Showing posts with label dessert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dessert. Show all posts
SUMMER OF YUM.
Isn't summer grand? D and I are on a berry and stone fruit frenzy and I honestly cannot put enough ruby jeweled sweet morsels into my mouth. Every meal is now adorned with berries or plums/peaches of some sort. In morning cereal, afternoon snacks with nuts and cheese, tossed into large salads. They really are the punctuation mark of the season!
This photo of a raspberry and sanding sugar depicts a little project I'm cooking up for The Kitchn, to be posted next week. MMM....
WEEKEND'S STAWBERRY FIELDS
I made strawberry shortcake for the first time and I got to hand it to my sweetheart, he ate his portion with gusto! He knows how to EAT a strawberry-filled dessert. Definitely started with his Mom's delish strawberry pizza (a whole other wonderful story), then migrated to milkshake form, and most recently, to the classic combo of shortcake (the biscuit's sweeter cousin), whipped cream and macerated strawberries fresh from the farmer's market. Just look at how happy this guy is!
The shortcakes make a perfect breakfast when served with coffee for dunking!
MANGO WITH CARDAMOM COCONUT CREAM & PISTACHIO
Puddings are one of my favorite goof-proof easy desserts. I like making them half of the main event, with the addition of seasonal fruits. Now mangoes are definitely not local to me in the NW, but mango season throughout much of the world is in full swing. Mexico, The Phillipines and India are blowing up with mango love right now. It's one of my greatest dreams to attend the mango festivities in Mumbai that take hold for the month of May. There are over 50 varieties of mango, which are folded into every edible morsel imaginable! I can't think of a better delirium than the mango-mania I'd succumb to if presented with so many luscious mangos!
For the months of April and May, I buy a mango almost every day, waiting for it to ripen on my window sill till it's tender and ready . . . Then I throw the fruit into savory dishes such as atop tacos and cabbage slaws, or sweet incarnations such as folded into crepes or swirled into yogurt or simply sucking it off the seed over the sink, surely one of the fruit's most naked and glorious ways to eat a mango.
This evening, I thought of the sweet rice puddings of India and went from there -- the coconut cardamom adds a floral note that compliments sliced mango perfectly. Like a bouquet for your palet! Pistachios, they are the best garnish, so underused in Western cooking -- but a small stash will serve you well, for they add the rich saltiness to balance any sweet and, their color is sublime.
Mango with Cardamom Coconut Cream and Pistachio
For the creamy pudding:
serves 4 generously
1 cup almond milk
2 tablespoons honey
2 tablespoons sugar
1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
1 teaspoon cornstarch, whisked with 2 tablespoons water
pinch of salt
2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons unsweetened coconut
1 egg yolk
1 mango, diced into medium sized pieces
2 tablespoons pistachios, crushed
extra coconut for garnish
In a small pot, on medium-high heat, whisk the almond milk, honey, sugar, cardamom, vanilla and almond extract together until warm. In a separate bowl, whisk the corn starch and water together. Add the cornstarch mixture to the milk, add the flour, salt and coconut and whisk, stirring vigorously (there may be a few lumps of flour, but they'll go away shortly). Stir on medium heat until thickened, about 3 minutes. In another small bowl whisk the egg yolk thoroughly. Add a few tablespoons of pudding mixture to the egg yolk and whisk again (you are tempering the yolk, so when it meets the pudding, it doesn't curdle). Finally, whisk the yolk mixture into the pudding -- the pudding will become creamy in color. Cook for another 3-4 minutes, until pudding is thickened, and the yolk has cooked.
Chill for a few hours before serving with the mango (or any other fruit you like!). Garnish with coconut shreds and crushed pistachio.
I love to reserve a little of the pudding cream for my morning bowl of oatmeal -- it's the best!
BRILLIANT IDEA: HOMEMADE POPTARTS
Like a shot of genius straight through my baking heart, I came upon a recipe for DIY strawberry/nutella pop tarts. After baking off a round with the yummy chocolate spread, a combo of French strawberry jam and just the jam, we deemed the plain strawberry versions the very best flavor indeed. Tender with salty butter flakyness, oozing sweetness in the form of rich red confiture -- they were the optimum hand pie. And mini at that!
Sublime with a small glass of milk or paired with afternoon tea, making your own pop tarts will light up a room and fill you with glee. I'm on an old-school confection kick and can't wait to make the next Americana classic with wholesome honest ingredients -- I think oreo cookies are next on my agenda!
Strawberry Pop Tarts
(makes about 10 mini pop tarts)
1 cup + 1 tbsp flour
1 heaping tbsp sugar
1/4 tsp salt
3-4 tbsp water
1/2 cup butter, frozen, cut into small pieces
your favorite brand of strawberry jam
2 tbsp cream
dermera sugar
In the bowl of a food processor, blitz flour, sugar, salt and butter until butter and flour yield a sandy texture. Add water one tablespoon at a time, bigger clumps will form. Turn dough (which looks like sandy flour at this point) onto the counter, gathering it into a loose ball), wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Refrigerate for 1/2 an hour.
STRAWBERRY MILK OVER ON THE KITCHN
It is rare that I cross post a recipe or idea here on this blog, that I have simultaneously going on over on The Kitchn . . . But desperately silly times call for some attention. This DIY strawberry milk is so 50s, yummy and insanely happy, I implore you to take a visit over there.
Just had to let y'all know.
Feel the strawberry milk love!
SWEET POTATO CAKELETS: INFINITY OF YUMMINESS
Good to the Grain, Kim Boyce's cookbook on baking with whole grain flours is pretty spectacular. I've blogged about it before, yes I'm pretty smitten with the tome. The photos, insight and new twists on old favorites make it a must for a seasoned baker looking for new inspiration.
I tried out the Sweet Potato Muffin recipe, but tweaked it slightly, by adding a tad more sugar (I know not in the spirit of the healthful book, but I had a muffin/cake idea in mind!) and baking the batter into a few different forms. I made one traditional coffee cake in a loaf pan, as Kim notes as a possibility in lieu of muffin tins, and few others in mini bundt pans. I enjoy changing up the form of my baked good. With just one batter, you can make several variations, keeping the big version for yourself and gifting a few lucky friends individual treats. Your own loaf or cake will only end up a tad smaller and your pals, well, they will love you and call you the cake fairy when small treats wind up on their doorstep. One last adjustment I made was adding vanilla and substituting cardamom for allspice.
This muffin, turned coffee cake, turned mini bundt cake was marvelous in all of its incarnations. It's delicious and tender toasted with a smear of butter or alone with a cup of tea. And dressed up, with a layer of plum jam at the center and enrobed in cream cheese frosting, it's simply over the top! Definitely a nice addition to the birthday cake arsenal.
When you think about it, muffins, cakes, they're not so dissimilar-- so grab yourself a big sweet potato and get to work! This is a show-stopper of a recipe.
Sweet Potato Muffins/Cakelets
makes about 12 muffins
(adapted from Good to the Grain by Kim Boyce)
3/4 pound sweet potatoes
butter and flour for muffin tins and loaf pan
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup sugar
1 cup whole-wheat flour
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cardamom
1 cup buttermilk
1/2 cup plain yogurt
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
6 Medjool dates, pitted and cut into small pieces
Heat the oven to 400 degrees. Prick the sweet potatoes with a fork and wrap in tin foil or parchment paper. Bake for about one hour, until they are tender. Remove from oven and let cool. Peel and discard the skins, mash up the potatoes in a bowl and set aside.
Lower the oven temperature to 350 degrees. Grease and flour your muffin tins or loaf pan.
In a medium-sized bowl, sift together the flours, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and spices.
In the bowl of a mixer, cream the butter and sugar until creamy. Add the egg and vanilla and continue to beat for another minute or so. Next add the buttermilk, yogurt and half of the sweet potatoes. Mix until just combined. Add the flour mixture to the wet ingredients at a slow speed until evenly mixed. Lastly, mix in the remaining sweet potatoes and dates until just uniform in texture and consistency. Careful not to over mix!
Scoop batter into prepared tins or pans and bake for 35-45 minutes, depending on what size tins you're using. Test with a toothpick and make sure it comes out clean. That's a good way to know the treat is done. Remove from tins/pan and let cool on a wire rack.
Interesting Additions:
Cream Cheese Frosting and a layer of your favorite tangy jam. I used a sour plum and it was a nice contrast to the warm, spiced flavor of the cake.
DOUBLE CHOCOLATE COOKIES: HEARTBREAKERS!
When you find a cookie recipe you love, it's hard to deviate! Instead of going out on Tuesday evening, my valentine and I went to the market and picked up all the necessary items for a batch of naughty naughty cookies. We then measured, stirred and literally sat in front of the oven watching our little beauties blossom into chocolate pillows. We were like school kids, mesmerized by the promise of rich, chewy, dense chocolate treats. It's moments like this where I can't believe I'm a grown up and I get to bake cookies WHENEVER I WANT even when there's no good reason for them at all. I can even lick all the batter of the spatula, ah ha ha!! Life, it is amazing at times!
Now the batch of cookies has whittled down to just a few scragly bits, because we've been breakin' off pieces to munch on pretty much every time we pass the kitchen! And in a 500 square foot apartment, that's pretty darn frequently. This recent baking project coincided with a passing thought of a no-sugar cleanse, baaah! A girl can dream, right? Why bother?!
If your smart you'll make these--like--yesterday!
Gooey Double Chocolate Chip Cookies
makes about 2 dozen cookies
makes about 2 dozen cookies
4 ounces (150g) bittersweet chocolate
1/2 cup (1 stick, or 110g) butter
2 large eggs
1-1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup (130g) all-purpose flour
1/2 cup Dutch-process cocoa
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1-1/2 cups (8 ounces, or 300g) chocolate chunks or chocolate chips
1/2 cup (1 stick, or 110g) butter
2 large eggs
1-1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup (130g) all-purpose flour
1/2 cup Dutch-process cocoa
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1-1/2 cups (8 ounces, or 300g) chocolate chunks or chocolate chips
- Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F (165 C). In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, cocoa, baking soda and salt. Set aside.
- Melt the butter and 4 ounces of bittersweet chocolate together over low heat. Remove from heat and add the vanilla.
- In the bowl of a mixer, combine the eggs and sugar and beat at medium speed until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Lower the speed to low and beat in the chocolate mixture until well combined.
- Add the flour and stir until just combined. Fold in the chocolate chips or chocolate chunks.
- Drop 1-1/2 tablespoon portions 2-inches apart onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.
- Bake for no longer than 13 minutes — they should be slightly underbaked so the interior stays chewy and soft. Remove the whole sheet of parchment to a cooling rack and cool until just warm and set.
*Notes:
- I made about 1 dozen extra big cookies, using a 1/4 c measure for getting the proper amount of dough
- I also added about 1/2 c chopped walnuts for texture and flavor
- I cooked the large cookies for 16 minutes, not the prescribed 13 minutes, because the cookies were just so big they needed more time
SWEET SOUTH INDIAN SOUL FOOD: KESARI BATH
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we attended a lovely wedding in Belur, Karnataka, where we were served kesari bath before the ceremony |
It's flowery, creamy, yellow, studded with pineapple and flecked with aromatic cardamom. Have you ever had the South Indian breakfast, Kesari Bath?
Kesari Bath is a traditional sweet creamed wheat dish served in many South Indian States. I had the best versions of this perfumey grain in Karnataka, India. It was served to me, as well as hundreds of other guests before a grand Indian wedding--a celebrated "love marriage." Karnataka is a large Southwestern State home to bustling cities such as Bangalore as well as ancient temple towns: Hampi, Halibeedu and Belur. Each town and chef has a slightly different take on Kesari Bath, pronounced 'Kee-see-ri Bath.' "Kesari" means saffron and "Bath” means semolina or rice mixture. The principle ingredient is Rava flour, the hulled kernel of a wheat grain. In the US, we know Rava as "Cream of Wheat" hot cereal or "Wheat Farina Cereal." Rava is available at local Indian groceries, but feel free to substitute the US equivalents I mentioned. The rava is then cooked with a myriad of spices, milk and sugar.
This delightful treat is usually served for breakfast or during snack times -- it's toasty sweet flavor is complimented perfectly by a tangy mango lassi , sweet lassi or chai-- a combination of any of these beverages and Kesari Bath comprise a typical breakfast in this state. Kesari Bath is most often served on a banana leaf, sometimes accompanied by a savory version of the grain called, "Khara Bath" (more on Khara bath later this week). When served together, a lovely combination of sweet and savory, the dish is known as "Chow Chow Bath."
I altered the recipe to be slightly less sweet and lower in fat than the traditional Inidian version -- I wanted to feel good about it, as I found myself eating the grain-based breakfast every other day. This simple dish can be adjusted to include local fruits you have on hand -- a diced peach, fresh figs, sliced bananas or poached pears are all lovely additions. Also, the garnish of almonds can be altered to suit your own tastes and preferences -- crushed hazelnuts, cashews, toasted coconut, ground flaxseeds would all be great toppings. So next time you're thinking of a warm bowl or oatmeal or hot cereal, try this similar Indian comfort food.
Kesari Bath
serves 4-5
serves 4-5
1 cup Rava (Cream of Wheat or Bob's Red Mill Whole Wheat Farina will work perfectly fine as well)
3 tablespoons butter (I used Earth Balance to keep mine Vegan)
1 heaping tablespoon sugar
1 1/2 cup milk (dairy, soy, almond -- whatever you like)
1 cup water
1 tsp ground cardamom
1 pinch saffron
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/2 cup pineapple, roughly chopped
1/3 cup mango juice (orange, apricot, or pineapple juice would work too)
4 dried mango slices (or dried apricot), slivered
2 tablespoons almonds, roughly chopped (or cashews, a more traditional option)
3 tablespoons butter (I used Earth Balance to keep mine Vegan)
1 heaping tablespoon sugar
1 1/2 cup milk (dairy, soy, almond -- whatever you like)
1 cup water
1 tsp ground cardamom
1 pinch saffron
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/2 cup pineapple, roughly chopped
1/3 cup mango juice (orange, apricot, or pineapple juice would work too)
4 dried mango slices (or dried apricot), slivered
2 tablespoons almonds, roughly chopped (or cashews, a more traditional option)
First, chop the pineapple, dice the mango slices and gather your spices. Heat butter in a medium-sized sauté pan, add rava, stir and roast on low until you can smell a nice, nutty aroma and some of the Rava is turning golden. Set aside when golden brown.
Meanwhile mix the sugar, cardamon, saffron, salt, vanilla, pineapple, mango juice and mango slices.
Heat this fruit mixture on medium for 3-5 minutes until the pineapple turns bright yellow from the saffron and starts to cook down a bit.
Add water and milk to pineapple mixture then add all of the liquids/pineapple mixture to toasted Rava.
Cook on medium heat until Rava has absorbed all the liquids, it only takes about 1 or 2 minutes. Serve about 3/4 cup Kesari Bath along with chopped nuts.
Serve hot or room temperature as breakfast or a snack. On a banana leaf for pure Karnataka flavor!
NOW THESE ARE SOME COOKIES!
Baking is my chance to unwind. I don't really get to do it very often for work and it always feels a little indulgent, so I don't bake all the time at home. I have to hold myself back (or my ass will be sorry, literally!) When I do succumb to the alchemy of flour, fat and sugar, I lose myself fully in the cathartic rhythms of measurement and assembly. I love the magic of disparate elements coming together to form a morsel reserved just for pleasure. No sustenance required, something to savor just for the joy of it! And let's be real, I live for chocolate in any manifestation -- so these particular cookies, they were just begging to be made.
I tweaked the recipe, which I'm apt to do -- and was pleased with the results.
Oatmeal Cookies with Cacao nibs, Toffee, Dark Chocolate and Maldon Salt
adapted from Salted, by Mark Bitterman
makes about 15 cookies
makes about 15 cookies
3/4 cup flour
1 1/4 cup oats
1 teaspoon Maldon salt, plus more for sprinkling
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 stick butter
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup full of chopped chocolate, cacao nibs and toffee (or any form of chocolate you have handy)
Preheat Oven to 350. Combine flour, baking soda and oats in small bowl. The rest is the classic Nestle’s Toll House cookie recipe: Beat butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar and vanilla extract in large mixer bowl until creamy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Gradually beat in flour mixture. Stir in morsels and nuts. Drop by rounded tablespoon onto parchment-lined baking sheets.
Sprinkle the Maldon salt of choice salt atop each cookie, and then toss them in the oven. Remove after 10 minutes, let cool on wire rack. They'll really firm up on the rack. Enjoy!
How To Make Perfect Crêpes: 5 Tips from Suzette

When she was a pastry chef at Chez Panisse, Jehnee Rains was asked to develop the restaurant's recipe for Crêpes Suzette. From the testing and retesting of several versions, she came up with what turned out to be the Holy Grail of sweet crêpes. She shared a few unusual tips that make these perfectly sweet crêpes stand out — and one very unusual ingredient. Can you guess?
Jehnee's secret ingredient is... BEER! She puts a light lager beer in her crêpe batter. You'd never know it, flavor-wise, but the texture and lacy structure of the dessert crêpes are perfection, with much credit to this added carbonation and yeast. Jehnee Rains is now owner and chef of Suzette, in Portland, Oregon. Her restaurant is a bit unusual — the crêpe-focused menu items get cooked within a 1940s trailer kitchen and the dining room is a converted garage. On Friday nights, there's usually an old movie projected as the diners take in the amazing crêpes and entertainment.
But back to the crêpes. They are certainly the best I've ever had, and that's saying a lot as I spent about two weeks in Paris on a crêpe and macaron bender.
Jehnee's Top 5 Tips for Making Sweet Crepes
1. Beer. I already mentioned it in the intro, but it's true. Beer adds a slight flavor, and carbonation, keeping the crêpe batter tender and loose. This ingredient keeps the crêpes lacy, with lots of air bubbles (which Jehnee says are a good thing!) while they're cooking. The bubbles and small holes leave lovely pockets for sauces and fillings to ooze through.
1. Beer. I already mentioned it in the intro, but it's true. Beer adds a slight flavor, and carbonation, keeping the crêpe batter tender and loose. This ingredient keeps the crêpes lacy, with lots of air bubbles (which Jehnee says are a good thing!) while they're cooking. The bubbles and small holes leave lovely pockets for sauces and fillings to ooze through.
2. The right pan. Jehnee suggests buying a small crêpe pan, like this 8-inch one from Sur La Table. They're not expensive — $20 — but they ensure even cooking and have a great little lip for lifting the batter off the pan. If you like crêpes, this pan makes life easier. It's also nice to reserve the pan just for crêpes and care for it following the instructions, so it doesn't get dinged up and lose its nonstick perfect-crêpe surface.
3. Strain the batter. Once the batter is mixed, strain it through a fine sieve or metal strainer, to ensure there's no lumps in your batter. This may seem like an extra-fussy step, but it's all these little details that create the world's most delicious crêpe at home.
4. Let the batter rest. If you can make the batter the night before, or 8 hours before you plan to make crêpes, they will be better than straight away. This resting period allows the gluten in the flour to develop and bond to the milk and eggs, and this yields a more complex flavor. Jehnee insists that this step isn't absolutely essential, but if you have the time and forethought, it is worth the trouble.
5. Heat the milk. Heating the milk to warm, not boiling, along with the butter before adding to the eggs and flour ensures a delicious batter. The warm milk/butter combination allows the butter to 'stay in suspension,' which means the fat is evenly distributed in the batter and the crêpes won't stick to the pan when you flip the crêpes.
6. Use your hands. Okay, here's one extra tip I found interesting while watching Jehnee in action — she uses her hands to flip the crêpes. No fancy offset spatula, silicone spoon or anything else but her little fingertips.
Jehnee's Sweet Crêpe Recipe:
serves 4-6
2 cups warm milk
1/4 cup melted butter
1 1/4 cup four
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon sugar
3 eggs
3/4 tablespoon oil
1/2 cup beer (any light lager beer will work)
1/4 cup melted butter
1 1/4 cup four
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon sugar
3 eggs
3/4 tablespoon oil
1/2 cup beer (any light lager beer will work)
Melt the butter and heat the milk to warm, over the stove or in a microwave. Meanwhile, mix flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer (or in a large bowl with a whisk ready). Make a well in the dry ingredients, pour eggs and oil into the well and beat on medium speed with whisk using the mixer, or vigorously with your hand-held whisk. Slowly add the melted butter and milk mixture until batter becomes uniform in texture.
Now pour batter over a fine-toothed sieve into another medium-sized bowl, pressing any lumps through with your fingers. Stir in beer, until just evenly incorporated (don't overmix). Set the batter aside, covered with plastic, for 8 hours or overnight, if you can.
Pour about 1/4 to 1/3 cup batter onto a smoking-hot pan, swirling the batter to create an even surface. Add a little more batter if needed. Little holes are okay while crêpe cooks — just 2 minutes on the first side (peek to see if golden brown color is there), then about 30 seconds on other side. Keep warm with sheets of parchment paper in between each crêpe, in a low oven, about 200 degrees until serving.
These crêpes are delicious with powdered sugar, jam, fruit compote, whatever you like! Jehnee served mine with homemade chocolate hazelnut spread, cinnamon ice-cream and chocolate sauce.
RECIPE REVIEW: CLOTILDE'S MINI FINANCIERS
What's a financier? It's not just a person who handles lots of money, it's also the name of a lovely little French treat! This petite cake would be a great make-ahead item for a brunch, shower or tea party. I deviated from the traditional recipe with one Pacific Northwest ingredient addition — I couldn't help myself.
I plunked one blackberry (straight from my freezer!) into each of my financiers. I figured it would give the cakes a jam-like center and add a little fruity complement to the almond flavor. They were lovely in this manner, but I am curious to try them sans fruit for the traditional taste.
Financiers are small French cakes with an almond meal and butter base. They are simple and satisfying, related in texture and taste to madelines or cat tongue cookies. It is said that these small tea cakes were originally baked in rectangular molds, creating a golden bar shape, thus eliciting the funny name of Financier. You don't have to be a Rockefeller to make and eat these edible golden sweets though!
Clotilde Dusoulier of the acclaimed blog, Chocolate and Zucchini, has a wonderful recipe for these delightful treats in her book, Chocolate and Zucchini: Daily Adventures in a Parisian Kitchen.
Honey Almond Financiers
makes about 2 dozen mini cakes
makes about 2 dozen mini cakes
(adapted from Chocolate and Zucchini: Daily Adventures in a Parisian Kitchen by Clotide Dusoulier)
1 cup ground almonds (I used Bob's Red Mill Finely Ground Almond Meal)
1/3 cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
6 tablespoons butter, plus a little more to grease the muffin tins
1/3 cup honey
2 eggs
1 teaspoon almond extract
24 blackberries (optional -- I used frozen!)
1/3 cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
6 tablespoons butter, plus a little more to grease the muffin tins
1/3 cup honey
2 eggs
1 teaspoon almond extract
24 blackberries (optional -- I used frozen!)
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour two mini muffin pans.
Combine the ground almonds, flour and salt in a medium-sized bowl. Melt butter in a small saucepan, add honey and sugar, stirring to melt. Pour the butter honey mixture into the almond flour mixture, whisking to combine. Add the eggs, one by one, stirring until the batter is uniform.
Pour about 1 heaping tablespoon of the batter into the greased and floured muffin tins. Place one blackberry, if using, on top of each muffin. Bake for 12-15 minutes, until golden. Let stand in muffin tins for about 5 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack to cool fully.
HOT CHOCOLATE ADDICTION + HAPPY FRIEND
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Tastes like happy. |
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Check out Tricia's amazing vintage ring, purchased from the same vintage shop, Antoinette's where D got mine! |
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That is one cute cup and one cute lady. |
I seem to be really having a love affair with decadent, luxurious, not safe for work-type hot chocolate. The kind that enrobes your taste buds in sweet, smoky, nuanced, breathy notes -- Sweet whispers on the back of my throat . . . Oh yes. Now I've officially lost it folks.
Even more exciting than finding a devilish shot of hot chocolate (which we did at Cacao) amidst a rainy afternoon, is the news that my dear friend Tricia is getting married. I'm overjoyed for her and her man, Andrew -- I have gotten to know Tricia and darling Andrew over the years, and am so happy for their impending nuptials. I'm also sad because Trish is moving across the country, to D.C., but am delighted at the thought of their new life, taking on a new town! Tricia and I are working on a project to be revealed on the blog soon. We're kindred spirits --the girl is equally crazed about hot chocolate and all of it's deep, yummy glory. Awwh, I'm going to miss you, my Dear!
Raise your glass of champagne or petite mug of barely-sweetened 70% cocoa -- To marriage!
HOT CHOCOLATE MADNESS
As much as I should heed my own advice, and grab an orange or a cup of green tea or something of the sort, I just want to swim in a giant puddle of hot chocolate. So does D. We are obviously, slowly, surely, going winter-stir-crazy in our abode. Oh Spring, where are you now? Save us from ourselves! For now, we must sally-forth with many cups of potent beverages.
And, throw in a little chunk of a nice chocolate bar -- this adds yet another layer of flavor, character and body to the final product.
Finally, a cup of serious hot cocoa is very nice the next day, cold, straight from the fridge. It's a breakfast pudding!
WINTER SNACK
The day in Portland was blistering cold, yet blazing sun, the kinda weather that slaps a big smile on your face -- so intense the colors and the mood. People bundled in mittens on the bicycles and glorious beanies of every shade. I love it when it's crisp with sunshine, like biting into the perfect Fuji apple!
Around 4 o'clock, we sat down to what may be the world's most perfect after-school and after-work snack. A giant mug of English Breakfast tea with plenty of milk and sugar, for good measure. And a bowl of sliced Valencia oranges, tart kiwis, blueberries, dried cherries and a sprinkling of coconut shreds. For me, snacking is essential -- be it in the car, on a walk, while cooking -- you can bet I've got a little stash of nuts or an apple close by. I have to feed this beast! Or I become very very cranky, and no one wants to be around a cranky Lee.
HAPPY NEW YEAR
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the British poppers from Gen Gen were a huge hit -- wore my crown all morning long -- sweater made by my grandma for my dad, more than 30 years ago -- amazing gift! |
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My parents served MANY heavenly meals over the break, I hardly lifted a finger. Each dinner was topped off with some wildly yummy dessert such as this pumpkin souffle with freshly whipped cream. |
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Dave and I soaking in the sun, in LA. Viva el sol!!! |
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the sweetest little red cuddle buddy in the whole wide world. |
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Holding court at D'Angelos with old friends, my favorite breakfast place in Santa Barbara. The best poached eggs and toast on Earth. |
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the darling boy received a few new green bones for his Xmas treat. |
I just returned to Portland after a long and restful stay in Santa Barbara and LA. The sun was actually shining bright and bold and beautiful today! The air was cold and fresh as we huddled in our little apartment by our fake fire place. Kinda great. I wanted to invite you in for a peek over my vacation, much needed after a busy working 6 months. I also set aside a little time to create a few intentions for the new year -- I love this season of reflection and new possibilities. Do you have any goals for the big 11?
Talk to you next year!