Ginger Chai Blondies

Ginger Chai Blondes are chewy and perfect with a cup of tea! {Brittany's Pantry}My neighbor, who ate some of the bars you see in this picture, sent me a text later in the day.  These taste like Christmas!  And they do indeed.

These bars are kind of a cross between a blondie brownie and spicy cup of chai tea, but they aren’t as rich, heavy, or as overwhelmingly sweet as a brownie.  They are simple to make and utterly fantastic with a hot drink.  As in, I highly recommend sipping something steaming when you make these.  This would be perfect!  Although a huge glass of milk wouldn’t be terrible either.  They are lovely and different without being so weird that everyone just passes them by.  Don’t they just look like Fall?  🙂 Make them for a Holiday potluck, bring them to work, or pack them in your lunch all week.  Either way, they are hard to resist!  You, and maybe even your neighbor, will thank me.Ginger Chai Blondes are chewy and perfect with a cup of tea! {Brittany's Pantry}Ginger Chai Blondes are chewy and perfect with a cup of tea! {Brittany's Pantry} One Year Ago: Garlic Herb Bread
Two Years Ago: Piggy Pudding

Ginger Chai Blondies
Adapted from Cooking For Seven
Recipe Updated 11/11

In the bowl of an electric mixer, add:
1 c (2 sticks) butter, softened
1 c brown sugar
1/2 c white sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
Mix with the paddle attatchment until smooth.  Add:
1 c white whole wheat flour or whole wheat flour
1 c all purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp allspice
1 1/2 tsp ground ginger
the contents of two chai tea bags
pinch of salt

Mix dough just until combined.  Spread dough-it will be sticky!-into a sprayed 9X13 inch baking pan and bake at 350 for 20-25 minutes or until toothpick comes out clean, or with just a few crumbs attached.  Cool slightly before cutting.

Pork & Prune Stew

Pork & Prune Stew | Brittany's PantryWhenever I come across this recipe I think of Fall.  It is exactly the kind of dish to warm you up after a long day of raking leaves, picking apples, running around a pumpkin patch, or just plain spending time outdoors bundled against the cold.  It is warm and hearty with an unexpected flavor that is comforting and satisfying at the same time.

If you are glancing below at the title of this recipe (save your neck-it’s called Pork & Prune Stew) and thinking to yourself, “Yeah right.  I don’t do prunes.”  Wait please!  I implore you!  Hear me out.  Prunes, now normally called ‘dried plums’ in an effort to revamp their reputation, have always been a favorite snack of mine.  They are sweet, chewy, and crazy good for you.  They are high in potassium, Vit K, and Vit A, and in case you are rolling your eyes at me, I will sum up.  THEY ARE GOOD FOR YOU!  You should be eating them, giving them to your children as snacks, and generally making them a part of a balanced diet. Aaaaand……end lecture.

I may have mentioned this before a time or two.  Or twenty.  But this recipe is the one of the reasons I started blogging.  People think that cooking, or baking for that matter, is hard or complicated or a process not worth bothering with.  And then they eat something like this stew at my house and they rave about how good it is and ask me to make it again when they come over.  I always say the same thing.  “Or you could make it yourself!”  Not because I don’t want to cook for them (obviously) but because people are so happy when they do something successfully.  And if I can pass along a recipe that I can nearly guarantee will turn out great and taste amazing, then that success is passed along to you.  Like I always tell my kids; “It isn’t rocket science, its just (fill in the blank)!”  In this case, that blank is filled with the word ‘cooking’.  So chill out.  Relax.  Make this stew, put it in the oven, go rake some leaves, then let the heavenly smells lead you back in where it is warm.  You will be so glad you did.Pork & Prune Stew | Brittany's Pantry One Year Ago: Chocolate Croissant Bread Pudding & How To: Homemade Pumpkin Puree

Pork & Prune Stew
Adapted from Eating Well
The prunes come out so wonderfully sweet you won’t believe it.  Apricots would work well here too.  This is fantastic served with carrots or roasted squash and it is even better as leftovers.

4 pounds pork butt, pork roast, or pork shoulder (it is actually all the same but with different names) trimmed of large pieces of fat and cut into 1 inch chunks-your butcher can do this if you ask nicely
salt and pepper
1 onion, diced
1 clove garlic, minced
1 carrot, peeled and diced
1 tsp dried thyme
salt and pepper
1/4 c apple cider vinegar
1 T brown sugar
1 scant T freshly grated ginger
1 can beef broth
2 c pitted prunes
1 c port

In a large Dutch oven or heavy bottomed pot, heat a few tablespoons of canola, vegetable, or olive oil over medium to medium high heat.  Season the pork with salt and pepper and brown it in the oil in a single layer so as not to crowd the pan.  Do this in batches, removing the pork to a large plate.  If you put too much meat in it will steam instead of brown so be patient.  Let it get some color on it, but don’t worry that it isn’t cooked through.  Once all the meat is browned and set aside, add the onion, garlic, carrot, thyme, and a bit more salt and pepper.  Sweat the veggies over medium heat, scraping up the bits on the bottom of the pan as you go.  After a minute or two, and when the onions are just starting to cook through, add the vinegar, brown sugar, and the beef broth.  Let come up to a bubble and add the pork back in with any accumulated juices on the plate.  Stir it a bit until the pork is settled in the broth.  Cover the pot and place in a 350 degree oven for 1 1/2 hours, or until the pork is fork tender.  Meanwhile, simmer the prunes and port together in a small saucepan for 7-10 minutes, or until the prunes are soft and the port is thick and syrupy.  Set aside.  When the stew is done and the meat is soft, let it sit on the stove for a bit to settle and then skim or blot the excess fat off the top.  Stir in the prunes and port mixture and serve over polenta or mashed potatoes.

Dark Chocolate Cookies & Drive-Thru Windows

Dark Chocolate CookiesI have come to accept the fact that I am somehow cursed when it comes to the drive-thru widows of restaurants.  I know I mentioned it before in a previous post (don’t ask me which one-I am way too tired  right now to try and figure that out) so I won’t rehash it all.  But to sum up, I almost never get what I order.  That is just the way it is.  I accept it.  My husband has come to accept it.  My friends deal with it.  It is a weird and yet totally normal phenomenon.

A few days ago, it was a chocolate cookie from Panera that I was after.  Lunch, yes, but the cookie was what I wanted more than my next five minutes of air.  I needed that chocolate cookie.  A chocolate cookie that they assured me was in the bag.  A half an hour later, when I arrived at home, it was of course, missing.  My solution?  Besides falling to my knees and throwing my hands to the sky, wailing, “Sweet Mary Mother of all the is good and Holy, WHY?!”  My solution is this cookie.

It isn’t an equal swap out and this cookie is not as thick and hearty as a Panera cookie.  But it is extremely chocolatey and that is what I wanted.  Not a brownie or cake or candy.  Just a rich, chewy, chocolate cookie.  Yeeeeeees!

It may not come as any surprise when I say that this recipe is adapted from Hershey.  Those people know chocolate.  Who am I to second guess them?  And I know there are superior chocolate cookie recipes out there.  For example, I make a Ghiradelli chocolate cookie that has so much melted chocolate in it you have to chill the dough just to be able to portion it out on a pan and bake it.  We are talking serious chocolate overload.  But the beauty of this one is that it mixes up and bakes just like every other drop cookie you would make.  No extra steps.  No extra time to melt anything, chill anything, or roll anything.  Just a lot of cocoa to give in that wonderful richness and flavor without an extra sweetness.  So simple and so good.  And bonus!  You can add just about anything to the batter to customize for any event or craving.  And I think we can all agree that is better than anything that comes through a car window.

One Year Ago: Ultimate Peanut Butter Cookies
Two Years Ago: Sweet Potato Biscuits

Dark Chocolate Cookies
Adapted from Hershey
Mix in whatever goodies you like!

2 sticks softened butter
1 c sugar
3/4 c brown sugar
1 tsp vanilla
2 eggs
1/2 c dark cocoa powder-regular is fine
2 c flour
1 tsp baking soda
In a mixer, combine the first 5 ingredients until well incorporated and creamy.  Add the dry ingredients and combine.  Fold in:
1/2 bag dark chocolate chips
1 c toffee pieces

Drop by rounded teaspoonfuls onto a greased or parchment lined sheet pan.  Bake at 375 degrees for 8-10 minutes.  Be careful!  Do not over bake!  Cool and enjoy!  These freeze great!

Note:  You can make any kind of chocolate cookie here.  Try any or all of these combos!
White Chocolate Chips
Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips
M&M’s
Reese Pieces
Peanut Butter Chips
Mini Chocolate Chips
Chopped Andes Mints