Sunday, December 16, 2012

Quick Biscuits with Maple Butter

These are the biscuits that I made with the dreamy cream scones to use up my leftover Thanksgiving whipped cream and I had very low expectations for them because the picture in the NYTimes made them look just like any other lesser biscuit. Low and flat and not particularly flaky. But then I made them with butter and cream, not margarine and grain milk. and you better believe these were so packed with butter and cream that it was like eating a flaky, salty stick of butter and if you are into that thing, well, then you can imagine it being pretty amazing. So much for being "well."

We didn't try out the whipped maple butter, but trust me, these don't need it.

From the NYTimes Well Thanksgiving blog 2012:
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/11/12/health/20121111_vegetarian-thanksgiving.html#Quick_Biscuits_With_Maple_%E2%80%9CButter%E2%80%9D

Ingredients:


For the biscuits:
2 C. all-purpose flour, plus extra for work surface
1 T. baking powder
3/4 tsp. salt
1/2 C. vegan margarine... or ahem butter...
3/4 C. soy, almond or rice milk... or real milk, or cream...

For the "maple butter":
1 C. vegan margarine, at room temperature
1/4 C. maple syrup

Directions:


1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. 

2. Whisk together flour, baking powder and salt in a large bowl. Add margarine and cut it roughly into flour using a pastry cutter, until mixture is the texture of coarse meal with a few larger margarine lumps. Add nondairy milk and stir with a wooden spoon until just combined. Do not overwork.

3. Transfer the dough to a lightly floured surface and pat into an oblong shape, about 1 inch thick. Using a 2 1/2-inch floured cookie or biscuit cutter, cut the biscuits out and place them on a baking sheet (or just cut them into wedges). Brush the tops lightly with melted margarine and bake for about 12 to 15 minutes, or until they begin to turn golden. Remove biscuits from oven immediately and transfer to a wire rack to cool.

5. Make the maple “butter.” In a mixing bowl, using a whisk or electric mixer, whip margarine with maple syrup until light and fluffy. Refrigerate until serving.

Dreamy Cream Scones

The last new scone recipe I tried was so bad I didn't even post it. The scones were lumpy and soggy and gross and I gave up on new scone recipes figuring, as you all figure, that I have enough. But then came this day after Thanksgiving when I had this exact amount of whipping cream I had to use, and this and another scone/biscuit recipe were both circulating the air, and the Robber was hungry, and such came to such and I made these with chopped fresh cranberries in them and then they were what every scone should be--  more biscuity rather than cakey, but not dry-- not too sweet-- and I ended up buying more cream and making them twice. The end.

Note: For the add-in I chopped my cranberries in half and then coated in sugar before adding to the dough.

An old Smitten Kitchen recipe:
http://smittenkitchen.com/blog/2006/11/dream-a-little-dream-of-scone/

Ingredients:

2 C. all purpose flour
1 T. baking powder
3 T. sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
5 T. chilled, unsalted butter, cut into 1/4-inch cubes
1 C. heavy cream
1/2 - 3/4 C. currants, cranberries, etc.

Directions:

1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 425°F.

2. In a medium sized mixing bowl, combine flour, baking powder, sugar and salt. 

3. Using a pastry cutter, quickly cut the butter into your flour mixture until it resembles coarse meal, with a few slightly larger butter lumps. Stir in add-in ingredient (currants, etc.) 

4. Stir in heavy cream with a rubber spatula or fork until dough begins to form, about 30 seconds.

5. Transfer dough and all dry, floury bits to countertop and knead dough by hand just until it comes together into a rough, sticky ball, 5 to 10 seconds. Form dough into a round disc and flatten gently until about 1-1.25" thick. Cut into 6 wedges.

6. Place wedges on a baking sheet covered with parchment paper and bake until scone tops are light brown, 12 to 15 minutes. Cool on wire rack for at least 10 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Pear Pomegranate Pie

I've had this recipe sitting in my to-bake box since 2009 when it first came out on the NYTimes. I know a few other people had tried it out, but it somehow never made the priority list, especially as I have two other reliable, delicious pear pies under my belt. In a pie frenzy prior to Thanksgiving, however, I wouldn't rest until I had made it. I used Odwalla pomegranate limeade for the filling, and ended up not quite following the instructions as far as the molasses was concerned. In the end, two of the three people I shared it with raved about it, but the Robber (the third, and perhaps most honest) said, "I can't tell if it is supposed to taste sophisticated or if it is a little bit burned." And in the end I have to agree. It wasn't bad. It was interesting. But I think unless it is the wintertime I'll be sticking to my other pear pie recipes for now.

Note: I don't see the point of ever pre-cooking pears for a pie. They soften beautifully and when I attempted to pre-cook them for this pie and for a scone recipe a while back (which I didn't blog because it failed so epically), I found the pears too be way too mushy and to release too much fluid, whereas using them raw produced a tender, less soupy product. If I make this again, I will disregard the instructions to pre-cook, omit the butter, and just stir my pears up in the molasses, sugar and spices. 

Originally from the NYTimes, but my link is from PieLoveYou:
http://pieloveyou.blogspot.com/2010/12/pear-pomegranate-pie-47.html

Ingredients:


For the pomegranate molasses:
4 C. pomegranate juice
1/2 C. sugar
1 T. lemon juice (omit if using Odwalla pomegranate limeade)

For the crust:
1 1/4 C. all-purpose flour
1/4 tsp. salt
10 T. unsalted high-fat butter, chilled and cut into pieces
2-5 T. ice water

For the filling:
4 Bosc pears, peeled and cored
4 Anjou pears, peeled and cored (can also use Bartlett or red)
6 T. pomegranate molasses
3 T. unsalted butter
3 T. tapioca (I used flour)
3/4 C. light brown sugar
1/2 tsp. ground ginger
1/4 tsp. salt

Directions:


For the pomegranate molasses:
1. Place the pomegranate juice, sugar and lemon juice in a saucepan set over medium heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the sugar has completely dissolved.
2. Reduce the heat to med-low and cook until the mixture has reduced to 1 1/2 C., about 50 min.
3. Remove from heat and allow to cool in saucepan for 30 min. Transfer to glass jar and cool completely before covering and refrigerating for up to 6 months.

For the crust:
1. Mix together flour and salt. Cut in (or use a food processor to combine) butter until small pieces are formed. Add ice water 1 T. at a time until dough just holds together.
2. Form dough into a ball, wrap with plastic and refrigerate for at least 1 hour.

For the filling and assembly:
1. Preheat oven to 425F.
2. Slice pears. Bring 3 T. molasses to boil in large skillet over med-high heat. Simmer for approx 2 min until molasses thickens.
3. Arrange half the pears in a single layer in the skillet. Add 1 1/2 T. butter to pears. Cook, turning occasionally, until pears are well caramelized on all sides, about 5 minutes.
4. Scrape pears and molasses into a bowl. Add tapioca and toss to combine. Repeat cooking process with remaining molasses, butter and pears. Add the second batch of pears to the first.
5. Stir in sugar, ginger and salt.
6. Roll out crust. Add pear filling to bottom crust in pie plate and the add top crust either as a complete crust or as a lattice.
7. Place pie on on a foil-lined, rimmed baking sheet and bake for 15 min.
8. Reduce the heat to 350F and bake for an additional 30-45 minutes until pears are tender and crust is golden brown. Serve after the pie has cooled at least 30 min. 

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Bob Andy Pie

Like milk in a pie, and nothing else. I made this just because. It went down like nothing and somehow emotionally, if not physically satisfied. I would say the chances of this getting made again are pretty low given the sheer number of fabulous pie choices, but I wouldn't count it out on a cloudy day.

From Recipe Girl:
http://threemanycooks.com/recipes/sweet-treats/bob-andy-pie-2/

Ingredients:


1 9-inch pie shell, unbaked

3 large eggs
2 C. whole milk
1 C. granulated sugar
2 T. flour
2 tsp. ground cinnamon (prolly used at least three plus some nutmeg)
1/2 tsp. salt

Directions:


1. Adjust oven rack to lowest position and heat oven to 325 degrees. 

2. Crack eggs in a medium bowl; brush pie shell with a little of the egg whites. 

3.  Whisk eggs until thoroughly mixed; whisk in milk. 

4. Mix sugar, flour, cinnamon, and salt in a separate bowl, then whisk into milk mixture.

5. Set pie shell on oven rack and pour filling into shell. Bake until custard has set and crust is golden, about 50 minutes.

6. Cool and serve room temperature or chilled.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Deep Dish Dulce de Leche Apple Pie

This year for the Relief Society Broadcast the Stake provided pie afterwards and, to my surprise, the pie they served was actually wonderfully delicious! It was the apple pie with a kind of caramel matrix/sauce with it and even though it must have been commercially made to feed so many I loved it and it has left me with a hankering to try making something like that myself. I found this recipe in a round about internet way, and when we had dinner with our friends the Perrys this weekend they requested it off of my extensive pie list. And while the pie was delicious, there is no doubt about that, I found the caramel a little lacking and thus am still on the perfect caramel apple pie recipe hunt. Should you know of one, find me the recipe so I can try it. If you don't have one, starting here will never disappoint but only make your mouth very happy.

P.S. I used Granny Smith and Fuji apples for my pie, and it was very sweet and I almost think I should have used straight Granny Smith so there would be more tart contrast of the apples against the sweetness of the caramel.

P.P.S. See below link for how to make the homemade dulce de leche.

From Recipe Girl:
http://www.recipegirl.com/2007/10/04/deep-dish-dulce-de-leche-apple-pie/

Ingredients:

1/2 C. brown sugar
1/3 C. granulated sugar
1/3 C. cornstarch (I used flour)
1/4 tsp. cinnamon (I used 1 T.)
1/4 tsp. freshly grated nutmeg
Pinch of salt (I also added a pinch of cloves)

7 to 8 cups of peeled, sliced apples
1/2 C. dulce de leche (canned or homemade)
2 T. apple cider (I used cranberry juice)
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract

Double crust for 9-inch pie
Egg white mixed with 1 teaspoon of water
Coarse sugar for top, optional

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 400F.

2. In a small bowl, mix sugars, cornstarch, spices and salt.

3. In a large bowl, toss together apples, dulce de leche, apple cider and vanilla extract. Add dry ingredients and toss to combine.

4. Roll out pie dough as large as possible keeping it a good thickness. Line deep dish pie pan with crust and let it hang over the sides. Brush with egg white mixture. Add filling and spread out evenly.

5. Roll out second crust and place on top of pie. Crimp edges together in a decorative fashion to seal. Brush with egg white mixture. Cut a few holes in the top crust for venting. Sprinkle with coarse sugar, if using.

6. Bake for 30 minutes, then turn the temperature down to 375F and bake for another 30 minutes.

7. Remove pie from oven and cool on rack for several hours to allow filling to set.

Momofuku Crack Pie

This pie was nominated best pie in New York City in 2009, which is when I ran across it at pieloveyou and thought certainly I will have to make this pie for myself. How could you not make something called a crack pie if you are living in San Francisco? I mean really? Except that it requires that you first make cookies, and then crust, and then pie... and you know that all is too much even if your name is Momofuku. I put it off and put it off and put it off until finally in a bit of residency whatnot stress-relief I needed to be heroic in my pie making and vowed to make it. I only made half the recipe for the cookie and the pie, which I will record here, but the original recipe makes two pies. This pie is actually as delicious as people make it out to be-- I would call it salted caramel in a pie more than a pie-- and worth the effort but very rich. Don't bother whipping cream or getting icecream to serve with it, it packs all the punches on it's own!

Originally printed in the LATimes but comes to me from PieLoveYou:
http://pieloveyou.blogspot.com/2010/05/momofuku-crack-pie-22.html

Ingredients for the cookie:
1/3 C. all-purpose flour
1/16 tsp. baking powder
1/16 tsp. baking soda
1/8 tsp. salt
1/4 C. softened butter
1/6 C. light brown sugar
1 1/2 T. white sugar
1/2 beaten egg
1/2 C. rolled oats
 
Directions for the cookie:
1. Heat the oven to 375 degrees.
2. In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.
3. In the bowl of a stand mixer using the paddle attachment, or in a large bowl using an electric mixer, beat the butter, brown sugar and sugar until light and fluffy.
4. Whisk the egg into the butter mixture until fully incorporated.
5. Stir in the flour mixture, a little at a time, until fully combined. Stir in the oats until incorporated.
6. Spread the mixture onto a 9-inch-by-13-inch baking sheet and bake until golden brown and set, about 20 minutes. Remove from heat and cool to the touch on a rack. Crumble the cooled cookie to use in the crust.
 
Ingredients for the crust:
1 crumbled cookie recipe
2 T. butter
2 tsp. brown sugar
1/16 tsp. salt
 
Directions for the crust:
1. Combine the crumbled cookie, butter, brown sugar and salt in a food processor and pulse until evenly combined and blended (a little of the mixture clumped between your fingers should hold together). 
2. Press the crust into a 10" pie plate to form an even layer along the bottom and sides. Set the prepared crust aside while you prepare the filling.

Ingredients for the filling:
3/4 C. sugar
1/2 C. light brown sugar
1/8 tsp. salt
1/6 C. milk powder
1/2 C. butter, melted
1/2 C. heavy cream
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
4 egg yolks
 
Directions for filling and pie assembly:
1. Preheat the oven to 350F.
2. In a large bowl, whisk together the sugar, brown sugar, salt and milk powder. Whisk in the melted butter, then whisk in the heavy cream and vanilla.
3. Gently whisk in the egg yolks, being careful not to add too much air.
4. Scoop the filling into the prepared pie crust gently.
5. Bake the pie at 350F for 15 minutes, then reduce the heat to 325 degrees and bake until the filling is slightly jiggly and golden brown (similar to a pecan pie), about 10 minutes. Remove the pies and cool on a rack.
6. Refrigerate the cooled pie until well chilled. Serve the pie cold.  

Nutmeg Maple Cream Pie

I know everyone else made this pie a million years ago when it first came out in the New York Times, and I've had it on my list to make for at least two years now, but with a title like "Nutmeg Maple Cream" it's not as compelling as anything chocolate or peach, you know? But this last weekend we had some cream and not much else, and I let the Robber choose a pie off my unmade list, and that all led to us finally making this pie and you know what? It was delicious and so easy to make. Seriously really delicious. Like a perfect flan, in a pie crust. Who knew? I wouldn't make it again in the summer, you know, when there are peaches around, but I would make it in the winter and be glad every time.

Of course I tripled the nutmeg and threw in a splash of cinnamon. So I'll put the increased number here and you can reduce it if you want. I used my mother's pie crust and that was good, but I also think the smoky almond and vanilla wafer crust from the Creamy Peach Tart recipe would also work well with this.

From the NYTimes (why why why aren't they having their Vegetarian Thanksgiving feature this year???)
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/15/dining/155crex.html?_r=0

Ingredients:

¾ C. maple syrup
2¼ C. heavy cream
4 egg yolks
1 whole egg
¼ tsp. salt
1 T. freshly grated nutmeg
1/4 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 pre-baked 9-inch pie crust of your choice

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 300 degrees. In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, reduce maple syrup by a quarter, 5 to 7 minutes. Stir in cream and bring to a simmer. Remove from heat. 

2. In a medium bowl, whisk together egg yolks and egg. Whisking constantly, slowly add cream mixture to eggs. Strain mixture through a fine-mesh sieve into a cup or bowl with pouring spout. Stir in salt, nutmeg and vanilla.

3. Pour filling into crust and transfer to a rimmed baking sheet. Bake until pie is firm to touch but jiggles slightly when moved, about 1 hour. Let cool to room temperature before serving.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Deb's Favorite Brownies

In a moment of extreme weakness during my medicine rotation, when I needed something to keep going, I made these brownies and put cut up Andes over one half and stuck Rolos all over in the second half and they were probably mostly sinful, but they hit the spot, you know?

The Robber really liked these and I thought well they tried too hard to like brownies you would make from a mix and I thought honestly, if you are going to make brownies from scratch good heavens they should not be like the box! But then the box brownies have their way of just being gooey chocolate in a not elegant, but satisfying way, so I ate a bunch of these anyway and figured why not just give in and enjoy it. Wouldn't call these my personal favorite, but they are very easy to make and in a pinch, are much better quality than the box. 

From Smitten Kitchen:
http://smittenkitchen.com/blog/2012/08/my-favorite-brownies/

Ingredients:


3 oz. unsweetened chocolate, roughly chopped
1 stick unsalted butter, plus extra for pan
1 1/3 C. granulated sugar
2 large eggs
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1/2 tsp. flaky sea salt or 1/4 tsp. table salt
2/3 C. all-purpose flour 

Directions:


1. Heat oven to 350°F. Butter and flour an 8×8-inch square baking pan.

2. In a medium heatproof bowl over gently simmering water, melt chocolate and butter together until 
only a couple unmelted bits remain. Off the heat, stir until smooth and fully melted. 

3. Whisk in sugar, then eggs, one at a time, then vanilla and salt. Stir in flour with a spoon or flexible spatula and scrape batter into prepared pan, spread until even. 

4. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out batter-free. If desired, dust the brownies with powdered sugar before serving.

Raspberry Buttermilk Cake

So all summer long I've basically just been stealing off Smitten Kitchen, and particularly earlier in the summer I got on a kick of making her raved about snacking cakes-- the rhubarb snacking cake, the blueberry boy bait, and most recently the dimply plum cake-- only to be an ungrateful beggar and go on to say how ho-hum I felt about them. Two more of her standards remained in my box of recipes to try, and I don't know that I would have tried this one except that we had a) raspberries and b) buttermilk and c) the need for an easy dessert for dinner with friends. Even with that alignment of stars, it was still with begrudgement that I made this cake. And then--- then! It was actually really good. All she said it would be. All worthy of starting the snack cake craze. So I guess I am reconciled to Smitten Kitchen and her snack cakes and after all, and who knows, I might go about trying the strawberry snacking cake before this summer is through after all. That is, if I can get away from this one. We still have raspberries and more buttermilk, and the Robber, with his big Robber eyes, has been asking for more.

Originally from Gourmet Magazine 2009, adapted by Smitten Kitchen:
http://smittenkitchen.com/blog/2009/05/raspberry-buttermilk-cake/

Ingredients:


1 C. all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 stick unsalted butter, softened
2/3 C. plus 1 1/2 T. sugar, divided
1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
1/2 tsp. finely grated lemon zest (or the rind of one smaller lemon)
1 large egg
1/2 C. well-shaken buttermilk
1 C. (about 6 oz.) fresh raspberries 

Directions:


1. Preheat oven to 400°F with rack in middle. Butter and flour a 9-inch round cake pan.

2. Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt and set aside. 

3. In a larger bowl, beat butter and 2/3 C. sugar with an electric mixer at medium-high speed until pale and fluffy, then beat in vanilla and zest, if using. Add egg and beat well.

4. At low speed, mix in flour mixture in three batches, alternating with buttermilk, beginning and ending with flour, and mixing until just combined. 

5. Spoon batter into cake pan, smoothing top. Scatter (see note) raspberries evenly over top and sprinkle with remaining 1 1/2 T. sugar (I used cinnamon sugar.)

6. Bake until cake is golden and a wooden pick inserted into center comes out clean, 20 to 25 minutes. Cool in pan 10 minutes, then turn out onto a rack and cool to warm, 10 to 15 minutes more. Invert onto a plate.

Note: All the raspberries are downward will be swallowed by the batter and sink to the bottom. The ones where the o is upward stay empty, like cups, and swim closer to the top. Both are delicious.

Peach Cobbler Scones

In addition to the North Fork scones I also made these scones this weekend, but saved them for the Robber who loves peach pie so much that I thought he might love these scones too. And he did! They ended up sitting on the counter, formed but unbaked, for several hours so I don't think ours rose very high and also because I used baking powder with aluminum yes, the peaches did turn grey within 48 hours, but the Robber happily consumed them. What I liked about these was that the dough itself was not very sweet so it really did feel like a cobbler and not so much like a cake and had a nice salty-sweet contrast which is the Robber's love. Definitely worth a re-visit next summer when the peaches are back in season!

From Annie's Eats:
http://annies-eats.com/2012/08/13/peach-cobbler-scones/

Ingredients:


North Fork Table & Inn Scones

Let's just face it: I have come to expect scones as my every day breakfast food. Now that I am eating at the hospital cafeteria for most of my meals-- including breakfast-- I have a lot more options. Yogurt. Eggs. Bacon. Bagels. Croissants. But what do I go to still on an every day basis? Yes, the scone-- although the hospital scones are not quite as tasty as some of the ones I've made. Anyway. But the other thing I like about scones is that I can make a batch for a night when I am on call and they are good for dinner when I'm coming on, for a midnight snack, for a 1 am snack, for a 2 am snack.... and then they are still good to share with the morning team coming on. Hence my scone craze is still alive and well despite my new lifestyle.

Here are some scones I made for my most recent night shift. They were alright. By all standards I'm sure they are amazing, but for me-- just alright. I think what I want out of a scone is changing. I want less chewiness and either more flakiness or more cakeiness but not chewy. And these were chewy. Perhaps because I made them with dried apricots and not with raspberries like Deb of Smitten Kitchen did? So take it for what you will, you will most likely find them amazingly delicious, unless you have made all the other scones on this scone-filled blog, then you will find them delicious but not stand-out-ish.

From Smitten Kitchen:
http://smittenkitchen.com/blog/2008/09/the-north-fork-and-its-scones/

Ingredients:

2 3/4 C. pastry or all-purpose flour
1/4 C. sugar
1 T. aluminum-free baking powder*
1 tsp. baking soda
12 T. butter, in 1/2-inch cubes
1 C. golden raisins plus 1 T. caraway seeds -or- 1 C. fresh fruit of your choice
3/4 to 1 C. buttermilk (use the smaller amount if using fresh fruit, the larger if using the raisin-caraway combo)
Turbinado or sanding sugar for sprinkling (optional, not in the original recipe)

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 375°.

2. Place cubed butter in freezer for 15 minutes. Meanwhile, combine flour, sugar, baking powder, and baking soda in a mixing bowl.

3. Add butter to the flour mixture and cut in until you have pea sized specks of butter. Add the fruit/seeds and the buttermilk and stir until just moistened.

4. Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead gently a couple times. Roll or pat dough out to approximately one-inch thick round and cut into 8-12 wedges.

5. Optional: Brush buttermilk over the top of the scones and sprinkle with turbinado or sanding sugar.

6. Bake on a baking sheet covered with parchment paper for 25 to 30 minutes, until lightly browned.

Note: If you use fresh fruit in a scone, it’s very important that you use an aluminum-free baking powder, otherwise the aluminum may precipitate out causing your scones to turn a bluish-gray color. They will still be edible, but may taste a bit tinny or simply look less appetizing.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Dimply Plum Cake

Just when you thought we couldn't possibly have more plums-- we did. The plum ginger crumble didn't quite use up all my mom's plums, so we turned to this recipe to finish them out. (There is another plum cake recipe on this site worth trying out also, the crunchy topped whole wheat plum cake.) Weirdly enough, when I took my first bite I was ho-hum and then the Robber-- that same Robber who is always trying to convince me to make old things he likes not new things-- took his first bite and LOVED it. And then proceeded to eat most of it quickly and to say again and again how much he liked it. So ok. I guess we'll be making this again. The flavor of the cake is quite pleasing, but I found it a bit dry so how to work around that? Also, the plums need to be quite small (I put in some larger store plums too and they didn't work as well as my mother's small plums). I made mine in a 9" cake pan which worked quite well. Smitten Kitchen says you can use apricots or other stone fruits also and mix up the zest and the spices and whatever so maybe I will try making a pear or a cherry cake some time just for kicks. Also the Robber wants me to make it without any fruit at all. Hrrrmmm. We'll see.

Originally from Dorie Greenspan's Baking: From My Home To Yours, by way of Smitten Kitchen:
http://smittenkitchen.com/2008/08/dimply-plum-cake/

Ingredients:



1 1/2 C. all-purpose flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon (the original calls for 1/4 tsp.)
5 T. unsalted butter, at room temperature
3/4 C. (packed) light brown sugar
2 large eggs
1/3 cup flavorless oil, such as canola or safflower
Grated zest of 1 orange (I used 1 tsp. dried valencia orange peel)
1 1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
8 purple or red plums (or even Italian prune plums, when they are in season), halved and pitted

Directions:


1. Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 350°F. Butter an 8-inch square baking pan, dust the inside with flour, tap out the excess and put the pan on a baking sheet.

2. Whisk the flour, baking powder, salt and cinnamon together.

3. Working with a mixer, beat the butter at medium speed until it’s soft and creamy, about 3 minutes. Add the sugar and beat for another 3 minutes, then add the eggs, one at a time, and beat for a minute after each egg goes in. Still working on medium speed, beat in the oil, zest and vanilla; the batter will look smooth and creamy, almost satiny.

4. Removing the mixer, add the dry ingredients in thirds, mixing in by hand until they are incorporated.

5. Run a spatula around the bowl and under the batter, just to make sure there are no dry spots, then scrape the batter into the pan and smooth the top. Arrange the plums cut side up in the batter–Dorie says she usually makes four rows of four plum halves each–jiggling the plums a tad just so they settle comfortably into the batter.

6. Bake for about 30 to 40 minutes, or until the top is honey brown and puffed around the plums and a thin knife inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. Transfer the cake to a rack and cool for 15 minutes during which time the plums juices will seep back into the cake then run a knife around the sides of the pan and unmold the cake. Invert and cool right side up.

7. Optional: Dust the top with powdered sugar. (It soaks into the plums, but keeps the cake a speckly white.)

Note: You can wrap the cake and keep it at room temperature for up to 2 days, during which time it will get softer and moister.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Spiced Plum Pie

Voila the spiced plum pie! I had wanted to make this pie for a long time, but the Robber likes so many other pies it is hard to get around to new ones sometimes. He left town and I wanted to make him a peach pie for his return out of my great love for him, but the peaches at the store were nowhere near ripe so shoot, shoot I just had to buy plums. And then I had to make plum pie. And my, oh my, was it so delicious! This is one of those pies that is going to be a strong favorite of mine forever, whether the Robber ever overcomes his preference for pecans or not.

A must. From Epicurious (with a few adjustments):
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Spiced-Plum-Pie-232397

Ingredients:

Unbaked pie crust of choice (used Tender Pie Crust)

3 T. plus 1 C. granulated sugar
1 3/4 tsp. cinnamon, divided
4 T. cornstarch
2 tsp. (packed) finely grated orange peel
3/4 tsp. ground cardamom
1/4 tsp. ground nutmeg
1/8 tsp. ground cloves
1/4 tsp. salt (I used a dash)
1/2 vanilla bean, split lengthwise (optional)
2 1/2 - 3 lbs. plums, haved, pitted, each half cut into 6-8 wedges.

2 T. whipping cream (or egg white, or egg yolk) for brushing crust

Directions:


1. Roll out 1 pie crust disk on floured surface to 13 1/2-inch round. Transfer to 9-inch glass pie dish. Trim overhang to 1 inch. Refrigerate crust while preparing filling.

2. Position rack in bottom third of oven; preheat to 350°F. Place foil-lined baking sheet in bottom of oven to catch any spills. 

3. Mix 3 tablespoons sugar and 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon in small bowl; set aside. 

4. Whisk 1 cup sugar, 1 1/2 teaspoons cinnamon, and next 6 ingredients in large bowl. Scrape in seeds from vanilla bean. Add plums and toss to coat. (This is where I recommend macerating for at least two hours then draining off the excess liquid before pouring into the crust. That way your pie will be way way less goopy and it has worked consistently for me to do it like this, even though you end up wasting spices that way. You could always just macerate in sugar and then add less spices to the macerated fruit. Whatevs. But if you don't macerate, expect a goopy pie no matter how much cornstarch.) Spoon filling into crust, mounding slightly in center.

5. Roll out second pie crust disk on floured surface to 13 1/2-inch round. Drape crust over filling; trim overhang to 1 inch. Press top and bottom crust edges together. Fold edges under; crimp. Using sharp knife, cut four 2-inch-long slits in center of top crust to allow steam to escape. Brush crust (but not edges) with cream. Sprinkle reserved cinnamon sugar over crust. (I actually used turbinado sugar, not the cinnamon sugar, on my pie crust and it was excellent.)

6. Bake pie 30-45 minutes. Tent pie loosely with foil to prevent overbrowning. Continue to bake until filling bubbles thickly through slits, about 1 hour longer. Cool completely on rack.


Tender Pie Crust

Usually I don't veer off the beaten path when it comes to pie crust, but something tempted me to try out this one-- I think it was its unanimous approval by the Epicurious lot. Lo and behold it was so very tasty and the dough was easy to roll out and so delicious and flaky when baked that I am tempted to make it again, even if it is more preparation and work than my usual crust. Only I think I will leave out the sugar, because I'm not used to having my pie crust sweet.

From Epicurious: 
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Tender-Pie-Crust-232398

Ingredients:

3 C. all-purpose flour
2 T. sugar (I will likely omit)
1 3/4 tsp. salt (I used 1 tsp. happily)
1 C. plus 2 T. (2 1/4 sticks) chilled unsalted butter, cut into 1/2" cubes
8 T. (or more) ice water
1 1/2 tsp. apple cider vinegar (oops, I maybe used T.)

Directions:

1. Combine flour, sugar, and salt in large mixing bowl. Add cubed butter; cut in until coarse meal forms. 

2. Add 8 tablespoons ice water and cider vinegar; blend until moist clumps form, adding more ice water by teaspoonfuls if dough is dry. 

3. Gather dough together. Turn dough out onto work surface; divide dough in half. Form each half into ball and flatten into disk. Wrap disks separately in plastic; refrigerate at least 1 hour. 

Notes: Can be made ahead. Keep dough refrigerated up to 2 days, or enclose in resealable plastic bag and freeze up to 1 month, then thaw in refrigerator overnight. Soften slightly at room temperature before rolling out. Makes two discs, enough for one complete pie (and lots of scraps for pie cookies!)

Plum and Ginger Crumble

My mother sent the Robber home from his trip to Utah with some plums from their backyard tree and, having just made him plum pie, had to go adventuring to find what to make next with the plums. I remembered this delicious crumble which my sister R had made in the Rochacha long ago. It is simpler to make than a pie-- quite simple, actually-- but still can be made in a pie plate and it ultimately very satisfactory. I am loving loving plums this year, something about the bright color and tartness of the flavor are making me very happy indeed.

This recipe is actually an adaptation of one of the NYtimes most famous recipes of all time, the plum torte recipe which I recorded on this blog earlier (search under plums) but have never actually made because really, given the choice, wouldn't you rather have a crumble? 

An old link, but a good link:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/21/dining/213frex.html

Ingredients:

12 Italian prune plums, halved and pitted
2 T. brown sugar 
1 1/2 T. plus 1 C. all-purpose flour
1 heaping tsp. cinnamon 
1/4 heaping tsp. ground ginger
2 heaping T. finely chopped candied ginger (I used crystallized)
3/4 C. sugar
1 tsp. baking powder
1 large egg, well-beaten
1 stick butter (1/2 C.), melted
Vanilla ice cream, optional


Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

2. Place plums in bowl. Mix brown sugar, 1 1/2 T flour, 1/4 tsp cinnamon, ground ginger, and candied ginger together and mix with plums. Arrange plums, skin side up, in ungreased 9 inch pie plate.

3. Combine white sugar, baking powder, remaining flour, and remaining cinnamon and salt and mix well. Stir in egg. Rub together with fingertips to combine ingredients and make a crumbly mixture. Sprinkle over plums. Drizzle butter evenly over top.

4. Bake 30 to 35 minutes. Serve warm, plain or with vanilla ice cream. 

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Pulled Pork Ala The Robber

For the Fourth of July the Robber cooked up a little pulled pork in the crockpot (his first!) because he wanted to work that day and I, being post-call, was sleeping. Errrr, trying to sleep. So anyway, he got crockpot duty. After it was done cooking we took it over to our friends the C's and ate it out on their patio, a perfectly lazy way to celebrate the Fourth. Here is what the Robber has sent me to memorialize his pulled pork process. I don't know where he found his inspiration, but maybe this will inspire him again in the future.

Ala the Robber, and in his own words.

Ingredients:

5 lb Pork Shoulder, bone in or bone out (5lb was how much I used and you saw how much it made)
A couple bottles/cans of root beer
1-2 bottles of bbq sauce (I used Sweet Baby Ray's because why would you use anything else?)
Optional Spices (Thyme, Sage, Pepper)--I added a dash of these, but I'm not sure it really makes a difference
1 chopped onion
Some minced garlic (about a tablespoon?)

Directions:

1) Trim fat off of pork shoulder.  I didn't do this beforehand b/c I thought it would taste better, but I think it made it much more greasy.

2) Place pork shoulder in slow cooker.  Top with onion, garlic, spices (if desired), and a good squirt or two of bbq sauce.  Pour root beer on until it covers the pork.

3) Cover and cook on low for 8 hours or so.  Can also try high and go for less time if you're in a rush.  I think I did high for the first 2 hours and then low for another 4 or 5.

4) Remove pork to separate bowl (should be falling apart by this point).  Discard root beer (you can save the onions and put them back in with the pork after shredding or you can chop up a fresh onion and put it in with the pork).  

5) Shred pork with forks.  Mix in the bbq sauce to taste (I used 1 and 1/2 bottles maybe).

6) Place pork back in slow cooker and heat until it starts bubbling.  Be careful cause the bottom can burn, so maybe stir it occasionally?

7) Serve!

Peanut Butter Cookies

I still have some old recipes written out on index cards that I look up the old-fashioned way-- in a recipe box. These peanut butter cookies are one of them, and I guess I haven't made them or blogged them since this Vegetable Tuesdays blog began. In my nights-to-days-to-nights haze I got a huge craving for peanut butter (I have been craving protein like crazy lately) and thought that I must have these cookies or else I would perish. So I made some and took them to my call day last night and thank goodness, what a little bit of happiness they provided.

Note: This time when I made them I made a half batch and I used 1/4 C. white sugar, 1/4 C. brown sugar, and 1/2 C. raw turbinado sugar and I really liked what it did for the texture and flavor.

From Somewhere. It's the recipe my mom has used as long as I can remember.

Ingredients:

1 C. yellow shortening
1 C. peanut butter (I prefer crunchy)
1 C. white granulated sugar
1 C. brown sugar 
2 eggs
2 1/2 C. flour (sift before measuring)
1 tsp. baking powder 
1 1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt

Directions:

1. In a medium sized bowl, combine flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Mix thoroughly. 

2. In a large together, cream together the shortening, peanut butter, and sugars with an electric mixer until thoroughly combined and fluffy. Beat in eggs one at a time. 

3. Remove the mixer. Add the flour mixture into the egg/sugar mixture 1/3rd at a time, beating in the flour mixture by hand (using the mixer will make for tougher cookies.) 

4. Form cookies into approximately 1" diameter mounds. Using a fork, gently press down twice, with the second press perpendicular to the first, making a cross-hatch pattern, so that the cookie dough is approximately flattened 1/2 way down from its initial height. 

5. Bake 10-12 minutes at 350F. Remove from oven before the cookie is completely done, while the middles are still soft (they will finish setting up outside the oven.) Allow to cool one minute on cookie sheet, then transfer to wire rack for the rest of the cooling process-- although you should feel very welcome to eat these warm.

6. Store in an airtight container. Cookies will stale if uneaten after 48 hours.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Raspberry Custard Pie

I tagged this recipe maybe last year, maybe the year before and because it was sitting there-- albeit among better pie recipes-- I felt obligated to make it. I have a problem these days with feeling pressure from my self-created recipe file. Ah, well. I made this on the pretense of feeding it to KK, our friend who is coming over for dinner tomorrow. But then the Robber and I couldn't wait and got tempted to eat a piece of it tonight... and well... maybe I will have to make another pie for tomorrow. As for this pie, it's good. It's good. It tastes good. It's simple. It's so easy to make. The raspberry is paired well with the custard. It's a good summer pie. But there are better. Ah, but my standards are too high these days. Le sigh.

From Martha Stewart:
http://www.marthastewart.com/343295/raspberry-custard-pie?czone=food/produce-guide-cnt/summer-produce-recipes&backto=true&backtourl=/photogallery/raspberry-recipes#slide_7

Ingredients:

One half pie crust of your choice, baked blind in shallow pie plate

2 T. all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling out crust
3/4 C. sugar, divided
1 large egg, at room temperature
1 C. heavy cream, at room temperature
1 lbs. (3 1/2 C.) fresh raspberries, plus more for garnish
1/4 tsp. salt

Directions:

1. Whisk flour and 1/2 C. sugar in a medium bowl. Add egg and cream, and whisk to combine.
2. In separate bowl, toss raspberries with remaining 1/4 C. sugar and the salt. Allow to stand at least 15 minutes, then drain in colander to remove excess fluid.
3. Spoon berries into pre-baked crust, then pour in cream mixture, filling to just below rim.
4. Bake at 350F until custard is set, but still a bit wobbly in the center (45-60 minutes.) Let cool in a dish on wire rack. Cover and refrigerate at least 2 hours before serving. Serve cold with fresh raspberries. 

Truly Short Shortcake

The redeeming thing about these (and the plum gratin before it) was that I was able to eat these in one of my favorite summer ways: the biscuit split open, with a layer of plain Greek yogurt on each half, and fruit (or fruit puree) scooped over the top. Like a strawberry shortcake with yogurt instead of cream, and more mash to the fruit. Otherwise, this biscuit was a little disappointing. The texture was nice and biscuity, but I like my other biscuit recipe better, and this lacked flavor even with me using buttermilk. The problem is I just keep trucking along, hoping to find alternates when I have things I am already perfectly happy with. So the chances of making this again are slim, but this is not a blog about perfection, just about archiving. Trying. Experimenting. Being. 

Note: I only made the cake part, not the berries. Also, the recipe says this makes 12, but what a mighty small 12 those would be. I made six more substantial sized scones by cutting a round of the dough into six triangles.

From Mark Bittman:
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/29/dining/the-minimalist-truly-short-shortcake.html?pagewanted=2&src=pm

Ingredients:

1 1/2 C. sugar
2 C. cake flour or all-purpose flour
Pinch salt
4 tsp. baking powder
4 T. cold butter
7/8 C. milk (low fat is ok)

6 C. cleaned and sliced strawberries
Sweetened whipped cream

Directions:

1. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. Toss the strawberries with 1 cup sugar. 
2. Mix remaining sugar with flour, salt and baking powder in a bowl or food processor. Cut the butter into bits, and either pulse it a few times quickly in the processor with the dry ingredients or take a little of the dry ingredients, rub a bit of butter into them with your fingers and drop back in the bowl. All the butter should be thoroughly blended.
3. Slowly add the milk to the bowl, stirring it in with a large spoon until the mixture forms a ball. The mixture should be sticky; use a little more or less milk if necessary. 
4. Drop mixture onto an ungreased baking sheet, one heaping tablespoon per cake. 
5. Bake about 10 minutes, or until biscuits are golden brown. (Keep an eye on them; once browning starts, it goes quickly.) Let cool a bit; top with strawberries and their juices and the whipped cream.

Honeyed Plum Gratin

Because it sounded like a good idea, yes? But instead it was tart, I'm not sure the broiler worked, and left the fruit in this odd curdl-ey sour soup. Maybe I used the wrong pan for the half-recipe I made? I think I will stick to sauteeing next time. At least plums are a good idea, and I tried these new red apricot-y plums that were so delicious. So delicious. Goodness, how I love fruit right now.

From Mark Bittman (sometimes I'm learning he and I don't see eye to eye):
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/09/11/magazine/mag-11eatpie.html?ref=magazine#Honeyed_Plum_Gratin

Ingredients:

6 C. sliced plums (about 3 lbs.)
2 tsp. sugar
1 2/3 T. cornstarch
1 T. butter
1 C. sour cream
1/4 C. honey
1/4 C. milk
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract

Directions:

1. Toss sliced plums with 2 teaspoons each of sugar and cornstarch.
2. Sauté in butter until tender and beginning to thicken, about 5 minutes.
3. Spread in a 9-by-13-inch pan.
4. Whisk together sour cream, milk, vanilla extract, honey and remaining cornstarch.
5. Drizzle over the plums and broil 4 to 6 inches from the flame until lightly browned, 3 to 5 minutes. Let sit for 5 minutes before serving.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Green Mango Pie

This is an old recipe that I made two years ago (on our honeymoon, in fact!) and never blogged, so it is sitting in my recipe stash awaiting formal entry so I can move on and delete it from the list. Personally, I liked this pie. It's spiced very much like an apple pie, but it's different-- you know. It's mango. The Robber of course would rather have an apple pie, but in the two years since he has since learned just to go with the flow of things around here. 

From Pie Love You:
http://www.pieloveyou.blogspot.com/2010/03/green-mango-pie-16.html

Ingredients:

For the filling:
3-4 unripe, mostly green medium mangoes (about 5 C.), peeled and sliced
3/4 C. sugar, adjusted for sweetness of the mangoes
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
1/4 tsp. kosher salt
Zest of 1 lime
1 T. of lime juice

For the double crust:
2 1/2 C. unbleached, all-purpose flour
1 tsp. kosher salt
1 1/2 T. sugar
2 1/2 sticks of unsalted butter
4-5 T. of ice water

Directions:

1. For the crust: Cube the butter and chill it along with the water until needed. Mix together all the dry ingredients and then add the chilled butter, cutting into the flour until pea-sized pieces are produced. Add the chilled water 1 T. at a time and mix with a fork until the dough is the right consistency. Gather the dough together and divide into two separate disks. Wrap in plastic wrap and chill at least 2 hours or overnight.

2. For the filling: In a smaller bowl, combine the dry filling ingredients. Slice mangoes and add to zest and lime juice in large bowl. Pour dry ingredients over mangoes and mix.

3. Put it together: Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. Roll out single dough to about 1/8″ thick and place in pie pan leaving the edges long. Scoop the filling in center of pie but do not pour in all the liquid. Roll out the second dough and place on top of the pie. Trim edges and crimp to design. Using a sharp knife, cut tiny vents in the top of the pie. Brush with egg whites and sprinkle sugar on top.

4. Bake it: Bake at 425 degrees for 25 minutes, rotating once at the halfway point. Reduce heat to 300 degrees and continue to bake 30 minutes more till golden. Remove from the oven and allow to cool completely before serving.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Creamy Peach Tart with Smoky Almond Crust

Sometimes when I read other people's food blogs I feel like all they ever do is post dessert recipes and I think to myself, "How are these people not HUGE? Don't they eat anything besides sugar?"... and then I do a little self-reflection and realize that in the last month I have posted cookie, pie, bar, cake, whatever recipes and precious little in the way of anything else. Hrmmmm.

Don't think this is everything the Robber and I eat. I think there are a number of reasons why I'm more likely to post a new dessert recipe than a non-dessert recipe, most of which revolve around the Robber's preferences, my own spirit of adventure, our eating patterns at work, and our love of hummus, goat cheese, bell peppers, pita bread, and grilled meat. But excuses aside, perhaps we do eat a bit much too sugar. Even when we are sharing.

This following recipe we did not share, but we did enjoy it, even the Robber who was deeply deeply skeptical of the smoky almonds in the crust until he tasted it and realized you can't even tell and that the filling was much akin to the beloved "cheesecake pie" of his childhood. I baked this in a pie plate because I don't have a springform pan (see previous post) and if I were making this again, would 1.5 times the recipe to make more filling and just turn it into a pie. We replaced the peaches with nectarines with good results and the Robber happily ate a third of it while I was sleeping last night.

Mildly adapted from Food and Wine Magazine August 2011.

Ingredients:

2 C. vanilla wafer cookies
1/2 C. smoked almonds
6 T. sugar
5 T. unsalted butter, melted
8 oz. cream cheese, at room temperature
1/4 C. sour cream
1 egg
2-3 firm, ripe medium peaches, cut into wedges

Directions:

1. Preheat the oven to 350F. Using a food processor or other instrument, crush wafer cookies and almonds until fine crumbs are obtained. Combine wafer crumbs, almond crumbs, and 2T. sugar. Add melted butter and stir until the crumbs are evenly moistened.
2. Press the crumbs into the bottom and 1/2 inch up the side of a 9" springform pan. Bake for ten minutes at 350F until the crust is set.
3. While the crust is baking, combine cream cheese, sour cream, egg, and 2T. of the sugar and blend with electric mixer until smooth. Pour the cheese mixture into the crust and bake for 15 minutes, until set. 
4. Allow to cool slightly and transfer to freezer to chill, about 15 minutes. (Do not allow to freeze thoroughly.)
5. In a bowl, toss the peaches with the remaining 2T. of sugar. Arrange the peaches in 2 concentric circles over the custard. Remove the ring, cut the tart in wedges and serve. 

Monday, June 25, 2012

Salted and Browned Honey Butter

The accompaniment to the Sally Lunn bread suggested by Smitten Kitchen. Why not? It wasn't my favorite, but the Robber seemed happy to spread it around on his bread and biscuits, so I'm sure he'll continue to enjoy what is in the fridge. I, of course, wanted it to have cinnamon.

From Smitten Kitchen:
http://smittenkitchen.com/2011/03/sally-lunn-bread-honeyed-brown-butter-spread/

Ingredients:

1 stick, 8 T. of unsalted butter divided in half
1-2 T. honey (I used 1.5)
Few pinches flaky sea salt (I used salted butter and ignored this)

Directions:

1. In a small saucepan, melt half your butter over medium heat. Once melted, reduce heat to medium-low. The butter will melt, then foam, then turn clear golden and finally start to turn brown and smell nutty. Stir frequently, scraping up any bits from the bottom as you do. 
2. Remove from heat and cool to room temperature. While it is cooling, leave the other half of the butter out to soften slightly (semi-firm is fine).
3. Whip softened butter with an electric mixer until fluffy. Slowly drizzle in the room temperature browned butter, honey and salt continue whipping until combined. Chill butter in fridge until a nice spreadable consistency, or until needed.

Sally Lunn Bread

My mother used to make this bread on Sundays for dinner and it was wonderful-- light and airy and delicious and fantastic. I have wanted for years to make this bread but thought I needed an angel food cake pan (or 9" tube pan) which what she made it in, or a bundt pan at least. It is amazing to me, the more that I cook, how much of cooking is simply having the right equipment. As I said to the Robber yesterday, "You know what I want? A 9" springform pan, a bundt pan, a tart pan, a kitchen scale, a food processor, and an icecream maker." "Which of those is the most important?" he asked. (I love him so much.) "The icecream maker, of course." One has to have priorities.

I know I've been stealing a lot from Smitten Kitchen lately, but seriously how could I not when I find things like Sally Lunn-- made in a normal bread pan! Something I have! As soon as I found it, I had to make it. Most recipes I find sit around for at least 3-4 months in my recipe list before I try them out, and this I think made it only 2 weeks, thankfully, as I made it last night and it was so easy and delicious and perfect and the Robber was so happy as he loves loves a freshly baked bread. I think this may be gracing our Sunday tables again in the near future. 

Note: Can double this recipe and make it in the tube pan... if you have one.

Adapted from Maida Heatter's Cakes (possibly the same one my mother got the recipe from) by yes, Smitten Kitchen (just read her blog, ok):
http://smittenkitchen.com/2011/03/sally-lunn-bread-honeyed-brown-butter-spread/

Ingredients:

2 C. all-purpose flour
2 T. sugar
1 tsp. salt
1 1/8 tsp. active dry yeast
3/4 C. milk
4 T. unsalted butter, softened
1 large egg plus 1 large egg yolk

Directions:

1. In a large bowl, mix 3/4 cup flour, sugar, salt and dry yeast by hand or with an electric mixer.
2. In a saucepan, heat the milk and butter together until the mixture is warm (105 to 110 degrees); don’t worry if this butter isn’t completely melted. Gradually pour the warm ingredients into the dry mixture and mix with an electric mixer for 2 minutes or stir vigorously by hand with a wooden spoon for 3 minutes. 
3. Add the egg, yolk and another 1/2 cup flour and beat again for 2 minutes by machine or 3 by hand. Add the last of the flour and beat or stir until smooth.
4. Scrape down bowl and cover the top with a clean kitchen towel. Let rise for one hour or until doubled.
5. Meanwhile, butter and flour a 9×5x3-inch loaf pan. Once the dough has doubled, scrape it into the prepared pan. Cover with your kitchen towel and let rise for a total of 30 minutes. After 15 minutes, however, remove the plastic and preheat your oven to 375°F.
6. Bake for 35 to 40 minutes or until a cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool in pan for 5 minutes then turn out to a rack to cool.

Strawberry and Cream Biscuits

I will be done with new "scone" recipes some day, I promise. Some day when I'm no longer obsessed... I promise, this one was definitely worth it. Yes! Yes is was! This produced a concoction with a lovely flaky exterior with a soft, moist interior and not too much sweetness-- definitely more biscuity than cakey. And so easy too! And better than the prior strawberry scone recipe I have posted. This now becomes my go to for strawberry scones. And maybe pear scones and everything scones... that is until I find another new recipe. Or want an oatmeal scone. Or a chocolate chip scone. Or... 

Notes: I used half whole wheat flour and loved it, no reason to do it differently next time. Although next time I might try using turbinado sugar instead of white sugar, for some extra crunch and a little interest. 

From Smitten Kitchen:
http://smittenkitchen.com/2012/06/strawberries-and-cream-biscuits/

Ingredients:


2 1/4 C. all-purpose flour (I used half whole wheat, loved it)
1 T. baking powder
1/4 C. sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
6 T. cold, unsalted butter
1 C. chopped very ripe strawberries (could add more)
1 C. heavy cream

Directions:


1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.
2. In the bottom of a large, wide-ish bowl, whisk flours, baking powder, sugar and salt together. Cut butter into the flour mixture with a pastry blender, breaking it up until the mixture resembles a crumbly meal with tiny pea-sized bits of butter about. 
3. Gently stir in the strawberries, so that they are coated in dry ingredient, then stir in heavy cream. When you’ve mixed it in as best as you can with the spatula, go ahead and knead it once or twice in the bowl, to create one mass. 
4. Generously flour your counter. With as few movements as possible, transfer your dough to the counter, generously flour the top of it and with your hands or a rolling pin, gently roll or press the dough out to a 3/4-inch thickness round and cut into 8 even triangles. Carefully transfer scones to prepared baking sheet, leaving a couple inches between each.
5. Bake the scones for 12 to 15 minutes, until bronzed at the edges and the strawberry juices are trickling out of the biscuits in places. Cool in pan for a minute, then transfer to a cooling rack. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Mango-Coconut Clafoutis

We had left over coconut milk and left over whipping cream, so why not make a clafoutis? The real problem was that I didn't actually know what a clafoutis technically was-- should have read Wiki beforehand-- so I bought too much mango and filled up my dish and consequently it was too liquidy, but whatever! It was delicious all the same. I had some extra batter that I used to fill some ramekins with strawberries and make extra clafouti and those were even more delicious than the mango kind. Plus this was all very very easy as you just have to throw everything in the blender. Next time the Robber wants coffeecake for breakfast (we made this on a Saturday morning) I will make him a clafoutis instead (although because he is the Robber he likes coffeecake better). Oh well. What is nice about this is you can probably swap out the coconut milk for real milk or additional cream and the mangos for any old fruit you want. Voila! Clafoutis.

From the NYTimes:
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/09/11/magazine/mag-11eatpie.html?ref=magazine#Mango-Coconut_Clafoutis

Ingredients:

3/4 C. heavy whipping cream
3/4 C. coconut milk
1/2 C. sugar
3 eggs
1/3 C. flour
1/2 tsp. cinnamon (I doubled this of course)
1/2 tsp. vanilla (could try almond or coconut extract!)
1 lb. mangoes, peeled and cut into chunks

Directions:

1. Combine heavy cream, coconut milk, sugar, eggs, flour, vanilla extract and cinnamon in a blender; blend until smooth.
2. Put mangos in a buttered and floured 8- or 9-inch pan. (I used a pie pan, maybe a cake pan would have been better as it would have been deeper and thus held my extra fruit.)
3. Pour the batter over the mangos.
4. Bake at 350 for 40 minutes. Serve warm or cold. (We ate it with a little extra sweetened condensed milk sprinkled over the top. Some toasted coconut would be nice with this as well.)

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Roasted Apricots with Almond Topping

This recipe I had saved from last year and kind of cobbled together between two recipes for a little summer picnic with our new friends A&C&R H. I served the desserts with whipped cream with just a touch of almond flavoring in it and found it very satisfactory. It will be hard to keep me from making these again, they are so easy and delicious hot or cold.

Note: I bought enough apricots for there to be 3 apricots per ramekin, but I ended up with way too much filling and had to bake the extra in a little pie plate. Not that that was a bad thing... and it used the extra topping up...

Melded together from Martha Shulman and Smitten Kitchen:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/25/health/nutrition/25recipehealth.html?ref=nutrition
http://smittenkitchen.com/2008/06/breakfast-apricot-crisp/

Ingredients:

8 medium-size or 12 small apricots (2-3 apricots/ramekin)
3 T. sugar
1 T. flour
1 tsp. fresh nutmeg
4 T. butter, melted
6 T. turbinado sugar
1/2 C. oatmeal
1/2 C. all-purpose (1/2 wheat ok)
Pinch salt
2 tablespoons almonds, sliced or slivered, raw or toasted

Directions:

1. Butter 4 6 oz. ramekins. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. 
2. Remove apricot pits and slice into quarters, or smaller slices as desired to fit ramekins. Combine with 3 T. sugar, 1 T. flour and nutmeg. Set aside.
3. Make topping but combining melted butter and turbinado sugar. Stir in oats, then flour, salt and almonds.
4. Distribute apricots among ramekins and top with topping. 
5. Bake 20-30 minutes. You can serve warm with vanilla icecream or almond-flavored whipped cream, although this is also very tasty cooled and eaten with plain yogurt (or more icecream or whipped cream!) for breakfast. 

Approximate nutritional info per ramekin: 78 calories; 4 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 5 milligrams cholesterol; 11 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 11 milligrams sodium; 2 grams protein. 

Strawberry & Lemon Curd Easy Summer Pie

So there was this time when I saw an "easy summer pie" recipe in the New York Times and I wanted it SO BADLY to be the best summer pie because not only did it have strawberries and lemons, but the crust had vanilla wafers and saltines, something I first was introduced to by SLB when she was SLO but have never tried myself. So I was so excited to try this! I was!....

But oh dear. What a disaster it was. Not all the recipe's fault, but certainly parts of it were. For starters, the crust was so salty the Robber and I couldn't even eat it, we scraped all the curd off and threw the crust away. I think it is salvageable, so I'll post the recipe here sans extra salt anyway, just in case I get bold enough to try it again in the future. Secondly, I ended up dumping almost half the curd on the kitchen floor. And then, the berries. Well. Call me boring, but I like them better just plain with sugar. Gah. But what I am posting is the original recipe sans salt in the crust so here you have it, if after all my comments, you (the future me) still want to try.

From Millicent Souris' new cookbook "How To Build A Better Pie" by way of the NYTimes:
http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/01/bookshelf-how-to-build-a-better-pie/?ref=dining


Ingredients:

For the saltine vanilla wafer cracker crust:

½ sleeve saltine crackers (16)
16 vanilla wafers
1 stick unsalted butter
¼ C. granulated sugar
1 egg white 
For the lemon curd (yield: 2 cups):
Juice & zest of 3 lemons
1 stick unsalted butter
1 C. granulated sugar
3 large eggs, lightly beaten
For the strawberry topping:
1 pint strawberries (the smaller the better)
2 T. raw sugar
Zest and juice of one lemon
½ tsp. salt
3 sprigs of tarragon, or 4 sprigs of mint, or 4 sprigs of chervil
Optional: a scraped vanilla pod




Directions:

For the crust: 
1. Melt butter in a small pan. Pull from heat before it browns and let cool. 
2. Toss the crackers and wafers in a food processor and pulse until crumbs begin to form. Gradually add the butter, sugar, salt and egg white. Turn the food processor off, and turn the mixture into the pie plate. With a level, steady hand lightly press the crust into the plate. Evenly tap the crust across the bottom of the plate and up the sides about half an inch. It should be even in thickness. 
3. Place crust in refrigerator to rest for at least 20 minutes.
4. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Once the crust has rested, bake it in the preheated oven for 15 minutes. Pull and cool. While the crust is baking, make the lemon curd.

For the lemon curd:
1. Fill a medium-size sauce pot about a third way with water and heat. Use a bowl that will fit atop the pot, or nestle down a bit, without touching the water. Cut the butter into small chunks and toss in the bowl with the sugar. Place on the pot so it starts to melt as you zest the lemons, keeping the zest separate to add at the end. 
2. Whisk the melting butter and sugar together and add the lemon juice, whisking together well.
3. Lift your bowl and make sure the water is gently simmering (not boiling). Gently beat the three eggs in a separate bowl. Add the eggs to the bowl over simmering water, whisking everything together. 4. Once the mixture is combined, use a rubber spatula to continuously scrape the bowl around the sides (especially the bottom) so everything cooks evenly. The mixture will thicken in 7 to 10 minutes, and should become more cohesive as it firms up along the edges of the bowl.
5. Add the lemon zest and salt. Mix. 
6.Turn into another bowl and place cling wrap flush across the top of the curd (this prevents a “skin” from developing). Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.

For the strawberry topping:
1. Hull the strawberries, then cut in half lengthwise (if they are bigger than the tip of your fingers). Toss them with the raw sugar, lemon zest, lemon juice and salt. 
2. Pick the herb of your choice and chop. Gently bruise the stems and toss the them, the herbs and vanilla pod with the fruit. Let the mixture macerate at room temperature, while everything else cools.

Putting it all together:
1. After 30 minutes, fill the crust with the curd. Refrigerate again until the curd settles and tightens.
2. Cut the pie into 8 slices, soaking the knife into hot water after each slice and wiping it clean. Plate the slices, then take a spoonful of the dressed strawberries to top the pie. Finish with a drizzle of strawberry juice and enjoy.