December 23, 2011

Neiman-Marcus Cookies

Posted by Lisa at 11:31 PM 0 comments
For Christmas this year, I decided to try this apparently mythical cookie. While I find it to be a yummy little thing, I also consider it to be a glorified chocolate chip cookie that's not worth a a purported $250.




I found the recipe here. It was under the ball cookie category, which I assumed meant the cookie would remain relatively round after baking. Instead, they flatted out into what you see up there.

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The Neiman-Marcus Cookie

1 c butter
1 c sugar
1 c brown sugar
2 eggs
1 1/2 tsp vanilla
2 c flour
2 1/2 c blended oatmeal (I used a food processor, but I believe they used a blender)
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
12 oz chocolate chips (I doubled this recipe, and ended up only using 23 oz of chocolate chips)
4 oz Hershey chocolate bar, grated (I actually chopped mine rather than grate, and I used half as much as I was supposed to so it's not very present in these cookies.
1 1/2 c chopped nuts (I used pecans, but ground mine into a powder which essentially ruined the effect of nuts)

Mix together flour, oatmeal, baking powder, baking soda and salt and set aside. Cream together butter and both sugars. Add eggs and vanilla. Add flour mixture to butter in intervals. Add in chocolate chips, Hershey bar and nuts. Roll into balls (with a diameter slightly larger than a quarter) and place about 1 1/2 inches apart on an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake at 375 for 10-12 minutes. A doubled recipe made me 136 cookies, so the above recipe should yield between 60 and 70 cookies.

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  Happy Holidays!

October 6, 2010

Apple Butter Cookies

Posted by Lisa at 9:15 PM 0 comments
First and foremost, the taste of apple butter in these cookies is negligible at best. That's okay with me because I'm not all that fond of apple butter.


See, these weren't supposed to be apple butter cookies. They were supposed to be sour cream cookies. I didn't have sour cream, and I had apple butter staring at me from the depths of the fridge. So I substituted and figured everything would go okay. Which it did! 



This turned out to be a fairly moist cookie, but it is definitely a treat meant to accompany a nice glass of milk or perhaps cider. The taste of them isn't too strong; the cinnamon and nutmeg come through just enough. At times it almost tastes like a weak version of Golden Grahams. I'll say this is a nice fall cookie, or a breakfast cookie if you're the sort who enjoys cookies for breakfast.

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Apple Butter Cookies

2 eggs
1 c sugar
1/2 c apple butter
1/3 c butter, melted
2 c flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp nutmeg
1/4 tsp cinnamon

Thoroughly beat eggs. Add in sugar, butter, apple butter and mix well. In separate bowl, mix together flour, baking soda, nutmeg, and cinnamon. Add to butter mixture. Arrange by teaspoon on a buttered cookie sheet about 1 inch apart. Bake for 8 or 9 minutes at 375 degrees. Makes around 30 cookies.
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September 9, 2010

Special Treat Crust - Cocoa, Coconut, and Pecans

Posted by Lisa at 10:24 PM 0 comments

The dreaded heat of summer has more or less moved on. This means, of course, that baking season is back. I’m thinking about focusing on cookies this year if only because I haven’t done too much with them. I’m not even sure there’s that much I *can* do with them, so we’ll see.

Recently I made some no-bake squares out of The Cookie Bible. I’m not going to get too much into them because they weren’t baked and I didn’t take pictures. Anyway, there’s a recipe called the Special Treat No-Bake Squares. They were tasty, and apart from a Ziploc bag meltdown they went smoothly. What I most enjoyed was the crust. Even though there’s coconut in there, which I’m not a fan of, I still find it very good. So here’s that:

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Special Treat No-Bake Squares Crust

1/2 c butter
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 c unsweetened cocoa powder
1 egg
1/4 tsp salt
1 1/2 c graham cracker crumbs
3/4 c flaked coconut
1/2 c chopped pecans

Combine butter, sugar, cocoa, egg and salt in medium saucepan. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly about 2 minutes, until mixture begins to thicken (I nearly overcooked it and it started to turn into a fudge). Remove from heat; stir in graham cracker crumbs, coconut and pecans. Press evenly into bottom of 9 inch x 9 inch pan.  
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In cupcake news, brandi.poff left me a comment waaay back in April about a recipe that sounds just about perfect for autumn:

Hello. I came across your site today by accident, but loved it immediately. I have a suggestion for your next batch of cupcakes. My mother-in-law makes these and we all think they are really great... first off, you need a box spice cake mix, 1 can of pumpkin (I think the 16 oz size or whatever the small size can is)... and right now pumpkin isn't always readily available... so it tastes just as good using about 12 oz. of apple sauce instead... and one package of cinnamon chips (they are just like chocolate chips, only cinnamon and are kind of difficult to find... usually I find them at Kroger), but they are a must for this recipe... you mix the cake mix, pumpkin or applesauce, and cinnamon chips together and it will form a thick gooey batter that you drop into muffin cups and bake at 350* for about 20 minutes or so. They aren't always the prettiest muffins, but they are definitely verrry tasty. Happy baking. 

I have never, ever seen cinnamon chips. I’m very intrigued by the idea. Now, I don’t know if I’ll be able to find them (it’s slim pickins for baking supplies in this area) but if I do I hope to make these and all sorts of future goodies with them.

April 3, 2010

No Easter Treats

Posted by Lisa at 5:02 PM 1 comments

Unless you count these guys. See, right at the beginning of my Spring Break I got sick. Whatever it is should (better) be gone by the end of my vacation and that's what the making of treats will occur. I did, however, dye some Easter eggs. I used a kit because I haven't used one since I was itty bitty and I missed it. I miss the little wire egg scoops but the faces are cute so I'll forgive them their crappy plastic scoops that don't even support the egg. Happy (almost) Easter!

February 12, 2010

Valentine Bears

Posted by Lisa at 12:42 AM 0 comments
For Valentine's Day, my mother and I made up an army of these little guys.


Aren't they ADORABLE? Okay, they look very similar to the Derangedeers I made for Christmas, but are a little less crazy in the eyes.

These were made using Bakerella's cake pop recipe. Notice that these aren't pops. They started out as pops but were too heavy. The chocolate started cracking under the pressure. Here's a basic materials list and rundown on the assembly once you've reached the ball rolling phase:

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Chocolate Melts
Brown M&M's or Reese's Pieces (paws and cut in half for ears)
Pearl Mints (eyes) (I don't know what these are actually called but they were in the wedding supply aisle of Wal-Mart
Strawberry Daiquiri Jelly Belly's (cut in half for noses)
Candy Hearts
Edible Ink Pen



1. Roll cake/frosting mixture into two sizes of balls, one for the head and one for the body.  Use your thumb to make an indent in the tops of the bigger ones.

2. Place balls on wax paper covered pan and freeze for 30 minutes to an hour to firm them up.


3. Melt some chocolate (I used chocolate melts of the bulk candy variety mixed with some melted butter) Take cake out of freezer. Push lollipop stick all the way through a bigger ball making sure the indentation is on top.

4. Spoon a little melted chocolate into the indentation and push a smaller ball on top. Don't push the stick all the way through the head. Move the body ball up if you need to. The chocolate should dry pretty fast but you can put them in the fridge or freezer for a minute to speed it up. This should bond the body and head together pretty well.

5. Once the body and head are secure, roll them in some melted chocolate until they are fully coated. Turn bear to let excess drip off.

6. You can attach the eyes, ears, noses, heart and feet before they dry if you're super quick, but I did if after each bear dried using a dab of melted chocolate to attach them.

7. This is where you'll notice your bears might be cracking. If this happens, or you want to avoid it happening, remove the sticks in a twisting motion as not to crack the chocolate.

I feel like I'm forgetting to mention something, but this will at least give you an idea of what to do if that's the case.

January 25, 2010

Lavender Pepper Cookies

Posted by Lisa at 8:42 PM 0 comments

I was a bit skeptical about my ability to experience lavender as anything but a fragrance. I've been putting off using it for a while, but tonight was the night to give it a shot.



The lavender taste in these is strong enough to stand out, but not so much so that it was offensive. The pepper leaves a lingering spice that is an interesting and new experience for me in a cookie. I probably wouldn't make these too often, but they'd be a nice change of pace from your average chocolate chip or peanut butter cookie.

To achieve the lavender taste, I made some lavender sugar. The smell was overwhelmingly perfumey to the point where I was more or less choking in a purple haze, minus the purple.

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Lavender Sugar

3/4 c sugar
1 3/4 tbsp dried lavender
1/2 tsp ground pepper

Using food processor, grind up ingredients. I can't exactly tell you when it's done. I probably didn't do it for more than 30 total seconds on pulse.

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The actual cookie recipe Fannie Farmer's Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie recipe.  I've used it in a variety of ways in the past because it's a pretty good base cookie to toy with.

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Lavender Pepper Cookies

1/2 c butter
lavender sugar
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla
1 tbsp milk
1 1/4 c flour
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp baking powder
2 1/2 tbsp sugar
1/2 tbsp ground pepper

Cream butter until light and fluffy. Beat in lavender sugar. Add egg and vanilla and beat thoroughly. Add milk. Sift together flour, baking powder, and salt and mix into butter mixture. In small bowl, mix together sugar and pepper. Spoon batter onto buttered cookie sheet about 1 inch apart. Sprinkle with sugar/pepper mixture and flatten slightly with fingers.  Bake at 375 degrees for about 9 minutes. Makes 22 2.5 inch cookies.

A note: These cookies flatten right out, so make sure you don't place them too close together. Also, they don't necessarily come out perfectly round.

January 14, 2010

Chocolate Sugar Cookies with Orange Decorator's Frosting

Posted by Lisa at 1:31 AM 0 comments
These are the teeniest tiniest little cookies. I don't know why I made them so small, but they are the perfect, pop-in-your-mouth size.



As you can see, these are about half frosting. I think it gives a much needed moisture to these otherwise dry cookies.What I discovered in making these is that I'm really not a fan of cocoa powder. It just doesn't taste right when I'm looking for a chocolaty treat. I do, however, still enjoy citrus sweets in just about every way.

The recipe for these cookies comes straight from Fannie Farmer's Boston Cooking School Cookbook. The only difference is, I apparently made them bigger than she wanted because I ended up with about 20 less cookies that the recipe said I'd get. These are meant to be super small.

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Old Fashioned Chocolate Sugar Cookies

1/2 c butter
3/4 c sugar
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla
1 tbsp milk
1 1/4 c flour
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/3 c cocoa powder

Cream butter until soft and fluffy. Beat in sugar. Add egg and vanilla and beat thoroughly. Add milk. Sift together flour, salt, baking powder and cocoa powder in separate bowl and stir into butter mixture. Mix well and arrange by teaspoon on buttered cookie sheet about one inch apart. Bake at 325 degrees for 8-11 minutes. Makes 50-60 (I got 32)

Note: These don't flatten out very much while baking, so if you're looking for a thinner cookie, flatten slightly with your fingers or a fork before putting in the oven.

Second note: This mixture is a little bit too think to spoon on, so I found it easier (though messier) to just roll them into balls my hand.

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The frosting on these is an altered version of my Christmas cookie frosting. I wanted orange frosting. This was, indeed, that, but it could be much better. I'll work on that another time.

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Orange Decorator's Frosting

2 tbsp butter
1/2 tsp vanilla
2 1/2 c sugar
1 tbsp orange juice
1 tbsp orange zest

Cream butter and vanilla until soft. Blend in sugar, juice and zest.

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So school is starting up in less than a week and I'm not sure what that's going to leave me with for baking time. If I had to guess, I'd say little to none. But! I'm not too worried about it. I'll do what I can to keep this going without massive gaps between updates.

(My birthday is next week, too. Happy birthday me.)

January 4, 2010

Maple 2: Electric Boogaloo

Posted by Lisa at 3:57 PM 0 comments
So I may have been finished up with ginger, but I wasn't quite done with this maple thing. When it came down to it, I realized I hadn't really had maple anything outside of the wide world of pancakes and waffles. I did a little perusing and found a maple cake recipe I wanted to try, tweaked it, and here I am.



Yes, the frosting is still marshmallow.  What can I say, I really enjoy that creamy, fluffy, smoothness. You'll notice, though, that I swapped the sprinkles out for the chopped pecans. I think the difference is...what makes it.




But in all seriousness, these look exactly like the last cupcakes I posted, so I had to do something to distinguish them.

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Maple Spice Cupcakes

2 1/2 c flour
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 c butter
1 c pure maple syrup
1/2 c sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp vanilla
1/2 c water
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp nutmeg

Sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon and nutmeg.Beat butter and sugar on high until light and fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, beating in between each. Add maple syrup and vanilla. Switch to low speed and add flour alternately with water, being sure to end with flour. Fill liners about 3/4 full. Bake at 350 degrees for 18 to 20 minutes. Makes 22.

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These aren't maple-y in the sense I was expecting, but they are good nonetheless. The nutmeg comes through a little heavy, but not in a bad way. The cinnamon doesn't come through very well, but might be accentuating the nutmeg. These would get a 3.6 out of 4 if I actually rated cupcakes.

January 2, 2010

Maple Ginger Cupcakes with Marshmallow Frosting

Posted by Lisa at 4:10 PM 0 comments
First and foremost, I didn't like these one bit. It may well have been the worst cupcake I've ever had. That being said, someone else said that they weren't that bad. Not good, mind you, but not *that* bad. Who might enjoy these? People who like the taste of ginger without the spice, marshmallow fluff without the taste, or the smell of maple syrup without any other trace of maple syrup.


They look pretty though, don't they? Note that I didn't want to put sprinkles on because these wouldn't have been a sprinkle cupcake even if they DID come out delicious, but I was basically forced to do it. So there's that.

I knew I was going to be using up the rest of my candied ginger. That was all I knew when I started this. From there I decided, "Well maple syrup doesn't sound like it would do too bad with ginger." And then, "Marshmallow and maple syrup sounds pretty good!" which is how I ended up here. I stand by my reasoning that these things could very well taste good together if done properly.




Another thing: the structural integrity of the cupcake is a bit shaky. You can get an idea from the picture. Having put too much candied ginger in a fairly watery batter, it all sank to the bottom and detached while baking. So yeah. There's that too.

Here's the recipe anyway:

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Maple Ginger Cupcakes

2 eggs
1 tbsp maple extract
1 c sugar
1 c flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 c milk
1 tbsp butter
1 1/4 c chopped candied ginger
1 tsp ground ginger

Beat eggs and maple together until blended. Beat in sugar. Sift together flour, baking powder, salt and ground ginger together in separate bowl. Add to egg and sugar mixture. Heat butter and milk together until butter melts. Add to mixture and beat until smooth. Stir in candied ginger. Bake at 375 degrees for about 20 minutes. Makes 12.

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The marshmallow frosting came from here and is the only thing I liked about this cupcake. Or rather, would have if I could taste it.

December 21, 2009

My Take on Bakerella's Christmas Cake Pops

Posted by Lisa at 8:07 AM 0 comments
So when I saw these things on her site, I thought "Golly gee, those are adorable." I immediately wanted to make them. Sadly, the process was not as easily as I would have liked and, well, my results are lacking.

Let's do a comparison:

Here are her versions:





Cute, right? Look at those Rudolph's! LOOK AT THEM!

And here are my sad little versions:




Okay, my trees aren't so bad. They don't have stars because I couldn't find any, and they don't have the great texture because I couldn't do it without mangling the whole thing.

But that reindeer. That is one entirely deranged animal. Where did I go wrong? Well, the eyes are candy coated sunflower seeds which are all different shapes and sizes and lent perfectly to the crazy eyes. I honestly couldn't find anything better to use for the eyes. Aside from that, I was sawing down a bunch of mini pretzels trying to get antler shapes because I couldn't find those nifty alphabet pretzels. And finally, I'm just plain terrible at working with candy melts, or any sort of melted object and what has resulted from this is a herd of reindeer with apparent skin conditions. Ah well.

To see how to make these and all sorts of other ridiculous cute edibles, go here.

Merry almost-Christmas to you all!

December 12, 2009

Roll Out Sugar Cookies, Christmas Style

Posted by Lisa at 11:40 PM 1 comments
When my mother and I make cookies for Christmas, they always look more or less like this. This is our signature look, you know. Most of our Christmas cookie cutters have disappeared or become generally misshapen in the years that we've had them, so we always have round ones now. Also, it seems that we attempt to make up for our lack of decorating skills by seeing how much frosting we can get on each cookie.

 
Okay, so I tried Fannie Farmer's Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie recipe for this. They aren't bad, but take more flour than the recipe calls for if you actually want to roll them out.

The frosting is from somewhere, I'm sure, but I got the recipe off of a little paper that's been taped inside the cupboard for as long as I remember. It needed a little bit more milk than it called for, but then again, our frosting was a little on the running side, so exercise judgment.

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Roll Out Sugar Cookies

1 c butter
1 1/2 c sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
2 tbsp milk
3 c flour (plus some amount)
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking powder

Cream butter until light and fluffy. Beat in sugar. Add egg and vanilla and beat thoroughly. Add milk. Sift together flour, salt and baking powder, then stir in. Chill overnight (or until you think it's ready I guess). Roll out 1/4 inch thick, cut out, and bake on buttered cookie sheet for 8 minutes at 350 degrees. I used tinfoil rather than butter because I thought it would make more and was planning to do it assembly line style. Makes 36 cookies (2.75 inch diameter)


Decorator's Frosting

2 tbsp butter
1/2 tsp vanilla
1 1/2 c powdered sugar
1 tbsp milk (plus maybe a tsp more or so)

Cream butter until soft. Blend in sugar, milk and vanilla.

I made four batches of this. Making two will give you enough to frost 36 cookies, making four gives you enough to do that and pipe on a bunch more. So what we did was make two batches, frost all the cookies, make two more and separate them in half, colored one half green and the other half red (and added 1/4 tsp strawberry extract to make a nice hint of flavor). Then we piped ourselves silly. Voila! Christmas cookies.

November 30, 2009

Chocolate Lime Cupcakes with Almond Extract Buttercream Frosting

Posted by Lisa at 8:33 PM 0 comments
I felt like making something today. I didn't know what, but I knew I was kind of low on sugar and butter and had some extra limes. So! I made these cupcakes.



As a jumping off point, I took a look at  Fannie Farmer's Quick Mix Fudge Cake. With a snip here and a cut there, this is what I ended up with:

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Chocolate Lime Cupcakes

1 c 1 tbsp cocoa powder (F.F. called for 3 oz chocolate and no butter)
3 tbsp butter, melted (I only had unsalted.)
1 3/4 c cake flour
1 c sugar (originally 1 1/2 c sugar, but like I said, I was low)
1/8 c Splenda (yeah, I used the little packets. It came to maybe 20 or so. Ludicrous.
1 tsp salt (originally 3/4 tsp)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/3 tsp baking soda
1/2 c oil
2 medium limes worth of juice (a little less than 1/3 c or so) and zest
1 tsp almond extract (originally vanilla)
2 eggs
2/3 milk (originally didn't call for milk)

Mix together flour, sugar, salt, baking powder, baking soda and cocoa. Add butter oil and milk and beat on low until mixed. Add lime juice, zest, almond extract and eggs and beat until smooth. Fill 3/4 full (for nice doming action) and bake at 350 degrees for 18 to 20 minutes. Makes 13.

How do they taste? I'll go with...different. It's like chocolate with a lime kicker if I'm being kind, tainted chocolate if I'm being less so. They're not bad! They're just different.

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The frosting on these guys is, once again, this recipe. The only thing I did differently was add 1 1/2 tbsp almond extract in place of the vanilla. Then I dipped the frosted cupcakes in colored sugar.

November 29, 2009

Lime Cupcakes with Rose Water Buttercream Frosting

Posted by Lisa at 9:36 PM 0 comments
Before I took ill, I was planning on trying this mixture of flavors. I'm thinking it was due more to my being partial to the combination of pink and green than to my thinking these flavors would go well together.



For these cupcakes, I went with Vanilla Garlic's recipe. The only changes I made were adding more zest and juice, using one lime's worth of both and adding 10 drops of green food coloring to the milk and lime mixture. The taste of lime is undeniable. The frosting is this recipe cut in half and with the rose water added instead of vanilla. The taste isn't very rosy, but the smell is dead on. Oh well.

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Lime Cupcakes (originally from Vanilla Garlic)

1 c unsalted butter
2 c sugar
4 eggs
2 3/4 c flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/8 tsp salt
1 c milk
the juice and zest of 1 medium lime

Stir together flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt in medium bowl and set aside.  In large bowl, beat butter until smooth. Add sugar and beat until fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, beating in between each. Measure out milk, lime juice and zest. Add milk mixture and flour mixture to butter mixture alternately and ending with the flour mixture. Fill liners about 2/3 to 3/4 full and bake for 22-25 minutes at 350 degrees. Makes about 22 cupcakes.

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Rose Water Buttercream Frosting

1 1/4 c unsalted butter
2 1/2 c powdered sugar
1 tbsp rose water
1 tbsp milk
pink food coloring gel

In large bowl, beat butter until creamy. Add sugar gradually. Add rose water, milk and coloring and beat until fluffy. Makes enough to lightly frost 20-22 cupcakes.

November 25, 2009

Checking In

Posted by Lisa at 11:49 PM 0 comments
I'm not done with this. I've just been ill. I'll be back when everything clears up. Boy howdy I've had a craving for fresh baked goods.

November 14, 2009

Peach Yogurt and Honey Cupcakes

Posted by Lisa at 5:15 PM 0 comments
I had some of those fruit on the bottom yogurts around that, frankly, I'm not that fond of and decided to bake them up. What I discovered is that the amount of fruit in those things is a lot smaller than I previously thought. I made up the difference with some canned peaches that we're floating around the pantry.



As a starting point, I went with Cupcake Project's Sour Cream Cupcakes. I doubled it, replaced the sour cream with yogurt, added some peaches and used regular butter instead of unsalted. So the recipe became:


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Peach Yogurt Cupcakes

2 1/2 c flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
4 eggs
2 c sugar
1 c butter
3 tsp vanilla
2 fruit on the bottom yogurt cups
1/2 c mashed peaches

Mix dry ingredients together in medium bowl. In large bowl, beat eggs and sugar together until light and creamy. Add butter and vanilla and beat on low for a minute or so until blended. Beat in the dry ingredients on low until blended. Add yogurt and peaches and beat until all mixed. Fill liners about 1/2 full and bake at 325 degrees for 22-25 minutes. Makes 32.

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I made Martha Stewart's Honey Glaze to cover these. I actually doubled what she made, but that made far too much. I tried to pour it on top of each cupcake and then squirt in on using a turkey baster and it all got very messy very fast. Only then did I try just brushing it on in layers, which worked fine. After glazing each cake I put some peach mush on top of them to try and create a more balanced taste. It partially worked, but honey is still the primary flavor here.

November 9, 2009

Chocolate Cupcakes with White Chocolate Ganache

Posted by Lisa at 2:09 PM 0 comments
So I would hear this word "ganache" every now and again, and I had no idea what it meant. Once I *did* learn what it meant, I decided to give it a try.

I decided to try the chocolate cake recipe out of my Fannie Farmer cookbook. It's a fair chocolate cake. It's not too dry and it domes well. I wish is had a stronger chocolate flavor, but in this particular instance, it's not what I was looking for anyway.



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Chocolate Cupcakes

1/2 c vegetable oil
1 1/2 c sugar
1 tsp vanilla
2 oz unsweetened baker's chocolate, melted
2 eggs, beaten
2 c flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 c milk

Sift together flour, baking powder and salt. In large bowl beat together oil, sugar, vanilla, chocolate, and eggs. Add flour mixture alternately with milk. Fill liners about 3/4 full and bake for 18 minutes at 350 degrees.

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For the ganache, I looked to Cupcake Project. The only problem with that was that I didn't have heavy cream anymore. Used it up, what, yesterday? So I made some substitutions.

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White Chocolate Ganache

1/4 c white chocolate morsels
1/4 c milk
1 3/4 tbsp unsalted butter
1 tsp flour

Place chocolate in small bowl. Add milk, butter and flour to saucepan and heat until boiling, stirring to mix. Pour over chocolate and stir together until melted and combined. Spread over cupcakes (I actually dipped mine, but tomato tomahto.)



Sadly, there is not enough white chocolate to stand up against the regular chocolate cupcake, and it's completely overshadowed. Next time, less cupcake, more ganache.

November 8, 2009

White Chocolate Sour Cream Mini-Cupcakes with Raspberry Whipped Cream Frosting

Posted by Lisa at 2:58 PM 0 comments
I had some sour and heavy cream I needed to use up, and some white chocolate I wanted to eat, so I searched for a white chocolate sour cream cupcake. That lead me to Cake on the Brain's recipe. I made minis instead of full sizers and got 24 slightly too full cupcakes that I almost burned because I got distracted.





This wasn't the white chocolate taste I was looking for. Most likely I would have gotten what I wanted if I made her frosting as well, but I opted for a raspberry whipped cream (recipe more or less from Cupcake Project) that is an unusual blend of sweet and tart. I can't even say that I like or dislike it. It's like a tart raspberry with an afterthought of sweetness.








White Chocolate and Strawberry Cupcakes (500 Cupcakes)

Posted by Lisa at 2:46 PM 0 comments
I went back to my 500 Cupcakes for this recipe. I've had a craving for white chocolate lately, and I thought this might be just the thing to make. That wasn't really the case.



I don't know what went wrong with these things, but all of the white chocolate chips sank to the bottom and detached from the rest of the cake! It ruined the whole experience for me. The strawberry cream cheese frosting was very good (I think I might just be a new found fan of cream cheese frostings) , but not quite enough to make up for how let down I was with the cupcake itself. So! I'm not sharing that recipe. I'll share the frosting.

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Strawberry Cream Cheese Frosting

1 c cream cheese, softened
1 1/2 c powdered sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
3 tbsp butter, softened
3 tbsp chopped fresh strawberries (okay, I didn't use fresh, but it's okay)

Beat first four ingredients together until creamy. Stir in strawberries.

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I also learned today that I'm a terrible froster. That's not a word. Er...terrible frosting-putter-on-er? Anyway, I can't do it. If I'm piping it on, I can make it look so-so, but otherwise it's just a big sloppy mess. Especially in this case, because with the lack of any real chopper mechanism, I had big chunks of strawberry floating around when I'm trying to spread the frosting out. But it's all good, I'm not entering these in a baked beauty contest any time soon.

November 6, 2009

Italian Wedding Soup

Posted by Lisa at 2:42 PM 0 comments
Okay, so soup doesn't fall into the baking category per se, but I made it none the less and I can put what I want here, right? Right. So. Italian wedding soup. This recipe came from a former boss of mine. There are some changes I would make next time, but all in all it's a good soup.

Before today, I had never made a meatball. I'm not much for handling meat, it's not my thing. I figured if I *am* going to get into that game, I should start with the basics: ground beef and chicken breast. Simple.

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Meatballs:

2 lbs lean ground beef (80/20 or leaner)
About 7 oz bread crumbs
About 1/2 container grated Parmesan cheese
Milk (just enough to keep things moist)

Mix all the ingredients together and form into quarter sized meatballs. Place in a shallow greased pan (I used a tinfoil covered pan) and bake at 325 degrees for about 8 minutes. Set those aside.



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Chicken:

4 good sized boneless chicken breasts
Olive oil (to coat pan)

Cut chicken into nickel sized pieces. Coat pan in olive oil and heat for a minute or so before putting chicken in. Cook until just done.



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 Soup:

4 containers of chicken broth (this might be considered cheating, but so what.)
1 package of frozen chopped spinach (the recipe called for 2, but that turned out to be too much.)

Put broth and spinach in large pot. Simmer until spinach is completely thawed. Add the meatballs and chicken and simmer for 1 1/2 to 2 hours.



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Pasta:

1 lb uncooked Orzo or Acin de Pepe. (I used Orzo)

Cook pasta, staying more on the al dente side of the spectrum. It'll finish cooking in the soup. Drain completely and add to soup. Simmer for about 1 more hour.



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And that's that. If done again, I'd use less spinach and more broth, but it didn't turn out bad at all.


November 5, 2009

Oh, and...

Posted by Lisa at 4:45 PM 0 comments
These ended up coming out pretty okay too.





For the record, this was what I had left of the Buttermilk Pie Filling put in graham cracker crusts (1 1/3 c graham cracker crumbs, 3 tbsp sugar, 1/3 c melted butter, made as the box of crumbs said so and pressed into cupcake tins instead of a pie plate) and baked for 35 minutes or so. I made enough crust for five of these and still had about 1/3 of the batter left.
 

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