Saturday, May 24, 2008

Karydopita (Καρυδόπιτα)





Feeling a little nostalgic, I asked my mom to share her Karydopita recipe with me. Karydopita is a Greek walnut cake but the amazing thing about this dessert is that there's no flour in it!

I'm not a big fan of super-syrupy Greek desserts but this is one cake that requires a simple syrup to complete the moist yet gritty texture one gets in each bite.

Karydopita can be surely be found at a Greek bakery and you might have even been lucky enough to try a piece over at your Greek friend's house.

In keeping with my goal to show you more of my sweet side, I'm sharing this wonderful family recipe.

There are three components to this cake: wet ingredients, dry ingredients and the syrup. The syrup measurements ask for 2 cups of water and sugar. If you're going to serve this to a large group of guests and you know it'll be eaten that day, stick with 2 cups. If however, this cake is just for the family and it might be laying around for the week, pump up the syrup amounts to 3 & 3 cups. The cake will absorb the syrup and stay moist for the week.

Karydopita (Καρυδόπιτα)

Dry Ingredients
10 Tbsp. of ground rusk (Zwieback toasts are fine)
10 Tbsp. fine Semolina flour
10 Tbsp. of pounded walnuts
2 Tbsp. ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp. ground cloves
2 tsp. baking powder

Wet Ingredients
10 eggs
10 Tbsp. sugar

Syrup
2 cups of water
2 cups of sugar
1 cinnamon stick
6-8 whole cloves
juice of 1/2 lemon
1 shot of Cognac
ground clove to taste
9" X 14" baking pan, buttered

Pre-heated 350F oven

  1. Using your food processor, keep on pulsing your walnuts until you get a medium ground mixture of walnuts that are fine and some noticeable pieces of walnuts.
  2. Add to a large bowl along with the remaining dry ingredients. Mix and set aside.
  3. In a large bowl, add your sugar and eggs and beat with a hand mixer until you achieve a consistency of almost stiff peaks.
  4. Fold the dry ingredients in small batches (DO NOT add all the dry at once). As the wet absorbs the dry, add more until all the dry ingredients are incorporated.
  5. Carefully pour the cake batter into the baking pan and place in your preheated oven (middle rack) for 30-35 minutes.
  6. In the meantime, make your syrup by adding the water, sugar, cinnamon stick, whole cloves and bring to a boil. Now simmer on medium heat for 10 minutes. Add the lemon juice and simmer for an additional 5 minutes. Add the Cognac and and some ground clove if desired (according to taste).
  7. To complete your Karydopita correctly, the cake must absorb the syrup. There are two ways to do this: add cool syrup to just out of the oven cake or add hot syrup to room temperature cake. My mother prefers to add cooled syrup to a just out of the oven cake. The choice is yours. Time the two components. Remove the cinnamon stick and cloves and pour the syrup one ladle at a time time until all the syrup has been absorbed by the cake.
  8. Cut your Karydopita into diamond shaped pieces and serve at room temperature. Store in a sealed container for up to one week.

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39 comments:

Peter G | Souvlaki For The Soul said...

My absolute favourite Greek cake ever! I love this and always will. I'm glad you showcased this.

Gloria Baker said...

Mmmmmm love this peter!! I have to make soon!!! looks so nice! xxxxxdon't feel blue dear, we love you,Gloria I feeling so sometimes!!!

Mama Mia said...

I've never heard of Karydopita before but it looks AMAZING!!! I want some of that walnut cake... mmmm

Jen said...

This looks absolutely wonderful. I will definitely make this soon. Maybe for our Monday cookout!

Sylvie said...

Peter, thanks for sharing another family recipe.

Joanna said...

Hi Peter, fabulous cake ... the dried rusk is not something I'm familiar with ... would breadcrumbs work as well? IN which case, would I need to dry them out before using them, or would it be okay to use fresh breadcrumbs? OR would Matzo meal be a good substitute?

Sorry to fire so many questions at you, but this is too good to miss

Joanna

Anonymous said...

Beautiful, Peter!

Sam Sotiropoulos said...

Peter, another great offering! This is a pretty standard dessert around our house as well. Nicely done!

glamah16 said...

This cake is a new one for me. But it looks wonderful. Bring out more of Mama's recipes!

Chef Erik said...

Give me a big piece of that and nice tall glass of chocolate soy milk and it's go time!

Elly said...

This is it. The one and only. My FAVORITE Greek dessert. You must have read my mind. I got my stepmom's recipe when I was home for Easter and I plan on making it soon, too!

test it comm said...

I like the sound of a walnut cake moistened with syrup. It looks really good! What is rusk or Zwieback toasts?

Lydia (The Perfect Pantry) said...

This is new to me, but it's always great to have a few gluten-free desserts in the recipe box.

LyB said...

I've never heard of this cake before but it sounds absolutely delightful. It looks so moist and tender, beautiful!

Nina Timm said...

This looks absolutely fab, Peter. Itis very similar to our Malva Pudding, but we use Pecan Nuts instead. I will definitely try this - we love this kind of puds for big family Sunday lunches!

Anonymous said...

This looks absolutely gorgeous! A really attractive cake! So moist.

Heather said...

Aw, only one shot of Cognac?

Jan said...

Lovely looking cake Peter!
Like Kevin, I don't know about rusk or Zwieback toasts?
Love the walnuts and cinnamon and the syrup sounds good to me with Cognac!

grace said...

that may be the most moist creation i've ever seen. i'm ashamed--i claim to be a lover of greek food, yet i've never heard of this. thanks for bringing it to my attention, because it has the potential to replace baklava as my favorite greek dessert!

Cakelaw said...

Yum! I have never heard of this cake before, but it looks and sounds devine. I love syrupy Greek desserts, of which I tried a few at the annual Panyiri festival in Brisbane.

Finla said...

Here in the shops i have seen this cake.
It looks mouthwattering.
Rusk is it breadcrumbs?

Finla said...

silly me i just clicked on to your rusk and now i know the info :-)

giz said...

Now doesn't this just smack of totally delicious. I appreciated the tip about how to change the proportions dependent on quick consumption vs. having it for a week.

When we're talking your "sweet side" are we referring to personality or culinary genius?

Anonymous said...

WOW... with only 10 tablespoons of semolina, it's a wonder this stays together. but i bet it's delicious.

Gloria Baker said...

Peter,Peter, How are you today??? Im blue too!!! I hope you are better dear!! xxxGloria

Cynthia said...

Now you've completely stolen my heart with this sweet side of you :)

La Cuisine d'Helene said...

No flour, I was septic but when I saw the pictures it looks so delicious and moist.

Peter M said...

Pete, it's one of my faves too and I was long overdue to eat it.

Gloria, thanks...it's hard to keep me down.;)

Lina, I just had a piece again today, moist as can be.

Jen, I look forward to seeing your result.

Sylvie, it's my pleasure.

Joanna, as long as they are coarse bread crumbs and dry, not fresh.

Efharisto, Lulu.

Sam, eating this brought back lots of memories.

Glam, mom's a treasure trove.

Erik, I like this cake with coffee.

Elly, yes...Karydopitia rocks!

Kevin, rusks are like melba toast, see link in ingredients.

Lydia, I never thought this cake being gluten-free but hey, that's cool!

Lyb, very moist indeed.

Nina, no pecans in Greece...it's walnuts for us.

Farida, it also smells amazing.

Heather, the rest of the Cognac is for drinking, sheesh!

Jan...and no vinegar either (inside joke)!

Grace, no worries...I'm still discovering new Greek dishes...YES!

Cake, it's not as syrupy as baklava but still moist.

Happy, glad you caught the link.

Giz, I'm just relaying good dishes...don't act like I created them or something. I'm just sweet! lol

Never Full, plus the walnuts and rusk too!

Gloria, in good spirits...live it up!

Cynthia, I knew the spices in this cake would appeal to you.

Helene, lots of air from the eggs being beaten.

Mary Coleman said...

That looks absolutely divine. Looks almost like a gingerbread. Cannot wait to make this.

Janulka said...

Peter, your karydopita looks perfect. You are right - it is one of the most common greek cakes - easy to prepare and very tasty.
Ask your mom for fanouropita - it taste as tasty as karydopita - but with different nuts. And show us your "sweet side"...

Brittany said...

This is my kind of cake! I must make it soon.
It looks so moist and flavorful.
I am honored to be shown your sweet side

Proud Italian Cook said...

I can only imagine how happy you make Mom, by featuring her wonderful recipes!

Maria Verivaki said...

hi peter, i think karidopita is my favorite syrupy dessert (maybe after galaktoboureko).
karidopita is excellent with vanilla ice-cream.
i'm intrigued that this recipe doesn't use oil or butter, as i do in my own recipe.

aforkfulofspaghetti said...

I love this stuff. Love it, love it, love it.

Oh, ok. I'll stop dribbling now.

Aimée said...

Fascinating recipe, Peter. I love sugar so am enjoying your sweeter side.

Marie Rayner said...

That looks fabulous Peter! I had a friend that used to make a delicious cake that was moist and seemed to be soaked in a syrup of some kind with a delicious creamy topping. She called it Greek Cake. (they were a greek family) Do you know what I am talking about? Would love a recipe for that!

Peter M said...

Mary, nothing like gingerbread, light yet syrupy & spicy from the cloves & such.

Janulka, we never made fanouropita in our household.

Awww thanks Brittany, more of "sweet Pete" to come!

Marie, she should have her own blog...now I have to teach her around a PC!

Kiwi, many different approaches to karydopita.

Forkful, this dribbling business...LOL

Aimee, thanks...more desserts abound!

Marie, nothing comes to mind...I'll be on the lookout, though.

Anonymous said...

YUM YUM YUM, i will definitely be trying this recipe.

Fiona
Perth, Western Australia

Mansi said...

This cake looks awesome! I love walnuts and this must've tasted like heaven:) kind of similar to "Basbousa", a mid-eastern cake that's made with semolina and syrup:)