There’s a thing that happens to bloggers. Well, at least THIS blogger. When I can’t WAIT to get to my computer to write up a post about a recipe, you can pretty well be assured it’s a winner of a dish. I haven’t exactly felt that way about any recipe I’ve made in the recent past. But oh, this one, yes indeedy! A winner. Apples cloaked in the lightest of crispy crusts. Serve warm. To raves.
The day I made this I was a bit frazzled. I’ve been that way a lot as the workers are finishing up the work I’ve had done to my house. I’m so ready to have them be gone-gone. I want peace and quiet – not just at 7 am when they show up – but all day long. As I write this they’re finishing up the roofing. The compressor runs pretty much all day long. Shorting out things, tripping the circuit breakers. It’s all very frustrating. My pool filters were off for days and I didn’t even realize it. Vigilance is the word of the day. The word of the hour. Our neighborhood had a power outage the other night (nothing to do with the work at my house since this was at about 8pm), for about 30 minutes. I was watching TV, and grabbed my iPad mini, opened up the lid and it provided enough light so I could locate the flashlight. Some candles were lit. That tripped some breakers too. More frustration.
Anyway, I have 2 ladies that come to clean my house every 2 weeks. I’m grateful for that. Ever so grateful. But if they come later than usual, then they’re still cleaning the kitchen when I need to be in there (they arrive about 2:30 pm and are here for about 3 hours). This week they were later than that, and I was already behind schedule to prepare a dessert for my bible study group. I didn’t start on it until 6:10 and my guests were arriving at 7:00. Oh my. The cleaning ladies were still cleaning the far side of my kitchen as I began work on this. I whipped out my 8-inch springform pan, madly peeled 4 apples (the recipe calls for Granny Smith, but I had 2 of those and 2 other kinds). The apples are tossed with a bit of sugar and lemon juice, then poured into the springform pan. Meanwhile, you mix eggs, sugar and almond extract. That gets mixed until the batter is very light and ribbony, which takes about 10-11 minutes. I did that while I was prepping the apples. The batter is spread on top. The recipe said to let it sit for 5 minutes to allow the batter to ooze down into the apple layers, but I had no time for that, so I just rapped the pan on the countertop a few times and watched as the batter moved some. Into a 350° oven it went.
It bakes for an hour – a long time considering the apples were thinly sliced, but I trusted the recipe (it was in Food & Wine, and is credited to Matt Danko, a superlative chef – he used to be in Cleveland). Anyway, this recipe is his Russian father’s (I love to read about recipes with that kind of heritage).
I allowed it to cool for about 15 minutes maximum, because my guests had arrived and my dessert wasn’t ready. No worries, I served it warm as we sat at my dining room table discussing the history of Paul (Romans). It needed not a smidgen of any garnish – I didn’t have enough ice cream, nor enough cream to whip, so I served it as is, plain and simple. Oh-la-la.
What’s GOOD: everything. All of it – flavor, texture, toothsomeness, sweet, tart. The top is a wonderful thin crispy crust – you top it with some powdered sugar – and some of the batter does ooze down inside. It actually oozed clear to the bottom in some places. It was easy to cut, and everyone liked it for sure. I’d definitely make this one again. It’s also VERY easy. It couldn’t have taken me more than 15 minutes total to put it together, maybe less. The oven had just reached temperature when I put it in. Do let it sit, and do serve it warm. It’s also relatively low in calorie – 200 calories per serving.
What’s NOT: I can’t think of a single thing I didn’t like about it. The original article in the magazine suggested you’d never want for another apple dessert after you’ve had this one. I tend to agree! The left overs lost their crispy crust – so try to eat it all up in the first sitting.
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Apple Sharlotka
Recipe By: From Food & Wine, Matt Danko
Serving Size: 8
4 whole Granny Smith apples — peeled, cored, thinly sliced
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
1 cup sugar
3/4 cup all-purpose flour — plus 2 tablespoons
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon grated nutmeg
1 pinch kosher salt
3 large eggs
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
Confectioners’ sugar for dusting on top
1. Preheat the oven to 350° F. Grease the bottom and side of an 8-inch springform pan.
2. In a large bowl, toss the apples with the lemon juice and 2 tablespoons of the sugar and let stand for 15 minutes.
3. Meanwhile, in a small bowl, whisk the flour with the cinnamon, nutmeg and salt. In a medium bowl, using an electric mixer, beat the eggs with the almond extract and the remaining 3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar at medium-high speed until thick and pale yellow and a ribbon forms when the beaters are lifted, 8 to 10 minutes. Gently fold in the dry ingredients just until incorporated.
4. Spread the apples in the prepared pan in an even layer, then pour the batter evenly over them. Let stand for 5 minutes to allow the batter to sink in a little. Or, rap pan on countertop a few times to allow batter to sink through.
5. Bake the sharlotka for about 1 hour, until it is golden and crisp on top and a cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean. Transfer to a rack and let rest for 15 minutes. Unmold and transfer to a serving platter. Dust with confectioners’ sugar and serve warm.
Per Serving: 200 Calories; 2g Fat (9.2% calories from fat); 4g Protein; 42g Carbohydrate; 2g Dietary Fiber; 80mg Cholesterol; 43mg Sodium.

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