Monday, February 15, 2010

Loving You Is Cherry Pie

Cherry nectarine pie*

So I found this recipe: http://goodeggseattle.blogspot.com/2009/07/summer-starts-with-vacation.html

And I made it for some friends on valentine's day. But I couldn't find apricots, so I used nectarines. Which is a shame, I love apricots with all my heart. Oh how symbolic, valentine's day without the deepest love. Haha. I like nectarines a bunch though, and am very pleased with the result. I used my trusty pie crust recipe (http://www.cooksrecipes.com/diabetic/reduced-fat-pie-pastry-diabetic-recipe.html , but with butter). I'd add a touch of sugar to it next time.

So, I know I made more changes, but honestly I am writing this post in late March, and I have no clue what I did. Look at the pictures, play a little "spot the difference" with yourself. You can also rearrange the photos til you align them in the appropriate order. So many hidden games in this post! Good times abound.















-Anna

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Because I like my cookies salty.

So Anna and I really like cardamom and cookies, and together--they're all pretty incredible. And I then I was inspired by Anna's brittle and I had to make snacks for my class last Thursday and snacks for a inspire-people-to-live-in-the-house-that-I-live-in-now-but-next-year fair, so chocolate chip cookies in bar form seemed ideal. And then cardamom is also really fun, these could also be really great with ginger. I want to make gingered pear challah soon, mmmm. My version is adapted from this recipe, but a bit spiced up. (note bad pun) Anyway have fun with them, and they would go well with this song, nice and rich. Yeah I did just do that.

Cardamom-y Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars with Salt!
2 3/4 c. flour
1 tsp (and then some) kosher sea salt
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp. ground cardamom
1 1/2 c. white sugar
1 TBS molasses (alternatively you could just use 3/4 c. white sugar and 3/4 c. brown sugar, but our kitchen's giant open bag of brown sugar could have broken bones)
3 medium eggs (or 2 large eggs)
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 sticks softened Earth Balance (margarine/butter etc.)
20 oz. chocolate chips/chunks whatever (these are veryvery chocolately!)

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Make sure butter/margarine is softened!
2. Whisk flour, salt, baking soda, and cardamom together in a bowl.
3. With a mixer, cream the sugars, molasses if using, and butter together. This might take a while, 3 or 4 minutes. Add the eggs one at a time, then the vanilla.
4. Carefully stir in dry ingredients (not too much!) and mix in chocolate chips.
5. Spray a 9 by 13 inch glass baking pan with cooking spray and pour the batter in and distribute evenly.
6. Bake for 20 to 30 minutes.
And these keep well if you put them in tupperware at least!

-Amanda

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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Dad how do I spell pierozhok?







I made up (and consequently forgot) the recipe for these cabbage pierogi. But this was my second time making them (first was with Amanda) ! So there will be thirds and fourths and fifths, and maybe on the sixth I will write down the recipe.

Til then, here is the email my dad said in response to that last picture:

Very Tasty,
Thank you for delicious supper
Kiss you,
Dad

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Brittle Little Chocolate Chip Cookie Bones


Based on this recipe


So my friend had a Liberace/apartment-warming/dessert potluck party. I made chocolate chip cookie brittle! Warning: it is veryy rich so you are going to be satisfied with a very small piece. I had lots left over, brought some to work the next morning.

You will need:
3/4 c room temp unsalted butter
1c sugar
1/2 tsp salt (but remember, less is less)
1/2 tsp vanilla
2 c flour
1 c semi-sweet chocolate chips, plus some more for drizzling


Preheat the oven to 350, and line your cookie sheet with parchment paper.

Beat together the butter and sugar, then add salt and vanilla. Finally (slowly) add the flour. This dough will look very crumbly. Check it out:


Now, add in chocolate chips. Much better!


Press this dough very firmly onto your cookie sheet, trying to make it level and pretty thin. I've seen some recipes involve another sheet of parchment paper, placing it on top of the goods and using a rolling pin to flatten. Try it?


Bake for approximately 20 minutes. My edges got a bit golden when it was just right. Cut the tip off of a corner of a plastic bag, and fill it with some chocolate you've just melted in a double boiler. Squeeze and drizzle all over the bark. Let it cool so that the brittle is firm enough to break apart, and so the chocolate drizzle is not all over the place. Then hurl it to the ground, causing it to break into a million little pieces. Does this remind any of you of the Russian snow queen story? With the shard of mirror that landed in the little boy's? I think I'd rather have a piece of this brittle lodged in my heart.


Enjoy =)
-Anna

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

I have cocoa powder, sugar, milk, and four types of vinegar. Can I make chocolate milk?



The answer is yes!

I call my friend Angela with this request; resounding reply: no way Anna.

I then proceeded to go through these seven steps with her on the line, listening in agony as she realized, with the unfurling of each step, just how embarrassing her mistake was.


This is all you need!

2 tbsp cocoa powder
2 tbsp granulated sugar
as much milk as your mug can hold
[five types of vinegar]


So here's how this is gonna go down.

Step 1, you're a dream come true.

2, just wanna be with you.

3, girl it's plain to see

mix the cocoa powder and sugar with a bit of milk in a saucepan, heating/mixing until combined to form a smooth&silky syrup.

...that you're the only one for me. ...

Add nice cold milk to the syrup and you have homemade chocolate milk! Don't forget to stir so you don't leave residue at the bottom of your mug.


If the only person to appreciate this post is Angela, I understand.

Oh ! I got my slightly newer copy of Jewish Cookery by Leah Leonard in the mail. Just opened it. Mmmm food.

-Anna

Date Day

Dates used to scare me. In second grade, my primary relationship was them was the fact that you could say the sentence, "On that date I ate a date while I was on a date," and feel really cool. Now they're just delicious. Sometimes they're desecrated though when they're a date nut bread and the nut in question is pecan or walnut. Sometimes you're lucky though, and that nut is almond, or in this case, pistachio. I found this recipe, for scones, which I always thought were so refined. And these are supposed to be healthier scones (though next time I would add a tad more sugar and definitely the orange zest which I skipped out on in this batch). I kept the basic structure of this, but played around with a few things like poppy over fennel seeds, almond extract over vanilla, and clabbering the milk over ready-buttermilk. This would also be wonderful with fig instead of dates, and almonds instead of pistachios, and maybe with ginger or cardamom...so many possibilities.

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Date, Pistachio, Poppy Scones
1 3/4 c.flour (I'd say a tad less next time)
2 TBS sugar (increase this, maybe 1/4 c.)
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
6 TBS butter, chilled (I used that vegan stuff Earth something, I forget.)
1/4 c. non-fat cottage cheese
1/4 c. low-fat milk plus a teaspoon of lemon juice to clabber it, takes 5 minutes (I needed to add more milk as I made the batter, so I'd increase this to 1/3 c. or maybe even 1/2 c.)
1 tsp orange zest (I didn't use this, but I would highly recommend, or lemon juice would be fine too, or blood orange, mmm)
1/2 tsp almond extract
1 c. chopped dates
1/4 c. chopped pistachios
1 TBS poppy seeds

1. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit.
2. In a small bowl, clabber the milk with the lemon juice, then add the cottage cheese, and almond extract and whisk.
3. In another bowl mix the flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Then cut the butter into small pieces and mix it in to the dry ingredients by rubbing it all together with your fingers (because a) I don't have a food processor and b) pastry cutters are useless).
4)Mix in the zest, dates, pistachios, and poppy seeds with the dry ingredients. Combine the dry ingredients and the wet ingredients but don't overmix! No one loves tough scones.
5)Throw out some flour on a cutting board or any surface really and take handfuls of the dough and shape into biscuit shapes, turnover shapes, whatever suits you really. I made mine about 1/2 inch thick and biscuit looking.
6) You can put an egg-wash on at this point, which in retrospect would have looked pretty, but I was too lazy. Just crack open an egg, beat it a bit, and spread it over the top of the scones with a pastry brush or your fingers.
7). Spray a baking sheet and put scones out. (I got about 11 out of this.)
8) Bake for about 15 minutes, more or less.

-Amanda

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