Tuesday, July 31, 2018

A Bundting We Will Go - Revisiting Sour Cream Blueberry Bundt Cake


I know I've shared this recipe at least twice before, but some things are worth repeating. Especially delicious things.


When Jan shared her blueberry buckle recipe several weeks ago (you can find that recipe here), she mentioned a blueberry sour cream cake she'd made that wasn't quite up to standard. I knew then it was time to post this again. That and blueberries were on sale for 97 cents a pint AND I needed something yummy for a church potluck. It was as if the stars had aligned, giving me the perfect reason to make one of my favorite cakes. And Jan, unless you overbake this (which I know you won't), I promise it won't be dry.



So let's get started. Here's what you'll need:
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
  • 1 1/2 cups sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 2/3 cups all purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 cups blueberries, fresh or frozen and thawed
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

In a large bowl, mix together butter and sugar on medium speed for 2 minutes. Add eggs and mix just enough to combine. Now add your vanilla, sour cream, salt and baking powder.
Beat a medium speed for another minute.

Bump the speed back down to low and add your flour, just a little at a time so you don't find yourself in a cloud of dust, mixing just until everything is combined.
Your batter will be stiff, but don't worry. It's also totally delicious. Just sayin.

Now add your blueberries.
 And gently fold into the batter.
Spray your bundt pan with baking spray. The kind with the flour in it.
This was my mother's bundt pan, circa 1970 something, evidenced by the lovely orange color.
Spoon batter into pan.
Then smooth and gently press the batter with a spatula so it's even.
Bake 45-55 minutes. Always start with the minimum time and test your cake for doneness before adding more time. Test by inserting toothpick midway between the side of the pan and the center cylinder thing (it's a technical term).
Cool cake in pan for 15 minutes then invert onto wire rack to cool completely.
Once cooled, it's time to make the icing. For that, you will need:
  • 2 TBS unsalted butter, melted
  • 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla
  • 2-3 TBS milk
Whisk the first three ingredients and 2 tablespoons of the milk together in medium bowl. If icing is too stiff to drizzle, add a little more milk. You don't want it super thin, just thin enough to drizzle over cooled cake.
The bigger blobs you see are because the icing was too thick initially.

Look at those luscious blueberries.
This cake was a hit at the potluck. Especially with the ladies who had also noticed the sale on blueberries. And let's face it, aren't potlucks where we gather some of our best recipes?

Now it's your turn. What are some of your summer favorite fruit recipes? What's your favorite berry and what's your favorite way to eat it?

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Three-time Carol Award finalist, Mindy Obenhaus, lives on a ranch in Texas with her husband, the youngest of her five children, two dogs and countless cattle. She's passionate about touching readers with Biblical truths in an entertaining and sometimes adventurous manner. When she's not writing, she enjoys cooking and spending time with her grandchildren. Learn more at mindyobenhaus.com

16 comments:

  1. I must try this because I think I meant to and didn't... my bad!

    Only I'm not sure I still have a Bundt pan. You know why? Because I have a bathroom. And all the storage that used to be in that space is now on racks in the basement... or affectionately known as THE CAVE.... when the house is 163 years old, the basement is kind of like a cave...

    Anyway, if I don't find the Bundt pan (always reminds me of My Big Fat Greek Wedding)!!!! I wonder if it would work in loaf pans?????

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    1. LOL! Ruthy, I always think of MBFG Wedding, too. And your basement sounds a lot like my Grandma Brock’s. I never did care to go down there. Didn’t Lacie help you organize that stuff, though? She might know right where that bundt pan is.

      And how many recipes have we all shared here that we’ve meant to try but didn’t? Are we a sad lot or what?

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    2. That's why I love it when we repeat recipes. Posts like this are gentle reminders of what we intended to do!

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  2. This sounds so good, Mindy! I'll have to make it for our next ladies gathering in a few weeks!

    And I am the proud owner of a bundt pan, and I love it. A few years ago, I finally got rid of my old one (a freebie with all the teflon scratched off) and one of my children gave me a new on for Christmas. New = easy to use!

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    1. Ah yes, the Teflon pans of yesteryear. At least they've improved over time.

      Jan, you'll have to know how this one compares to that last one you made.

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  3. Blueberries + cake pretty much = heaven to me.

    I'm pretty sure I no longer have a bundt pan. I had one of those cool ones that are in two parts so the bottom separates and lifts the cake. But I remember getting rid of it after it got kind of disgusting/rustyish.

    So maybe I'm due a new pan. I do have a birthday coming up.

    But that would mean baking more cake.
    And that would mean me eating more cake.
    Alas, I have no willpower.

    You asked about favorites - I know I shared this, but I don't see it in the sidebar - my blueberry and peach coffee cake. Such a great flavor combo.

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    1. Couldn't find mine, but I found yours from 2013.

      https://yankeebellecafe.blogspot.com/search?q=blueberry+peach&updated-max=2012-07-25T00:01:00-04:00&max-results=20&start=2&by-date=false

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    2. But Mary Cate, mine was a crisp, yours was a coffee cake. Still, I think we can agree that peaches and blueberries are a good pairing.

      You know, I almost got rid of my Bundt pan in the move, but decided that, even if I don't use it much, it's still worth keeping because some cakes demand a Bundt pan. Which meant I'd end up buying another somewhere down the road. And it was still in good shape. No rust. I don't remember Bundt pans with the bottom separating, though. Tube pans, yes, but not Bundt pans. It must have been ancient.

      And do I hear you about eating cake. I love it. Which is why I have to make it for things like potlucks. Otherwise, it sits in my kitchen and calls to me--"Mindy...eat me. Eat me." I feel like Alice in Wonderland. And it's kind of the same thing, because the more cake I eat, the bigger I get. :D

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    3. I almost got rid of mine, too. But then I remembered making monkey bread in it, too, and decided to keep it. Still haven't used it 2 years after the move, but that's okay! :)

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  4. Oh my goodness!! This sounds so yummy! I can't wait to try this at home. I have made lemon bundt cake, but never blueberry. And the sour cream....yeah!!!

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    1. LeAnne, you sound like me. I love baked goods with sour cream in them. They're so moist and suck me in every time.

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  5. Mindy, feel free to share that as many times as you want! I love to be reminded and should make this soon! It looks amazing.

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    1. Missy, it’s one of my favorites, so I’ll keep sharing.

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  6. There's no such thing as too thick icing. :-) I'm someone else who didn't make this cake last time...in fact I've never made a sour cream cake. Ever. So this will be it because I love fruity things in the summer. I'm not sure I can pick a favourite but I made a rhubarb strawberry crumble last week that made me giddy!

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    1. Kav, I would be thrilled if I could get my hands on some rhubarb. I love rhubarb pie and I have a yummy rhubarb cake recipe that I go from my high school boyfriend’s mom. I fell in love with it the first time I tasted it and promptly asked her for the recipe. Sigh. If only I could find some rhubarb.

      Sour cream makes moist cakes. It’s one of my favorite ingredients. So when I found a banana nut bread recipe that used sour cream, I was all over that, too.

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