Saturday, April 14, 2012

Chocolate Chip Cookies with Caramel Bits

Caramel Chocolate Chip Cookies - baked April 14, 2012

Remember the Chocolate Chip Cookie Tarts that I made from The Sweet Spot's blog?  I had some leftover dough so I baked it off today and brought them to a family get together.  Turns out they're pretty good as regular cookies too.  Make sure not to overbake them.  These are best when the edges are golden brown and the middles are just barely baked.  They'll fall in the middle and set when they cool.  If they're overbaked, they'll be dry and more cakey than chewy.

A public service announcement on the caramel bits: you can find them in 11-oz bags at Target in the baking aisle. (Not sure if grocery stores sell them too since I rarely buy groceries at a real grocery store anymore but they might.)  I mention this because I've had at least 2 friends bake recipes from my blog that use the caramel bits but they couldn't find them so they ended up buying (some kind of) caramels and cutting them into bits.  In theory, that should work too but you don't want the super-chewy or hard caramels that will become really hard after they're baked and cooled.  Not to mention cutting up caramels into bit-size pieces is much too time-consuming.  Much easier to head to Target and fork over $2 for the bag of caramel bits and save yourself the time.


Friday, April 13, 2012

French Toast Bread Pudding

French Toast Bread Pudding - made April 7, 2012 from Small Batch Baking by Debby Maugans Nakos (book #208)

I haven't forgotten my baking challenge; I've just been getting distracted by all the recipes I've been pinning from other blogs :).  But I'm close to being done and I'm looking forward to wrapping it up.  This is one of the last books I need to bake from and since I was disappointed by how my last bread pudding experiment turned out, I tried this one as it seemed like what I was getting at with my snickerdoodle bread pudding attempt.  This one had you cutting the bread into cubes (challah works best, I like the one from Trader Joe's), drizzling with melted butter, tossing with cinnamon sugar and baking in the oven for a few minutes to "stale" or crisp the bread.  Then you soak it in the custard mixture and bake.  This turned out really well.  The top gets crisp (don't overbake) for a nice texture contrast and inside is the perfect bread pudding/custard combination.


Funny thing about bread pudding is it looks unremarkable in appearance.  But, taste-wise, it's one of my favorite desserts.  Probably because bread is my kryptonite more than sugar is and bread pudding incorporates one of my favorite breads: challah.  The nice thing about it is I can make it in small portions and enjoy it in moderation.


I changed the recipe directions slightly based on my past experiments with bread pudding and what I think would work better.  The key is giving the bread enough time to soak in the custard. Otherwise the bread pudding can come out too dry.  It's also better to err on the side of having less bread than too much or there won't be enough custard to soak in and again the bread pudding will be dry.  Lastly, of course, don't overbake.

For the Bread
1 tablespoon sugar
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 cups stale soft-crusted French bread or challah
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

For the Pudding
1 large egg
Yolk of 1 large egg
¾ cup whole milk
¼ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1.     Preheat oven to 350°F.  Spray 2-3 ramekins lightly with nonstick cooking spray.  Place on a baking sheet and set aside.
2.     Prepare the bread: mix together sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl.  Spread out the bread cubes on a rimmed baking sheet and drizzle the melted butter over  them; toss to coat.  Sprinkle the cinnamon sugar and toss to coat.  Bake the bread, stirring the cubes once, until lightly toasted, 12-15 minutes.  Remove from oven and let cool completely.
3.     Make the pudding: whisk the egg, egg yolk, milk, sugar, cinnamon and vanilla in a medium-size mixing bowl.  Add the bread cubes and stir to coat the bread.  Press down on the bread lightly with a wooden spoon to submerge it.  Let the mixture stand, pressing on the bread occasionally to keep it submerged until the bread is saturated, about 15-20 minutes.
4.     Spoon the mixture into the prepared ramekins, dividing it evenly between them.  Bake until the puddings are puffed and set, about 30-35 minutes.  Remove from the oven, transfer the ramekins to a wire rack and let them cool for 10 minutes.  Unmold onto serving plates and serve, garnished with confectioners’ sugar and/or maple syrup if desired.

 

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Toffee and White Chocolate Chunk Cookies

Toffee and White Chocolate Chunk Cookies - made April 6, 2012 from That Skinny Chick Can Bake! blog

Super quick post as I'm short on time this week.  Made these cookies from That Skinny Chick Can Bake's blog (and she really can :)).  Mine didn't come out with the same appearance as hers, probably because I like to underbake my cookies, but I really liked these.  It's a nice brown sugar cookie with white chocolate, toffee and coconut add-ins.  The edges were crisp and the middles were chewy, always the hallmark of a good cookie in my book.  Click on the title for the recipe.


Monday, April 9, 2012

Chocolate Chip Caramel Toffee Cookie Cups

Chocolate Chip Caramel Toffee Cookie Cups - made April 4, 2012 from The Sweet Spot blog


I finally remembered the pan I bought at Sur La Table was called a dessert cup pan.  Basically, it looks like a 6-cavity muffin tin but instead of a muffin shape, there's a dome in the middle of each cavity so that when you fill it with batter or dough, bake and invert the baked product, you'll end up with a well in the center of each one. Which is perfect for something like this - a chocolate chip caramel toffee cookie cup with a nice little dip in the middle to cradle a scoop of vanilla ice cream.  I used the recipe from The Sweet Spot's blog (click on the recipe title to go to the recipe) but any chocolate chip cookie recipe will do.  Just let it cool for a few minutes in the pan first though before you invert or else the cookies will be too hot and could fall apart.


I like to serve these when they've been 10-12 minutes out of the oven and are still warm but not hot.  It won't be too hot to melt the ice cream on contact but the caramel bits and chocolate chips will still be melt-y enough to add some gooeyness.  It's not bad at room temperature either, which I discovered, all in the name of research.....after a 4-mile run at the gym (there goes that workout, haha).  So yummy.  And if you don't have a dessert cup pan, never fear, you can bake these in any ramekin or even muffin tins and follow the same principle.  Just don't forget the ice cream.

Editing to add: since there was some interest in the dessert pan I used, here it is on amazon - Dessert Cup Pan

  The Sweet Spot What's cooking, love?

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Cobbler

Apple Cobbler - made April 2, 2012 adapted from Perfect Light Desserts by Nick Malgieri

I almost didn't put up this post.  It wasn't very good and I didn't want it to take up space on my blog, lol.  But I don't just put up the good recipes, I put up all recipes I try and critique them honestly so I will compromise, admit I made this and keep it brief.

"Real" cobbler, as opposed to crisps, fools, grunts, etc is typically defined by having biscuit dough baked on top.  In culinary school, we made a terrific cobbler and my favorite part was the dough baked on top which was more like a pie dough than a biscuit dough.  Not so with this one.  The dough part was definitely more like a biscuit, heavier and less sweet than what you'd use for a good strawberry shortcake and not as good as or flaky like an actual biscuit.  It was just bread-y without being good bread.  Nah.

Cobbler Topping
2 cups cake flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup sugar
1 large egg
1 cup low-fat buttermilk
Sugar for sprinkling the top crust

Fruit of your choice for cobbler, lightly sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon
  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
  2. Sift the dry ingredients together in a bowl.
  3. Beat the egg and combine with the buttermilk.
  4. Pour over dry ingredients and mix with rubber spatula (do not overmix).
  5. Drop large spoonfuls over fruit mixture in ceramic baking dish and smooth top.
  6. Bake for 30-35 minutes or until topping is a golden color and the fruit is bubbling.
  7. Serve warm with ice cream.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Sweet Buttermilk Banana Cake

Sweet Buttermilk Banana Cake - made March 31, 2012 from Go Ahead Take a Bite's blog

Remember when I said the days are going by too fast and wow, it's already April?  That goes double when I see expiration dates on my perishable ingredients, including buttermilk that I always seem to race to use before it expires.  I mark how fast the time flies by how quickly those expirations come and go.  I had pinned this recipe (click on the recipe title to go to the original recipe itself) shortly after getting on Pinterest as I knew "someday" I would be in the position of having to use up buttermilk and I'd need some recipes to test out on a dime.

I love banana cake and am still on a quest to make one that's similar in texture to my favorite banana cake from Icing On the Cake Bakery in Los Gatos, CA.  Theirs is so fluffy.  Seriously, I want to get a job there just to learn how to make their banana cake.  (Obsess much, yes, I do).

I changed two things from this recipe though.  The original recipe called for shortening.  I don't know why but I'm always reluctant to use shortening in cakes.  I prefer butter for more flavor.  The weird thing is I have no hang up about using oil in cakes.  But if I can substitute butter for shortening, I do.  And I did.  I also went with a standard cream cheese frosting because that's my preferred frosting with banana cake.  I thought this cake was pretty good.  It was moist and the texture was similar to a pound cake although not quite as dense.  Still not the fluffy texture of Icing on the Cake though so my quest continues.  Although maybe I would've gotten fluffier results if I had used shortening?  I may have to try it again and stay more faithful to the original recipe.

Cream Cheese Frosting
4 ounces cream cheese, softened
2 ounces (4 tablespoons or 1/2 stick) butter, softened
1 teaspoon vanilla
2-3 cups confectioners' sugar

Cream the cream cheese and butter together until well combined.  Add vanilla extract.  Add confectioners' sugar, 1/2 cup at a time, until frosting is the taste and consistency desired.  Use immediately.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Nutella Rice Krispies Easter Baskets

Nutella Rice Krispies Easter Baskets - made March 31, 2012, inspiration from Chef in Training and Will Cook for Smiles blogs

Easter snuck on me this year.  Actually, all the special occasion days have: pi day (didn't make a pie), St Patrick's Day (didn't make anything green), Mardi Gras (no King Cake - okay, I probably wouldn't have made one anyway but still....), and so on.  It didn't help that we've had rain off and on for the past 3 weeks and it's been more winter than spring whereas winter was more spring than winter.  So my seasonal timetables are all messed up.  And now it's April.  Yikes.  Okay, I am surfacing long enough to realize ahead of time that Easter is this Sunday.  When I was a kid, we didn't do the whole Easter bunny/egg hunt thing at my house.  Easter was more about Jesus and dressing a little more nicely on Easter Sunday in new spring clothes.  As an adult, Easter is still about Jesus for me but I also enjoy a good chocolate egg here and there, primarily the Cadbury mini eggs with the hard shell coating and milk chocolate inside.  I also like the Cadbury caramel eggs with the liquid caramel inside a milk chocolate shell.  Alas, however, I am indifferent at best, dislike at worst, all other Easter candy.  The ones I'm indifferent to are all the candies you can get at any other holiday except at Easter, they're pastel colored and egg shaped.  But Peeps?  Oh no.  They're marshmallows without rice krispies.  And dyed marshmallows at that.  Plus they come in weird shapes.  I don't enjoy the visual of sinking my teeth into a gummy, stretchy, dyed bunny head or a baby chick; no real self-respecting bunny or chick would actually be any of those colors nor would I bite their heads off either.  Sorry, Easter bunny, not in my kitchen.

But I do like to pay homage to my annual bag of Cadbury mini eggs.  Last year for Easter, I made Chocolate Easter baskets using pretzels coated with chocolate to form a mini basket for my favorite Easter candy.  This year, I took inspiration from two different blogs, Will Cook for Smiles using the rice krispie treat recipe to form baskets and Chef in Training's blog for the nutella addition.  This is a really simple and easy recipe to make.  For the basket shape, I used a pan I got from Sur La Table that makes a well in the center.  But you don't need any fancy pans to make baskets.  If you don't want to freeform shape baskets by hand, turn a mini muffin tin over and shape the warm rice krispie mixture around each cavity.  Then gently slip off when they've set a bit.  You can also use a regular size muffin tin if you want a bigger size basket. If you have kids, this is a fun recipe to make with them, especially for little ones.

Click on the blog links above to go to the original posts - I've made some slight modifications to the recipe and instructions below as I found that adding the nutella into the melted marshmallow/butter mixture almost made the mixture seize and made it difficult to incorporate enough rice krispies into it.  So I suggest warming up the nutella first to get it to blend more easily without having to cook the marshmallow mixture more than necessary.  If you overcook the marshmallows, your Rice Krispie treats will get too hard when they cool.

5-6 cups Rice Krispies (I never measure, just add however much you can get in there)
1 10.5 ounce bag mini marshmallows
1/4 cup butter
1 cup Nutella
  1. Melt butter and mini marshmallows over low heat until just barely melted, stirring constantly. 
  2. Warm Nutella in the microwave at 30-second intervals until it's liquid but not too hot.  Add to the barely melted marshmallow mixture and stir to incorporate.  Take off the heat and add Rice Krispies.
  3. Work quickly to form the baskets using a turned-over mini muffin pan.  Shape gently, let cool and turn right side up.  When completely cool, fill with your favorite Easter candy.