It seems like my best creations are often the ones I have the most trouble photographing. Sigh. |
Regardless of the origin of the word, nearly everyone knows that a bucket of Neapolitan ice cream is simply the combination of three classic and popular flavors--chocolate, strawberry, and vanilla. I'd be willing to bet that in your family, there are several people who fight for the chocolate and some who do battle for vanilla, leaving one or possibly two to eat the strawberry. Yep, in my experience, it's the strawberry that gets left behind, gathering ice crystals. Agreed?
I think it's a great idea to package multiple flavors together, and I think chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry make a great team. If it works for ice cream, why not apply it to cake? I'm definitely not the first person to do this, but I took the idea and made my own adjustments. You should, too.
Moist cake, made more tender by the addition of some jam between the layers, and frosted with the most supreme of all frostings, swiss meringue buttercream stuffed with sweet, ripe strawberries. Happy Memorial Day indeed!
Napletonian Cake
One recipe of your favorite chocolate cake, halved (or you could just make two 9-inch rounds and freeze one)
One recipe of your favorite vanilla cake
strawberry jam
strawberry meringue buttercream (recipe follows)
Assembly is easy. Plop a layer of vanilla cake on your serving piece and slather on some strawberry jam. Plop the chocolate layer on top of that and slather on some more jam. Place the other vanilla cake layer on top of that, and then frost the sides and top with your luscious buttercream. Refrigerate for an hour or so to let things meld.
Strawberry Meringue Buttercream
(from Martha Stewart’s Cupcakes)
1 1/2 cups fresh strawberries (8 ounces), rinsed, hulled, and coarsely chopped
4 large egg whites
1 1/4 cups sugar
1 1/2 cups (3 sticks) butter, cut into tablespoons, at room temperature
Puree strawberries in a food processor. Combine egg whites and sugar in the heatproof bowl of a standing electric mixer set over a pan of simmering water. Whisk constantly by hand until mixture is warm to the touch and sugar has dissolved (the mixture should feel completely smooth when rubbed between your fingertips).
Attach the bowl to the mixer fitted with the whisk attachment. Starting on low and gradually increasing to medium-high speed, mix until stiff (but not dry) peaks form. Continue mixing until the mixture is fluffy and glossy, and completely cool (test by touching the bottom of the bowl), about 10 minutes.
With mixer on medium-low speed, add the butter a few tablespoons at a time, mixing well after each addition. Once all butter has been added, scrape down sides of bowl with a flexible spatula and switch to the paddle attachment; continue beating on low speed until all air bubbles are eliminated, about 2 minutes. Add strawberries and beat until combined. Stir with a flexible spatula until the frosting is smooth. Keep buttercream at room temperature if using the same day, or transfer to an airtight container and refrigerate up to 3 days or freeze up to 1 month. Before using, bring to room temperature and beat with paddle attachment on low speed until smooth again, about 5 minutes.
What a delightful looking cake! Layers of pure pleasure.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Rosa
You're right about the strawberry ice cream! Though, no ice cream stays in our house long enough to develop ice crystals.
ReplyDeleteI haven't had Neapolitan ice cream since I was a youngster. Every payday my father would bring a half gallon home. My mother got the vanilla, me chocolate and my sister strawberry. My dad didn't eat ice cream. (Maybe because he was Sicilian:)
ReplyDeleteI adore the thought of this cake, Grace. It looks pretty darn good from my angle and I have a feeling it tasted pretty darn good too!!!
Thanks for sharing...Enjoy your Memorial Day...
This cake wouyld certainly be a crowd pleaser Grace!!!!
ReplyDeleteAre you kidding me? Transforming the ice-cream considered a joke in the grocery store to a slice of perfect loveliness? Oh, you are dangerous!
ReplyDeleteOh yum, Grace! I'm not much of a swiss meringue buttercream fan, but studded with strawberries you say? Yes please! And chocolate cake too. Oh my.
ReplyDeleteWhat an incredible looking cake! You've captured it perfectly. And what a smart idea to make a cake inspired by that Neopolitan icecream! Just fab
ReplyDeleteThe first thing I thought when I saw this was HOLY SHIT! What a gorgeous cake, I have everything needed to make it. p.s. I love the Strawberry Ice Cream!
ReplyDeleteWhen I saw that first picture all I could think was "ooh" and "ahh"! Looks amazing!!
ReplyDeleteQue maravilla, fantastica te ha quedado, esta me la copio.. Saludos
ReplyDeleteI disagree, I think your photos turned out beautifully showing all the details of the cake and layers. Very lovely cake.
ReplyDeleteYum. Yum. And more YUM! Three brilliant flavors in one.
ReplyDeleteamazing!!! I love this Grace!! the pictures amazing! LOL gloria
ReplyDeletedang, I'll take a bowl of the frosting please!
ReplyDeleteAm I the only person in the world that likes the poor maligned neapolitan ice cream? Get a big scoop of all of the flavors and smoosh them up with a little bit of milk and you've got one of my favorite treats. This cake could quickly become one of my favorite treats too. I love all of the flavors combined. :) And that frosting? It looks soooo good!
ReplyDeleteThere is definitely is something truly fantastic about that neapolitan trilogy. (and yes - why neapolitan? weird.) this cake is gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteYou should open a bakery and invite me to taste-test!
ReplyDeleteLovely cake! The vanilla one was always neglected in our household... although I did enjoy mixing them all together!
ReplyDeleteIt looks amazing! Thank you for the inspiration, and yes the strawberry is always left behind.
ReplyDeleteThis cake would be a huge hit in my house! My husband goes crazy for strawberry frosting...and I'm a cake-lover. ;)
ReplyDeleteTaking photos of something that is both chocolate and vanilla is definitely not easy, and you did a great job!
ReplyDeleteAwesome idea. And even if you're not the first to think of it, you certainly did a fabulous job!
ReplyDeleteNapolitan- hate that ice cream when I was little. Never enough of the flavors I wanted. Now your cake looks like something that I would like every single layer!
ReplyDeleteNo one in my house would turn down this cake. BTW ths strawberry was left behind because it had such a fake strawberry flavor.
ReplyDeleteMimi
I always wanted the strawberry! (Does that make me weird?) But, in cake form, I'd want all three flavors. Looks amazing.
ReplyDeleteOnce again beautiful pictures. Of course Neapolitan comes from it's Latin name Neaplolis (or Neopolis, it's too late at night for spelling)
ReplyDeleteIt's also interesting that an ice cream modeled after the Italian flag (this Thursday Italy celebrates 150 years of unification) is namedfor the city that was least happy to join Italy back then.
But then enough history, I want to eat what's in your photo. Slowly
Oh, this would have been a perfect dessert to make for my celebration of my family's 20th anniversary of coming to America. Because the first food I had in the United States was Neapolitan ice cream :)
ReplyDeleteThat is one divine cake, Grace! I'm odd, in that I'd eat one layer at a time.
ReplyDeleteBut then, that's the way I ate Neapolitan ice cream too. Adore your idea of making it in cake form. Clever girl!
what a fun cake!! I have the same trouble with photographing my faves...usually, in my case, because they all have giant spoonfuls missing...ahem
ReplyDeleteI can't take photos of food at all. Mine all end up looking exactly the same. This looks tasty good, and I love the ice cream favours as cake!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful cake!
ReplyDeleteIn my house my son and I would eat the chocolate and vanilla layers and my daughter would eat all three, which would leave my cake-hating husband asking where the ice cream was. :)
Very nice! But I did think Neopolitan ice cream was Napoleon ice cream as I called it for years!
ReplyDeleteWhen a child I used to love the Neapolitan ice cream...and you created in cake. Looks delicious...and the pictures sure reflects the beauty of your creation. Hope you are having a great week Grace :-)
ReplyDeletei'm so hungry right now.. looks yummmyyyy
ReplyDeleteThis is absolutely mouth watering! I would love a piece right now! Nothing wrong with your photo either :)
ReplyDeleteThe strawberry buttercream made my heart flutter. Just a lil bit.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous! I'd have a big slice, even if I had just eaten. I think the picture is great.
ReplyDeleteYour photos and recipes never fail to make my mouth water! What a delicious cake!
ReplyDeleteNeapolitan ice cream is my very favorite and I am the type that needs equal amounts of each flavor in my bowl. You have no idea how much this cake makes me drool. I know what I want for my b-day this year. YUM!
ReplyDeleteWow - this looks amazing, it's really difficult to be sitting at work (yup I'm goofing off) and know that there's nothing even remotely resembling that beautiful creating close by!
ReplyDeletestrawberry was always left alone when my parents bought home neapolitian ice cream, sinful creation,
ReplyDeletesweetlife
Yo Grace. This cake is da bomb! Beautiful, beautiful my friend. I just have one question... did you save me a piece?
ReplyDeleteexquisita receta querida gracia se ve estupendo soy una amante del chocolate,cariños y abrazos.
ReplyDeletethis looks amazing! Oh my goodness! I am so happy I found your blog! I am your newest follower and would love it if you would come check out my blog and follow me too! Thank you!
ReplyDelete-Nikki
http://chef-n-training.blogspot.com/
This brings back memories! Haven't had this flavour combo for the longest time!
ReplyDeletei adore using jam in the middle of cake. i never used to do it but now am hooked.
ReplyDeleteall i need with this cake is a nice scoop of ice cream. perfect.
What a classic cake! Love the layers of goodness. Enjoy your weekend. :)
ReplyDeletetjis is divinely (maybe not the right word!!)moist
ReplyDeletePierre
What a brilliant cake! Hmmm, how can I combine this with your gorgeous zorse cake?
ReplyDeleteTo be honest, I always leave strawberry flavored ice cream / cake behind...but if you gave me a slice of this I can definitely promise it would be alllll eaten up :)
ReplyDeleteThis cake looks beyond amazing...wish I could dive in for breakfast and all my snacks today :)
ReplyDeleteLol. totally true, the strawberry always get shafted! Looks amazing Grace!
ReplyDeleteGreat job on the neapolitan cake! I love cakes with jam in between the layers, and how the cake just soaks it up. And your frosting looks beautiful!
ReplyDeleteWow..what a outstanding looking cake... great job... ;o)
ReplyDeleteSo creative - I love the idea of a Neapolitan cake! And especially like that strawberry buttercream - yum!
ReplyDeleteNow that is what I think of as an "Event" cake - wow!! And gorgeous picture, as always. :)
ReplyDeleteRegardless, I think this is a most delicious looking photo!
ReplyDeleteJammed jam?! Yes please!