Go-to Brownies

There are thousands of brownie recipes to choose from, and I’m sure at least a thousand of them are delicious. But sometimes you’re not in the mood for experimentation, you just want a go-to brownie recipe that is going to be just right.

This is ‘that recipe’ for me. It produces a fudgey brownie, but it still maintains a light crumb. There are no fancy nuts or chocolate chunks, and just a simple icing to finish them off. This was inspired by the Barefoot Contessa’s Outrageous Brownies.

Chocolate Brownies with Cocoa Almond Icing

3 sticks unsalted butter
16 oz semi-sweet chocolate chips
6 oz unsweetened chocolate
6 eggs
3 T instant coffee
2 T pure vanilla extract
2 1/4 cups sugar
1 1/4 cups flour
1 T baking powder
1 tsp salt

1) Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Melt together butter, chocolate chips, and unsweetened chocolate in heavy saucepan over low heat, or in a double-boiler. Stir until smooth. Let cool.

2) Stir together eggs, coffee, vanilla, and sugar until combined. No need to beat.

3) Add cooled chocolate mixture to egg mixture and stir until smooth.

4) Whisk flour, baking powder, and salt in separate bowl. Combine with chocolate mixture and stir until combined.

5) Line a 12x18x1 inch baking sheet with parchment paper, allowing some to overhang the edges. Pour in batter and evenly distribute. Bake for 25-35 minutes – when brownies are finished, a toothpick stuck in the middle should come out with moist crumbs.

Cocoa Almond Icing

4 T butter, melted
1/4 tsp almond extract
2 T cocoa
3 cups sifted powdered sugar
2/3 cup milk (may need to add more for desired consistency)

1) Whisk butter, extract, and cocoa together. Whisk or beat in sifted powdered sugar. Add milk slowly until desired consistency is reached. I like mine to be pourable.

2) Spread a thin layer of icing over cooled brownies.

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Tropical Frappés

This is the beverage I served with my brunch last weekend. It was not quite as healthy as my usual green smoothies, but it was delicious and a lovely peach color. It was meant to be an upscale Orange Julius.

Notice the fabulous reusable glass straw – we’re using a lot of straws in our household these days . Drinking anything is more fun with a straw. I found these beauties at Glass Dharma.

Tropical Frappé

Serves four adults and 1 toddler (although the toddler also drank 1/2 of another adult’s serving, so plan accordingly)

1/2 can orange juice concentrate
2 cups milk
1/2 cup water
3 T sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1 cup frozen pineapple
1 cup frozen strawberries

Add everything to a blender, and whip until smooth. If you are using fresh instead of frozen fruit, then add a handful of ice cubes to get an icy finish.

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Huevos Rancheros

Chef Rick Bayless is coming to town the weekend of April 17th. I’m a big fan – and more on these goings on later, but in the meantime, I’m in a Mexican state of mind. Huevos Rancheros, presented in single-serving crocks, seemed like the right mix of elegant casual for our weekend brunch.

You can make this as easy or gourmet as you want to; there is a lot of inherent flexibility. You can make your own refried beans (I used organic vegetarian ones from a can, but I dressed them up a bit), you can make your own salsa (I used jarred), and you can do the eggs whatever style suits you (I poached, but fried or scrambled would still be delightful.) The only thing this dish was lacking was a diced up avocado.

This dish has several steps, but only one has to be done immediately before serving to guests, so you can prepare ahead.

Huevos Rancheros

Makes 4 single-sized servings

4 medium-sized tortillas
1 cup refried beans (my dressed up recipe below)
1/2 cup cheddar
1/2 cup salsa
4 poached eggs sprinkled with sea salt and ground chile
chopped cilantro and chives

1) Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Sprinkle four tortillas with water, and heat up in microwave for about 15 seconds, until soft and pliable. Brush one side with vegetable oil. Arrange each tortilla in a small bowl, oiled side facing up. Be careful not to tear them – you can usually get them in nicely with one or two pleats (see photo below).

2) Bake tortilla shells for 10-15 minutes, until beginning to turn light golden in spots, and toasted enough to hold ‘bowl’ shape. Reduce oven to 350 degrees.

3) Put 1/4 cup dollop of refried bean in each tortilla bowl.

4) Top with eggs and about 1/8 cup cheddar cheese.

5) Bake in oven 5-10 minutes, until cheese is melted and bubbly.

6) Sprinkle with chopped chives and cilantro, and diced avocado (if you have a nice ripe one, which I did not). Serve with salsa.

Notes: I used organic, vegetarian refried beans. I sauteed 1/2 small onion until translucent, added a few dashes of cumin, cayenne, and salt, then added 1 clove minced garlic and 1 minced jalepeno. I cooked everything until soft, then stirred this in with the beans, along with the juice from one lime. If you don’t have a can of refried beans available, just mash up a cup of black or pinto beans and add ingredients above.

I love poached eggs, and I like them in this dish with a soft-set yolk. A fried egg will give you the same taste effect, but will not have the same cute little pod shape. Scrambled eggs will suffice if you prefer not to serve runny yolks. A tutorial on how to poach an egg, which can be a simple yet daunting task:

1)First, the fresher your eggs, the easier it will be to poach. A grocery store egg just doesn’t poach up as nice, but it will still work.

2) Heat a large, shallow saute pan with about 4 inches of water (nonstick works well if you have it). Heat until it is almost boiling, but bubbles are not breaking the surface. Add in a generous glug of nice-tasting vinegar (this helps the whites coagulate quickly).

3) Crack the eggs carefully in a small bowl or ramekin, trying not to break the yolk. Fish out any shell pieces, then pour into simmering water, holding bowl very close to the surface.

4) After about 30 seconds, when the white starts to set, go in with a spoon and gently unstick it from the bottom, and gather any straying whites close to the yolk. After about 2 minutes, gently roll the egg over. Cook f0r 3 minutes for a very soft yolk, 5 minutes for a little more firmness.

5)Remove with a slotted spoon, and place on a plate lined with a paper towel to soak up moisture. Blot tops of eggs gently. These can be refrigerated for a couple of hours before using.

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Jam Doughnut Muffins for Brunch

We had friends over for brunch today that we hadn’t seen in quite some time. They were kind enough to drive almost two hours to see us, so I felt compelled to give them a good meal. We ate, talked, and had a lovely morning.

Here was the menu:

Jam Doughnut Muffins
Tropical Frappés
Huevos Rancheros

I’ll add links to the other recipes as soon as I get them posted over the next week.

But let’s start with the pièce de résistance, Nigella Lawson’s Jam Doughnut Muffins. These little pieces of heaven are from her book How to Be a Domestic Goddess: Baking and the Art of Comfort Cooking.

These ‘muffins’ are utterly decadent, and I could probably eat an entire batch myself. They are also extraordinarily easy. And my favorite part is that they actually elicited a genuine food compliment from my husband.

My husband is a wonderful, wonderful man, but he is one of those ‘eat to live’ types that consumes the same nutritive staples for both breakfast and lunch everyday, and it doesn’t bother him one bit. If it fills his belly, and is sort of good for him, he’s set. He’ll eat most anything, but rarely does food bring him that eye-rolling, drop-to-our knees pleasure that some of us get from a great dish.

There’s nothing wrong with this type of person, but they’re not much fun to cook for. (That’s why I entertain – and it may be why I had children.) But these little muffins caused my porridge-eating husband to exclaim “These are the best things I’ve ever eaten”, so they will forever be in my repetoire.

Nigella Lawson’s Jam Doughnut Muffins

1 1/3 cup self-rising flour
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 cup milk
7 T vegetable oil, plus more for greasing the pan
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
12 tsp jam (I used strawberry)
1/2 cup unsalted butter
1/2 cup sugar

1) Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In bowl, whisk together flour and sugar.

2) Separately, whisk together milk, oil, egg, and vanilla.

3) Add milk mixture to flour, and stir gently until just combined. Don’t get your britches in a bundle if it’s still lumpy – if you mix too much, the muffins will turn out tough.

4) Grease a 12 cup mini-muffin pan with vegetable oil or butter. (I often have enough batter to fill my 12 cup mini-muffin pan, plus about 4 more – but these pans all have slightly different sized cups.)

5) Fill cup 1/3 full with batter, add teaspoon of jam. Fill rest of cup with batter.

6) Bake for about 15-20 minutes until muffins are puffed and just turning golden around the edges.

7) Now brace yourself – the first time you do this you will be telling yourself how wrong it is, but the results are so good, you will do it again. Melt 1/2 cup butter in small saucepan. Fill a shallow dish with granulated sugar.

8) When muffins are cooked and cooled just a bit, dip each one in melted butter, roll in sugar, and eat them one after another. Share with your husband if he thinks they are the best thing he’s ever eaten, and he happens to walk in the room before you’ve finished them all. Don’t share with your children – they’re not good for them.

Notes: If you don’t have self-rising flour, all it is is flour with salt and a leavening agent. For each cup of flour, add 1 1/2 tsp baking powder and 1/2 tsp salt. I’ll let you do the math.

Since self-rising flour is salty, it is best to use unsalted butter for dipping, otherwise your end result may be a little too salty. (On the flipside, if you make your own self-rising flour and only have salted butter, just add less salt to the flour.)

Enjoy! And then enjoy the 3 mile post-muffin run you will feel compelled to take.

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Truffled Onion Pizza and Pizza Tutorial

Homemade pizza is one of my favorite meals to make – it’s very easy, if you can get over making the dough ahead of time. And done well, it will impress your friends. With the right toppings, is there anyone who doesn‘t like pizza? I make it almost once a week for my family, my mom insists I make it whenever she visits, and I’ve even made it for a party appetizer, cut up into small, irregular shapes.

Here is the technique I’ve settled on – this post is longer than normal due to the doughy details I’ve included.

There is some special equipment that isn’t absolutely necessary, but does help:

a pizza stone – when pre-heated, this helps give you an exceptionally crispy crust. If you don’t have one, use a cookie sheet that has sides, flipped over.

a pizza peel – this is a wooden paddle that you use to slip your pizza in and out of your screaming hot oven. Use another cookie sheet flipped over if you are lacking.

parchment paper

a wood-fired pizza oven – just kidding, but I dream of owning one someday. (Check out these incredibly cool beehive ovens)

Here’s my recipe, technique to follow. Of course, any fixins’ you love will make a great pizza. Here are additional topping combos that are also delicious. I typically use mozzarella, mixed with another cheese with more flavor, like fontina or asiago, and I rarely use tomato sauce:

caramelized onions, pancetta
roasted red peppers, green olives
spinach, mushrooms, artichokes
onions, kale, potatos (saute first)
caramelized onions, figs, goat cheese
roasted chicken, red/yellow peppers, onion, cilantro, barbecue sauce

Basic Pizza Dough

1 cup warm water
1 envelope active dry yeast
1 T honey
3 T olive oil
1 tsp salt
3 cups unbleached flour

Truffled Onion Topping

olive oil for sauteing
2 red onions, chopped
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp thyme
8 good-sized cremini or baby bella mushrooms
drizzle of balsamic vinegar or squeeze of lemon juice
big handful chopped spinach
salt to taste
8 oz truffle cheese, grated
4 oz mozzarella cheese, grated
olive oil and salt for crust

1) Dissolve yeast and honey in 1 cup warm water, let sit until foamy. Ideal temperature is about 110 degrees. It should feel like a nice bath – not too hot, not too cool.

2) Whisk together salt and flour, add yeast liquid and olive oil. Knead by hand or in stand mixer with dough hook until smooth and elastic (about 10 minutes). Add more flour as necessary until dough is tacky, but pulls away from sides of bowl and forms a nice ball.

3) Cover and let rise in warm place for about an hour. You can make this the night before and store in the fridge, just bring it to room temperature before rolling, otherwise it won’t cooperate.

4) Preheat your oven to 500 degrees, with your pizza stone inside. Preheat for a minimum of 20 minutes. If you’re using a cookie sheet, you may not want to use this high of a temperature, unless you have a really heavy duty one that will not warp. I would only put the cookie sheet in to preheat for a few minutes, just long enough to get it hot.

5) Prep your toppings. For this particular pizza, saute the onions in olive oil along with the sugar, thyme, and a little salt until they are soft and translucent (about 10 minutes). If you have the time, let them cook on low for a longer period of time to caramelize.  Add chopped mushrooms, and cook for 3-5 minutes until they release their liquid. Turn heat to high and add chopped spinach, cook for 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in vinegar or lemon juice, and salt to taste.

6) Rolling out the dough: I’m a proponent of hand-stretching, but if you can’t manage without a rolling pin, don’t sweat it. I typically coat my hands and my surface with olive oil instead of flour to prevent sticking. If you want to try stretching it out (and if you kneaded your dough well, it should stretch readily), an easy way to get it started is to flip over a large mixing bowl, and use that as a form to stretch it out. This will get it about 3/4 of the way, then you can lay it out and pat it the rest of the way there with your fingers. Stretch it as thin as you can, leaving it slightly thicker along the edge. If you like a thin, cracker crisp crust, roll it out when you are ready to top it and cook. If you like a thicker, softer crust, still roll it out thin, but do it before you prep your toppings. Let the rolled out pie sit on the pizza peel on top of your oven while it preheats – it will rise again and give you a light, soft crust with crisp bottom.

7) Lay the rolled out crust on top of parchment paper, on top of your pizza peel. Brush on some olive oil and sprinkle with a bit of kosher or sea salt. Sprinkle on 3/4 of your cheese. Distribute onion mushroom topping, and then finish with your remaining cheese.

8) I never had luck getting my loaded pizza into the oven just using a bit of cornmeal on my pizza peel, so this parchment paper trick is invaluable to me. Pick up your peel, slide out your oven rack with your stone, and then simply slide the pizza and the parchment paper onto the stone. Your toppings don’t get jostled and dumped onto the bottom of your oven. After five minutes, use your peel to tip of the partially baked pizza and slide out the parchment paper so that the pizza finished cooking directly on the stone. Bake for 10-12 minutes total, until your cheese begins to brown.

9) Remove from oven, and let sit for a few minutes before cutting.

Note: If you don’t have Trader Joe’s and cannot find truffle cheese, a drizzle of truffle oil after cooking would give you the same flavor. I realize truffle oil is also expensive and hard to come by (definitely pricier than truffle cheese), so if you are truffle-less, I promise this will still taste good. You could use a wilder mix of mushrooms to add some fungal complexity.

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