Cherry Frozen YogurtI knew I had a winner with this recipe when my husband dug into the freezer container and filled his empty coffee mug right up to the top with this frozen yogurt.  Make no mistake.  This is tangy and wonderful and so refreshing it will give you chills.  No pun intended…

The honey in the background is light without being sickeningly sweet as so many frozen treats are.  Whether you choose to go with fat free yogurt, regular, or something in between, you can truly inhale this dessert guilt free.  Just be sure to get plain cherries, not sweetened or packed in syrup.  Big chocolate chips are OK too, but we like the cold little bite of the minis.  They are easy to eat when frozen.  Also, you can roughly chop the whole cherries before stirring them in at the end, but I found it wasn’t necessary.  Add a little shortbread cookie and you have got yourself one spectacular dessert!  Take a cue from my husband and serve it right in your after dinner coffee mug.
Cherry Frozen YogurtOne Year Ago: Shepherds Pie, One Bowl Chocolate Cake, Homemade Ketchup, Egg Ribbon Soup

Cherry Frozen Yogurt W/ Mini Chocolate Chips
Some yogurts contain gelatin as a stabilizer, so make sure the yogurt you use for this is gelatin free.  Stoneyfield Farms is a great brand for this.  I use the fat free, but the low-fat might freeze even better!  Feel free to use fresh sweet cherries when they are in season-about 3 cups.

1-32 oz container vanilla yogurt, preferably organic
1-12 oz bag frozen cherries-do not defrost
1/3 c honey
1/2 c mini chocolate chips

In the bowl of a food processor, pulse the yogurt, honey, and half of the bag of cherries, just until combined.  Freeze in an ice cream maker according to manufacturers directions.  Stir in the rest of the bag of cherries and the chocolate chips.  Pour into a freezer container and freeze until firm.  Let set out a bit before serving to soften.
Note: We actually like this best right out of the ice cream maker with the consistency of soft serve.

Honey Cheesecake Bars

Honey Cheesecake BarsThese little squares of deliciousness are nothing short of dreamy.

When my parents passed along the last bottle of honey I would get from them until the end of the summer next year, I horaded it.  I wanted that last jar of wild honey to last forever and so my chances were higher if I didn’t open it, right?  Unable to stand it anymore, I caved and busted into it this past week.  In my house, an open jar of honey goes fast.  As mentioned in a previous post, I use a lot of honey when I cook.  I use it almost exclusively in yeast breads and try to swap it out when I can in savory recipes too: marinades, salad dressings, and sauces.  But what I was really looking for was a recipe that highlighted the taste perfectly.  Honey straight from the hive is so superior to honey from the store and there really is no way for me to describe the difference in taste.  Just trust me on this one.  The next time you pass up a stand at the farmer’s market, pick up a jar.  You won’t be sorry!

My craving led me to these bars.  This is a recipe I have made many times over the years, but finally decided to tweak it a bit to make it more…well…honey-ey.  I wanted the flavor of the honey to not just be the sweetener, but the star.  It took a few pans but I got it.  Creamy, smooth, sweet, and perfectly simple.
Honey Cheesecake BarsOne Year AgoPeanut Butter & Jelly Bars

Honey Cheesecake Bars
Kinda, sorta from Gourmet

6 whole graham crackers
3 T sugar
3 T melted butter
1-8 oz block cream cheese
1 egg
2 T milk
1/3 c honey

In a food processor, combine the graham crackers and the sugar and process to fine crumbs.  Add the melted butter and pulse a few times to combine.  Dump the crumbs into an ungreased 8×8 or 9×9 inch pan.  Spread evenly and pat gently flat.  Bake at 325 for 10 minutes and let cool a bit while you make the filling.  Rinse out the food processor bowl and wipe clean.  Process the remaining ingredients until smooth, scraping the sides and pulsing again to ensure a smooth, even, and incorporated filling.  Pour over crust and bake for 25 minutes, or until filling is just set and does not wiggle in the center.  Cool to room temp and chill completely.  Cut into 16 squares.  These bars are best eaten the day they are made, but will be OK on day two.

Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesMmm.  This picture makes me so happy…

As I was looking down my list of food to freeze and have on hand after baby #3 arrives, I noticed that peanut butter chocolate chip cookies were not on my list.  For shame!  How could they have been overlooked?!  So in the midst of the 101 other things I was doing yesterday, I decided to make some.  Unfortunately, I remembered that the recipe I usually make now had about half a dozen other different versions that had been added to it over the years.  Which one was the best one?  I really didn’t feel like keeping all the different recipes for one cookie so I narrowed them down, eliminated all but four, and got to work.  The results were unanimous!  In a blind taste test (which means paper plates with numbers on them for the different cookies-very scientific and official) my own recipe was chosen.  Take that Martha Stewart, who was represented in cookie #2.

I do want to take a moment and mention why we didn’t pick this recipe from Cooking Light.  I have actually made them several times before but had never done a side by side comparison.  In this case, even though the cookies had fantastic texture and the use of mini chocolate chips is kind if nice, the flavor could not compare.  The Cooking Light version-made with canola oil-tasted great, but when you eat a cookie made with real butter at the same time, it kind of trumps the light version.  If you are looking for a cookie that is just lower in fat, they are wonderful.  But in the words of my husband, “If you are going to eat a healthy cookie, go all out and make it a really healthy cookie, like these.  If not, then just eat the butter version.”  I totally agree.

I have now deleted or tossed all other recipes for peanut butter chocolate chip cookies.  This is the only one I will bake from now on.  It is chewy and wonderful.  More of a chocolate chip cookie with peanut butter in it than a peanut butter cookie with chocolate chips in it.  Makes for a less crumbly texture.  Now my only dilemma is whether or not to make a different cookie to put in the freezer.  Right next to the 4 gallon bags I have left over from testing…
Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip CookiesPeanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
This recipe is easily doubled.

1/2 c peanut butter, crunchy or creamy
3/4 c butter, softened
1/2 c brown sugar
1/2 c sugar
Cream all ingredients together.  Add:
1 egg
1 1/2 tsp vanilla
Mix thoroughly and scrape down the sides of the bowl.  Add:
1 1/3 c flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
pinch of salt
Mix just until combined.  Stir in by hand:
1 c chocolate chips
1 c roughly chopped peanuts, optional

Bake at 350 degrees for 10-12 minutes or until just barely golden brown on top.  Cool a few minutes on the pan and then remove to a cooling rack.  These freeze great!

Pineapple Upside Down Cake-I Aim To Please

Pineapple Upside-Down CakeMy family had dinner at our close friends’ house tonight and in the interest of using them as guinea pigs taste testers, I offered to bring dessert.  My reasons for this were three fold:  they aren’t picky and will eat just about anything I make as long as it does not contain olives, they have several hungry kids and between our two families we can polish off a dessert that would normally take our family days and days to eat, and my least favorite reason is that I have gestational diabetes and I can only have a bite or two of whatever I make.  The last reason is keeping me from doing a lot of experimentation in the kitchen and any excuse to try something totally new is a welcome change.

So my husband looked at me with his big, blue, dreamy eyes and asked for pineapple upside-down cake.  I was powerless to resist…*sigh*

I have made just about everything except pineapple upside down cake, but was eager to make some since my Dad has always loved it and he will be here in just a few short weeks to help watch our two munchkins while Mike and I are at the hospital welcoming the third munchkin.  So trial run on the recipe tonight, and round two in a few weeks.  And man, I can’t wait for round two!!

As you know, I usually make a recipe several times before I post it.  Just to make sure.  But in this case, the whole process was so simple, there is little room for error.  I ended up picking the recipe from this book, figuring I could not go wrong.  Bingo!  I have now tossed every other recipe for pineapple upside-down cake that I have ever clipped, copied, or scribbled in the margin of a notebook. There is no more need for testing!  This is exactly what I was looking for.  Simple, easy, and totally classic.  It mixed up quick and made the house smell…well…there aren’t really words.  Kind of like warm, pineapple ice cream with carmel on top.  Soft, moist, vanilla cake covered in sticky, gooey fruit.  Surprisingly, it is not all that sweet, which is one of the things I love most about this.  While I was a bit disappointed that this version didn’t have the tell tale rings of fruit with a maraschino cherry in the middle, it does make for more carmel soaked pineapple per bite.  And that is a very good thing.  Some freshly whipped cream on the side and this very good thing goes to fabulous.  Mmmm.  Can you feel the love?! 🙂
013 (4) Pineapple Upside-Down CakePineapple Upside-Down Cake
ATK includes a tip if you don’t like pineapple but still want to make this cake.  Use peaches!  About 4 peaches, peeled, pitted, and sliced in place of the pineapple.  Scrumptious!  Also, I like to buy the pineapple pre-cut from the deli department to save time and energy, but it is up to you!

1 1/2 sticks (12 T) of butter, softened
3/4 c brown sugar
1 1/2 lbs, peeled, cored, and cubed fresh pineapple (not canned) which is about 3-4 cups
1 1/2 c flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
pinch of salt
3/4 c sugar
2 eggs, room temperature *see note*
1 egg white, room temperature
1/3 c milk, room temperature
1 tsp vanilla

In an 8 or 9 inch round cake pan *see note* (with sides at least 2 inches high), place 4 T (1/2 stick) of butter.  Put pan in a 350 degree oven until melted.  Watch carefully so it doesn’t burn!  Just melt!  Add the brown sugar to the pan and mix with a spatula, spreading it out to cover the bottom of the pan evenly.  Add your pineapple in one even layer.  You may use a little less than called for.  You just want to cover the pan evenly without any major holes.  Set this aside.  In a medium bowl mix the flour, baking powder and salt.  Set aside.  In a mixing bowl with a paddle attachment, beat the remaining 8 T of butter with the 3/4 c of sugar.  Beat until light and fluffy, about 5 minutes, scraping the bowl at least once.  Add the eggs and the egg white, one at a time, beating after each and scraping the bowl.  Add vanilla.  Add 1/3 of the flour and mix carefully, then half the milk, then another third of the flour, the last of the milk, and finally the last of the flour, mixing just until combined.  Scrape down the sides of the bowl and mix by hand a few turns till smooth.  Drop big globs (yes, that is a technical term…) of batter onto the pineapple and carefully smooth out until even.  Bake for 40-45 minutes or until cake just starts to pull away from the sides of the pan and a toothpick comes out with just a few crumbs attached.  Let cake cool 10 MINUTES in pan before inverting it onto a serving plate.  Let cool for at least another hour.  Serve plain or with cream.  Or for breakfast.  Or snack.  Or brunch…
Note: If your eggs are not at room temp, simply place them in a small bowl filled with very warm tap water and let sit for a minute or two.  You just want to take the chill off of them.  Milk can be microwaved for just a few seconds.  You don’t want them warm-just not cold.  This helps ensure a nice, fluffy, light cake.
Note: You can also bake this in a 8×8 or 9×9 square baking dish.

Buttermilk Brownies

Buttermilk BrowniesFor a couple of weeks now, I have been in a kind of ‘brownie mood’.  This is a bit odd for me.  I really like brownies and if you look through my recipe archive you will find a ridiculously high number of recipes there for me to try.  But when it comes down to it, they are kind of rich for me.  A good chocolate cake?  More my style.  My chocolate needs to be broken up by something.  Something like….whipped cream or peanut butter or carmel or marshmallow.  Something!  Lately though, I have been after the texture of brownies.  The chewy, dense kind of brownie.  I made a batch for the Super Bowl and while they tasted great, the texture was crumbly and annoying; not worthy of passing on to all of you.  So I kept paging through my recipes, still looking for that chewy, gooey brownie.  Or at least one I could modify to be that way.

I failed.  Miserably.  What I ended up making were these buttermilk brownies-the opposite of what I was originally looking for.  The first batch I made were so good, I turned around and made a second one so that I would know if they were reliable or not (the method is kind of weird) and, in turn, be able to post about them here.  All thoughts of dense and chewy were gone!  This is one of those recipes that I know I will be making for a dozen different reasons in the future.  These are most definitely cake-like.  If you are a lover of a soft, moist brownie, I have found the perfect one.  What cemented it for me was the taste.  They are sweet, but not really all that rich.  And while I don’t usually frost my brownies, these need it.  Of course, now that my husband has confessed to me (after more than 10 years of marriage and not saying a word) that he actually prefers his brownies frosted, I need to make it up to him!

I mentioned above that the method for this recipe is kind of odd.  Somehow, they still turn out fantastic though.  I know this is the first of many brownie recipes that I will post here so please don’t take this version as some kind of ultimate ‘brownie recipe to end all brownie recipes’!  There are so many different kinds of them out there-all of them just as good-that there is plenty of room for a version to go with every occasion and every mood.  I am very much looking forward to my next testing session.  Maybe carmel brownies next…
Buttermilk Brownies Buttermilk BrowniesButtermilk Brownies
Adapted from BHG
You will notice below in the instructions for these brownies that this recipe can be baked in either a 9X13 inch pan or an 11 X14 inch glass Pyrex pan.  I have tried both, and although they turn out excellent either way, the bigger pan bakes up much better.  Use the large one if you have it.

2 c flour
2 c sugar
1 tsp baking soda
pinch of salt
Combine the above ingredients in the bowl of an electric mixer.  Meanwhile, in a medium saucepan, melt together:
1 c water
1 c (2 sticks) butter
1/3 c cocoa powder

Cook over medium heat, whisking constantly until smooth.  Bring the mixture just to a boil and then pour into the dry ingredients with the mixer on very low.  Scrape the bottom and sides of the bowl and mix again until everything is incorporated.  With the speed on low again, slowly add:

1/2 c buttermilk
1 tsp vanilla
Mix until incorporated.  Add, one at a time:
2 eggs

Mix and scrape the bowl if necessary.  Turn the speed up as high as you can without making a mess of your kitchen (this is only about medium for mine) and beat the batter for 1 minute.  Batter will be very thin! Pour the batter into a greased 11X14 inch glass Pyrex dish or 9X13 inch pan.  Bake at 350 for 30-35 minutes or until toothpick comes out clean or with a crumb or two attached.  During the last 10 minutes of baking, make the Chocolate Buttermilk Frosting.

Chocolate Buttermilk Frosting

In a medium saucepan (I just use the one from earlier in the recipe), melt together:
1/4 c butter
3 T cocoa powder
3 T buttermilk

Whisking constantly, bring the mixture just to a bubble!  Remove it from the heat and add 2 1/4 c of powdered sugar, whisking vigorously until smooth.  I add it in a bit at a time so I don’t make a huge mess.  Once it is whisked smooth, spread it over the hot brownies you just took out of the oven, smoothing to cover the whole pan.  Cool completel to room temp.

Banana Snack Cake With Honey Cinnamon Glaze

Banana Snack CakeIsn’t snack cake a most wonderful name for a food?  It implies that it is a sweet, moist cake that you can, well, snack on.  Meaning, eat whenever you like as a snack!  I mean, really!  That is like the best thing ever!  And this recipe is much like all other snack cakes.  Simple and good.  Quick to throw together as an afternoon treat or hasty dessert.

I am really not partial to any particular snack cake.  Chocolate, chocolate chip, applesauce, lemon-all are good!  And I am currently immersed in the process of making a master list of them to have at my disposal.  This one is a bit more dense, like a banana bread, and perfect to soak up all the glaze.  Simply scrumptious.
Banana Snack CakeOne Year AgoVegetable Couscous

Banana Snack Cake W/Honey Cinnamon Glaze
Cake recipe adapted from Americas Test Kitchen, Glaze is a Brittany Original
This recipe is just fine without the glaze but it is REALLY GOOD with the glaze.  Just don’t eat it all before pouring on the cake.  Its kind of addictive.

In the bowl of an electric mixer or using a hand mixer, combine:
1 stick of softened butter
1 1/4 c sugar
2 large, very ripe bananas
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
1/4 c milk
1/4 c sour cream or plain yogurt
When that is fully incorporated, add:
2 c flour
2 1/2 tsp baking powder
dash of salt

Mix just until combined.  Pour into a well greased 9X9 baking pan and bake at 350 degrees for about 40 minutes or until toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.  Cool ten minutes in the pan.  If desired, remove cake to a cooling rack before glazing.

Glaze:
1/2 c powdered sugar
2 T honey
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1 T water

Combine all ingredients in a small bowl until smooth.  Pour evenly over cooled cake.

Chocolate Pudding Cake, As Promised!

Ok.  So here it is.  The ooey gooey chocolate dessert I told you I would post.
Chocolate Pudding CakeI need to mention right off that this was kind of hard to photograph.  How do you take a picture of something that is part cake, part pudding, part brownie, and all decadence?  Because that is what this is like.  If you have never made pudding cake before, let me explain.  Its um…well…its kinda weird.  I don’t really know how it ever turns out, just that it does.  Most pudding cake recipes, regardless of what kind (I have a lemon recipe that is OUT OF THIS WORLD!), all seem to have a kind of heavy cake mixture on the bottom, then a dry sugary layer, and then-yes I know this is odd-you pour hot liquid over the top and don’t stir it in.  Somehow (I think) the liquid seeps through the whole she-bang and mixes with everything.  It is magic I tell you!  Then voila!  You take it out of the oven and you have this dense, cakey top with perfect pudding on the bottom.  Whoever figued out how to do this on purpose, as I am guessing the first time was an accident, I am forever in their debt.  I mean seriously!  Does this not look like happiness on a spoon?!
Chocolate Pudding CakeI thought so.  I am only sad that it is now all gone and that I don’t have anymore to eat while I post this.  Because looking at these pictures is making me drool on the keyboard.
Chocolate Pudding CakeSo on to the recipe.  I got this recipe from my Mother-In-Law and I think it was in a Hershey cookbook of hers.  I am telling you, this woman likes chocolate more than anyone I know, and this gets made in her house A LOT!  And for good reason too!  It is warm, chocolatey, not very complicated at all, and just so darn yummy.  So please just trust me!  It is weird going into the oven, but soooo wonderful when it is done!
Chocolate Pudding Cake Chocolate Pudding Cake Chocolate Pudding CakeOne Year Ago: Crispy Bars

Chocolate Pudding Cake

In a medium bowl, mix together:
3/4 c sugar
1 c flour
1/4 c cocoa powder
2 tsp baking powder
pinch of salt
After it is mixed well, stir in:
1/2 c milk
1/3 c melted butter
1 tsp vanilla
Mix until smooth and pour into an ungreased 9X9 pan, preferably glass.
In a small bowl, mix:
1/2 c sugar
1/2 c brown sugar
1/4 c cocoa powder

Dump dry mixture over the top and spread evenly.  DO NOT STIR!
Lastly, pour 1 1/4 c very hot tap water over the whole thing.  Again, DO NOT STIR!
Slide it carefully into the oven and bake at 350 degrees for 35-40 minutes.  Let cool for at least 15 minutes before scooping out portions and devouring.  This is very rich so a little goes a long way.  Also, I don’t bother serving this unless I have freshly whipped cream to go with it!  Enjoy!

Weeknight Apple Pie

Weeknight Apple PieThis is going to be a quick post: short and sweet!  I have a meatloaf in the oven and potatoes simmering away on the stove, nearly ready to be smashed.  The carrots have been steamed and are just waiting for a glaze just before dinner.  So far, dinner smells have not invaded the house.  Only dessert smells.  Apple dessert, to be exact.  Always a good thing.  Dessert is done and cooling on the counter in all its golden brown glory and I thought I would take this opportunity to tell you about it!

As you can see, my pie split a bit in the back, but no matter.  Its all good!  Also, I was losing my light so it is extremely hot in this picture.  Like…molten hot.  It will settle down a bit as it cools and not be quite so puffed up.  I make this a lot in the middle of the week or when unexpected guests stop over.  It is quick, easy, and makes just enough for what I need.  No huge pile of leftovers that I end up finishing off myself!  It really is perfect for a weeknight when you have just enough time for something special.  If you ask me, it is the perfect ending for meatloaf night.

One Year Ago: Chicken Salad

Weeknight Apple Pie

1 refrigerated pie crust, store bought or homemade
2 medium apples, peeled cored and sliced thin
1/4 c brown sugar or raw sugar
1/3 c apple juice or apple cider or water
1 T butter, optional
cinnamon
2 tsp corn starch and a splash of water

In a medium sized saute pan over medium heat, mix the apple, sugar, apple juice, and butter together.  Add dashes of cinnamon to taste.  Simmer until the apples are just starting to soften, about 5 minutes.  Mix the cornstarch and just a tiny splash of cold water in a small bowl to make a slurry.  Add this to the apples and cook until thick, about 30 seconds.  Meanwhile, lay out the circle of pie crust on a piece of parchment paper on a sheet pan.  Pour the apple filling onto one half of the pie crust.  Fold over the other half and use a fork to pinch the two halves closed.  Poke a few holes in the top to vent.  If desired, beat an egg with a splash of water in a small bowl and brush over the top of the pie.  This doesn’t affect the taste, but it does make it look all fancy.  Bake at 375 for 20-25 minutes or until golden brown.  Let cool on the pan until just warm.  Cut into wedges and enjoy.  This is great with ice cream!  When it is cool, you can even pick up the pieces like a piece of pizza!

Peppermint Meringue Cookies: Nostalgia

These Peppermint Meringue Cookies are sometimes called Forgotten Kisses. Whatever you call them, they are light and OH so crispy! {Brittany's Pantry}It has been a long week here with surprise visits and several trips to the doctor due to a relapse in illness.  In addition, my plans for this weekend have suddenly changed and I now need to clean out the fridge.  Amongst several unsalvageable items-i.e. leftover pork chops I don’t even remember making-were four lonely egg whites.  Eureka!

I get excited about leftover egg whites, or yolks for that matter, for lots of reasons.  Mainly because I don’t like to waste anything.  So, if I am making ice cream for example, I immediately start thinking about the leftover whites I will have when all the yolks end up in the custard.  Is it enough to make an angel food cake?  A white layer cake?  A meringue pie?  Or something just as scrumptious but much less exciting, like an omelet?  The beauty of egg whites is that they keep much better than yolks do.  If you have a lot of egg yolks leftover, you are better off pitching them (There is a rumor going around that too many egg yolks aren’t good for you…) or making something with them immediately.  Whites on the other hand-those beautiful, protein packed, cholesterol free whites, can actually be frozen and used later.  With a label that says how many and a nicely sealed container, they will keep a month or two.  Just leave them in the fridge to thaw overnight.  Of course it is always nice when you have a recipe that calls for both, like a lemon meringue pie.  You use the yolks to make the lemon curd for the filling and the whites for the topping.  But just this past weekend I made creme brulee, a very unhealthy, egg yolk and heavy cream laden dessert with a burnt sugar topping.  And it was soooooo good.  Hence, the presence of four egg whites in my fridge.  Unlike other times when I sort of ponder what I am to do with them, these egg whites had a purpose.  A destiny, if you will.  Peppermint Chocolate Chip Meringue Cookies.  The moment I added creme brulee to the New Years Day menu, I instantly jumped to these cookies as a secondary treat.  My mom used to make these all the time when I was a kid and I think it was because she always had intentions of making a lemon meringue pie, but usually only got as far as making the custard filling.  It is kind of hard to beat warm lemon custard in a bowl and I can’t even tell you how many times the full pie was never made.  I am guessing that is why we always had egg whites in the fridge.  Whatever the reason, peppermint flavoring and mini chocolate chips always seemed to be the way she made them and I for one never complained.

The beauty of these cookies is that they seem really special, but only have a few ingredients.  I have always considered them an easy, make anytime kind of cookie so please don’t save this recipe for a special occasion.  The fact that they are a bit better for you than most cookies makes them a good treat for adults and kids alike, even if shrinking the size of your jeans was not a resolution this year.  Personally, I am not a fan of using these in little treat bags for the holidays or a bake sale given the fragile nature of the cookie, but they are definitely a crowd pleaser.  So placing them alongside a heavy dessert, say at Easter or even a barbecue, makes them a fun addition to a menu.  I happen to enjoy them Monday through Friday, 365 days out of the year and my family has not complained once so I think they are safe to serve anytime.  Whether it is ‘fridge clean out day’ or not.
One Year Ago: Hot WingsHoney Waffles, Filet Au Poivre, Fettuccine Alfredo, Shrimp Quesadillas

These Peppermint Meringue Cookies are sometimes called Forgotten Kisses. No matter the name, they are light, airy, and wonderfully crisp! {Brittany's Pantry}Peppermint Meringue Cookies W/Mini Chocolate Chips
Please note the time frame you need to make these cookies.  It isn’t complicated, just a lot of waiting around.  For that reason, they are also called Forgotten Kisses.  They need time to dry out slowly and can’t be hurried.  No shortcuts here people!

4 egg whites
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
3/4 c sugar
2 tsp cornstarch
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 tsp peppermint extract
1/2 c mini chocolate chips

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment, beat the egg whites and cream of tartar on medium high until increased in volume and pillowy and foamy.  In the meantime, mix together the sugar and cornstarch in a small bowl.  When egg whites are ready, slowly pour in the sugar mixture while mixer is running, continuing to beat on medium high until glossy and at stiff peaks.  The meringue should hold a peak when a spoon or the whisk is drawn through it and pulled away.  This whole process will take less than five minutes.  Add the extract and whisk a few seconds more.  Fold the chocolate chips in by hand.  On two sheet pans lined with parchment paper, drop the meringue by spoonfuls at least an inch apart, poking down any spiky peaks.  Bake in a 225 degree oven for one hour and then turn the oven off, leaving the cookies in the oven for an additional hour.  Remove the sheet pans and let the cookies cool completely on the counter top, on the sheet pans, for another hour.  Store in a tightly sealed container at room temperature for up to 3 days.

‘Midnight’ Crackles

These Midnight Crackles are a dense and chewy cookie as dark as the night! {Brittany's Pantry}Get it?  Midnight?  Great recipe for New Years, don’t you think?

This picture actually doesn’t quite capture the correct color.  They are super dark.  Like…midnight dark:)

Actually, these cookies are fantastic just about anytime of the year, even though I usually make them around the holidays.  They are a wonderful contribution to the cookie plate but honestly.  Can you see many people looking at this treat in July and saying ‘No!’ to a dense, bittersweet chocolate cookie?  I didn’t think so.  The wonderful thing about these cookies is that the flavor is just a tiny bit different than a straightforward chocolate cookie.  What does this mean?  It means you end up really really liking them.  Like…a lot.  I have been making them for years and am always a little surprised when I eat my first one of the batch.  “Oh yeah,” I say to myself, “THIS is why I always liked these!”  If you follow my blog regularly, you may recognize this conversation.  I have it with my self all the time and in turn, end up babbling about it here to you.  No matter how many times I make a dish, I can still be wonderfully shocked at how fantastic it is.  I like to think this is one of the things that my husband finds attractive about me.  I pray he still finds it endearing that I can make a shrimp pasta that I make ALL THE TIME or a coffee cake I whipped up twice in one week and still roll my eyes to the heavens, savoring the flavor and hopping up and down in what he calls my ‘happy food dance’.  All because food never ceases to amaze me.  And on that note, I hope food continues to knock my socks of for the rest of my days.  I once saw an extremely elderly couple at a pizza place and they looked so…um advanced in years that I would have had my doubts of their making it through the meal had I been their server.  When I glanced at the table they each had one of the most enormous pilsners of beer I have ever seen and were sharing a huge pizza that from what I could tell, was covered with nothing but cheese and enough jalapenos to kill a cat.  This was years ago and I still think about that couple.  And I sincerely hope that is Mike and I someday.

Only I will probably be drinking milk, not beer, but that kind of shatters the image doesn’t it?

So back to the cookies!  Like most cookie recipes, this one is easy and straightforward.  It will satisfy the most intense chocolate craving so keep them in mind for the pregnant lady in your life.  Just sayin.These Midnight Crackles are a dense and chewy cookie as dark as the night! {Brittany's Pantry}One Year Ago: Sweet Cream Biscuits & Cranberry Orange Scones

Midnight Crackles
Adapted from Dorie Greenspan
The ingredients in this recipe have not changed from the original, but after years of fussing with the baking technique, I realize that I have come to disagree with the wonderful Dorie Greenspan.  Please don’t tell her.  Also, don’t disregard what seems like unimportantly small measures of spice in this recipe.  It makes a difference.

In a medium size sauce pan, melt together over very low heat:
10 T unsalted butter
1 1/4 c brown sugar
10 oz bittersweet chocolate chips, preferably Ghirardelli, or an equal amount of good quality bittersweet chocolate, chopped
Stir the mixture occasionally until the chocolate is just barely melted and smooth.  Pour into a mixing bowl and let cool slightly.  Add 2 eggs and mix well.  Sift together and add:
2 1/2 c flour
1/2 c cocoa powder
1 tsp baking soda
pinch of salt
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1/8 tsp cloves

Mix all ingredients until just combined.  The dough will come together in a ball and look kind of shiny.  Scoop out a chunk of dough about the size of a prune and roll into a smooth ball.  Place on a parchment lined baking sheet and flatten slightly with you fingers, keeping the cookies a good 2 inches apart from each other.  Bake at 350 for 10-11 minutes or until cracked and dry on top.  DO NOT OVER BAKE!  Let cool for  a few minutes on the pan to set up and then remove to a cooling rack.  Store tightly sealed for up to 5 days or freeze for a month.

Fruit & Nut Rum Balls

Fruit & Nut Rum BallsThere might be some kind of rule that says I have to post lots of Christmas cookie recipes in December but I don’t really care.  I actually have so many cookie recipes I could post here (literally dozens and dozens) that I couldn’t choose between them and decided to share this recipe instead.  I make these-I call them candy I guess-every single year.  And every year I say to myself, “Self?  These are really good!”  I don’t know why I forget about it for eleven months and then am surprised every year but I don’t know why people buy food to feed squirrels either.  Both are a mystery to me.

Back to the food, the beauty of this recipe is that, well…its beautiful!  I love the colors of the dried fruit.  Actually, it just occurred to me that it is kind of like fruit cake, but without the cake part.  Hmmm.  You would think I would have noticed that before now…Any-hoo, don’t be turned off by that!  These little nuggets are sticky and sweet and chewy and rich and mmmmm.  Years ago, when I made them the first time, my Mom and my sisters were there to test them out with me.  We all took a bite and our eyes got big and round!  “Wow!  These are great!” was the general consensus.  So I have been making them ever since.  I like the fact that they aren’t just the same old thing you find on a cookie tray and they are really fun to pass out to the neighbors.  Bonus!  They are no bake!  They are just so darn festive I hear Jingle Bells playing in my head every time I eat one!
Fruit & Nut Rum Balls Fruit & Nut Rum Balls Fruit & Nut Rum BallsOne Year Ago: Brown Sugar Shortbread

Fruit & Nut Rum Balls
Recipe adapted from Eating Well

1/2 c dried cranberries
1/2 c chopped, dried apricots
2 eggs
3/4 c sugar
1 c chopped walnuts and pecans (1/2 c each)
1 tsp rum extract
shredded, sweetened coconut

Stir together the first four ingredients in a medium sized sauce pan and place over medium heat.  Cook stirring constantly until the mixture turns a kind of pale yellow and it starts to thicken.  This will take about five minutes.  As soon as you notice that it is starting to get thick (this will be around 165-170 degrees on a candy thermometer if you want to get technical) pull it off the heat and stir in the chopped nuts and the rum extract.  Set aside to cool.  Once it is cool enough to handle, scoop out scant teaspoonfuls onto a sheet pan covered in wax paper.  You should get about 2-2 1/2 dozen out of this recipe.  Chill the sheet pan if necessary to make them sticky enough to hold a ball shape.  When your mixture is stiff enough (either right out of the pan or after it has chilled a bit) roll them gently into a small ball and then roll in coconut.  Chill completely and store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to five days.  You can freeze these for up to a month too!

Note: Chopped dates, chopped dried cherries, and raisins work well here too.  So do chopped pistachios so feel free to experiment!

The BEST Carrot Cake EVER!!

The Best Carrot Cake EVER!In the interest of mixing up the sweet and savory recipes from my Christmas dinner menu, I will save the potato gratin recipe for the next post.  So we are jumping ahead to dessert for today, and ooooooh MAN!  What a dessert it is!  Maybe not exactly the kind of holiday dessert that first comes to mind, but when you have trays of cookies and fudge and candy, something spicy and classic is absolutely perfect.  I should tell you that the pictures here don’t nearly do it justice.  It turns out that the bright color of the cake was difficult to photograph and my light kept changing.  Please know that no matter how good this cake might look, it is ten times better in person.

I seriously don’t even know where to start with this cake.  Do I tell that it is thick and moist and has the best texture?  Will it help you out if I say the blend of spice is perfectly balanced with the sweetness?  Should I mention that the frosting is so good you will want to just fill a bowl with it, grab a spoon, and then sit in the closet so no one will find you and want to eat it too?  All these are good points but what I really wish I could do is just hand you all a piece.  Not being able to physically share food with you is one of the major drawbacks to blogging.  This would just be sooo much easier if I could just hand you a plate with a little sliver of cake and then you would eat it and then your eyes would pop out of your head and I would say, “See?” and you would be like “Wow!  Yeah!  I totally get it now!” and I would smile and be all, like “I told you!” and you would be like “OK enough already.  Can I have another piece?”  I am pretty sure that is how it would go…
The Best Carrot Cake EVER!It is actually my husband that is such a fan of carrot cake and several years ago, I started trying different recipes-because wow, do they vary when it comes to carrot cake-trying to find a really great one that would become our only recipe.  The addition or subtraction of nuts, raisins, coconut etc, is easily enough to swap and experiment with, but it was the balance of spice and sweetness and texture that I couldn’t quite get right.  This cake ended my searching.  I am told by some (I mean you , Mom) that the absence of crushed pineapple is its only flaw.  I personally don’t mind if my carrot cake has it or not, so I don’t miss it here.  But just in case you believe that carrot cake cannot be made without pineapple, I am sorry to disappoint.  That minor adjustment aside, I think you will be happy with it.  And even though cakes can be temperamental sometimes, this one has turned out the same every single time I make it.  I consider it very reliable, making it perfect to serve around the holidays when you don’t want to experiment with something fussy.  It will feed quite a crowd and simply decorated would be stunning at an open house.

The recipe comes from Zoe Francois, a pastry chef/blogger/cookbook author from my home state of Minnesota!  If you want to really impress people, or just develop your skills, she posts video tutorials on how to frost cakes and other dessert related skills.  Very helpful.  You can check out her fantastic blog here.  I took advantage of her expertise and trusted her judgement when she said this was the ultimate carrot cake.  She was right.  Make this cake once and you will toss all your old recipes.  It really is the ultimate.
The Best Carrot Cake EVER!One Year Ago: Hot Chocolate #1

The Best Carrot Cake Ever
Slightly Adapted From Zoe Bakes
If you want to get a jump on things, you can bake the cake layers ahead of time, cool completely, wrap well, and freeze for up to one month.  Just defrost and then frost. 🙂  Feel free to bake this batter up as cupcakes.  That would be awesome for a birthday party or display for the holidays.  It would also be nice on a Saturday…

Cake:
4 eggs, room temp if possible
1 1/4 c sugar
1 c brown sugar
1 1/4 c canola oil
2 tsp vanilla
zest of 1 orange
2 1/4 c flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground ginger
1/4 tsp cloves
1/4 tsp nutmeg
healthy pinch of salt
1 lb carrots, trimmed, peeled, and grated
1 c walnuts, chopped
1 c raisins

Frosting:
3 blocks (24 oz) cream cheese, softened
8 oz (2 sticks) softened, unsalted butter
2 tsp vanilla
zest of one orange
5 c powdered sugar

For the cake, mix the first six ingredients in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment.  Add the dry ingredients and mix just until combined, scraping down the sides of the bowl.  Fold in the carrots, walnuts, and raisins by hand.  Divide the batter evenly between two 9 inch round cake pans that have been greased and floured very well.  Bake at 350 for 35-40 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean.  Let cool for 5 minutes in the pan and then carefully turn out onto cooling racks and let cool completely.  Frost cake.

For the frosting, mix all ingredients together, except sugar, until smooth and mixed well.  Add sugar and mix thoroughly.  This will give you PLENTY of frosting so don’t be skimpy!  Leftover frosting can be frozen until needed for something else!

Peppermint Chocolate Chip Cookies

Peppermint Chocolate Chip Cookies | Brittany's PantryOK.  So you know how I kind of avoid the recipes that include boxed ingredients because I would rather just make them from scratch?  Yeah.  Well that still stands.  I like to cook and bake from scratch and truly believe that it just tastes better that way.  Of course, as I have said before, there is nothing wrong with taking a little help now and then to make your life easier.  Piggy Pudding is a prime example of this.  As a matter of fact, I made it this morning with scrambled eggs and Apple Cider Syrup.  But that is not the point!  The point is that life is crazy and hectic and wonderful and most people just need to have an arsenal of great, quick ideas that don’t have a huge ingredient list and can be made in the time it takes my two year old to pretend to ‘read’ The Cat In The Hat.  This recipe falls into those categories.

These cookies are perfect for this time of year!  Because they are made with a sugar cookie mix, they are extremely fast to mix together and can withstand quite a bit of handling.  Kids can mess with the dough as much as they want, dropping it on the sheet pans to bake and pinching it and squishing it, and it will still bake up the same.  So often, as with traditional sugar or butter cookie dough, you have to chill it before and after every step and keep flour on it.  It is just much more particular.  This recipe, you can just have fun with.  It also seems to consistently make 3 dozen cookies exactly.  So if you have to whip something up last minute for an office party or school snack, these festive little treats will do just fine.  It makes it feel like Christmas without having to commit to the hours of time in the kitchen that you need for some cookie recipes!  Most of all, they are quite good.  I was pleasantly surprised about that when I first made these with my daughter a few years ago.  They have since become an easy weeknight treat during the Christmas season when I am pressed for time, but want to do something special.  And wrapped up in a red bow, they would make any neighbor a happy camper!Peppermint-Chocolate-Chip-Cookies One Year Ago: Puppy Chow

Peppermint Chocolate Chip Cookies
From Betty Crocker
Besides being quite yummy, kids (including mine) seem to love the fact that these are green.

1 pouch of sugar cookie mix, such as Betty Crocker
1 stick of softened butter
1 egg
6-8 drops of green food coloring
3/4 tsp peppermint extract
1 1/2 c chocolate chips

In a bowl for a stand mixer or with a hand mixer, combine first three ingredients.  Add the food coloring and mix well.  I like the pale color of only 6 drops, but 8 drops will make them nice and green!  Add the peppermint extract and combine.  Measure carefully!  It is very potent!  If you like, taste the batter to see if you want more extract, but only add more in by drops.  It is VERY strong and you can’t take it out once it is in there!  Stir the chocolate chips in by hand.  Drop by scant teaspoonfuls onto a greased or parchment covered sheet pan.  Make these tiny!  They are too overwhelming if you make them regular size!  Besides, small cookies are so cute…  Bake at 350 for 8-10 minutes or just until starting to barely brown on the edges.  Don’t over bake!  Let them cool on the sheet pan for a full five minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack.  Cookies will firm up as they cool.  These will last for several days in a tightly sealed container, or you can easily make them ahead of time and freeze them for when you need them!

Bon Bons

These old-fashioned bon bond follow a vintage recipe from my childhood! Two flavors, one of them gluten-free, and the perfect holiday recipe to make with kids! {Brittany's Pantry}I still have the Roasted Shrimp Cocktail recipes from the party to share with you, but I haven’t posted a sweet recipe in nearly a week!  For shame!  This is the holiday season after all!  Not every recipe this month will be rich, indulgent, or a cookie, but…well…some of them need to be, right?

What is the first thing that comes to mind when you think of bon bons?  For me, it is mashed potatoes.  Why? you ask.  Because when I was a kid, that was what we made them with!  Let me explain.
A few weeks ago, when my parent’s were in town for Thanksgiving, my Mom made this comment:  “You know Britt, you really have the perfect set up to make bon bons.”

I looked around my kitchen with a critical eye and then turned to her, confused and skeptical.

“Umm…what?”  I asked.

She gestured to our extremely chilly screen porch.  “Look!” she exclaimed.  “You have all this room and it is just like a big fridge.”  She groaned and rolled her eyes.  “When you guys were kids and I used to make trays and trays of bon bons-You know, the ones with the mashed potatoes in them?-and it was always such a pain to haul them back and forth to the car.”

I nodded absent mindedly and went on with making dinner.  Then something she said sparked a memory and I looked up.

“Bon bons.  YES!  I remember those!  With the mashed potatoes!”  I went back to my dinner prep, mumbling to myself, “Man.  I haven’t had those in years…”

So what do you do when it is the holidays, family is visiting, and you know you are going to be peeling a large amount of potatoes in the near future?  You message your Aunt on Facebook because she has the recipe and your mother doesn’t generally carry it around in her purse.  So a big thank you to my Aunt Mary.  I have no idea where this recipe came from or if it is hers personally, or if it has been around for decades.  All I know is that they are crazy simple and crazy good.  Don’t forget that they need a place to chill, so unless you have an empty extra fridge that can accommodate your cookie sheets, plan on using your screen porch or your car to put them in outside so they can chill.  Unless of course you live farther south and it is warm outside, making it a bit more difficult for you to make a full batch of these.  But you live where there is no snow so don’t complain!  *Ahem*  This is also a great recipe for kids to help you with, seeing as how there are so few ingredients and they can be handled as much as needed.  And no raw eggs, so snitching is perfectly permissible.  My memory is a bit hazy, but I am pretty sure snitching was always part of this recipe…These old-fashioned bon bond follow a vintage recipe from my childhood! Two flavors, one of them gluten-free, and the perfect holiday recipe to make with kids! {Brittany's Pantry}These old-fashioned bon bond follow a vintage recipe from my childhood! Two flavors, one of them gluten-free, and the perfect holiday recipe to make with kids! {Brittany's Pantry} Coconut Bon Bons
I know it sounds ridiculous, but the mashed potatoes in here are actually all the liquid you need.  And no, these won’t taste like potatoes when you are done!  They do however make a really big batch, so making them for a large party or cookie swap or plan on gifting them to your neighbors.

3/4 c cold, plain, mashed potato (not the garlic and rosemary kind you may have leftover from dinner last night)
4 c shredded coconut
4 c powdered sugar

Mix all ingredients in  a bowl with a stand or handheld mixer until combined well.  Cover your sheet pans with parchment paper or wax paper and drop mixture in small clumps onto the pan. These should be pretty small, about the size of a grape or fresh cherry.  Remember, you are going to dip these in chocolate so the end result will be bigger.  Let the pans chill for about a half hour to stiffen up the mixture a bit and then go back and roll them into a nice smooth ball.  The mixture is a bit too sticky to do this at the beginning.  Once they are rolled into a smooth ball, let them chill until very cold.

In a medium microwaveable bowl, melt 2 bags of good quality chocolate chips (Ghirardelli is recommended as it melts wonderfully.  DO NOT USE A GENERIC BRAND FOR THIS!  They have stabilizers in them that will keep the chocolate from melting properly) and 3 T of butter.  Melt them on medium heat in 30 second intervals until almost completely melted.  Stir to melt any last bits of chocolate that remain.  DO NOT OVERHEAT!  Gentle is the name of the game here.  If you prefer, you can place the bowl over a pan of simmering water-be sure not to let the bottom of the bowl touch the water-and melt the chocolate that way.  This is called a double boiler and will take longer, but leaves less room for error.  It is up to you!

One by one, drop the bon bons into the chocolate and roll around until coated.  Using a fork, remove them, letting excess chocolate drip off, and place them back on the sheet pan and chill again until chocolate is set.  Store in an airtight container in the fridge for a week or two!

Peppermint Variation: If you would like to split up the recipe and do half peppermint bon bons, portion out half of the mixture onto sheet pans and then add 1/2 tsp of peppermint extract to the remaining filling.  Mix well.  Give it a taste to see of you want to add more and make it really strong but only add more by drops!  This stuff is potent!  Continue with the recipe!

Note:bon bons and whether or not sticky little fingers were involved!  I recommend sticky fingers.

Peanut Butter Bon Bons

2 c powdered sugar
1 c creamy peanut butter-Jif has great flavor but DO NOT use natural peanut butter here
3/4 c graham cracker crumbs
1/2 c (1 stick) of softened butter

Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl until smooth.  Continue making them using the method above.

Rum Pumpkin Pie

Rum Pumpkin Pie.  Its a thing, and its as good as it sounds. {Brittany's Pantry}In continuation of our pumpkin theme, I wanted to share with you my third favorite pumpkin pie recipe.  Now in case you think that a third place pie is kind of anti-climatic, let me explain.  My current favorite pumpkin pie recipe will be making an appearance on the actual turkey day-too late for you to make it yourself.  I could make two of them, one to share with you now, but I really want to save it for the actual holiday.  Silly, I know.  But that is my story and I am sticking to it.  My second favorite pumpkin pie recipe is actually a tart, and I was going to make it for you this week, but after making the following pie FOUR TIMES and finally getting it where I want it, I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to post it here.  Rum Pumpkin Pie is most definately a holiday pie.  Thanksgiving is great, but it would be very much at home on your Christmas dinner buffet.  The flavor screams ‘special occasion’ and with a few minor substitutions it ends up being less calorie dense than regular pumpkin pies.  Bonus!  Seconds please!

I do find that this pie is a bit more rich tasting than other pumpkin pies, due to the addition of rum, and my testers agreed unanimously that it needs a scoop of plain vanilla ice cream on the side.  If you use whipped cream, just make sure it isn’t too sweet.  It might be a bit too much!Rum Pumpkin Pie.  Its a thing, and its as good as it sounds. {Brittany's Pantry} Here is my pie, about to go in the oven.  And all the crap on my counter.  Ignore the box of multi-grain crackers.  They didn’t go in the pie, but I needed something to settle my tummy while cooking.  I highly recommend baking your pie on a sheet pan.  Not only does it keep your oven clean in case of spillage, but it is infinitely easier to transfer a vessel filled with liquid across a kitchen and into a hot oven.Rum Pumpkin Pie.  Its a thing, and its as good as it sounds. {Brittany's Pantry}Rum Pumpkin Pie.  Its a thing, and its as good as it sounds. {Brittany's Pantry} One Year Ago: Marshmallow Pumpkin Dip

Rum Pumpkin Pie
Adapted from Eating Well
The rum extract in this recipe is optional if you want, but I found that it needs that extra boost of pure flavor without the addition of more alcohol.

1 refrigerated pie crust or homemade pie crust
In a large bowl, whisk together:
2 eggs
1 3/4 c pumpkin puree, or 1 can pumpkin
1-12 oz can evaporated milk, nonfat is fine
1/4 c molasses
2 T dark rum or 2 tsp vanilla
1/2 c brown sugar
1 T cornstarch
1 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp cloves
1/4 tsp nutmeg
1 tsp rum extract, optional but recommended

Place the pie crust in a deep dish pie plate, being careful not to stretch the dough.  Crimp the edges and then cover with plastic wrap and leave it in the fridge while you make the filling.  Once all filling ingredients are mixed together and smooth (take care to fully whisk in the cornstarch) pour carefully into cold pie crust and place on a baking sheet.  Bake in a 350 degree oven for 40-50 minutes or until center is just set and no longer liquid when gently shaken.  If crust is browning too quickly, tent pie with foil.  Remove and cool to room temperature.  Serve with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.