Sour Cream Crumb Cake
I think we all try to find our sense of humor (sometimes it feels like it’s in my back pocket, I promise you) where we can. The other day I was struck by a NEED to bake a good coffee cake to start off my day on a positive note with a good cup of coffee. Ya know what I mean? There are days like that. K. So I prepared it and it sat like a jewel on the counter on a wire rack cooling and DH moseyed in to the kitchen. Baking again? he asked. Yup. Why? Cuz I felt like it. Huh, k what did you make. Sour cream crumb cake. He made a bit of a face and said he prefers non-dairy cakes since dairy are “too rich”. I didn’t get excited and said, fine, more for me. So, each morning I came downstairs for my caffeine hit with the crumb cake and suspicious amounts were missing. I’m just letting you know that this lasted 6 days, count ’em and did not get stale on me. (Live dangerously and don’t refrigerate it, keeps much better, although it does freeze well). So on the fifth day I finally said (when it was nearly gone) what happened to not wanting the dairy cake? He looked at me without a trace of embarrassment and said after I had a piece, I changed my mind. It’s really good. On the 6th day, btw, I came down to discover he had polished it off and somewhat outraged asked why he didn’t save me any. It was really good and I didn’t realize you wanted any. So I share this with you because my sense of humor came to the fore and I found myself giggling throughout the day at the scenario. Nu, nu, gotta get your giggles where you can. Bottom line, he loved it.
Sour Cream Crumb Cake
Cake:
2 cups (250 grams) all-purpose flour
1 1/4 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 3/4 cups (350 grams) white sugar
3/4 cup butter,(170 grams) melted
2 tablespoons milk
2 large eggs
scant 1 cup (200 grams) sour cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Topping:
4 tablespoons (57 grams) melted butter
1/2 cup (104 grams) packed brown sugar
1/2 cup (62.5 grams)all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 F /180 C. Grease 2 9 inch round baking pans and if you have it, place a round of parchment paper on bottom of greased pans. If not, sprinkle a little flour on the bottom of the pan over the oil spray to prevent sticking.
In a large bowl, mix together the flour, baking powder, white sugar and salt till combined. Make a well in the center of the flour mixture (an indentation). Melt the full cup of butter and set aside 1/4 cup (4 tablespoons or 57 grams) of the butter to use in the topping. Cool the butter and pour the 3/4 cup into the well in the flour mixture. Add eggs, sour cream and vanilla. Stir together till combined well. Batter is very thick.
Place half the batter in each of the prepared pans.
Take the 1/4 cup butter you’ve set aside and mix together with the brown sugar, flour and cinnamon together in a medium bowl till crumbly. Sprinkle half the topping over each cake batter in the pans.
Bake in the preheated oven in the 2 cake pans for 32-35 minutes or till wooden toothpick comes out clean.
This sounds lovely.
I don’t bake milchik.
Have you ever substituted non dairy soya sour cream or greek yogurt for sour cream or oat based similar product. Assume weight for weight.
I also use margarine instead of butter.
Obviously not quite the same flavour profiles
Janice Hyman
Thanks Janice! While I haven’t made this non-dairy, if you have a real non-dairy sour cream substitute with the same thickness consistency, it should work. Do not try to use a facsimile of buttermilk rather than sour cream, however, since that will make the batter not thick enough to support the weight of the crumbs which will then sink into the cake and ruin the whole thing. Margarine works as a sub for butter (of course, you are correct, not the same flavor profile but a decent sub nonetheless).