Upon waking up, one of our first thoughts is about breakfast. Tom & I are big fans of breakfast, from simple to fancy, it doesn't much matter. I've never quite figured out skipping breakfast. I usually wake up hungry, and though I'm a coffee drinker, I much more useless without food in me than I am without coffee.
Last weekend, while pondering our breakfast options and ruling out eggs (tired of them), cereal (too mundane), and oatmeal (had it earlier in the week) Tom came up with the brilliant idea of pancakes with walnuts, banana and blueberries. With this idea, we sprung in to action.
Tom headed out to the store, as we were out of maple syrup. I poked around for a good pancake recipe. I ended up using the multi-grain pancake recipe in Super Natural Every Day by Heidi Swanson. Once I had the pancakes on the griddle, I added the chopped banana, toasted walnut and blueberries. These were hearty pancakes, they held us through a 3.5 mile walk and til mid-afternoon. I had some left over batter, which I've frozen (without the add-ins). I'm not sure how well it will thaw and cook, but it's worth a try.
Saturday, July 2, 2011
Thursday, June 23, 2011
One of my faves - Blackbird Baking
A co-worker of Tom's turned us on to Blackbird Baking last fall. This one-woman baking company is located in South Portland Me, offering "the simple goodness you've been craving." Stacy posts and/or emails her menus regularly. You order and then later in the week, voila! A pie is delivered unto you. It is like pie magic.
We've had a couple of different pies, most recently a delicious 3 Berry Pie with blackberries, blueberries and raspberries, topped with a butter-oat-sugar crumble. Since the menu noted this pie was ice-cream worthy we had to oblige. We paired this local pie with some locally made ginger gelato.
She also makes muffins, quickbreads, cookies, and baked squares. We've only tried the pies, but I have no doubt the rest of her treats are just as good.
I'm not absolutely sure of her pie delivery range, but definitely in the Portland / South Portland area. When she dropped off our most recent pie she told Tom she is trying to get in to some local markets and restaurants, so it looks like we'll have more access to her treats.
Connect with Stacy on Facebook or via email at blackbirdbaking@gmail.com
We've had a couple of different pies, most recently a delicious 3 Berry Pie with blackberries, blueberries and raspberries, topped with a butter-oat-sugar crumble. Since the menu noted this pie was ice-cream worthy we had to oblige. We paired this local pie with some locally made ginger gelato.
She also makes muffins, quickbreads, cookies, and baked squares. We've only tried the pies, but I have no doubt the rest of her treats are just as good.
I'm not absolutely sure of her pie delivery range, but definitely in the Portland / South Portland area. When she dropped off our most recent pie she told Tom she is trying to get in to some local markets and restaurants, so it looks like we'll have more access to her treats.
Connect with Stacy on Facebook or via email at blackbirdbaking@gmail.com
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
A Yummy Birthday Cake
Over the weekend I was trolling around different sites, looking for a tasty birthday cake option for Molly's b-day. I didn't want a standard layer-frosting-layer-frosting kind of cake, but was looking for something a bit different.
My go-to site for this search was Smitten Kitchen. One of my favorite cooking blogs - great recipes, great pictures and an approach to food that I can relate to - good food, cooked well and deeply appreciated. I quickly came across this recipe for strawberry summer cake. Up here in Maine, our strawberry plants still have flowers on them, while down south in NY they have fresh berries at the Farmer's Market already. Even though we are a few weeks from berries, this recipe had me, well, smitten.
I can only imagine how this would be with late season Maine strawberries, oozing with juicy-goodness. While I'm decidedly biased about most things Maine (except maybe February), close, if not at the top of my list of "things that are better in Maine," are strawberries. Our berries work hard up here in the slow, often cold spring. You can taste their hard work in the concentrated flavors, that are just sweet enough and just tart enough.
Since I knew I'd be going with store-bought berries, I decided to go with a berry mix instead of just strawberries. I landed on strawberries, blackberries and raspberries for my mix. I also decided to try SK's suggestion of using some barley flour.
As described at SK, this recipe is "short on steps." Easy to make and delicious to eat. Served with some brown sugar whipped cream we had unanimous yums all around.
I'd like to try it with some other summer fruit combinations - peaches & blueberries, strawberry & rhubarb - I think most any juicy summer fruit would work.
I going to send you over to Smitten Kitchen for the recipe, cause I think you'll love her site.
Enjoy!
My go-to site for this search was Smitten Kitchen. One of my favorite cooking blogs - great recipes, great pictures and an approach to food that I can relate to - good food, cooked well and deeply appreciated. I quickly came across this recipe for strawberry summer cake. Up here in Maine, our strawberry plants still have flowers on them, while down south in NY they have fresh berries at the Farmer's Market already. Even though we are a few weeks from berries, this recipe had me, well, smitten.
I can only imagine how this would be with late season Maine strawberries, oozing with juicy-goodness. While I'm decidedly biased about most things Maine (except maybe February), close, if not at the top of my list of "things that are better in Maine," are strawberries. Our berries work hard up here in the slow, often cold spring. You can taste their hard work in the concentrated flavors, that are just sweet enough and just tart enough.
Since I knew I'd be going with store-bought berries, I decided to go with a berry mix instead of just strawberries. I landed on strawberries, blackberries and raspberries for my mix. I also decided to try SK's suggestion of using some barley flour.
As described at SK, this recipe is "short on steps." Easy to make and delicious to eat. Served with some brown sugar whipped cream we had unanimous yums all around.
I'd like to try it with some other summer fruit combinations - peaches & blueberries, strawberry & rhubarb - I think most any juicy summer fruit would work.
I going to send you over to Smitten Kitchen for the recipe, cause I think you'll love her site.
Enjoy!
Friday, June 3, 2011
S'mores!
This is not baking.
It barely involves fire, but it is very good.
Years ago in my house we were on a microwave s'mores kick. Don't know how we got off this kick, or why because a microwave s'more is really a very a good thing.
From a variety of different baking I've done recently, including Congo Bars and Coca Cola Cake, I found myself with the appropriate fixings for these easy tasty bites.
What you need:
Chocolate chips (or a thin-ish chocolate square would do)
Mini Marshmallows (or Fluff would do)
Graham crackers
What you do:
Put chips on graham cracker and microwave on high about 30 seconds.
Check how melty the chips are, and microwave another 30 seconds if needed.
Put mini mallows on top of chips and microwave about 20 seconds or until the marshmallows puff up so much that they scare you.
Optional: If you have a kitchen torch, torch the marshmallows to the desired level of brownness (or burnt if that's how you roll).
Another option - top with another graham cracker. Personally, I like mine open face.
Tasty adds:
Peanut butter under the chips
Banana on the chips, under the marshmallow
The best thing about these - no large fire required, no risk of the whole thing dropping in the sand because you've been sitting around the bonfire drinking way too many sombrero's, nice melted chocolate. I'm sure there are s'more purists out there completely aghast that one should make a s'more in a less than authentic way. All I'm saying is that I can enjoy s'mores in February in Maine, barefoot in my kitchen this way. Can you?
It barely involves fire, but it is very good.
Years ago in my house we were on a microwave s'mores kick. Don't know how we got off this kick, or why because a microwave s'more is really a very a good thing.
From a variety of different baking I've done recently, including Congo Bars and Coca Cola Cake, I found myself with the appropriate fixings for these easy tasty bites.
What you need:
Chocolate chips (or a thin-ish chocolate square would do)
Mini Marshmallows (or Fluff would do)
Graham crackers
What you do:
Put chips on graham cracker and microwave on high about 30 seconds.
Check how melty the chips are, and microwave another 30 seconds if needed.
Put mini mallows on top of chips and microwave about 20 seconds or until the marshmallows puff up so much that they scare you.
Optional: If you have a kitchen torch, torch the marshmallows to the desired level of brownness (or burnt if that's how you roll).
Another option - top with another graham cracker. Personally, I like mine open face.
Tasty adds:
Peanut butter under the chips
Banana on the chips, under the marshmallow
The best thing about these - no large fire required, no risk of the whole thing dropping in the sand because you've been sitting around the bonfire drinking way too many sombrero's, nice melted chocolate. I'm sure there are s'more purists out there completely aghast that one should make a s'more in a less than authentic way. All I'm saying is that I can enjoy s'mores in February in Maine, barefoot in my kitchen this way. Can you?
Friday, May 20, 2011
Coca Cola Cake
Who knew that mini-marshmallows and Coca Cola would make for a great cake?
I was a deep skeptic of this cake. I'm not a soda drinker, let alone a Coke drinker. Truth be told, I think Coke is pretty wretched. Baking with sweetened carbonated beverages was something I never encountered. The first time I had this cake was at an vegetable lasagna "cookout" in Boothbay Harbor, ME. A good friend of my husband's is a Southerner and this cake is a southern classic.
A quick side trip about the vegetable lasagna. For a couple summers, we'd go to this cookout in Boothbay. There was no cooking out involved, but the party did include the best lasagna I've ever eaten. This lasagna was about 5 inches tall, and it baked for about 3+ hours. The cheese on top was baked to dark brown delicousness. The chef extraordinaire of this lasagna has moved back south. One of these days I'll attempt to replicate the lasagna....sigh.
Ok. On to the cake.
This is a surprisingly light (as in not dense, not as in low fat or low calorie) cake. Like the Congo bars from my last post, it is a picnic, pot-luck, crowd pleaser. Both the batter and the frosting has Coke in it, along with lots of butter, sugar and cocoa powder. You don't taste the Coke, but this is a very sweet cake.
This is the chocolate cake you loved as a kid, and smeared all over your face as you ate it. This would be a great cake to serve to kids who do not live in your house, since they will be completely strung out after eating this. You can pack them full of sugar, chocolate and caffeine and then send them on their merry way.
It's probably one of the easiest cake recipes you can make. It isn't quite pantry-ready, as the ingredients include Coke, Buttermilk and Mini-Marshmallows, but it is worth the trip to the store. Enjoy!
Coca Cola Cake
Ingredients
Cake:
1 cup Coca-Cola
1/2 cup buttermilk
1 cup butter (softened)
1 3/4 cups cups sugar
2 eggs, beaten
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups flour
1/4 cup cocoa
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 cups miniature marshmallows
Frosting:
1/2 cup butter
1/3 cup Coca-Cola
3 tablespoons cocoa
1 box confectioner's sugar, (16 oz)
1 tablespoon vanilla
Topping options: This cake is great with frosting only. If you want to spiff up the top a bit, try:
1/2 cup chopped pecans, toasted or chopped heath bar candy, or chopped Reese's Peanut Butter Cups....
What to do:
Cake:
Combine coke and buttermilk, set aside.
Beat butter at low speed with electric mixer until creamy. Gradually add sugar, beat until blended. Add egg and vanilla, beat at low speed until blended.
Combine flour, cocoa and soda. Add to butter mixture, alternating with coke mixture. Begin & end with flour mixture. Beat on low until just combined.
Stir in marshmallows. Pour batter into greased & floured 13x9 pan. Bake at 350 for 30-35 minutes. Remove from oven and cool 10 minutes. Pour frosting over cake and garnish w/ toppings of choice (or not). Let frosting set (at least an hour) before cutting cake.
Frosting:
Bring butter, coke and cocoa to boil in large saucepan over med. heat, stirring until butter melts. Remove from heat, whisk in sugar and vanilla. Pour over slightly cooled cake.
I was a deep skeptic of this cake. I'm not a soda drinker, let alone a Coke drinker. Truth be told, I think Coke is pretty wretched. Baking with sweetened carbonated beverages was something I never encountered. The first time I had this cake was at an vegetable lasagna "cookout" in Boothbay Harbor, ME. A good friend of my husband's is a Southerner and this cake is a southern classic.
A quick side trip about the vegetable lasagna. For a couple summers, we'd go to this cookout in Boothbay. There was no cooking out involved, but the party did include the best lasagna I've ever eaten. This lasagna was about 5 inches tall, and it baked for about 3+ hours. The cheese on top was baked to dark brown delicousness. The chef extraordinaire of this lasagna has moved back south. One of these days I'll attempt to replicate the lasagna....sigh.
Ok. On to the cake.
This is a surprisingly light (as in not dense, not as in low fat or low calorie) cake. Like the Congo bars from my last post, it is a picnic, pot-luck, crowd pleaser. Both the batter and the frosting has Coke in it, along with lots of butter, sugar and cocoa powder. You don't taste the Coke, but this is a very sweet cake.
This is the chocolate cake you loved as a kid, and smeared all over your face as you ate it. This would be a great cake to serve to kids who do not live in your house, since they will be completely strung out after eating this. You can pack them full of sugar, chocolate and caffeine and then send them on their merry way.
It's probably one of the easiest cake recipes you can make. It isn't quite pantry-ready, as the ingredients include Coke, Buttermilk and Mini-Marshmallows, but it is worth the trip to the store. Enjoy!
Coca Cola Cake
Ingredients
Cake:
1 cup Coca-Cola
1/2 cup buttermilk
1 cup butter (softened)
1 3/4 cups cups sugar
2 eggs, beaten
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups flour
1/4 cup cocoa
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 cups miniature marshmallows
Frosting:
1/2 cup butter
1/3 cup Coca-Cola
3 tablespoons cocoa
1 box confectioner's sugar, (16 oz)
1 tablespoon vanilla
Topping options: This cake is great with frosting only. If you want to spiff up the top a bit, try:
1/2 cup chopped pecans, toasted or chopped heath bar candy, or chopped Reese's Peanut Butter Cups....
What to do:
Cake:
Combine coke and buttermilk, set aside.
Beat butter at low speed with electric mixer until creamy. Gradually add sugar, beat until blended. Add egg and vanilla, beat at low speed until blended.
Combine flour, cocoa and soda. Add to butter mixture, alternating with coke mixture. Begin & end with flour mixture. Beat on low until just combined.
Stir in marshmallows. Pour batter into greased & floured 13x9 pan. Bake at 350 for 30-35 minutes. Remove from oven and cool 10 minutes. Pour frosting over cake and garnish w/ toppings of choice (or not). Let frosting set (at least an hour) before cutting cake.
Frosting:
Bring butter, coke and cocoa to boil in large saucepan over med. heat, stirring until butter melts. Remove from heat, whisk in sugar and vanilla. Pour over slightly cooled cake.
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Congo Bars
Is this even considered baking?
This recipe involves melting butter, sprinkling sugar laden toppings, pouring a sweet liquid and then 30 minutes in the oven. I suppose technically I'm baking, but it is more like baking-lite.
You've had these chewy, sweet, guilty delights. They are Congo bars, treasure bars, glop bars....they have many aliases (aliai?). They consist of butter, graham cracker crumbs, chocolate and butterscotch chips, coconut and sweetened condensed milk. If you have been to a pot-luck, bake sale or other "cripes I've got to pull a dessert together that everyone will love, and do it quick," event, then you have made these, sold these or eaten these.
I'm making these to take to Vermont for a pre-graduation pot luck (of course) for Molly and her roomies families & friends. We are at T-minus 47 hours and 27 minutes til graduation. Zoiks!
If you would like to hire a bright, charming, and witty Philosopher, please let me know.
Congo Bars
Ingredients
1/2 cup butter
1 cup graham cracker crumbs
1- 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
1- 1/2 cups butterscotch chips
1-1/2 cups flaked coconut
1 cup chopped walnuts (as usual, I passed on the walnuts)
1 (14 ounce) can sweetened condensed milk
1- 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
1- 1/2 cups butterscotch chips
1-1/2 cups flaked coconut
1 cup chopped walnuts (as usual, I passed on the walnuts)
1 (14 ounce) can sweetened condensed milk
What to do
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
Melt the butter or margarine in a 9x13 inch baking pan. Sprinkle the graham cracker crumbs evenly over the butter. Sprinkle on the chocolate chips and butterscotch chips. Cover with the flaked coconut. Sprinkle the walnuts on top of the coconut layer. Finally, pour the condensed milk over everything as evenly as you can.
Bake at 350 for 30 - 35 minutes.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Elvis Muffins
While I don't think there is any direct connection between Elvis and Easter, I was inspired to make an muffin for our Easter brunch that the King would enjoy. That would be a muffin enjoyed by the latter-year's, somewhat bloated King. The one you want to avert your eyes from while you think longingly of the Elvis from "Blue Hawaii." When I was little, I thought Elvis was plastic and lived in the TV. I'm not so sure I was wrong.
The ingredients for these muffins are obvious....
Over-ripe bananas - check.
Peanut butter - check.
Chocolate chips - check.
Tom asked, rhetorically I think, 'you know what would be good on top of these muffins?' ....BACON! Even better, candied bacon.
Truly a muffin fit for a King.
Candied Bacon
6 slices thick-cut bacon
2 Tbs. plus 1 tsp. pure maple syrup
1-1/2 Tbs. light brown sugar
Put a rack in the center of the oven and heat the oven to 425°F. Cover a rimmed baking sheet with parchment and put bacon slices on it. Drizzle both sides with the maple syrup and then sprinkle both sides evenly with the sugar. Bake until browned and crisp, 20 to 22 minutes. Remove to wire rack to cool, then chop into small pieces. Try not to eat an excessive amount.
We didn't have maple syrup (how did that happen?) so we used rice syrup (why we have rice syrup but not maple is a mystery of impulse shopping I guess). We mixed the rice syrup with some whiskey.
2 cups all purpose flour
1/2 cup lightly packed brown sugar (I used light brown)
1 tbs baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 cup peanut butter (I used no salt/no sugar added)
2 eggs
2 tbs canola oil
3/4 cup milk
2 ripe bananas, mashed.
1 additional ripe banana (optional)
1 cup (and some more if you like) dark chocolate chips
What to do
This first step is optional, but it does give you a bit of an extra kick of banana flavor.
Put the milk and the extra mashed banana in a small saucepan. Bring to just under a boil and turn off the heat and let banana steep in the milk for 15 to 30 minutes. Strain the milk into the peanut butter mixture (below) and discard the banana that steeped in the milk.
Preheat oven to 375.
Mix flour, sugar, powder and salt in a large mixing bowl and set aside. In a medium bowl, beat eggs, peanut butter, the other 2 mashed bananas, milk, oil and eggs until well mixed. Add the peanut butter mixture to the flour mixture, stirring until just moistened. Stir in the chocolate chips.
Spoon into well greased muffin tins. Sprinkle chopped bacon on top, and gently press into the batter a bit. I used mini-muffins tins, and the recipe yielded 42 mini muffins. In regular muffin tins, you'll get 12 muffins.
For mini muffins, bake 8-10 minutes. For regular muffins, 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the middle comes out clean.
These are yummy little two bite morsels, with a definite banana-y, peanut butter-y taste. I read recently that the royal wedding reception next week will feature 2-bite appetizers, in case you need to greet a passing Monarch. I doubt we will have that need at brunch tomorrow, but you never know.
While these were baking, Jackson did a neat trick with his ear:
The ingredients for these muffins are obvious....
Over-ripe bananas - check.
Peanut butter - check.
Chocolate chips - check.
Tom asked, rhetorically I think, 'you know what would be good on top of these muffins?' ....BACON! Even better, candied bacon.
Truly a muffin fit for a King.
Candied Bacon
6 slices thick-cut bacon
2 Tbs. plus 1 tsp. pure maple syrup
1-1/2 Tbs. light brown sugar
Put a rack in the center of the oven and heat the oven to 425°F. Cover a rimmed baking sheet with parchment and put bacon slices on it. Drizzle both sides with the maple syrup and then sprinkle both sides evenly with the sugar. Bake until browned and crisp, 20 to 22 minutes. Remove to wire rack to cool, then chop into small pieces. Try not to eat an excessive amount.
We didn't have maple syrup (how did that happen?) so we used rice syrup (why we have rice syrup but not maple is a mystery of impulse shopping I guess). We mixed the rice syrup with some whiskey.
Peanut Butter Banana Muffins with Chocolate Chips
Ingredients2 cups all purpose flour
1/2 cup lightly packed brown sugar (I used light brown)
1 tbs baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 cup peanut butter (I used no salt/no sugar added)
2 eggs
2 tbs canola oil
3/4 cup milk
2 ripe bananas, mashed.
1 additional ripe banana (optional)
1 cup (and some more if you like) dark chocolate chips
What to do
This first step is optional, but it does give you a bit of an extra kick of banana flavor.
Put the milk and the extra mashed banana in a small saucepan. Bring to just under a boil and turn off the heat and let banana steep in the milk for 15 to 30 minutes. Strain the milk into the peanut butter mixture (below) and discard the banana that steeped in the milk.
Preheat oven to 375.
Mix flour, sugar, powder and salt in a large mixing bowl and set aside. In a medium bowl, beat eggs, peanut butter, the other 2 mashed bananas, milk, oil and eggs until well mixed. Add the peanut butter mixture to the flour mixture, stirring until just moistened. Stir in the chocolate chips.
Spoon into well greased muffin tins. Sprinkle chopped bacon on top, and gently press into the batter a bit. I used mini-muffins tins, and the recipe yielded 42 mini muffins. In regular muffin tins, you'll get 12 muffins.
For mini muffins, bake 8-10 minutes. For regular muffins, 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the middle comes out clean.
These are yummy little two bite morsels, with a definite banana-y, peanut butter-y taste. I read recently that the royal wedding reception next week will feature 2-bite appetizers, in case you need to greet a passing Monarch. I doubt we will have that need at brunch tomorrow, but you never know.
While these were baking, Jackson did a neat trick with his ear:
I Heart Standard Baking
Yum.
Errands this morning included a stop at Standard Baking here in Portland. This is one of the many food gems to be found in our great little city. Always a difficult decision, we settled on the fruit buckle.
It was still warm.
Nice crumb topping that didn't completely fall off as we ate it. Stuffed full of raspberries, with a dough that had a bit of a lemon tang. Delicious.
Here's the aftermath of our delectable treat.
Errands this morning included a stop at Standard Baking here in Portland. This is one of the many food gems to be found in our great little city. Always a difficult decision, we settled on the fruit buckle.
It was still warm.
Nice crumb topping that didn't completely fall off as we ate it. Stuffed full of raspberries, with a dough that had a bit of a lemon tang. Delicious.
Here's the aftermath of our delectable treat.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
(Recycled) Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Coconut Cookies
Tonight, baking was more compelling than the work homework that I should have been doing. I hadn't made an oatmeal type of cookie in awhile and was jonesing on one with chocolate and coconut in it.
As I dug through the pantry, I realized that I didn't have all the chocolate chips that I needed. Hmmm. There were some chips, there was a chunk of dark chocolate, there was a chunk of white chocolate (both leftover from my chocolate bark from a few weeks ago). This wasn't quite enough, so I was pondering other add-ins, such as cranberries or cocoa nibs.
It was at this point that Tom reminded me that I had some chocolate chip cookie dough in the freezer (from a failed recipe experiment). The dough was not a success, but the consistency of it made it quite easy to pull out the chocolate chips (they were large and good quality). Yes, I pulled chocolate chips out of dough to re-use the chips in another cookie. I had been considering just tossing the remaining dough, so I thought that this was a good re-use, recycle approach to baking - and it is almost Earth Day.
About the time that I could no longer feel my finger tips, I had enough chip-age, in all of my varieties for the cookies. Finally, on to the baking!
Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Coconut Cookies
Ingredients
Drop by rounded spoonfuls onto ungreased baking sheets (or line sheets with parchment paper) and bake for 10-12 minutes. Cool for a minute on baking sheet then remove to a wire rack to cool completely.
As I dug through the pantry, I realized that I didn't have all the chocolate chips that I needed. Hmmm. There were some chips, there was a chunk of dark chocolate, there was a chunk of white chocolate (both leftover from my chocolate bark from a few weeks ago). This wasn't quite enough, so I was pondering other add-ins, such as cranberries or cocoa nibs.
It was at this point that Tom reminded me that I had some chocolate chip cookie dough in the freezer (from a failed recipe experiment). The dough was not a success, but the consistency of it made it quite easy to pull out the chocolate chips (they were large and good quality). Yes, I pulled chocolate chips out of dough to re-use the chips in another cookie. I had been considering just tossing the remaining dough, so I thought that this was a good re-use, recycle approach to baking - and it is almost Earth Day.
About the time that I could no longer feel my finger tips, I had enough chip-age, in all of my varieties for the cookies. Finally, on to the baking!
Numb fingers have paid off, and I've hit my quantity. |
Ingredients
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/4 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups whole wheat flour (all purpose is fine too)
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups rolled oats
1 cup sweetened coconut flakes
12 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips (or alternatively, a combination of chips pulled from frozen dough, a partial bag of chips and leftover white and dark chunks, chopped into small chunks).
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/4 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups whole wheat flour (all purpose is fine too)
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups rolled oats
1 cup sweetened coconut flakes
12 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips (or alternatively, a combination of chips pulled from frozen dough, a partial bag of chips and leftover white and dark chunks, chopped into small chunks).
What to do
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.In a large bowl, beat together butter and sugars until fluffy. Add eggs and vanilla and beat well. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt. Add flour mixture to butter mixture and beat until well combined. Stir in oats, coconut, and chocolate chips.
Drop by rounded spoonfuls onto ungreased baking sheets (or line sheets with parchment paper) and bake for 10-12 minutes. Cool for a minute on baking sheet then remove to a wire rack to cool completely.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Orange Flavored Olive Oil Cake
Spring is making a shy appearance here in Maine. After perhaps the best April Fool's joke ever with a Nor'easter that dropped about 6 inches of snow in my yard, our temps have been climbing slowly.
We took advantage of the low 50's temps this weekend to have some much needed outdoor time. Tom took me on my first motorcycle ride of the spring on Saturday. I was safe and spiffy in my new helmet, gloves and jacket. Today was people-powered cycling, getting our road bikes out for a spin. Our shakedown ride to get the winter out of our legs ended up being a 23 miler. It was great to be out, the roads were in decent shape and other than very cold toes, I felt great at the end of the ride.
Ok, back to baking. We were having some friends for dinner Saturday night, and I had been wanting to try making an olive oil cake. I checked out a few different recipes and found this one on the Saveur site. I really like this site. It's comprehensive, providing both Saveur recipes, but also recipes they've found across the web. Great pictures make the recipes hard to resist.
I happened to have some blood orange olive oil on hand, so I thought that would be a good alternative to plain olive oil, and punch up the orange a bit.
To dress this up a bit, I decided to serve it with a blueberry sauce and honey whip cream. For a garnish, I attempted candied basil leaves. The basil tasted good, but I was hoping they'd firm up a bit. My friend suggested dipping the leaves in slightly whipped egg whites before sugaring them next time.
The orange flavor in the cake was subtle, but noticeable, and the cake nice and moist. The berries and whip cream were a great add, and everyone finished happy and full.
Olive Oil Cake (from Saveur)
Ingredients
1 tbsp. butter
3 cups plus 2 tbsp. flour
4 eggs
1 cup sugar
1⁄4 tsp. lemon zest
3⁄4 cup quality extra-virgin olive oil
2⁄3 cup milk
3 tbsp. Grand Marnier
1 tbsp. baking powder
Blueberry Sauce and Honey Whip Cream instructions are below.
What to do:
Preheat oven to 325°. Grease an 11-cup bundt pan with butter and dust with flour. Set prepared pan aside.
Beat eggs and sugar together in a large mixing bowl with an electric mixer on medium-high speed until pale yellow, about 1 minute. Add remaining 3 cups flour, lemon zest, oil, milk, and liqueur and stir with a wooden spoon until well combined. Add baking powder and stir until thoroughly combined.
Spoon batter into prepared pan around ramekin or bowl or spoon batter into bundt pan and smooth out top with the back of the spoon. Bake until cake is deep golden brown and a wooden skewer inserted in center comes out clean, about 40 minutes. Transfer cake to a wire rack to let cool completely, in its pan.
Blueberry Sauce
Mix frozen (thawed) or fresh berries with some orange zest, the juice of half and orange and about 1/2 tbsp of honey. Heat on the stove over medium heat to reduce and thicken the sauce to your liking.
Honey Whip Cream
While mixing heavy cream, add 1-2 tsp of vanilla and then honey to taste. I warmed the honey up before adding to the cream, in order to help it incorporate better.
This cake is one of those that you'd be able to serve anytime of day. I think it would work well as a breakfast bread, definitely a mid-day tea or coffee snack cake, and dressed up for dinner with a good fruit topping and whip cream.
We took advantage of the low 50's temps this weekend to have some much needed outdoor time. Tom took me on my first motorcycle ride of the spring on Saturday. I was safe and spiffy in my new helmet, gloves and jacket. Today was people-powered cycling, getting our road bikes out for a spin. Our shakedown ride to get the winter out of our legs ended up being a 23 miler. It was great to be out, the roads were in decent shape and other than very cold toes, I felt great at the end of the ride.
I happened to have some blood orange olive oil on hand, so I thought that would be a good alternative to plain olive oil, and punch up the orange a bit.
To dress this up a bit, I decided to serve it with a blueberry sauce and honey whip cream. For a garnish, I attempted candied basil leaves. The basil tasted good, but I was hoping they'd firm up a bit. My friend suggested dipping the leaves in slightly whipped egg whites before sugaring them next time.
The orange flavor in the cake was subtle, but noticeable, and the cake nice and moist. The berries and whip cream were a great add, and everyone finished happy and full.
Olive Oil Cake (from Saveur)
Ingredients
1 tbsp. butter
3 cups plus 2 tbsp. flour
4 eggs
1 cup sugar
1⁄4 tsp. lemon zest
3⁄4 cup quality extra-virgin olive oil
2⁄3 cup milk
3 tbsp. Grand Marnier
1 tbsp. baking powder
Blueberry Sauce and Honey Whip Cream instructions are below.
What to do:
Preheat oven to 325°. Grease an 11-cup bundt pan with butter and dust with flour. Set prepared pan aside.
Beat eggs and sugar together in a large mixing bowl with an electric mixer on medium-high speed until pale yellow, about 1 minute. Add remaining 3 cups flour, lemon zest, oil, milk, and liqueur and stir with a wooden spoon until well combined. Add baking powder and stir until thoroughly combined.
Spoon batter into prepared pan around ramekin or bowl or spoon batter into bundt pan and smooth out top with the back of the spoon. Bake until cake is deep golden brown and a wooden skewer inserted in center comes out clean, about 40 minutes. Transfer cake to a wire rack to let cool completely, in its pan.
Blueberry Sauce
Mix frozen (thawed) or fresh berries with some orange zest, the juice of half and orange and about 1/2 tbsp of honey. Heat on the stove over medium heat to reduce and thicken the sauce to your liking.
Honey Whip Cream
While mixing heavy cream, add 1-2 tsp of vanilla and then honey to taste. I warmed the honey up before adding to the cream, in order to help it incorporate better.
This cake is one of those that you'd be able to serve anytime of day. I think it would work well as a breakfast bread, definitely a mid-day tea or coffee snack cake, and dressed up for dinner with a good fruit topping and whip cream.
The sauce was blueberries, orange zest and juice and honey. |
Monday, April 4, 2011
Crock Pot Banana Bread
Despite my best intentions, I'm an infrequent user of the crock-pot. It sits tucked away on a high pantry shelf, making access at best difficult and at worst, dangerous. The heavy glass lid threatens to fall on my head whenever I pull it down, and this scares me.
The most common applications for the CP in my kitchen are making apple or pear sauce, cooking farro overnight (makes for a great "instant" breakfast) or making a kick-ass bolognese sauce.
The best application though, is Crock-Pot Banana Bread. I'd never heard of such a thing until my husband made a batch in his CP while we were dating. He's the banana bread baker in the house, and has dabbled with and perfected this recipe. This banana bread is perhaps the favorite care package item mailed off to college, in great risk of not even making it in the door before consumption.
It's baked in this funky round "pan" that sits in the CP, and looks a bit like a big coffee can. I don't know if this insert comes standard with crock-pots or is a charming accessory. It makes a cylindrical loaf, and fun half-round slices. Cooking time is about 2 hours or so. The slow heat makes for a very moist bread, not as dense as pan based banana breads. Mini-chocolate chips (never optional), add to the deliciousness of this treat.
The size and shape of this loaf would also lend itself to a great little banana cake. I think it could probably be sliced into 3 or 4 layers, frosted with any number of frosting options...chocolate, rum butter-cream, some type of brown-butter cinnamon.....mmmm. I haven't tried this yet, but I'm looking forward to that adventure in the kitchen.
Crock Pot Banana Bread
Ingredients
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup unsweetened apple sauce
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
4 small ripe bananas, mashed
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2+ cup dark chocolate chunks
What to do
Turn crock-pot on high. Grease and flour manufacturer's insert. Mix flour, baking soda and salt in medium bowl. In another bowl, cream applesauce with butter & sugar. Add eggs, one at a time. Add milk and vanilla. Mix completely. Stir in bananas until well mixed. Gradually add flour mixture. Stir until just combined. Stir in chocolate chips. Place insert into crock-pot. Carefully add batter. Cover. Put lid on crock-pot and bake, checking for done-ness at the 2 hour mark. Our crock-pot usually bakes this loaf in 2 hours or just a bit over.
The most common applications for the CP in my kitchen are making apple or pear sauce, cooking farro overnight (makes for a great "instant" breakfast) or making a kick-ass bolognese sauce.
The best application though, is Crock-Pot Banana Bread. I'd never heard of such a thing until my husband made a batch in his CP while we were dating. He's the banana bread baker in the house, and has dabbled with and perfected this recipe. This banana bread is perhaps the favorite care package item mailed off to college, in great risk of not even making it in the door before consumption.
It's baked in this funky round "pan" that sits in the CP, and looks a bit like a big coffee can. I don't know if this insert comes standard with crock-pots or is a charming accessory. It makes a cylindrical loaf, and fun half-round slices. Cooking time is about 2 hours or so. The slow heat makes for a very moist bread, not as dense as pan based banana breads. Mini-chocolate chips (never optional), add to the deliciousness of this treat.
The size and shape of this loaf would also lend itself to a great little banana cake. I think it could probably be sliced into 3 or 4 layers, frosted with any number of frosting options...chocolate, rum butter-cream, some type of brown-butter cinnamon.....mmmm. I haven't tried this yet, but I'm looking forward to that adventure in the kitchen.
Crock Pot Banana Bread
Ingredients
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup unsweetened apple sauce
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
4 small ripe bananas, mashed
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2+ cup dark chocolate chunks
What to do
Turn crock-pot on high. Grease and flour manufacturer's insert. Mix flour, baking soda and salt in medium bowl. In another bowl, cream applesauce with butter & sugar. Add eggs, one at a time. Add milk and vanilla. Mix completely. Stir in bananas until well mixed. Gradually add flour mixture. Stir until just combined. Stir in chocolate chips. Place insert into crock-pot. Carefully add batter. Cover. Put lid on crock-pot and bake, checking for done-ness at the 2 hour mark. Our crock-pot usually bakes this loaf in 2 hours or just a bit over.
Monday, March 28, 2011
Brownies!
If I could only have one form of dessert for the rest of my life, the brownie would be a serious contender for the top spot. Yes, pies are delightful, cookies are comforting, and cake is festive. But when it comes right down to an immensely satisfying form of chocolate baked goodness, there is nothing really close.
Most of my formative batter licking experiences happened while making brownies. Truth be told there was more than one occasion, when baking with a childhood friend, the brownies never actually got baked.
I like most any brownie. The boxed mix variety with those squeezey chocolate packets were my brownie of choice for a long time. I loved very gently picking up the chunks of dry mix (they crumbled very easily, remember?) and eating them. The only brownie that has no place for me is the cakey brownie. I mean seriously, a cakey brownie? If you want a cakey brownie, make CAKE for cripes sake. And don't get me started on nuts in brownies. I'll take a nut in my chocolate chip cookie sooner than in my brownie. If you are looking for a nut-brownie recipe it is not here.
But better than a squeezey chocolate packet brownie mix brownie is the homemade from scratch (or as my brother-in-law calls it, from itch) brownie. There is no shortage of great recipes here. The Moosewood cookbook has a good one and you feel somewhat righteous making it because of the source. I just Googled "brownies from scratch" and got 183,000,000 results in .12 seconds. I've made a handful of different brownie recipes, the more recent ones I've tried are recipes that call for cocoa powder vs. melted chocolate. I like the cocoa powder recipes better, at some point maybe I'll try side by side taste test. At any rate, I tend to go for the cocoa powder recipes, since those ingredients tend to be in my pantry. If I have a chunk of chocolate suitable for melting, it usually gets hacked up and eaten bit by bit. This is not a problem with cocoa powder.
The brownies I made yesterday came from Fine Cooking. I've jazzed them up in the past with things like instant espresso powder, ganache topping and the like. On their own, these brownies deliver that great dense chocolaty punch that you can't get anywhere but in a brownie.
Watch your time carefully on these, they are meant to be dense and not overcooked.
Fudgy Brownies (from Fine Cooking magazine)
Ingredients
12 oz. (1 1/2 cups) unsalted butter, cut into 9 pieces; more softened for the pan
3-3/4 oz. (1-1/4 cups) unsweetened natural cocoa powder, sifted if lumpy
2-3/4 cups granulated sugar
1/2 tsp. table salt
5 large eggs
2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
7-1/2 oz. (1-2/3 cups) all-purpose flour
What to Do
Position a rack in the center of the oven and heat the oven to 325°F. Line the bottom & sides of a 9x13-inch straight-sided metal baking pan with heavy-duty aluminum foil, leaving about a 2-inch overhang on the short sides. Lightly butter the foil.
Put the butter in a large (4-quart) saucepan over medium-low heat and stir occasionally until melted, about 2 minutes. Off the heat, whisk in the cocoa powder until smooth, 1 minute. Add the sugar and salt, and whisk until well blended. Use your fingertip to check the temperature of the batter—it should be warm, not hot. If it’s hot, set the pan aside for a minute or two before continuing.
Whisk in the eggs, two and then three at a time, until just blended. Whisk in the vanilla until the batter is well blended. Sprinkle the flour over the batter and stir with a rubber spatula until just blended.
Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and spread evenly. Bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with small bits of brownie sticking to it, 35 to 45 minutes. Cool the brownies completely in the pan on a rack, about 3 hours.
When the brownies are cool, use the foil overhang to lift them from the pan. Invert onto a cutting board and carefully peel away the foil. Flip again and cut into 24 squares. Serve immediately or wrap in plastic and store at room temperature for up to 3 days. They can also be frozen in an airtight container or freezer bag for up to 1 month.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Chocolate Chip Cookies (dare I say perfect?)
After my mediocre CCC experiment the other day (let's be honest, those cookies kind of sucked), I went back to the Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe from the New York Times article that I referenced in a recent post. These cookies did not disappoint. They came out thick, with crispy outside and chewy-gooey chocolate-y insides.
I think the key to this cookie's goodness is the aging process. The article explains the chemistry at work here, but there are also flavor development processes going on. Think of your stews, soups and meatloaves. Almost universally, these are better the second or third day than they are when first cooked. Same with these cookies. The rest time lets the flavors meld and deepen - the article describes the 36 hour cookie, in comparison with cookies from younger dough like this: "they had an even richer, more sophisticated taste, with stronger toffee hints and a definite brown sugar presence."
I mixed up the dough for these cookies Sunday afternoon and baked them Tuesday night. They were over the 36 hours, as I baked them at around the 50 hour mark. While the dough aged temptingly in the fridge, we started calling it "the entity" as it was a sizeable mound and beckoned with a siren's call.
Then, after all that, I messed up in the baking. But, like many mistakes, I think I ended up with a happy accident. These cookies are supposed to bake at 350. I wasn't looking when I set the oven and it wasn't until after I took them out that I realized the oven was at 450. The outside got pretty golden brown, but the insides were still gooey. Since this is my preference, I'd gladly make this mistake again.
By a small miracle of exceptional will-power, all of these cookies (minus the 2 - 1/2 that Tom & I had to sample) got bundled up and delivered to my brother this morning for his birthday. A very happy and delicious ending to a Chocolate Chip Cookie quest that included 2 different doughs, about 4 bags of chips and lots of happy sampling.
Chocolate Chip Cookies
(From the New York Times article, "Perfection? Hint: It's Warm and has a Secret" and recipe adapted from Jacques Torres)
Notes about my adaptations follow the recipe
Ingredients
2. Using a mixer fitted with paddle attachment, cream butter and sugars together until very light, about 5 minutes. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Stir in the vanilla. Reduce speed to low, add dry ingredients and mix until just combined, 5 to 10 seconds. Drop chocolate pieces in and incorporate them without breaking them. Press plastic wrap against dough and refrigerate for 24 to 36 hours. Dough may be used in batches, and can be refrigerated for up to 72 hours.
3. When ready to bake, preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a nonstick baking mat. Set aside.
4. Scoop 6 3 1/2-ounce mounds of dough (the size of generous golf balls) onto baking sheet, making sure to turn horizontally any chocolate pieces that are poking up; it will make for a more attractive cookie. Sprinkle lightly with sea salt and bake until golden brown but still soft, 18 to 20 minutes. Transfer sheet to a wire rack for 10 minutes, then slip cookies onto another rack to cool a bit more. Repeat with remaining dough, or reserve dough, refrigerated, for baking remaining batches the next day. Eat warm, with a big napkin.
Yield: 1 1/2 dozen 5-inch cookies.
Notes about My Adaptations
Flour - I didn't use cake flour. I used all purpose flour and bread flour. I think you will get slightly different results using only AP flour, but I wouldn't worry too much about it. I did weigh my flours, as I think you get a more accurate quantity that way.
Chocolate - I didn't use the disks. I had 2 types of semisweet chocolate chips (Ghiradelli & Guittard), but I did use 1-1/4 lbs of chips. Holy crap.
Size - I baked a standard size cookie, not the jumbo version described here. Should I even bother trying to be moderate when using 1-1/4 lbs of chocolate and lots of butter?
Bake Temp & Time: I accidentally baked at 450 instead of 350. At that higher temp, the (smaller) cookies took about 11 min. I'd guess that at 350, they'd be more like 12-14 min.
I think the key to this cookie's goodness is the aging process. The article explains the chemistry at work here, but there are also flavor development processes going on. Think of your stews, soups and meatloaves. Almost universally, these are better the second or third day than they are when first cooked. Same with these cookies. The rest time lets the flavors meld and deepen - the article describes the 36 hour cookie, in comparison with cookies from younger dough like this: "they had an even richer, more sophisticated taste, with stronger toffee hints and a definite brown sugar presence."
I mixed up the dough for these cookies Sunday afternoon and baked them Tuesday night. They were over the 36 hours, as I baked them at around the 50 hour mark. While the dough aged temptingly in the fridge, we started calling it "the entity" as it was a sizeable mound and beckoned with a siren's call.
Then, after all that, I messed up in the baking. But, like many mistakes, I think I ended up with a happy accident. These cookies are supposed to bake at 350. I wasn't looking when I set the oven and it wasn't until after I took them out that I realized the oven was at 450. The outside got pretty golden brown, but the insides were still gooey. Since this is my preference, I'd gladly make this mistake again.
By a small miracle of exceptional will-power, all of these cookies (minus the 2 - 1/2 that Tom & I had to sample) got bundled up and delivered to my brother this morning for his birthday. A very happy and delicious ending to a Chocolate Chip Cookie quest that included 2 different doughs, about 4 bags of chips and lots of happy sampling.
Chocolate Chip Cookies
(From the New York Times article, "Perfection? Hint: It's Warm and has a Secret" and recipe adapted from Jacques Torres)
Notes about my adaptations follow the recipe
Ingredients
2 cups minus 2 tablespoons (this is 8-1/2 ounces) cake flour
1 -2/3 cups (this is 8 1/2 ounces) bread flour
1-1/4 teaspoons baking soda
1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1-1/2 teaspoons coarse salt
2-1/2 sticks (1 1/4 cups) unsalted butter
1-1/4 cups (10 ounces) light brown sugar
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons (8 ounces) granulated sugar
2 large eggs
2 teaspoons natural vanilla extract
1 1/4 pounds bittersweet chocolate disks or fèves, at least 60 percent cacao content (see note)
Sea salt.
What to Do
1. Sift flours, baking soda, baking powder and salt into a bowl. Set aside.1 -2/3 cups (this is 8 1/2 ounces) bread flour
1-1/4 teaspoons baking soda
1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1-1/2 teaspoons coarse salt
2-1/2 sticks (1 1/4 cups) unsalted butter
1-1/4 cups (10 ounces) light brown sugar
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons (8 ounces) granulated sugar
2 large eggs
2 teaspoons natural vanilla extract
1 1/4 pounds bittersweet chocolate disks or fèves, at least 60 percent cacao content (see note)
Sea salt.
What to Do
2. Using a mixer fitted with paddle attachment, cream butter and sugars together until very light, about 5 minutes. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Stir in the vanilla. Reduce speed to low, add dry ingredients and mix until just combined, 5 to 10 seconds. Drop chocolate pieces in and incorporate them without breaking them. Press plastic wrap against dough and refrigerate for 24 to 36 hours. Dough may be used in batches, and can be refrigerated for up to 72 hours.
3. When ready to bake, preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a nonstick baking mat. Set aside.
4. Scoop 6 3 1/2-ounce mounds of dough (the size of generous golf balls) onto baking sheet, making sure to turn horizontally any chocolate pieces that are poking up; it will make for a more attractive cookie. Sprinkle lightly with sea salt and bake until golden brown but still soft, 18 to 20 minutes. Transfer sheet to a wire rack for 10 minutes, then slip cookies onto another rack to cool a bit more. Repeat with remaining dough, or reserve dough, refrigerated, for baking remaining batches the next day. Eat warm, with a big napkin.
Yield: 1 1/2 dozen 5-inch cookies.
Notes about My Adaptations
Flour - I didn't use cake flour. I used all purpose flour and bread flour. I think you will get slightly different results using only AP flour, but I wouldn't worry too much about it. I did weigh my flours, as I think you get a more accurate quantity that way.
Chocolate - I didn't use the disks. I had 2 types of semisweet chocolate chips (Ghiradelli & Guittard), but I did use 1-1/4 lbs of chips. Holy crap.
Size - I baked a standard size cookie, not the jumbo version described here. Should I even bother trying to be moderate when using 1-1/4 lbs of chocolate and lots of butter?
Bake Temp & Time: I accidentally baked at 450 instead of 350. At that higher temp, the (smaller) cookies took about 11 min. I'd guess that at 350, they'd be more like 12-14 min.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Chocolate Chip Cookie update
Following up from my earlier post with results from the baked product. In a word, 'meh.' These cookies were ok, certainly better than many I've had, but not even close to the best I've made. They were a bit flat tasting, and lacked that inherent chocolate chip cookie goodness.
Here's my diagnosis:
Corn Syrup - Helped achieve some of the thickness that I wanted, but detracted from the flavor in it's flatness. left the cookie with bit of a gummy-ness rather than the chewiness I was looking for.
Shortening - Again, helped with the thickness, but left the flavor flat. The cookies did not have that richness you get from butter. Not a surprise.
Sugar & Salt on top - Got mixed reviews. I liked the salt, but my fellow samplers could have done without it. The sugar wasn't a highlight or a lowlight.
I think the key is to use my fat (butter) and flour / sugar proportions to get the thickness and gooey-ness that I'm looking for. A good reminder that the more real and closer to the source the ingredient is (e.g. butter vs. shortening, sugar vs. syrup) the better the outcome!
I'm going back to my standard recipe for my next try and will follow up soon with those results.
Here's my diagnosis:
Corn Syrup - Helped achieve some of the thickness that I wanted, but detracted from the flavor in it's flatness. left the cookie with bit of a gummy-ness rather than the chewiness I was looking for.
Shortening - Again, helped with the thickness, but left the flavor flat. The cookies did not have that richness you get from butter. Not a surprise.
Sugar & Salt on top - Got mixed reviews. I liked the salt, but my fellow samplers could have done without it. The sugar wasn't a highlight or a lowlight.
I think the key is to use my fat (butter) and flour / sugar proportions to get the thickness and gooey-ness that I'm looking for. A good reminder that the more real and closer to the source the ingredient is (e.g. butter vs. shortening, sugar vs. syrup) the better the outcome!
I'm going back to my standard recipe for my next try and will follow up soon with those results.
Chocolate Chip Cookies, Chapter 2
Coming back to Chocolate Chip Cookies, as promised and because, well - it's always good to come back to CCC. And because my brother's birthday is coming up and he's the kind of brother that you just want to make chocolate chip cookies for. When I was in college, he'd bake and mail cookies to me. Slightly crushed and more than slightly delicious they would arrive, to the oohs and ahhs of my roommates.
For these cookies, I'm falling back on a little cookie chemistry, and a bit of experimentation. My quest is that fat, crispy outside, gooey inside cookie that a I posted about a few weeks ago. A couple years ago, the New York Times had an article on Chocolate Chip Cookies (all the news that's fit to eat?). You can read it here. It's a bit history and a bit chemistry. The chemistry part is this - you get a better cookie if the dough rests for about 36 hours before you bake the cookie. I know, this is tough. Usually you make chocolate chip cookies because you really need to eat one Right Now. So bake a couple of them, and then let the remaining dough rest.
Why does this make a better cookie? The New York Times article describes it well. In a nutshell, the rest time lets the dough soak up the liquids (eggs), this makes for a firmer and drier dough and better cookie consistency.
For these cookies that are in process (aka aging in my freezer) I had an dough brainstorm that I'm experimenting with. While eating a Lumberjack (sadly the last of that frozen dough) the other night, I got thinking about the crispy outside, chewy inside perfection of this cookie and realized, 'hey, this is what I want for my chocolate chip cookies!' From that, I decided to follow the general Lumberjack ingredients and ratios, but apply those to a chocolate chip cookie recipe.
I substituted corn syrup for the molasses, and used all shortening and no butter. I want to establish some type of baseline that I can then adapt from with future batches. Ideally, I'll get to a point with more butter and less shortening, but I didn't want to try too many different things first time out.
The basic recipe I created is below. I haven't baked these yet, but will probably try a couple later today (this will only be at the 24 hour point of aging) and will report back on hopefully delicious results.
Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
1/2 c light brown sugar, packed.
1/2 c butter flavored Crisco (aka "fat sticks")
1/2 c light corn syrup
1 tsp instant espresso powder
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
2 c flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
12 oz good quality dark chocolate chips (I like Ghiradelli or Whole Foods 365 brand)
Optional
Turbinado or other coarse sugar for topping.
Kosher or other large flake salt for topping.
What to do
Cream together sugar and shortening in a stand mixer (or with hand mixer). Add the corn syrup and continue mixing, then add the espresso powder. Add the egg and vanilla and mix until all is well blended. A quick note about the espresso powder. First, I love instant espresso powder and look for every opportunity to use it. Second, I think corn syrup is sort of uninspired and flat tasting, so I wanted to pep up the dough a bit. This amount of powder gave the dough a nice added depth, but not a strong coffee flavor.
You can just see the espresso flecks in the dough |
Wrap dough up well in plastic and age in refrigerator or freezer up to 36 hours.
Having not baked these yet, these instructions are not yet tested. When you are ready to bake, preheat oven to 350 (convection bake if you have that option). Scoop dough out into roughly walnut sized balls, and dip in the Turbindo sugar and then sprinkle with some sea salt (again the toppings are optional). Bake for 9-11 minutes (I think). Remove from oven and cool on racks.
I'll report back once I bake these and note any changes.
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Spent Grain Bread
Tom has embarked on his third batch of homebrew, a yet to be named IPA. Since he started making beer in September 2010 I've been wondering about using the spent grains for bread making. Since we are essentially making the liquid and baked version of the same thing (yeast, grain, water, sugar fermentation) it seemed like I should be able to make a bread out of what he leaves behind.
His current brew used crystal malt and toasted barley, and there were heaps left over. I did some research and found many other like-minded brewer/bakers. The recipe I ultimately adapted was from a site called Top Fermented. I made some adjustments here and there, with my final product being a large and lovely loaf.
Spent Grain Bread
Ingredients:
1 cup whole wheat flour
2-1/2 cups bread flour
1/2 cup spent grains
1/2 tsp kosher salt (after the tasting the bread, I'd go to at least a teaspoon next time)
1 Tbs yeast
1-1/4 (and a bit more) warm water
1 Tbs molasses
What to do:
Mix grains, flour, salt & yeast in the bowl of a stand mixer, fitted with the dough hook. Mix the molasses into the warm water and then add to the dry ingredients. Mix on low to medium low until dough comes together in a clump, pulling away from the edges of the bowl.
Put dough into oiled or buttered bowl to rise. As usual, mine went into the microwave which gets nice and toasty when the light underneath is on (my micro is mounted over my stove, so there is a light on the micro that illuminates the stove top).
Before the rise. You can see the grains in this dough. |
Top Fermented suggested to bake on a pizza stone (you can substitute a cookie sheet sprinkled with cornmeal) and putting a broiling pan on the next lower rack. When you add water to the preheated broiling pan the steam helps to create a good crust on the bread. I preheated my oven, pizza stone and broiling pan to 425 while I formed and shaped my dough, as described next.
Remove the risen dough from the bowl and, adding minimal flour, work the dough into the shape you want. I shaped mine into an oblong loaf. I put it back in the microwave for the final rise, about 30 minutes. The oven and stone preheated during this whole second rise.
The dough poofed up quite well in this second rise. Not a big surprise - the yeast to flour ratio in this recipe is pretty high. I made some slashes in the top of the loaf and slid it - on parchment - on to my hot pizza stone. I probably would have gotten a better bottom crust cooking directly on the stone, but it was easier to transfer the dough while it was on parchment. Next time I'd make 2 smaller loaves and skip the parchment. Once I put the bread in the oven, I poured about 1-1/2 cups of water into the broiler pan below the stone.
I baked the bread for 35 minutes and for once resisted temptation to sample it too soon. It helped that there was a Belgian Beer tasting that we wanted to go to, so I was physically removed from the good smelling, hot loaf.
Back home after the tasting - some good beers and one that had a bit too much cheese-funk taste for my liking - we cut into the loaf.
It was perfectly cooked, with a pretty tight crumb. The chew of the crust is a nice contrast with the soft bread. It smelled kind of beery (no surprise). I liked the taste of it, though I'd increase the salt to a full teaspoon next time. The salt level of this loaf does lend itself to both sweet and savory toppings. I had to sample a piece with butter, then with some honey.
I realize not everyone has spent grains hanging around their kitchen. I think you could try using leftover cooked grains - farro, oatmeal, quinoa. Alternatively you could leave them out all together, or throw some uncooked oatmeal in the mix.
I think this would be a good recipe if you are interested in trying bread baking, but leery of the time commitment and have a fear of bread impotence (i.e problems with the rise). As I mentioned, the yeast / flour ratio is high, which provides a Viagra like effect. My total hands-on time with this bread was about 10 minutes.
Unfortunately, I won't be able to have this bread with it's beer cousin unless I freeze some. I think the IPA is due to be ready in about 6 weeks. You can read all about that process at Tom's new blog Pitch the Yeast.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Peter Reinhart on bread
Do you know about TED? TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) is a non-profit devoted to ideas worth spreading. It's kind of hard to explain TED - they host a couple conferences each year where the speakers, "the world's most fascinating thinkers and doers," are challenged to offer inspiring, thought provoking talks, in 18 minutes or less.
The short videos found at the TED website inform me and inspire me. I found this one recently Peter Reinhart on Bread. Reinhart is master bread-maker, teacher & theologian. who talks about the process of bread becoming bread. This talk reminded me that bread is more than just yeast, flour and water - it's a process of transformation.
I hope you like it, if it doesn't inspire you to bake bread perhaps you'll be a just a bit happier the next time you eat some.
The short videos found at the TED website inform me and inspire me. I found this one recently Peter Reinhart on Bread
I hope you like it, if it doesn't inspire you to bake bread perhaps you'll be a just a bit happier the next time you eat some.
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Bark! (woof)
I've been thinking about chocolate bark for most of the week. Not sure what prompted it, other than we were out of the really good dark chocolate that we often have a wee piece of for dessert. While not much beats an unadulterated piece of really good dark chocolate, sometimes I like stuff in or on my chocolate to mix things up a little.
While I was coming up with ideas for my mix-ins, I pulled out The Flavor Bible, by Karen Page & Andrew Dornenburg. This is a great cooking resource - a bit hard to describe, so I'll let Amazon.com do it:
"An alphabetical index of flavors and ingredients, the book allows readers to search complimentary combinations for a particular ingredient (over 70 flavors go well with chickpeas; over 100 are listed for oranges), emphasizing the classics (chives with eggs, nutmeg with cream, sardines and olive oil, etc.)...The listings, combinations and short essays from various chefs on different matches are meant to inspire rather than dictate-there are, in fact, no recipes included. Instead, the volume is meant as a jumping-off point for those comfortable in the kitchen and eager to explore..."
We use this book a lot, since our favorite way of creating meals involves foraging at our local shops, farmer's markets, bakeries and fish markets for what is fresh. The book helps us tie things together, usually with some staples and basics that are already in our pantry. I appreciate some of the more off the beaten track combinations that this book offers.
But back to the Bark. I wound my way through The Flavor Bible, not necessarily using the chocolate section, but using an ingredient that I knew I wanted to put in my chocolate, for instance orange zest, and then seeing what some of the suggestions were. I made a long list of some Barks that I wanted to make, then Tom & I each picked one.
But back to the Bark. I wound my way through The Flavor Bible, not necessarily using the chocolate section, but using an ingredient that I knew I wanted to put in my chocolate, for instance orange zest, and then seeing what some of the suggestions were. I made a long list of some Barks that I wanted to make, then Tom & I each picked one.
I ended up making a dark chocolate bark with orange, candied ginger and white chocolate drizzle - this was my pick. Tom picked dark chocolate with cocoa nibs, coffee beans, espresso powder and topped with alder-smoked sea salt. I call this one "Bark with a Bite."
The basic recipe couldn't be easier, and it is oh-so adaptable.
Orange Ginger Chocolate Bark
Ingredients
6 oz good quality dark chocolate (at least 65% dark, 70-72% is preferred)
2 oz white chocolate
2 tbs orange zest
2 or 3 tbs chopped candied ginger
What to do
Zest the orange and set aside. Chop the ginger into small pieces. I used pieces that were maybe the size of a lentil (how's that for an obscure size reference?). You want the ginger to be big enough to see and taste, but not so big that it overpowers your bite of chocolate. Candied ginger is really sticky. I separated the chopped bits and put them on a cookie sheet and stuck it in the freezer so I could more easily sprinkle them over the chocolate when I was ready.
Chop the chocolate - I found that using a big sturdy knife, putting the point straight up and down right on the chocolate then using one of my heavy pans as a hammer cracked nice size shards off the chocolate and was a lot easier than trying to chop this brick of chocolate that I bought.
Melt the dark chocolate. I'm a fan of melting chocolate in the microwave, and setting it for a minute on about 60% power melted it slow enough and allowed me to check progress frequently. I think it took 2-3 minutes ultimately. Stir the orange zest into the chocolate, make sure to taste (yay!) to see if the orangey-ness is to your liking. Melt the white chocolate the same way.
Spread the dark chocolate on a cookie sheet covered with wax paper or a silicone baking sheet. I spread it out to just smaller than a sheet of paper. Use a spoon to drizzle the white chocolate (a la Jackson Pollack) over the dark chocolate. Sprinkle the ginger over the top of the chocolate. Put in fridge for 15-30 minutes to firm up, then snap random pieces off. I've seen recipes that suggest storing wrapped up in the fridge and others that don't suggest that. Mine is just in a tupperware in the pantry, though not for long I suspect.
Bark with a Bite - Coffee, Cocoa Nib Bark with Smoked Sea Salt
(It just occurred to me that if I put bits of bacon on top of this, it would count as breakfast)
Ingredients
6 oz dark chocolate (just like above)
2 - 3 tbs of cocoa nibs
3 tbs coffee beans, pulsed in 1 second increments, 2 or 3 times in a coffee grinder.
2 tsp instant espresso powder.
Smoked sea salt (any sea salt would do just fine, or no salt if you prefer. I like the way that salt intensifies the taste of chocolate, so I'm votin' for salt).
What to do
Melt the chocolate according to the instructions above. When the chocolate is melted, mix in the espresso powder until it dissolves. Mix in the nibs and coffee, reserving a little to add after you spread the chocolate out (if you want to, that is).
Spread the chocolate out on baking sheet prepared as above, again to just slightly smaller than a sheet of paper. I let the chocolate cool slightly before I put the salt on, thinking that the salt might either sink in and disappear, or it would melt in the warm chocolate. Chill in fridge 15-30 min., then snap and store. Oh yeah, and sample as you go!
Saturday, March 5, 2011
I'm a Lumberjack and I'm ok
Despite my professed love for the chocolate chip cookie, today's soft but crispy, sugar topped molasses cookie is right up there among my favorites. Don't get me started on how good this dough is in its uncooked state.
This cookie - the Lumberjack - came from an Old Sturbridge Village cookie recipe book that one of my sisters has had for probably close to 30 years. I've tweaked the original recipe a bit, updating the sugar topping (I use Tubinado for the top for bigger sugar crunches) and fiddled with other ingredients from time to time.
Ultimately this is just an easy, dependable, and most importantly, delicious recipe. Most ingredients are always in the pantry and the dough freezes exceptionally well.
Lumberjack Cookies
Adapted from an Old Sturbridge Village recipe book (and from Mary's recipe card)
Ingredients
1 cup white sugar
1 cup shortening (I use Crisco butter flavored. I know, not the purest of ingredients, but it works well)
1 cup dark molassess
2 eggs
4 cups flour, sifted (or not, if you don't feel like it)
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ground ginger
What to do
Cream together the sugar and shortening in stand mixer on medium high until light & fluffy. Reduce to lower speed and add molasses, then add eggs one at a time. Mix until well combined.
Sift or mix together dry ingredients, then slowly add to wet ingredients while mixer is on low. Mix until combined. Resist eating too much dough at this stage.
At this point, I like to refrigerate the dough for a while, it will make it easier to roll into little balls. I think you get a better cookie starting with colder dough. Putting this dough in the freezer for awhile speeds up your process.
When you freeze this dough, due to the shortening, it doesn't get rock solid. It is roll-able right out of the freezer. I'll get the oven preheating while I roll out the cookies and pop them in while still chilled. I think starting with frozen dough yields the best results for this cookie. Cooking time may need to be a bit longer when using frozen dough.
When you are ready to roll out the cookies, preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Roll dough into walnut-sized balls, then roll the balls in sugar. You can use plain white sugar, but I like a bigger grain sugar. I think the bigger grain sugar adds a better crunch and since these tend to be a darker sugar, adds a little toasty caramel taste to the cookie.
Bake on ungreased cookie sheet for 12-15 minutes. When done, the cookie will have some cracks in the top, but will still be a bit soft when tested. I like to bake these cookies using the convection bake option on my oven. I think it helps create a crisper crust with a soft inside. If I use convection, I'll reduce the cooking time a bit - maybe to 9 - 11 minutes.
Walnut sized cookies will yield about 4 dozen. I've used a small sized ice-cream scoop (about a 2 tsp volume) and got closer to 5-6 dozen.
Some successful modifications I've tried (I've tried these independently, not all in the same batch):
- Add a heavy teaspoon of vanilla extract
- Use a combination of honey and molasses (I think I used about 2/3 molasses and 1/3 honey)
- Add some instant espresso powder. Start small and taste frequently as you go. Be aware that the flavor will strengthen as the cookie bakes.
Some other ideas that I haven't tried:
- Toss in some raisins or other dried fruit, maybe some lemon or orange zest
- Add some nuts
- Use a combination of brown and white sugar.
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Blueberry Pie With Goat Cheese and Basil
Inspired by a pie of the same name, served at a diner featured on the Food Network, I decided to go recipe-less on this one. Well, not entirely true. I did followed a guide for the pie dough. I just found Michael Ruhlman's (of the bread conversion from last post) iPhone App - Ratio. It's based on his book of the same name and provides the basic culinary ratios for things like bread, pie and pasta dough, custard, etc. It's a pretty cool little app, letting you tap in different amounts of basic ingredients (flour, fat, sugar) and calculating the correct proportion of other basic ingredients.
I followed the standard proportions for pie dough - all proportions by weight not volume:
3 parts flour, with 1/2 tsp salt for every 10 -12 oz - I also added about 1 Tbs sugar.
2 parts fat - I made an all butter crust.
1 part water.
Lots of chilling involved in this crust. About 30 min in the fridge after the dough is first formed, 60 minutes once in the pie plate, another 30 once the dough is trimmed and the edges crimped. The result was a fantastic, flaky crust.
But now, it gets really interesting. Blueberries, goat cheese & fresh basil. I really had no idea of the proportions for this, so I just guessed. Here's what I did. Oh, and this was for a 6 inch pie, a wee pie as I like to call it.
1 pint blueberries
About (maybe just under) 2 oz of goat cheese
About a 1/4 cup of heavy cream
Just under 1/4 cup of light brown sugar
10 - 12 fresh basil leaves, chopped.
I mixed the goat cheese (let it soften first), cream and brown sugar together until it had the consistency of a loose frosting. Added the basil next, then the blueberries, mixing enough to coat the berries without crushing them. In hindsight, I think some cornstarch mixed in before the berries would have helped create a firmer filling. Or maybe tapioca pearls?
The filling got mounded up in the chilled dough and topped with a oatmeal crumb topping. Here I followed a basic Fanny Farmer recipe. I knew that Fanny's recipe would give me more topping that I needed for the pie and more than I needed to snack on, so I pared that down as well.
For my oatmeal crumb topping improv, I ended up with something on the order of:
1/2 stick unsalted butter - room temp to coolish
A bit less than 3/4 c of light brown sugar, flour and old fashioned oats
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4-1/2 c slivered almonds
Pinch o' salt
This is easy to mix up using a pastry cutter. You are going for a mixture of a range of chunk sizes.
I made a little pie-lette, with my extra dough and filling |
This was a terrific pie. The goat cheese gave it a bit of tang, but I'd say the basil was the real star. It was just enough to remind you of its presence, but it didn't overpower at all.
This pie got me thinking about other savory/sweet mash ups to try with some fresh herbs mixed in. Good pie experimenting and eating ahead!
A bit oozy, but very tasty! |
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