Buckwheat squash slice

Good morning, everyone! Ooh, this week is starting off well. The sun is shining, I'm about to turn a pound of butter and an equal amount of raisins into Stollen for the book, and I have a cake discovery for you, a wondrous, light, delicious cake discovery. I am so, so excited for you!

Friday evening was the first time in ages that I'd some time to myself in the kitchen. Hugo was asleep, Max was out with a friend, and I was finally – finally!!! – all on my own with nothing to do. I roasted a squash, I boiled broccoli rabe, I cooked fish for dinner. It was quiet, it was heaven. And when the squash was roasted and beaten to a purée, I set to making this cake. This wonderful, tender darling of a cake that I plan to make again today and then again mid-week, since that seems to be about the pace that we are consuming it at. (It is marvelous for breakfast.)

Alice Medrich's Buckwheat Squash Loaf

I first spotted the recipe on Megan's blog in early November. She got the recipe from Alice Medrich's newest book, Flavor Flours, a baking book that happens to be gluten-free but is really more focused on the tastes and textures that different flours bring to the table. The original recipe is made with buckwheat and rice flour, regular sugar, pumpkin purée and raisins (or currants). But when Megan made it, she swapped in dark brown sugar for the regular sugar, added chocolate chips instead of raisins and topped the loaf with pumpkin seeds. And when I saw the recipe, I knew instantly I'd fold in frozen cranberries instead of raisins or chocolate, use butternut squash purée instead of pumpkin, and leave off the pumpkin seeds, but keep Megan's brilliant muscovado sugar swap.

Without further ado, I'd like to present to you the newly-christened Buckwheat Squash Loaf with Cranberries.

(NB: No matter what it's called, I LOVE IT SO MUCH I CAN'T WRITE THIS POST FAST ENOUGH.)

Buckwheat squash loaf

If you are a fan of buckwheat flour – and you know who you are – then I practically guarantee that you'll love this cake. Its strange and stony flavor is one of my very favorites. I used a medium-grind buckwheat flour that I had in the pantry, which resulted in a cake that crunched ever-so-subtly in my mouth. But the cake crumb is so velvety and fine that it practically quivers. It's quite something. I pulled the cake out of the oven right before bedtime and let it cool in the pan overnight. Early Saturday morning, the first fat slices I cut for myself were just on the right side of damp. The dark brown sugar brings moisture and depth to the cake and those sour, brilliantly pink pockets of cranberry against the velvety, spicy crumb were exactly right.

I know these kinds of superlatives can be so annoying, but I just scrolled through all my posts from 2014 and must tell you that it is my favorite cake of the year. I love this cake. I love it so much. I hope you do too!

Buckwheat Squash Loaf with Cranberries
Makes one 9-inch loaf
Adapted from Alice Medrich's Flavor Flours

8 tablespoons (1 stick/115g) unsalted butter, melted
1 cup (190g) muscovado (dark brown) sugar
2 large eggs
3/4 cup (120g) white rice flour
1/3 cup (40g) buckwheat flour
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 cup (170g) squash puree
1/2 cup (55g) fresh cranberries

1. Position a rack in the lower third of the oven and preheat the oven to 350 F. Line a loaf pan with parchment paper.

2. Combine the butter, sugar, and eggs in the bowl of the stand mixer and beat on medium speed with the paddle attachment until lighter in color, about 2 minutes. Alternatively, use a handheld mixer and beat for 3-4 minutes.

3. Add the rice and buckwheat flours, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, pumpkin puree and beat on low speed until smooth. Fold in the cranberries.

4. Bake the loaf for 45 -50 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool the loaf in the pan for 30 minutes before using the parchment as a sling to unmold the cake and let cool completely on a rack. The cake keeps for several days on the counter, wrapped loosely in parchment or plastic wrap.

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57 responses to “Alice Medrich’s Buckwheat Squash Loaf with Cranberries”

  1. Caroline Avatar

    This look amazing! Going home for holidays and will definitely try this!
    http://mademoiselleaventure.blogspot.co.uk

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  2. Gadia Avatar
    Gadia

    You had me at first glimpse of that gorgeous golden nutty brown loaf studded with pockets of magenta. I just knew it had to be good.

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  3. Debra Avatar

    Looks wonderful and moist! Can you subsitute regular flour for rice flour? Will that alter the crumb?

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  4. Gerlinde Avatar

    This looks fantastic and I like all the changes that have taken place. I’m thinking of making it with persimmon purée.

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  5. Luisa Avatar

    You absolutely can. The crumb will probably be a teeny tiny bit less delicate, but I think relatively imperceptible. It’s such a small amount. Report back! 🙂

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  6. Comeconella Avatar

    i have made the megan gordon adaptation of this pumpkin loaf and it is delicious and so incredibly moist! i absolutely understand why you loved it so much as well! x

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  7. divya Avatar
    divya

    this looks delish! I’m not a big fan of cranberries but looks like they are perfect in this cake, can’t wait to try it. Sidenote: I also made the malt chocolate icing from your last post, for my nephew’s birthday on Thanksgiving, and it was a big hit! Thanks for sharing the recipe, it’ll be a new favorite 🙂

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  8. Sam @ PancakeWarriors Avatar

    love the squash and cranberry combo! Such great holiday flavors!

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  9. Janel Avatar

    Oh oh! I’m a fan of buckwheat! I have to try this. It looks so good.

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  10. Lydia Avatar

    Alright I’m sold! I have a girlfriend coming for coffee and I’m going to make this. Wondering – did you use your own squash puree? I ask because I often see recipes that recommend canned pumpkin instead of homemade. I’ve got a pile of winter squash but it tends to be wetter than canned.
    And while I’m here: I make so many recipes that you post. Thank you!

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  11. Luisa Avatar

    So happy to hear it!

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  12. Luisa Avatar

    You are so welcome! Thank you for your lovely note. I did make my own squash purée – I always do. I split a butternut squash in half lengthwise and roast it in a hot oven, cut side down, on a baking sheet with a little water poured in until it’s soft when you poke it. Then I just peel off the skin and use an immersion blender to blitz the flesh to a creamy pulp. You could also use a food processor. It works perfectly in any recipe that calls for pumpkin or squash puree. Any further leftovers can be frozen in portions or turned into soup (I like adding grated ginger, chile, fish sauce and coconut milk for an Asian take on it) or croquettes even!

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  13. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    I’d love to send some to a friend for Christmas this year, will this loaf survive 2-3 days in transport? possibly through the german post service?

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  14. Rossi @ A Baking Girl Avatar

    Do you think this would work with sweet potato puree? Lovely post!

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  15. Luisa Avatar

    I think so! The purée will be moister than squash so you may need a touch more flour.

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  16. Luisa Avatar

    i don’t know; it’s a pretty delicate cake…

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  17. Rossi @ A Baking Girl Avatar

    Perfect, I will try that. Thanks!

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  18. Stephanie Avatar

    I often make gluten-free cakes for my Celiac husband. I find they’re excellent on the first day, good on the second and just OK after that. I agree that it might not retain its lovely moist crumb a few days out and through the postal service. But something like spiced nuts certainly would…

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  19. Stephanie Avatar

    Now that I see both you and Megan recommending this cake, I MUST try it! I also have some frozen cranberries kicking around and this looks like the perfect use for them.
    By the way, my husband and I watched your Chefkoch videos last weekend, and they’re great! And I work in media, so I have some credentials for paying you that compliment. (: We’re really looking forward to watching the next ones and practising our German.

    Like

  20. Mary Frances Avatar
  21. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    would a regular flour cake with pumpkin and cranberries survive? the key is pumpkin cake, i really want to send a pumpkin to someone, i could also do next day mail in Germany, thats not so hard.

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  22. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    please ladies, lend a hand and give a girl some ideas here! i want to bake this cake for a guy i am sweet on 🙂

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  23. Stephanie Avatar

    And really, in any case, I think he is sure to love what you send if he’s sweet on you, too. All my best wishes!

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  24. Zanna Avatar

    This looks delicious! Thanks for posting.
    But what to do with the extra cranberries in the pack?!

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  25. Carly June Avatar
    Carly June

    Hi Luisa! I love the Chefkoch videos 🙂 It’s funny you mention that you think you look serious in the videos because I always feel like I look/sound so serious when I’m speaking German! Regardless I think you may have a German television cooking series in the pipeline 🙂 And I must try this cake recipe, thanks for sharing

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  26. Luisa Avatar

    Freeze them and use a handful here and there in cakes or muffins!

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  27. Luisa Avatar

    Ha, thank you, maybe it’s the language! 😉

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  28. Leah Avatar

    Vegan-ized version: 1 very ripe pureed banana in place of eggs and combo of 4T Earth Balance, 4T olive oil in place of butter + I added 1/2 c toasted pecans. HEAVENLY!!! Thank you Luisa!!!

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  29. Eva Avatar
    Eva

    Thanks Luisa! Always looking for glutenfree cakes that turn out well! And thanks Leah, I was wondering whether the cake would work without eggs (Sometimes it’s just hard to live on a glutenfree-vegan diet…)

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  30. Imogen Avatar
    Imogen

    Hi Luisa,
    Would you mind telling me the measurements of your loaf pan? Your loaf looks a lot bigger than the pans we commonly use for loaves here in Australia!
    Thanks

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  31. Tricia Avatar
    Tricia

    This is delicious! The loaf I made yesterday was devoured by friends – I think I’ll make another tomorrow.

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  32. strudelgoesparis Avatar
    strudelgoesparis

    Lovely recipe, thank you for sharing ! I used chestnut instead of buckwheat flour and only 160g of (muscovado) sugar, and the result was great. Will definitely try the buckwheat version also !

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  33. Luisa Avatar

    Mine is 10 x 4 in or 27.5 x 11 cm.

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  34. tverkler@yahoo.com Avatar
    tverkler@yahoo.com

    I have made this twice, once with regular flour and once with the rice flour. Both fabulous! I almost feel like I need some nuts in it. Thanks.

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  35. Adrienne Avatar
    Adrienne

    I just cut up raw butternut squash and threw it in the food processor. Not a pure puree but more minced. Used that in the recipe and work perfectly. This recipe is amazing and very adaptable.

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  36. Alicia Avatar
    Alicia

    This so good, I’m already on my second loaf. This time I subbed in cherries for the cranberries and it’s a touch too sweet for snacking so I’ll keep that in mind for future experiments. There will definitely be more of these, especially once rhubarb season comes along. Thanks Luisa!
    Oh, and I should mention that I don’t own a mixer so I just mixed the dry and wet ingredients separately with a whisk and then stirred them together before adding the fruit. Worked like a charm.

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  37. sara Avatar

    This looks wonderful! I’ve had my eye on this cookbook because my MIL is gluten free…definitely need to try this recipe at Christmas when I am back! 🙂

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  38. Judy Avatar
    Judy

    This recipe makes a dozen perfectly delicious normal sized muffins which I baked for 18 minutes. They taste exactly like the larger x2 sized muffins that my MIL (gluten free because she is a sheep) buys from a fancy, expensive bakery for $4 a pop. I’m going to bake a loaf and make bread pudding with it.

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  39. Findia Group Avatar

    Thanks for sharing!

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  40. elizabeth.hoaglund@gmail.com Avatar
    elizabeth.hoaglund@gmail.com

    This is delicious! I’m also going to have to make a new batch mid-week. I subbed white wheat for the white rice flour, since I didn’t have any on hand. Worked great!

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  41. Luisa Avatar

    Good to know!

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  42. Luisa Avatar

    Great! I think toasted pecans would be amazing…

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  43. Giulia Pines Kersthold Avatar

    I must admit when I first saw this I thought, “who on earth would have squash puree, just lying around?” Lo and behold, a week later that was me. I’d cut up two big pumpkins for a pumpkin soup and found that only one of them would fit in my soup pot.
    I pureed the rest, made it into (disappointing) pumpkin scones, and then remembered your recipe. I have since made it twice (served at the end of a New Year’s Eve meal as a quick, light, not too sweet “tide you over” dessert until the midnight festivities, and then made it again the next day so we could enjoy it for breakfasts and snacks over the weekend).
    One difference, though, since I’m not too sure where to get fresh cranberries in Berlin (help?): I used Aronia berries instead (which came dried in a package from my nearest organic store, and which I soaked overnight to make soft and chewy). It worked like a dream!

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  44. Tawny Avatar
    Tawny

    My grocery was out of butternut squash so I snagged an acorn squash. Will this be okay?

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  45. Luisa Avatar

    So glad you liked this so much! My local Rewe is currently selling fresh cranberries – they freeze really nicely (just wash and dry beforehand), so I suggest buying a bag or two and stashing them away. I usually only find them in October/November, but I read that there’s a record cranberry glut in the US this year so I imagine we’ll be seeing them for a bit longer.

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  46. Luisa Avatar

    Acorn squash is more watery than butternut squash, so the puree will be looser. You may need to up the flour quantities slightly, but I’m not sure, can’t really give you precise quantities. I’d experiment. Good luck!

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  47. Kerstin Avatar
    Kerstin

    Danke Luisa für den Verweis auf “Flavor Flours”! Alles sieht so lecker aus. Nachdem ich schon viel aus “Good to the Grain” gebacken habe, war ich auf der Suche nach ansprechenden Rezepten ohne Weizen. Und die bringt “Flavor Flours” – ich hoffe, es bald auszuprobieren können!

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