From Baked

Butterscotch Pudding Tarts

butterscotch_puddingCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

I was feeling pretty lazy on the day I made these, so instead of making the tart part of this recipe, I stopped after the butterscotch pudding part. And I don’t think I missed much (except maybe lots of extra work and dishes).

I don’t eat much butterscotch stuff, but every time I do, I’m reminded of how much I like it. This pudding is no exception. It combines a dark caramel sauce with a pudding made of brown sugar, egg yolks, vanilla and milk. The end result is a thick, extremely rich pudding full of caramelly, buttery, brown sugary flavor.

My only problem with the recipe was that I ended up having to strain the pudding to get rid of lumps.

From Baked

Peanut Butter Pie with Cookie Crust

pb_pieCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

Every time I consider making something with peanut butter in it, I think of my step-daughter who loves the stuff. And you really can’t get much simpler than this no-bake frozen concoction. In fact, you could leave off the crust and just eat the filling as a frozen mousse.

So Cho, this one is for you.

You start off by making an easy chocolate cookie crust held together by a bit of butter. This crumb mixture gets pressed into a pie pan and left to solidify in the fridge while you make the filling.

The filling is simply cream cheese, smooth peanut butter, vanilla, brown sugar and cream. The cream cheese, peanut butter and sugar are mixed together until smooth. Then you whip the cream to soft peaks and fold it into the peanut butter mixture. Then the whole thing is dumped into the crust and frozen.

There are a couple of things I’d recommend changing. First, the authors have you put a layer of melted chocolate between the crust and the filling. The only purpose I found for this chocolate layer was to make it impossible to get the pie slices out of the pan. It didn’t add anything to the flavor, so I’d just leave it out. And the second change I’d make was to use either a springform pan or a square pan lined with tinfoil instead of a pie pan. The first couple of slices came out of the pan sans bottom crust. That crust was too hard to cut through. By pulling the pie out of the pan, you’ll get a better angle with the knife and can get a spatula or something underneath that bottom crust much easier.

The recipe also calls for an easy hot fudge sauce. The sauce was good and it went really nicely with the peanut butter filling.

From Baked

Baked Bars

baked_barsCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

You might have heard of these bars under a different titles, such as Seven Layer Bars or Magic Bars. The big thing about this type of bar is that it is made up of seven different layers.

1. A graham cracker crust
2.  Nuts
3. Chocolate chips
4. White chocolate chips
5. Butterscotch chips
6. Sweetened condensed milk
7. Toasted, shredded coconut.

The only change the boys at Baked made was to use the coconut in the crust, along with the graham crackers. This makes for a mighty tasty, albeit crumbly, crust. These are some of the sweetest things to have come out of my kitchen in a very long time, and to even try to eat them without a glass of milk is pure folly.

The crust is a standard graham cracker crust (with toasted coconut added) held together with butter. The buttery crumb mixture is pressed into a pan, refrigerated briefly and then baked until toasty. I liked this crust, but I thought it had too much butter in it. Next time, I’ll reduce the butter slightly.

Once the crust is cooled, it’s topped with a layer of walnuts (sliced almonds, in my case), semisweet chocolate chips, white chocolate chips and butterscotch chips. And if that isn’t enough sweetness, two cans of sweetened, condensed milk are poured over the entire thing. This sugar bomb gets baked until the condensed milk is brown and bubbling.

We could only eat these bars in small, small squares, but they were pretty good. Besides reducing the butter in the crust, if I make these again, I’ll increase the amount of semisweet chocolate and reduce the white chocolate chips and the butterscotch chips.

From Baked

Root Beer Bundt Cake

rootbeer_bundtCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

This was the first recipe I made from Baked, back when. At the time, I had a bunch of generic root beer taking up refrigerator space, so root beer bundt cake it was. Except, it really wasn’t. Root beery, that is. That cake tasted flat and thin. This time around, I made sure to use the good stuff, and it made all the difference.
This is a pretty standard cake recipe, with the liquid being supplied by two cups of root beer. Don’t make the same mistake I did, when thinking about this cake. This isn’t a root beer cake. Rather, it’s a very chocolatey cake with a hint of root beer flavor. And trust me, that isn’t a bad thing at all. Besides being oh so very chocolatey, this cake is also moist and tender.
The cake is finished off with a root beer fudge frosting, which is made up of dark chocolate, butter, root beer, cocoa powder and confectioners’ sugar. Normally, I don’t like frosting made with confectioners’ sugar, but this one was really good. It was thick and fudgy and just a little bit salty. The Baked authors recommend eating this cake with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, but it tastes just fine on its own.
From Baked

The Baked Brownie

baked_brownieCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

I think these brownies are the thing that started all the buzz surrounding this bakery, and by extension, this book. Oprah made them one of her “favorite things,” and America’s Test Kitchen and the Today Show awarded these brownies top honors (brownie tester – now there’s a job I could get behind). How could I not make this recipe?

Was I wowed? Blown out of the water? Made to feel insignificant and puny? No. In fact, I really hated these brownies. Hated them. Not the recipe (easy to follow). Not the flavor (deep and chocolatey). Not the texture (moist and fudgy). No, I hated these brownies because I couldn’t get them to cut cleanly. If you look closely at the picture, you’ll see all the ragged edges and the chunks gouged out of the sides.

Stupid brownies.

Nitpicking aside, these brownies are pretty good, and I liked them better as they aged. The recipe is straightforward, calling for flour, cocoa powder, dark chocolate, butter, sugar and eggs. Instant espresso powder and vanilla give the chocolate some depth. Everything is mixed by hand, and the only tricky part is not overbaking these brownies. Next time I make these, I’ll line the pan with parchment and refrigerate the brownies before cutting them.

From Baked

Chipotle Cheddar Biscuits

cheddar_biscuitsCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

The biscuit curse struck again! Not familiar with the biscuit curse? See this and this. One day, I may come to the realization that I was not put together in such a way as to produce a lovely biscuit (or scone, for that matter).

Back to these biscuits. I had to make a couple of substitutions. First, I couldn’t find chipotle powder anywhere, so I used chili powder. Secondly, the only cheese I had in the house was colby jack cheese, so that’s what I used. I also cut the recipe in half, because I didn’t want to end up with leftovers.

These days, leftovers seem to be going straight to my thighs.

This is a standard buttermilk biscuit recipe, with chipotle powder and grated cheese added. I don’t know if my changes are to blame, but I found these biscuits to be boring, and oddly enough, chewy. As is standard for me, they spread out, instead of up. To be fair, I should probably make these again, without all my changes.

From Magazines, Newspapers, etc.

Chocolate Fruit and Nut Clusters

choc_clustersWhat do you do when the holidays leave you with bits of nuts and fruits? Dump all those odds and ends in a bowl, stir in some melted chocolate and call them clusters. These won’t win any beauty awards, but they are great to have on hand when a craving for salty chocolate hits.

There aren’t any precise measurements with this sort of thing, and just about anything will work. I ended up with about 3 cups of dried cranberries, sliced almonds, salted cashews and hazelnuts which were covered with about 6 ounces of melted bittersweet chocolate. Once the fruit and nuts were thoroughly coated, I made tablespoon-size mounds of the mixture on parchment paper. To help the chocolate set faster, I put them in the refrigerator for 10 minutes.

See? Piece of cake.

From Baked

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Loaf

pumpkin_loafCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

Can one have too many pumpkin-chocolate recipes? I don’t think so, especially when there is a half of a can of pumpkin puree sitting the fridge begging to be used.

There’s nothing surprising about this recipe. You mix pumpkin puree, chocolate chips, vegetable oil, eggs and sugar with spices (cinnamon, allspice, ginger, nutmeg), flour and leavening. After baking for just over an hour, you end up with a fragrant cake, earthily sweet and moist, studded with chocolate chips.

This is an easy, simple, tea-time cake. It won’t knock your socks off, but it is a good recipe to have.

From Baked

Lemon Lemon Loaf

lemon_loafCurrently baking out of Baked by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito

Back in 2008, when this cookbook was published, the New York bakery by the same name was garnering all sorts of accolades. Oprah had declared their brownies “one of her favorite things,” and the owners had recently appeared on the Martha Stewart Show. I started hearing about this book when some of my favorite food bloggers started baking from it. One quick trip to the bookstore, and I was ready to join them. I tried a few recipes, but then other books caught my attention, and this one ended up stuck back into the bookshelf.

But here it is, a new year, and I’m ready to give this book another chance (as well as try those brownies!). At first glance, Baked looks like a fairly standard baking book. But take a closer look, and you’ll find some not-so-standard recipes, such as a rootbeer cake and peanut butter rice krispy treats.

The first recipe I chose was a lemon loaf cake, mainly because I had a ton of lemon juice sitting in the fridge. The cake is made mostly in the food processor, with the dry ingredients folded in at the end. This is a seriously lemony cake. It calls for lemon zest and juice in the batter, the hot cake is brushed with a lemon syrup after baking and the cooled cake is drizzled with a lemon glaze.

My cake didn’t dome like the picture in the book, but it was moist and tender with a nice lemon punch. The glaze is listed as optional, but I’d encourage you not to leave it out. It adds a burst of tartness that contrasts nicely with the slightly sweeter cake.

From The Internet

Dark Chocolate Fleur de Sel Cupcakes with Snappy Butterscotch Icing

fleur_de_sel_cupcakesSalty sweets seem to be catching my eye lately. First there were those salty oatmeal cookies and now these dark chocolate cupcakes that are liberally sprinkled with coarse salt before baking and after frosting. The cupcakes were good, but the star of this recipe is the butterscotch icing. Oh my.

The recipe comes from a new book by Christie Matheson called Salty Sweets. I got the recipe here.  The first time I made these cupcakes, it was for a family dinner on Christmas Eve. They were easy enough to make, but I thought they could benefit from a few modifications.

First, I scaled down the amount of baking soda from 1 teaspoon to 1/2 teaspoon. I also added 1 teaspoon of instant espresso powder to the batter. Second, and mostly importantly, I doubled the amount of butterscotch icing.

But that icing? Oh. My.

See, you really only need one batch of the icing to cover the cupcakes (unless you like a really thick layer of frosting), but you really should try this stuff drizzled over ice cream or straight from the fridge by the spoonful.

The icing is the only part of the recipe that gave me any trouble. You combine brown sugar, heavy cream, butter, water and coarse salt and cook it, on the stovetop, until it thickens. The first time I made the icing, I let it cook for the 15 minutes that the recipe calls for. Well, it never thickened enough that I could frost the cupcakes with it. I ended up beating the icing with a hand mixer to thicken it.

The second time I made the icing, I let it cook for almost 40 minutes. This time it thickened enough to stay put on the cupcakes, but it was pretty thin. In the end, I think I prefer the beaten version of the icing. It makes for a really nice mouth feel, you can mound it up like frosting, and it just looks better.