wars and the head of Sticky Fingers Sweets & Eats. A DC institution since 1999, Stic...
"Anybody who says they don't have a sweet tooth is a total liar," says Doron Petersan, defending champ of Cupcake Wars and the head of Sticky Fingers Sweets & Eats. A DC institution since 1999, Stic...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 72
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elcerritan
My bio is not micro
01:23 PM on 02/12/2012
These things are sugar bombs.
12:28 AM on 02/08/2012
Once again, people are confusing processed, refined carbohydrates with whole foods. No, apples are not bad for you. Yes, Moon Pies are. The former grows on a tree; the latter in a lab.
03:08 AM on 02/15/2012
I don't think anyone is seriously arguing that an apple is just as unhealthy as a Moon Pie, I-US. But that's not because the fructose in an apple is healthier than the sucrose in a Moon Pie. It's because much of an apple's weight is water and fiber, as opposed to a Moon Pie, which is pretty much straight up sugar. But sugar is still sugar. There's a reason that diabetics on insulin can correct hypoglycemia by eating some fruit.

Different people have different levels of tolerance for sugar - in any form - so I would disagree with those who tell people that they can eat all the fruit, starchy vegetables, and "healthy whole grains" they want, just because these are "whole foods", without knowing the specifics of an individual's situation. People have different levels of tolerance for even whole-food-based carbohydrates. I can't help thinking that a lot of that is genetic. I would imagine that someone descended from Lapplanders isn't going to handle eating a lot of fruit that way that someone descended from Polynesians might. Just a guess, though.

In any case, I can't imagine that ANYONE would be genetically adapted to eating Moon Pies. Those things are just nasty, anyway.
10:35 AM on 02/15/2012
I don't disagree that individual situations require individual needs, and I am not advocating that people "eat all the fruit, starchy vegetables, and 'healthy whole grains' they want. It's pretty clear to me that far too many of us are eating far too much food, hence the reason many of our current afflictions are called "diseases of affluence." This is made particularly poignant considering the front-page story on starvation here.

As to "descend[ing] from Lapplanders"...we all walked out of the same African region at some point where we had already developed an enzyme in our saliva designed specifically to digest starches. The industrial sludge, which includes Moon Pies, that people are regularly consuming--fast food products, boxed and packaged goods, fruits/vegetables sprayed with a chemical concoction in the field and then canned with another chemical concoction to sit on the shelf, animal products pumped full of hormones, antibiotics, and so on--cannot be compared with organic whole foods. However, I am scared that as the sludge flows to other parts of the world, it will cover and destroy the fields that nurture those crops that have sustained us for thousands of years.
12:01 AM on 02/08/2012
I have been to Sticky Fingers and I have to say that I loved every bite! We even got some vegan gardein wraps to go with our tasty sweets. :D I will also plug Vegan Treats in Bethlehem, PA... which is also dangerously delish!
WonderingNThinking
Think Before We Sink
01:28 AM on 02/07/2012
Reminds me of Purble Place.
12:01 AM on 02/07/2012
Whatever else you've done, you certainly haven't gotten rid of the simple carbohydrates.
06:56 PM on 02/06/2012
Any shortening is poison.
Use butter instead. Since we stopped (or decreased) using butter, heart rate incidence skyrocketed.
You're vegan? That's unfortunate, but still no need to kill yourself with shortenings. Use coconut or palm oil.
09:52 PM on 02/06/2012
Earth Balance and Spectrum Brands of margarine and shortening are not hydrogenated or the 'plasticides' we associate with the term. They are made with cold pressed oils including the ones you mentioned above, plus olive and canola. I will definitely start using the term 'spread' in place of margarine and shortening which has such an unhealthy connotation. Thanks for the heads up!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Leigh49
Close your eyes, you won't feel a thing
07:05 PM on 02/07/2012
Canola oil is NOT healthy.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Leigh49
Close your eyes, you won't feel a thing
07:05 PM on 02/07/2012
Exactly. But most people have no idea.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karl Wilder
01:54 PM on 02/06/2012
Earth Balance is one of the nastiest most vile products ever created. ONLY a vegan can love it. It ruins baked goods like no other product. Those recipes should be made with butter from free range cows please.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lele23
10:26 PM on 02/06/2012
"Earth Balance is one of the nastiest most vile products ever created."

Well, if anything, it might be considered nasty and vile to consume the secretions of another species.

"ONLY a vegan can love it."

Hmmm...I know quite a few decidedly ominvorous foodies who have thoroughly enjoyed not only Sticky Fingers' delicious baked goods but also cookies, corn bread and other yummy home-baked items containing the amazing Earth Balance. Not to mention that Tal Ronnen swears by it, and he's no slouch of a cook.

"These recipes should be made with butter..."

Of course they shouldn't. Veganism is the point, silly!
photo
FaunaAndFlora
Daughter of Pan
11:30 PM on 02/06/2012
Do yourself a favor and drop the hyperbole. Eating snot would be nasty and vile. Butter, yogurt and cheese are delicious and good for you, especially when made with whole-fat milk.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Leigh49
Close your eyes, you won't feel a thing
07:06 PM on 02/07/2012
Then use coconut oil. This stuff is not natural.
11:33 AM on 02/07/2012
I've heard countless people, vegan and otherwise, tell me that they prefer Earth Balance to regular butter. Personally, I can't tell the difference.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karl Wilder
11:48 AM on 02/07/2012
You really truly can't tell the difference?

My suspicion is that the reason you cite 'countless' people is that there are none, thus they can't be counted.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ckdogs
11:55 AM on 02/06/2012
I am a sweetaholic, who is too old to get away with eating very much of it. Even though the sweets are vegan, they are still very high in calories and sugar. When we think of eating vegan, we think of salads and berries. Chips and sweets are vegan too - and very unhealthy. I am also an animal lover, but still eat some meat - though I try to buy most of it from organic sellers. The high price ensures that the quantities will be small.
10:08 AM on 02/06/2012
Why do vegans always seem to think being vegan gives them a green light to eat tons of sugar? Almost every vegan I know is a big sugar addict and sugar is horrible for your health. I hate that there is cruelty in the world and I love animals, but my health suffered on a vegan diet. It would be much healthier for you to eat the occasional fish or chicken than to sit and eat a bunch of sweets.
11:13 AM on 02/06/2012
Agreed. But I would add pork and red meat to that list.

And what does veganism have to do with "being green" anyway? Is it because most plants are green?
06:59 PM on 02/06/2012
Pork and red meat themselves are TOTALLY healthy and should be the base of our diet.
Unfortunately majority of it is corn-fed and antibiotic-ridden.
But I see the trend is changing.
I love vegetables and (low fructose) fruit (read berries). I actually eat tons of them.
The problem with veganism is that animal fats must be replaced with something and most of the time is tons of carbs. That's why in my opinion veganism is unhealthy.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lele23
08:37 PM on 02/06/2012
I would certainly not be healthier by adding pork and red meat, or even chicken, to my diet. When I adopted a whole-foods, vegan diet, my cholesterol went down 70 points, I lost ten pounds, stopped having chest pains, and in a month I felt a decade younger. Eight years later it's only getting better.
Why "green"? Because of the toll that the production of animal products takes on the environment, creating more greenhouse gases than all types of the transportation combined.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lele23
05:41 PM on 02/06/2012
We don't. I am a mostly-whole-foods vegan who looks forward to picking up something yummy at Sticky Fingers a few times a year---for family birthdays. Most of my vegan friends eat this way also. I'm sorry the vegans you know have given you a lopsided impression!
photo
Lesann
The secret is negative reinforcement
08:35 AM on 02/08/2012
You would think no one in this world is allowed a treat every one in a while. I would eat something like this for a special occasion - not on an everyday basis!