Archives 'Sweet Teeth

Satisfy your sweet tooth and keep your dentist in business with each and every bite!

29 January

It was purely by chance that this cake made it into my kitchen.  I am not particularly enthusiastic about gingerbread, nor do I tend to make desserts that do not contain any trace of chocolate.  I am enthused, however, that my guest of honor who is a fan of both gingerbread and fruit desserts inspired me to bake this upside-down cake.  It.  Was.  Delicious.  And pretty!  And really not all that bad for you!  So if you find yourself in the company of one of those people who doesn’t keep an emergency stash of cocoa products in their purse, car, and desk or if you just feel like taking a bite on the other side, try this cake.  I promise even the worst chocoholic won’t be disappointed. 


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23 December

No, not referencing your dog dressed up in antlers and the ugliest sweater ever seen.  This bark is the delicious crunchy, sweet, and salty southern treat that’s so easy to make you’ll feel you just didn’t work hard enough to deserve such a delectable treat!  So while a photo of Mommy’s relentless battle to keep that red nose on Sparky might be entertaining for a hot second, these candies will keep you satisfied for day(s) to come!  If you have more than a teaspoon of self-control that is… 

Bag of Bark?

You know what’s even more fabulous than having a cellophane wrapped bag of bark in your possession?  The ability to take this basic recipe and bake it into your heart’s desire.  This Christmas I tried two variations on the classic candy:  Mexican Chocolate with Spiced Almonds and Fruited Nut.  So I leave you with this chocolate topped butter laden Christmas gift and wish you all a fat and fabulous holiday!  Ruff Ruff!

 
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21 December
katy

Holidays: Christmas; Christmas Eve; stockings and bows and garland and tinsel; good tidings and trips home. The holidays are by far, without doubt, my most favorite time of the year, and the food is just the icing on that glorious yuletide cake. Holiday dishes call for, of course, decadence. I hotly anticipate this season all year, and naturally want it to be worth the wait. This is not the time to sub in Splenda or wonder if margarine will do. It will not. Bring on the cheese, the nuts, the fudge, all the richer the better. What follows is an account of one young and hungry girl’s attempt to create memorable Christmas desserts, desserts basking in unbridled dietary depravity. A grand finale worth the mea culpas.

Gloriously decadent figgy pudding

Gloriously decadent figgy pudding

My baking began with the proverbial question of what to make. Sure, I could easily toss together a simple-yet-delicious gingerbread trifle or whip up a batch quick peppermint brownies, but those endeavors seem so….everyday. Nay, my favorite holiday calls for desserts demanding fastidious attention to detail and hours of kitchen toil (there are few things I love better than kitchen toil.) And so here are my two picks for Christmas ’09, one classic and one decidedly untraditional, both equally resplendent in their copious steps: Steamed Toffee Pudding and Cuatro Leches Cake. They are both so mind-blowingly rich and full of carefully nurtured, gorgeous flavors that I may just make them again come Valentine’s Day. Memorable indeed.

For Christmas Eve I chose the quintessential Christmas dessert of yore, Steamed Toffee Pudding, a recipe I took straight from my Craft of Cooking cookbook. One of my most favorite restaurants and home to innumerable memorable meals, Craft, to me, epitomizes the essence of fine dining, and I’d trust any of the recipes in Chef Colicchio’s book. And seriously, how much more Christmas can you get than to hear your family clamoring for more figgy pudding? I half expected Tiny Tim to walk through my door.


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18 December

It’s finally pear season!  The peachy peaches of summer are long gone to be replaced with gifts of citrus and pomaceous fruits from Harry & David.  I recall the much anticipated day when the big box of pears would arrive individually wrapped in gold foil and sitting atop a bed of green foam in their assigned cubbies.  And then the wait.  Oh, the dreaded and forever long wait for the pears to ripen so that you could scoop out the fruit with just your spoon.  Of course, almost immediately after the pears reached the perfect ripeness, they just could not be eaten quickly enough and, god forbid, became waste.  If only I had known then what I know now.  Had I been in possession of this delightful crumble recipe those pears would have made it to their proper resting place, in some pudgy girl or boys belly.  Alas, I know better now and will never let a pear fall short of its proper destiny on my watch. 

 Crumble for Three?

 

This crumble could also be used atop apples, peaches, or whatever fruit might happen to be in season.  If you have leftovers, it makes a delicious topping for your morning oatmeal or yogurt.  And, as usual, serve a la mode.   

 


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16 December

O Kitchen Aid, Kitchen Aid, wherefore art thou Kitchen Aid – mixer?  Shiny and red and steadfast mixer…  After three mixer-less batches of biscotti, my arms are now made of steel.  And the remainder of me:  flour, sugar, egg, and nuts…  My days of beating, stirring, kneading, battling by hand are now over.  I’m passing the torch to you, reader. 

 Afternoon Coffee

But before I say adieu,  here is the last and best of the biscotti recipes.  The traditional and original recipe from which all my previous variations were born.  I was raised on this anise scented cookie and, as my affection has grown with each passing year, look more and more forward to a batch (or two) each passing birthday or Christmas.  Of course now that I finally know how exactly to make them, I have no excuse to not have biscotti around at all times.  There’s just something to be said for the ones made by Nonna herself, a special Grandmotherly touch if you will.  While I know hers will always be the best to me, I hope that yours will be just as perfect.  If not, select all, copy, paste, and send to Grandma!

 


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13 December

While it turns out that Baci is just as much a nickname for chocolate hazelnut as Nutella, I’m sure they’d be happy to know that, in my mind at least, they’re the Kleenex of chocolate hazelnut candy!  Baci, which means kiss in Italian, is the much more delicious Nestle version of our Hershey Kisses.  Not only  is their taste superior to our plain Jane chocolates, but they come with little multilingual love notes inside the wrapper! 

 Joy and Bacis to You!

I’ll never forget my trip to the chocolate festival in Perugia, the home of the Perugina factory where these little pecks of heaven are crafted.  There was chocolate everywhere!  Hot chocolate as thick as honey, decadent chocolate desserts, and even a chocolate sculpture contest where artists chipped away at life size blocks of cocoa while people crowded at their feet to catch the scraps*.  How they maintained focus I will never know!  It was a trip to remember, even 6 years later.  And so here’s a little chip of Perugia just for you! 

 

Dillo con un Bacio! 

 

*Scraps?!  Excuse my blasphemy. 

 
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11 December

Biscotti get a tough wrap for being a tad on the crunchy side, but I’d like to take this opportunity to commit their poor reputation to user error.  It’s a dipping cookie people!  So whether you prefer coffee, tea, or milk – stop complaining and dunk it!  This recipe for Toffee Crunch Biscotti goes particularly well with Starbuck’s new Caramel Brulee Latte or they’re slightly more grown up Toffee Nut Latte.  I have never been able to do the black coffee thing and, as such, enjoy experimenting with new coffee creations.  The latest and greatest is the simple substitution of about ½ cup of eggnog instead of the usual cream and sugar.  For a Thai coffee, swap that eggnog for some sweetened condensed milk.  And, if you’re really feeling sweet, heat a tablespoon of cocoa powder or hot chocolate mix with milk or cream for a quick mocha.  There are about as many options as there are biscotti, so get dipping! 

 The Perfect Present!

 
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9 December

Despite the fact that the Baking Bonanza has been in progress a couple weeks now, I actually just started my holiday baking last weekend.  This year I decided to go with the 3 Bs of Baking:  Breads, Barks, & Biscotti!  I’m using said theme to strap some boundaries around what usually turns into a big cookie catastrophe, for my kitchen anyway.  Hopefully keeping within these three categories will enable me to tie a pretty little bow around my baked gifts while still allowing some creativity.

 Merry Christmas!

We will start with biscotti aka cantucci.  For the sake of this holiday season and my Nonna from whom the base recipe comes we will call them biscotti.  The biscotti series is going to come to you in four installments, one variation per installment, and will conclude with the orginal (and best) recipe from which all the other recipes were created.  I know my mother is asking why mess with a good thing?  Well, Mommy dearest, I can only post the real deal one time and there are over 360 days in the year.  That, and you know me well enough to know I’m a meddler. 

 

What I was surprised to learn was that after many not so perfect attempts at meddling with various biscotti recipes, these actually turned out just right!  They don’t have the traditional essence of anise that make the original recipe so unique, but if you prefer or like these flavor combinations or just want to spice things up a bit these are all quite delicious!  There is a METHOD to the madness and I was happy to learn that if you keep to the basic ratios and processes defined in the original recipe, the world is your oyster! 

 


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4 December

Valentine’s Day always comes with a list of requirements that vary drastically depending on the sex with whom you are conversing.  My requirements, post the days of heartshape meatloaf with the rents, include the sporting of my favorite black and red heart blouse and copious amounts of cheese and chocolate, emphasis on the latter.  My girlfriends and I have spent many a Valentine’s Day experimenting with new items to cover and smother with cheese and chocolate, but I definitely think we got it right Senior year of college when we stopped messing around and went straight for the Krispy Kremes, from the original location in Winston of course. 

 Cantucci!

  

Last year I actually had a Valentine, so what better gift to give to both him and my office of almost eighty women than chocolate chip biscotti.  Luckily, I had a recipe saved in my Blackberry “To Do” list which had been verbally relayed in ounces and grams from the pretty little owner of the Italian restaurant in my condo building.

 

My roomate and I had ventured down to the late Allegro for a building happy hour, hoping to actually meet meet one of our neighbors.  We sipped our complimentary champagne and nibbled on the perfectly al dente truffled risotto brought to us by a waitor who probably felt sorry for the loner ladies in the corner.  As the mostly married with children couples fled home we were able to get seats at the bar, the key to my fated encounter with a little Italian biscotti called cantucci.  When they brought out the tray of crunchy cantucci with perfect ribbons of chocolate rippling through their centers my jaw dropped.  I MUST get this recipe. 

 
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20 November

Funny that the forbidden fruit is so closely assimilated with the US of A, although I suppose our great nation is the 2nd largest producer.  Apples, seen first in the Book of Genesis, have since come to be symbols of knowledge and immortality, but also temptation and sin; lest we forget the infamous scene in American Pie.  Alas, it is apple picking season!  While I have not been so fortunate as to have had the pleasure of frequenting an orchard to pick the forbidden fruits, I was lucky enough to have 3 pounds of “the best baking apples”, Arkansas Black, brought home to me from North Carolina.  Lucky me!

 The Missing Piece

 

I don’t know if it was the “best baking apples ever” that made the pie or the “Best Apple Pie Ever” recipe that made the apples, but the result definitely lived up to both reputations.  This recipe introduced sour cream to the more standard butter & sugar generally used for the filling and what a difference it makes!  Both the flavor and texture are, in my opinion, a much welcomed twist that produces a pie you can only dream is immortal… 

 
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