Tag: made from scratch

In the Big Apple, Dim Sum & Then Some…Levain Chocolate Chip Cookies

In the Big Apple, Dim Sum & Then Some…Levain Chocolate Chip Cookies

Yay. Back to my second favorite city in the world…New York.  In the immoral words of Tony Bennett, I left my heart in San Francisco and it will always be first.  But wow, New York, I love you.  Every time I return to this amazing city I am in awe of its energy.  The number of people that converge to live, work and play in Manhattan, all at the same time, is intimidating but oh so amazing.  Blaring horns, wailing sirens, screeching tires, rumbling subways trains, people yelling, music playing, dogs barking, the sounds of vibrant, urban life.

Home Away From Home

We are staying in LES (Lower Eastside) which exemplifies NYC.  We are within walking distance of neighborhoods that represent every economic strata.  Much like San Francisco, it is not unusual to walk a couple of blocks in any direction and see, homeless folks on the streets, millennials with their backpacks or totes making their way to the FiDi, the down and out struggling with addiction, to folks decked out in designer wear enjoying a latte and 8 dollar croissant.

The Daily Grind

We walk Moose to Chinatown to pick up breakfast, rice roll noodles filled with bbq pork and veggies, slathered with chili oil, peanut sauce, and hoisin.  Sitting on a stoop we wash it down with Milk Tea.  The next morning a walk down Ludlow finds us at my favorite spot, BBF. I pick up a coffee and an onigiri (a generous, warm ball of rice topped with pork belly or mushrooms). Our daily walks, navigating the streets through the LES, Chinatown, Ukranian Village, and Little Italy, are all reminiscent of growing up in San Francisco.

Left top corner BBQ Pork Pineapple & Siu Mai Bun Mei Lai Wah 🥟🥟 🥟 🥟 Clockwise dim sum assortment from Royal Seafood, Big Chicken Bun Royal again 🥟🥟 🥟

I LOVE it.  Faced daily with the spectrum of life, good and bad, keeps me somewhat grounded.  I am keenly aware of how lucky I am to enjoy a life built by the hard work and struggles of those who came before me.  Dad, a Paper Son, came to this country at 16.  Gung Gung left his family in China looking for a way to support them.  Mom, the eldest of 6 kids, started her hair salon at 17 but continued to study to become a businesswoman and real estate broker.  All their hard work focused on the future and a better life.

In Search Of…

We headed to midtown today, in search of shoes.  In particular, Hokas. I have developed plantar fasciitis, so to keep doing what I love best in Manhattan, WALK.  I am searching for new shoes. Plus I can hardly shirk my Moose-walking duties since that is my “excuse” for spending time in the Big Apple.  Mission accomplished, my foot feels infinitely better in my new shoes.  This calls for a celebration…we head to the nearest Levain Bakery for one of their scrumdidilyumptious chocolate chip cookies.

On our last visit we sampled CCC in NYC, so you wouldn’t have to (tough job, somebody’s got to do it).  Our winners included Levain’s, best described as a ginormous chocolate-filled, scone-like warm cookie, and Jacques Torres’s, classic CCC and oh-so-delicious. Not surprisingly, the chocolate in his cookies is amazing.

Levain Blueberry Muffin 🥟🥟 🥟 🥟 Chocolate Chip Cookie 🥟🥟 🥟 🥟 +

The hubs tried Levain’s popular Blueberry Muffin to compare it to Hummingbird’s version, which we make at home, and honestly, our homemade one is just as good if not better.  This got me thinking, is there a recipe out there for Levain’s CCC to try so I could avoid spending 5 dollars for a cookie, lol?

Pancake Princess to the Rescue

I turned to a favorite site, Princess Princess to search for a Levain knock-off.  Not familiar with Pancake Princess?  Best described as a one-woman version of America’s Test Kitchen.  She will test a slew of different recipes, in this case, Levain CCC knock-offs, and invite tasters to help her select the best of the bunch.  Her top two included Stella Parks’s from Serious Eats, and one from Hijabs and Aprons.  I perused both and decided to try Hijabs and Aprons as they looked easier and did not require resting the dough for 12 hours before baking (total dealbreaker).

It’s a good thing I picked the simpler recipe…rummaging through our home away from home kitchen, I found a gorgeous red ceramic bowl, one big spoon and a rubber spatula, a small cookie sheet, and a tiny (almost worthless) whisk.  I get the feeling very little baking goes on here.

Tips for Baking in a Tiny, No Baking Tools Kitchen

Here we go, I made sure my butter was room temp soft but not melty since I only had a spoon. Then, ran downstairs for Guittard chocolate chips (ya gotta have decent chips), a tiny bag of Gold Medal AP Flour (4 dollars!), vanilla extract, and dove in.

Muscle through beating the butter and sugars (unless you are lucky enough to have a mixer handy in which case, don’t overbeat),  Add eggs and vanilla, then sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt over the creamed mixture.  Fold the dry ingredients in and add chocolate chips and nuts last.  Voila’ that’s it. It took significantly longer than if I had a mixer but I got an arm workout, yay. Use classic chocolate chips, not chunks, and don’t bother cutting up a chocolate bar.  These cookies depend on a nice, even distribution of chips throughout the cookie.

The OG cookies call for walnuts but feel free to use pecans or another nut.  If you like that tannic bite from walnuts, don’t substitute.  Best to make these cookies as directed, BIG, 5-6 ounces of dough.  The cookies will be crisp with browned edges on the outside but moist and buttery on the inside.  You can make them smaller but the difference between the exterior and interior won’t be as pronounced.

When scooping out dough, don’t smooth the dough into a ball.  The craggy edges give the cookie character so plop the dough on the sheet, and keep the overall shape round.

Bake until the edges are a nice deep golden brown.  Serve WARM, really, so much better warm and gooey.  I zap next-day cookies in the microwave for a few seconds to warm them up before eating.

These easy-to-make cookies will satisfy your Levain CCC craving anytime!

Levain Style Chocolate Chip Coookies with Walnuts

From Hijabs & Aprons, a delicious Chocolate Chip Cookie that comes oh so close to Levain's famous Chocolate Chip Cookies with Walnuts.
Course cookies, desserts
Cuisine American
Keyword chocolate chip cookies, chocolate chips, Levain Bakery
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 16 minutes
Servings 8 cookies

Ingredients

  • ½ cup butter, slightly softened 112g
  • 1 cup light brown sugar 200g
  • ¼ cup granulated sugar 50g
  • 2 eggs cold
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • cups all-purpose flour, sifted 300g. (Gold Medal works)
  • tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp fine sea salt or 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 2 cups walnuts, roughly chopped 250g , if omitting walnuts, you can add roughly 50g extra AP flour
  • 2 cups dark chocolate chips 325g Use a dark or semi-sweet that you like, I like Guittard’s chips

Instructions

  • Preheat your oven to 375ºF. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.
  • In a medium sized bowl, sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.
  • Beat the butter and sugar in a large mixing bowl until creamy smooth (about 3 minutes).
  • Add the first egg and beat on low-medium speed until fully incorporated. Repeat with the second egg. Add vanilla. MIxture will be soft and creamy
  • Add flour mixture to the mixing bowl. On low speed, pulse a few times to blend flour into creamed mixture. Low speed to prevent flour from exploding in your face.
  • Stir in the walnuts and chocolate chips.
  • Form and place eight 6-ounce rough/messy balls of cookie dough into your lined baking sheet. If you have a scale, weigh the dough then divide into 8-12 cookies. Each one will be approximately 4-6 ounces, as a general goal/guideline. Also, if the edges of the cookie dough ball are rough/not smooth, that’s better. I use 2 tablespoons In my experience, if you like craggly crispy tops, it’s best if you barely mush it together and smack it onto the pan.
  • At this point, if your dough seems like it has softened due to your kitchen's temperature or too much handling with hands, refrigerate the dough-balls for about half an hour before baking. Because of the relatively high flour content in this recipe, the dough tends to be pretty stiff and doesn’t require chilling.
  • Pop the pan(s) into the oven for 12-16 minutes. This time variation depends on your oven (I’m using conventional top and bottom heat, not convection) as well as whether or not you chilled your dough (and for how long). I recommend checking (look, don’t touch) the cookies every minute after hitting the 11 minute mark. Ideally, you want patches of deep golden brown and lighter golden brown.
  • No matter what, you need to let these cookies set! Similar to steak, you’ve gotta take the cookies out while they’re technically a bit undercooked, and let them finish cooking in the still-hot pan in order to achieve the cooked-but-gooey center. The amount of walnuts/chocolate chips will make it hard to really check the inside without just breaking a cookie in half.
  • If you need to reuse your baking sheet for the second batch of 4-cookies, you can do so. Just make sure the pan is clean of grease and has cooled down before you place the dough-balls on it.

Notes

FREEZING DOUGH: If you’d like to freeze the dough for later use, go right ahead! To be completely honest, I don’t know how long the dough stays good in the freezer (at least a month for sure from my own experience). Wrap the dough balls individually in plastic wrap and freeze them. You can thaw them for about 20-30 minutes prior to placing on a parchment lined sheet and baking them.
SMALLER COOKIES: The only alternative size I’ve tried for these cookies is 3oz (half of my original). I would bake them at 375ºF for 10-12 minutes. Again, the time will depend on the oven. When baking a single chilled dough ball in my toaster oven, 375ºF for 11 minutes is perfect. Any more time and the center is overbaked.
Blueberry Cornmeal Tart, Sweet Enough

Blueberry Cornmeal Tart, Sweet Enough

Yikes!  Before blueberry season ends, make this Blueberry Cornmeal Tart.  From Alison Roman’s Sweet Enough, an easy, absolutely delicious way to take advantage of fresh blueberries. But before we get into the recipe and my notes…I need to address the elephant in the room.  Yes at one time I was ready to burn my Alison Roman cookbooks.  In an interview, she decided to DIS Chrissy Teigen and Marie Kondo as “sell-outs” for hawking products, while encouraging folks to buy her stuff. LOL  Interestingly enough she called out two POC women.  Backlash ensued, she lost her column in the New York Times, had a Twitter squirmish with Chrissy, which she lost, and felt the ire of many POC foodies.  She laid low for a while, started back, and is now back in the good graces of most.

She recovered, but will probably always be under the microscope. Occasionally, controversy rears its head in a damned if you do, damned if you don’t way.  She made a dish, called it Gentle Lentils (LOL), and got called out for Appropriating Daal, an Indian staple. What are you going to do? 🤷🏻‍♀️.  Her personality is up my alley, a bit tongue-in-cheek, snarky, funny AND she is fond of expletives, just like me.

Yes, Another Cookbook

She came out with a dessert book and I caved.  I have made her dessert recipes and they are pretty darn good.  I believe she originally worked in pastry.  Her Salted Butter and Chocolate Chunk Cookies went viral one year (pre-fallout) and are really good. They’re buttery, sandy, chocolatey, and sweet with a surprise pop of salt.  It hits every taste bud, and has a crispy edge from the demerara sugar finish.

This Blueberry Cornmeal Tart couldn’t be easier.  The crust and crumble topping are made from the same dough.  Butter, flour, and powdered sugar go into the dough. The powdered sugar lowers the flour’s protein content to help with tenderness.  Cornmeal adds that characteristic cornmeal crunch to the crust and crumble.  I am not a fan of the grittiness of stone-ground cornmeal.  Luckily, cornmeal comes in a wide range of textures and grinds.  I love the cornmeal from a local family farm in the Bay Area, Tierra Vegetables.  They have an array of heirloom cornmeals that are amazing.  My favorite is the Hopi Pink Cornmeal which is finely textured and adds just a tiny bit of crunch.  It’s perfect in Christina Tosi’s Corn Cookies where you can see the reddish pink flecks in the cookies, so cool.  Use the cornmeal you like.

The Steps

Betcha think the next instruction is to roll the dough out.  Nope, there is no rolling involved in the making of this tart.  Yay.  Reserve a quarter of the dough for the crumble and put it in the fridge to chill. Press the remaining dough into a 9-inch tart pan.  How easy is that?

The blueberries are mixed with a bit of sugar and either vinegar or lemon juice, I prefer lemon juice, I am a citrus kinda gal.   Flour rounds out the filling to act as a thickener and that’s it.

Pour your blueberry mixture into the tart pan and spread evenly over crust.  Press little bits of the dough to form little clumps and sprinkle these over the blueberries.  Bake on a sheet to save yourself from oven cleaning.

Bake until the crumble and crust are a nice golden brown and the blueberries bubbling.  Remove to a rack and let it cool completely before removing.  Serve with a generous scoop of vanilla…cause that’s how we roll!  Enjoy!

Blueberry Cornmeal TartI

From Alison Roman's Sweet Enough, a simple, absolutely delicious Blueberry Cronmeal Tart
Course Dessert, Pie, Tart
Cuisine American
Keyword blueberry, cornmeal, tart

Ingredients

For the Crust & Topping

  • 1 ½ cups /225g all-purpose flour
  • cup /55 grams cornmeal
  • cup /50 grams confectioners’ sugar
  • ¼ cup /55 grams light brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon / 4 grams baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon / 3 grams kosher salt
  • ¾ cup /170 grams unsalted butter 1 1/2 sticks, melted and cooled slightly

For the Filling

  • 1 pound /455 grams blueberries or combination of blueberries, blackberries and raspberries
  • ½ cup /110 grams light brown sugar
  • 2 tablespoons / 28 grams apple cider vinegar or fresh lemon or lime juice I prefer lemon juice
  • 2 tablespoons / 18 grams all-purpose flour
  • Pinch of kosher salt

Instructions

Make the crust and topping: Preheat oven to 350°.

  • In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cornmeal, confectioners’ sugar, brown sugar, baking powder and salt. Add melted butter, then use your hands or a wooden spoon to combine ingredients until a coarse dough comes together, with a few dry spots.
  • Press 3/4 of the cornmeal mixture into a 9-inch tart pan with a removable bottom making sure the mixture is evenly pressed on the bottom and about 1/2 inch up the sides. (Using something large and flat, like the bottom of a measuring cup, will be helpful.) Place the shell on a rimmed baking sheet; pop the tart shell and remaining mixture into the fridge while you prepare the filling.

Make the filling:

  • Toss blueberries, brown sugar, lemon juice, flour and salt in a medium bowl. Pour the fruit into the crust.
  • Crumble the remaining cornmeal mixture over the blueberries, pressing bits of the mixture together into large clumps as you go, as you would with a crisp or coffee-cake topping (note that it won’t cover the top entirely, more just create a nice sporadic covering, still allowing the blueberries and their juices to poke through).
  • Bake tart until the blueberry filling is bubbly and thickened, and both the crust and top are nicely browned, 50–55 minutes.
  • Let tart cool completely before slicing into triangles and serving. The tart can be baked up to 2 days ahead and stored tightly wrapped at room temperature or refrigerated (especially if your kitchen is hot or humid).
  • EAT WITH: vanilla ice cream would be too obvious, but I don’t care.

Notes

DO AHEAD: tart can be baked 4 days ahead, stored wrapped in plastic at room temperature, or refrigerated. 
Blue-tifulberry Muffins from Zoe Bakes

Blue-tifulberry Muffins from Zoe Bakes

I know, I know…I already have a few showstopper blueberry muffin recipes on 3Jamigos but I just found another one!  From Zoe Bakes, her Blueberry Muffin with Crumble Topping.  The crumble and a touch of lemon sets this muffin apart.  They’re delicious and perfect with a cup of coffee or tea.  During blueberry season, which happens to be right now, I head to our farmer’s market to load up on the tiny blue orbs.  First, I eat some out of hand when I return from the market.  Then I save some for fruit salads or a favorite spinach salad with hazelnuts, and avocado dressed in a honey mustard vinaigrette.  A portion gets frozen to be enjoyed later in the year.  But ultimately, the berries end up in baked goodies- there’s Blueberry Boy Bait Cake, Blueberry Hand Pies, Blueberry Cornmeal CobblerBlueberry Cornmeal Mochi CakeI feel like Bubba Gump, you get the picture.  I’m blue without blueberries.  Search blueberries on 3jamigos.com and a plethora of recipes will pop up.

 Zoe of All Trades

If by chance you aren’t familiar with Zoe Francois, let me fangirl about her for a moment.  Zoe is based out of Minneapolis.  She started in a different career but ultimately pivoted to food, working as a pastry chef and co-writing cookbooks.  Her easy, friendly, personable style , million-dollar smile and great dessert recipes have given rise to cookbooks, videos, and a TV show.  I love her show, which is filled with great tips, techniques, and ideas.  It also highlights the folks and local businesses in Minneapolis and St. Paul.  I have a soft spot for the Twin Cities having visited often (even in the winter) when Jamie lived there.  Her book, Zoe Bakes, sits on my frequent flyer bookshelf on my island and I can’t wait until her next book, Zoe’s Cookies, comes out in September.

How the Muffin Crumbles

As much as I love Hummingbird High’s Levain Bakery Blueberry Muffins, my family is crumble-crazy.  There was never a question if we would make Zoe’s muffins, the question was when.  With blueberry season in full swing, the time was now.  I brought home a quart of blueberries from my favorite purveyor, Triple Delight, and set upon making these muffins.

Make the crumble first as it needs to chill a bit, toss it in the fridge while making the batter.  The crumble is a little on the sweet side, maybe I’ll add nuts next time and a pinch of salt. It’s a classic crumble topping, butter, and brown sugar with a hint of nutmeg and cinnamon.  Work the butter in with a pastry blender or your fingers, it should look like coarse lumpy sand.  Stash it in the fridge.

Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy.  Add the egg and yolk along with the vanilla and combine well.  It may look slightly curdled but will smooth out after adding the dry ingredients.  Be sure to scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl a couple of times during the process.  It makes a difference.

Add flour mixture with sour cream or buttermilk in two portions.  Do not overmix.  The batter will be fairly thick and stiff.   Finally, fold the blueberries into the batter by hand to avoid crushing the berries.

I love these tulip-shaped muffin tin liners but traditional cupcake papers will work too. Use an ice cream scoop (#20) to portion the batter into a muffin tin.  Sprinkle the chilled crumble equally over the batter.

Bake the muffins until golden brown on the edges.  The middle will be lighter than the edges.  Remove from oven, serve warm.  Enjoy!

While blueberries are in season make these muffins.  They can also be made with frozen blueberries.  Do not thaw, fold the frozen berries into the batter.

Blueberry Muffins

A tender, fine crumb muffin studded with sweet blueberries and topped with a buttery crumble topping. Perfection from Zoe Bakes
Course Breakfast, Muffins, Snack
Cuisine American
Keyword blueberries, Blueberry Muffins, muffins, streusel, zoe bakes
Prep Time 15 minutes

Ingredients

Topping

  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour bleached or unbleached will work 60g
  • 2/3 cup brown sugar well packed 125g
  • 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/8 tsp freshly ground nutmeg
  • 4 tbsp unsalted butter room temperature 57g

Muffins

Dry Ingredients

  • 2 cups spoon and sweep 240g all-purpose flour (bleached or unbleached)* Use 210gm if using KA flour
  • 3/4 tsp baking powder
  • 3/8 tsp baking soda
  • 3/4 tsp kosher salt

Cream Mixture

  • 6 tbsp unsalted butter room temperature 86g
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar 150g
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar 30g
  • 1 lemon, zested
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 whole egg room temperature
  • 1 yolk room temperature

Liquid Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup plus 2 tbsp sour cream or buttermilk crème fraîche or yogurt work too! 135g
  • 1 1/2 cups fresh or frozen blueberries** 175g
  • 1 tbsp all-purpose flour

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 375°F. Prepare the topping by mixing all the ingredients in a bowl until it turns into uniform clumps. Refrigerate until ready to use.
  • Prepare regular muffin tins with 7 LARGE liners. (You can bake regular sized muffins by dividing it into 12)
  • Whisk together the flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt in a bowl, set aside.
  • Cream the butter, sugars and zest together on medium speed, in a stand mixer with the paddle attachment, until light and fluffy, about 4 minutes. Add vanilla. Add the egg and yolk, one at a time, mixing on low just until combined. It may seem a bit curdled, because it is a lot of liquid to add to that amount of butter. It will all come together in the end.
  • Add half the flour and half the sour cream. Mix on low until combined. Add the remaining flour and sour cream.
  • Toss the blueberries with flour and if using frozen berries immediately fold them into the batter with two or three gentle stirs. If you over mix, the batter will turn purple and then gray. Scoop into the muffin liners.
  • Sprinkle the topping over the muffins. Bake for about 35-40 minutes or until golden brown and a tester comes out with moist, but not wet, crumbs. If you are baking smaller muffins, bake for 20-25 minutes. Cool slightly and serve warm or at room temperature.

Notes

*If you use King Arthur Baking all-purpose flour, your muffins will not be as soft and fluffy, because it has more protein, so use a few tablespoons less.**If you use frozen blueberries, keep them frozen until the last minute.
These muffins can be frozen. Thaw them out and reheat in a warm oven for about 10 minutes to serve.
Gochugaru Salmon with Crispy Rice-Yet Another Eric Kim Winner

Gochugaru Salmon with Crispy Rice-Yet Another Eric Kim Winner

Another winner from Eric Kim, NYTcooking columnist, cookbook author, and writer.  Like many of his recipes, this one is very approachable, comes together quickly, and packs a one-two punch of flavor and texture.  The first time, I didn’t bother making the crispy rice.  MISTAKE.  The salmon and glaze are delicious but the crispy rice pushes it to the next level.

I have made so many of his recipes that I have an index of his recipes included in my post about his delightful pound cake.  If you love Sara Lee’s poundcake, you’ll love his version.  Here is the Eric Kim Hall of Food, so far…

Links are included for the ones I have written notes for so far.  One day, I will get through all of them, I hope.

Back to the Fish

Cooked rice-Make this dish when you have leftover rice.  Instead of making fried rice with it (come on, everyone makes fried rice with day-old rice), plan on making the crispy rice cake for this recipe. Short grain is stickier so works well for the rice cake.

The Star- 4 fresh salmon fillets, skin on.  Salt and pepper the fillets and fry until the skin is nice and crispy.  Try not to overcook the salmon,  it’s fine when slightly undercooked.

Before the fish gets sauced,  pan-frying for nice crispy skin.  Imagine that generic video everyone does running a knife over the skin to prove how crispy it is…yep.

The Sauce-pantry staples except for perhaps Gochugaru which is Korean chili pepper flakes (coarse ) or powder (fine). It’s spicy, smokey, and sweet. Find it at most Asian Supermarkets, definitely at H-Mart and Ranch 99. I recommend doubling the sauce, it’s that good.

The sauce comes together quickly. Key ingredient.  Allow it to come to a boil to caramelize the sauce.

Add cold butter to create a delicious, smooth, creamy emulsion.

Crispy Rice- Adds time and work to the dish, but it is so worth it!  The crispy rice adds a textural element.  The rice soaks up the flavor from the oil left in the pan from the fish.  Delish!

Serve this with sliced cucumbers, pickles, fresh kimchi, any banchan, or blanched spinach.

Enjoy!

Gochugaru Salmon With Crispy Rice

Another winner from Eric KIm, NYT Cooking columnist and author of Korean American. Gochugaru Salmon with Crispy Rice. Quick, Easy and Delicious
Course dinner
Cuisine Asian-American, Korean-American
Keyword crispy rice, gochugaru, maple syrup, quick and easy, Salmon
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 16 minutes
Servings 4 servings

Ingredients

  • 4 skin-on salmon fillets 6 ounces each
  • Kosher salt such as Diamond Crystal
  • Black pepper
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil I use peanut oil
  • 4 cups cooked white rice preferably leftover rice, and short grain which is a bit stickier so it stays together

Sauce

  • 4 teaspoons gochugaru powder or flakes is fine
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 2 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, kept whole

Garnish & Sides

  • Toasted sesame seeds to sprinkle on fish when done
  • Sliced cucumbers or pickles for serving (optional)
  • Any Banchan you like, kimchi, potato salad, spinach your choice

Instructions

  • Season the salmon on all sides with salt and pepper. Heat a large cast-iron or nonstick skillet over medium-high. Add the oil and sear the salmon fillets skin side down until the skin is browned and crispy, 2 to 5 minutes. The salmon will begin to turn pale coral as the heat slowly creeps up the sides of the fish; you want that coral color to come up about two-thirds of the way for a nice medium-rare.
  • Carefully flip the salmon and cook the second side until the flesh feels firm, another 1 to 2 minutes. When you press it, it should not feel wobbly. Transfer the salmon to a plate skin side down and keep the pan with the rendered fat over the heat.
  • Add the rice to the fat in the pan and spread in an even layer, packing it down as if making a rice pancake. Reduce the heat to medium and cook until the bottom is lightly browned and toasted, about 5 minutes. You should hear it crackle.
  • Flip the rice like a pancake, using a spatula if needed. You may not be able to flip it all in one piece, but that’s OK. Cook until lightly toasted on the second side, another 1 to 2 minutes. Go longer if you want crispier rice, but the trifecta of crispy-chewy-soft tastes wonderful.
  • While the rice is cooking, stir together the gochugaru, maple syrup, rice vinegar and 1 teaspoon salt in a small bowl. Set aside.
  • When the rice is done, divide it evenly among the plates. In the now-empty pan, add the gochugaru mixture and cook, stirring constantly, over medium-high heat until it bubbles up and reduces significantly, 15 seconds to 1 minute. It should look pretty sticky.
  • Turn off the heat and add the cold butter, stirring with a wooden spoon or tongs until fully melted and incorporated into the gochugaru mixture. Pour this glaze over the salmon and serve with cucumbers or pickles.

Notes

You can find gochugaru, or red-pepper powder, at Korean or Asian supermarkets or online. Store in the freezer, it lasts a long time without degrading.
I use a non-stick skillet that doesn't brown or crisp food like a cast iron pan.  It may take significantly more time to brown and crisp rice.
There’s a New Carrot Cake in Town (Carrot Graham Cake from SK)

There’s a New Carrot Cake in Town (Carrot Graham Cake from SK)

Well it was the Hubster’s birthday a week ago.  I had the nerve to make him a carrot cake for HIS birthday. As many know, his Carrot Cake reigns supreme.  Every birthday we celebrate, it is a given the candles will be on a Wes-created Carrot Cake.  Do I get jealous?  Maybe a bit, BUT then,  I don’t have to bake a cake.  It’s a win-win.  Although he normally has to bake his birthday cake, guilt got the best of me this year and truth be told, I had been eyeing a luscious-looking carrot cake from Smitten Kitchen.  Now was my opportunity to try it.

I am in the minority when it comes to the add-ins for different carrot cake recipes.  Luckily, my family is unanimous regarding nuts…none, zippo.  We put the kibosh on nuts a long time ago.  That goes for coco-NUT too, none.  Wes has experimented over the years and has landed on the family favorite of raisins and pineapple in his recipe.  Being a jealous contrarian, I like his carrot cake but I would LOVE it if it were a little bit lighter and cakier.  I am in the minority though, my family looks at me and rolls their eyes…mom being a turd.  Hey, I’m entitled to my opinion, especially on my blog, lol.

So with that, I decided to try Deb’s version of carrot cake. No nuts, pineapple, or raisins, just carrots and crushed-up graham crackers…well, and the usuals, flour, oil (butter), sugar, and eggs.  Without further ado, let’s get to it.

This is an easy cake to make.  You don’t need a mixer, just a large mixing bowl, and a spoon or spatula to stir everything together.  How easy is that?

Graham Crackers-Honey Maid of course or use your fav.  I throw the crackers in a plastic bag, take out my trusty rolling pin and CRUSH 💪 them into fine crumbs.  You can use different cookies such as Digestive Cookies (It’s a British thing, lol), Speculoos or Biscoff.  Just make sure to crush em’ up good.

Carrots-Most recipes have you use the small holes for finely grated carrots.  I used the bigger holes 🤷🏻‍♀️  for coarsely grated carrots, worked like a champ!  If you are using a box grater, I don’t think it matters much.  Don’t buy pre-shredded carrots and don’t forget to peel you carrots!

Fat-I use oil in this cake, either a canola, grapeseed oil, any oil that is neutral in flavor should work.  You can use butter, I’m not sure there is an advantage since butter flavor is not necessary for this cake.

Add-itions-Ok, if you must, you can add raisins or nuts to this cake.  Stir into the batter after adding the carrots.  Use approximately 3/4 cup of either.

Pour batter into three parchment lined 9×2 round pan equally.  For a slightly taller cake bake in 8×2 cake pans, adjust baking time.  I have a scale so I weigh the total amount of batter, place each cake pan on the scale, zero it and pour 1/3 of batter by weight into each pan.  Takes the guessing away but that’s just me.

The layers bake quickly, so keep an eye out, and they will be pretty flat, perfect for frosting.

It’s All About the Frosting

Cream Cheese Frosting.  Sometimes I think cake is just an excuse to have frosting especially cream chesse frosting.  I have been binging Zoe Bakes and lucky for me she has an episode on carrot cake.  More importantly, her method to make creamy, smooth, cream cheese frosting.  No more lumpy frosting!  The cream cheese frosting is an adaption of Hubby’s.  Add powdered sugar to taste, approximately 1.5 cups to 2 cups max.  The creme fraiche adds creaminess and voluptuousness.

The trick is to start by beating COLD cream cheese until smooth and then gradually adding room temperature butter.  When you have finished adding the butter, add vanilla and creme fraiche and beat until combined.  Scrape the sides of the bowl periodically.  Add one third of the powdered sugar and beat at low speed to combine. Repeat with remaining sugar.  Careful not to beat the frosting too much.  Beat just to combine the sugar and cream cheese mixture until it is smooth and creamy.  If it seems too soft, cover with plastic wrap and chill in fridge for 30 minutes or until it firms up.

The Finish

Icing on the Cake

To make things easier, I weigh the frosting and then divide into 4 equal portions using my trusty scale.  Place cake on a turntable (see my IG video!)  Place one layer on cake turntable, top with frosting and spread to the edge using an offset spatula. Repeat with remaining layers.  For the top layer and sides, start with a crumb layer, a thin layer of frosting to lock in any crumbs on the cake for a clean look to your frosting,  Then finish frosting.  It’s not necessary to frost the sides.  If you don’t, divide the frosting into thirds.  I went with the “skimpy” sides frosting look..something I have seen a lot lately. Kinda cool and very easy.

With an offset spatula, starting at the center of the cake, move the spatula tip through the frosting towards the outside perimeter, groovy right?

For a fun touch, use a cookie cutter to create design in the center with sprinkles.  Enjoy!

Carrot Graham Cake

A lighter, less than version of the traditional carrot cake with hints of graham flavor. Of course topped with a classic cream cheese frosting that is smooth, creamy, buttery with a hin of tartness from sour cram. Yield: 1 9-inch 3-layer cake
Course Cake, Dessert
Cuisine American
Keyword Carrot Graham Cake, cream cheese frosting, smitten kitchen
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Servings 12 servings

Ingredients

Cake

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour 125 grams
  • 3/4 cup finely ground graham cracker crumbs 95 grams
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 3/4 teaspoon fine sea or table salt
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 3/4 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar 150 grams
  • 3/4 cup dark brown sugar 145 grams
  • 3/4 cup plus 3 tablespoons neutral oil or melted butter 210 grams (i.e. 1 tablespoon short of 1 cup)
  • 3 large eggs
  • 3 cups peeled and grated carrots (using larger holes) 12 3/4 ounces or 360 grams

Frosting

  • 2 8-ounce packages cream cheese, softened 455 grams total
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature 2 sticks, 8 ounces or 230 grams
  • 2 cups powdered sugar, sifted if lumpy 240 grams
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 2 tbsp sour cream, or creme fraiche or mascarpone

Instructions

For cake:

  • Heat oven to 350°F (175°C). Line three 9-inch cake pans with a fitted round of parchment paper and coat with a nonstick cooking spray.
  • In a large bowl, whisk together flour, graham crumbs, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger. Set aside.
  • In a medium-sized bowl, whisk together the sugars, oil and eggs until smooth. Stir in grated carrots. Pour wet ingredients into dry and stir until flour just disappears.
  • Pour batter evenly between three prepared baking pans. Bake each layer for 15 to 18 minutes, until a tester comes out clean. Cake will seem soft and likely still sticky on top. Let rest in pans for 5 minutes on a cooling rack, then run a knife around the edges of the first cake layer to ensure no parts are sticking to the sides, flip cake out onto cooling rack, remove parchment paper and flip back right-side-up on another cooling rack.
  • Repeat with remaining layers and let the cake layers cool completely before frosting. If you are in a rush, you can place cake layers in your freezer until cool and slightly firm. The cake will be easier to handle

For Frosting

  • Start with cold cream cheese and room temperature softened butter.
  • With an electric mixer, beat cold butter until smooth. With mixer running, add room temp butter a couple of tablespoons at a time and allowing each add to blend in completely. Beat until smooth and creamy. Add vanilla and creme fraiche, then add powdered sugar, don't over beat which will cause mixture to get runny. Add graually. Beat in vanilla and sour cream until combined.
  • Arrange first cake layer on a cake plate or stand. Spread top with frosting; repeat twice with remaining layers. Use a heart-shaped cookie cutter to create the heart shape in the center, fill with sprinkles. Let cake chill until serving.

Notes

Cake is delicious on the first day, and even more moist on the second and third days. Keep in fridge. To prepare in advance, make the cake layers, wrap each well and freeze them.
Mrs. Singer’s Eggnog, The Real Deal

Mrs. Singer’s Eggnog, The Real Deal

How many of you have had REAL eggnog?  Not the ultra-pasteurized, homogenized version of eggnog found in every supermarket during the holidays.  Who drinks that stuff?

Context

I did a bit of sleuthing on the origins of eggnog.  It has been around since medieval England (1300s), that’s a LONG time.  Its lineage starts as a posset, a milky, warm ale-like drink.   Fast forward to the 1700s, eggnog came along for the ride to the new colonies in America. Farmland was plentiful for cows and chickens which in turn provided lots of milk and eggs.  Rum, the inexpensive alcohol of the time, rounded out the nog.  Thus, eggnog became the festive drink of choice for the everyday man.

Unlucky for us,  the advent of supermarkets and technology led to the eggnog so many of us know.  As soon as pumpkin lattes disappear after Thanksgiving,  red and green cartons of super sweet, weirdly thick (like slime) non-alcoholic eggnog pop up in its place on supermarket shelves.  Whenever I volunteer to make eggnog for a holiday soiree’ I am invariably met with a chorus of yucks and eewwws.

The Eggnog Caper

To which I launch into my oratory, on the much-maligned REAL eggnog.  It starts with the story of Mrs. Ethel Singer.

When my brother and I were babies we were taken care of by a family out in the Sunset, the Singer Family.  Mrs Ethel Singer was the sweetest, most amazing woman, who ran a nursery for babies.  A friendship was born from our stay there and it became a tradition for us to visit them every Christmas.  As I admired their gorgeous Christmas tree with an entire miniature town around the base, she brought out her homemade cookies and eggnog.

Not Your Mama’s Eggnog

We would sit sipping our eggnog merrily chatting away. Much to my chagrin, I often started nodding off while listening to the conversation. I fought hard to keep my eyes open. How could I be so rude?!  Finally, during one visit, I asked for her eggnog recipe.  Not only did she gift me her recipe, but she went over the recipe step by step,  “A quart of milk, 12 eggs (my arteries spasmed), sugar, heavy whipped cream, milk, and make sure to use a generous CUP of GOOD brandy, like Christian Brothers, lol.   My dear Dr. Watson, the mystery is solved regarding my annual, ill-timed bouts of narcolepsy.  Blame it on the alcohol, the alcohol…

Yes, roughly 15% alcohol, masked by sugar, milk, heavy whipping cream, and eggs. A smooth, creamy, sweet, calorie-laden, festive, delicious, diabolical drink.

Our Annual Cookie Swap

So, for our annual preschool holiday cookie swap, I pulled out Mrs. Singer’s Eggnog recipe.  Martini glasses filled with eggnog seemed a fitting way to toast 25 years of cookie swaps that began with toddlers in tow. Back then we were new moms who could not imagine those toddlers becoming adults making their way in the world.  It seems like in the blink of an eye we have arrived at that point.

Remember When…

2000

2001

2002

2015

2023

Happy Holidays!

Feel free to HALF this recipe

Print
5 from 1 vote

Ethel Singer's Eggnog

(from an ad for Yellowstone Whiskey in SF Chronicle, circa 1952)   Note: You should prepare at least 12 hours before serving
Course Drinks
Cuisine American, English
Keyword brandy, Eggnog, eggs, holiday drink, whipped cream
Prep Time 20 minutes
Chill Time 12 hours

Equipment

  • 1 stand mixer
  • 3 large bowls, 1 should be your serving bowl, like a punch bowl

Ingredients

  • 1 dozen eggs 12 eggs
  • 1 pint heavy whipping cream 2 cups
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup brandy / bourbon/rum original recipe has 1-2 cups lol
  • 1 quart milk 4 cups
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • Nutmeg for garnish

Instructions

  • Need 3 mixing bowls (2 chilled), and one punchbowl
  • Separate egg whites into 1 chilled bowl, and yolks into room-temp bowl (make sure no yolk is in the egg whites or they won’t beat!).
  • Using a stand mixer with wire whisk attachment (infinitely easier) or hand mixer, beat egg whites until they are firm and peaked. Do not overbeat. Set aside (or put in fridge).
  • Start whisking egg yolks and gradually add 1 cup sugar. Whisk until light and frothy, slightly thickened. Add 1 cup brandy/bourbon to the egg yolk mixture. Whisk to blend completely.
  • Pour 1 pint (2 cups) of heavy cream into 2nd chilled mixing bowl, using whisk attachment, start at medium and gradually increase speed to beat cream. When it starts to thicken, add vanilla. Continue to beat until cream is thick and has firmed peaks when stirred with a spatula.
  • Pour egg yolk mixture into a serving bowl or punch bowl, add milk stirring to blend. Add egg whites and whipped cream and mix thoroughly with a spatula or wooden spoon (fold egg mixture over cream and egg whites. Garnish with nutmeg, and chill overnight.
  • Enjoy! Ladle eggnog into martini glasses or small bistro glasses. Garnish with nutmeg and a cinnamon stick.

Notes

1/2 recipe
6 eggs.                                                        3 eggs
1 cup whipping cream.                            1/2 c whipping cream
1/2 cup (100gm) sugar                            1/4 c sugar      
1/2 cup brandy, or rum, or Bourbon    1/4 c brandy
2 cups whole milk                                       1 cup milk
1/2 tsp vanilla extract                                 1//4 tsp vanilla
Nutmeg for garnish
Fresh Tomato & Sausage Pasta-When Comfort Food is Required

Fresh Tomato & Sausage Pasta-When Comfort Food is Required

Our final road trip with Moosie (for context, my daughter’s Bernedoodle whom we have been sitting for the last 4 months) took us first to Lake Tahoe for a couple of days.  A pit stop before our final destination, Salt Lake City, where we were to hand off the pooch to Sam.  Moose was bound for New York, back to Jamie and Sam. 😢

It has been a while since we last spent time in Tahoe.  We took time to wander around and check out some the new eateries.  Our favorites include  Coffeebar (☕️☕️☕️☕️/5), Great Gold (🍝🍝🍝🍝+/5),and Truckee Food Stop (🥙🥙🥙🥙/5).   We also perused the shelves at a very cute bookstore Word After Word (📕📕📕📕+/5).  I LOVE bookstores.

Perfect way to start the morning, coffee and a buttery, delicious pastry.

Great Gold, its roots are from Flour + Water in San Francisco, a beautiful restaurant, with great pizza and pasta, don’t pass on the Brussels sprouts!

 

Truckee Food Shop features pre-made meals to take home.  They also have a nice curated selection of wines, pastas, spices, and cookbooks.  Don’t walk out without an order of their ceviche.

Comfort Food

We spent our last evening in the cabin cooking, sipping wine (thanks to whoever left that nice bottle of Chardonnay in the fridge), and playing with Moose.  I had brought this week’s farmers market bounty, dry-farmed tomatoes, onions, and basil from my garden (apparently the only thing I can grow) with us.  We picked up Italian Sausages and pasta and made a quick and easy dish, Fresh Tomatoes, Sausage, and Pecorino Pasta.

Used spaghettini the first night, I prefer a tube pasta like rigatoni mezze

Tomorrow we start the drive to Salt Lake City, maybe we should turn around and head home?  Guess that would be considered dog-napping though, lol.

Just what I needed a nice, big, bowl of pasta to ward off the pending “I ain’t got me a dog no more blues”.  This sauce comes together in the time it takes for you to cook the pasta.  Chop your tomatoes, thinly slice an onion, smoosh some garlic, crumble the sausage, combine, and saute for a couple of minutes.  That’s pretty much it.  Right before serving, hit it with some fresh herbs, and grated cheese. The OG version calls for Pecorino Romano, which packs a bigger punch than Parmesan so I cut it back a little.  You could also use Parmesan.

So, while you can still get wonderful fresh tomatoes (we are so spoiled in California) this is an easy, lovely meal.  Bowl food is soul food has always been my mantra.  Round it out with a glass of wine, a fresh salad, and some crusty bread.  Boom, done.

I tried this with canned tomatoes and my advice is, don’t. I doctored it with some sugar and butter but still not the same.  Unless it is the dead of winter and fresh, summer tomatoes are a distant memory…no, still don’t.  This dish is meant for fresh, sweet, tomatoes.  I’m thinking of making a batch and freezing it.  That might work.

Fresh Tomato, Sausage, and Pecorino Pasta

Ripe, summer tomatoes are juicy and delicious in this pasta dish, with no seeding or peeling necessary.
Course dinner, lunch
Cuisine Italian-American
Keyword comfort food, fresh tomatoes, italian sausage, one dish meal, quick and easy, rigatoni
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes

Ingredients

  • 8 ounces uncooked penne or meze rigatoni, or tubular pasta of choice
  • 8 ounces sweet Italian sausage or spicy works too
  • 2 teaspoons olive oil Go crazy, use a tablespoon of oil, lol
  • 1 cup vertically sliced yellow onion
  • 2 teaspoons minced garlic
  • 1/2 teaspoon chili pepper flakes optional
  • 1 ¼ pounds tomatoes, chopped dry farmed or Romas work well, or any ripe sweet tomato, some may have more moisture
  • 6 tablespoons grated fresh pecorino Romano cheese divided. sub Parmesan if you want
  • ¼ teaspoon salt to taste
  • teaspoon black pepper to taste
  • ¼ cup torn fresh basil leaves
  • 2 tbsp Italian parsley, chopped optional

Instructions

  • Cook pasta according to package directions, drain and set aside. In the Cooking Light edition this is adapted from, the recipe omits the salt and oil when cooking. I add salt to the pasta water.
  • A carryover from when the kids were little. I drain the pasta and hit it with butter and parmesan cheese. It seems to give the dish that extra oompf. I then add sauce to the pasta. I do this with my ragus, bolognese recipes also. TOTALLY OPTIONAL
  • If using sausage links, remove casings from sausage.
  • Heat a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add oil to pan; swirl to coat. Add sausage and onion to pan; cook 4 minutes, crumble sausage. by smooshing with your spatula.
  • Add garlic; cook 2 minutes.
  • Stir in tomatoes; cook 2-5 minutes depending on how you like your sauce.
  • Lower heat; stir in pasta, julienned basil, 2 tablespoons cheese, salt, and pepper. If I have Italian parsley I throw that in too.

Final Touches

  • Pour into a big serving platter or individual bowls. Sprinkle with remaining 1/4 cup cheese or let folks sprinkle their own. Garnish with remaining basil leaves. Enjoy!

Notes

Nutrition Facts
Per Serving: 389 calories; fat 10.7g; saturated fat 4g; mono fat 4.5g; poly fat 0.7g; protein 21.6g; carbohydrates 53.5g; fiber 4.5g; cholesterol 27mg; iron 3.3mg; sodium 595mg; calcium 159mg.
Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookie, Soft & Chewy

Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookie, Soft & Chewy

I’m not sure how many chocolate chip cookie recipes I have but it seems you can never have too many.  I came across yet another CCC from Sturbridge Bakery, a delightful blog from Jess Italiano.  Initially, it caught my attention on Instagram., the photos and the title just popped out at me, Chewy Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies.  I am usually not one for soft and chewy but I was determined to try this one.  Why?

Let Me Tell You Why

We just returned home from our road trip to Salt Lake City.  We were bringing Moose, my kid’s dog, back to them.  😢😢😢 We have been taking care of him since they made the big move from Houston to New York City.  Now they were ready to take him to the Big Apple.  I’m gonna miss that little pup, despite the fact that he doesn’t listen, runs away, and hogs the bed.  He is just so damn cute, you immediately forgive him any transgressions.

We dropped him off with Sam in Salt Lake City and said our goodbyes, he was visibly traumatized, NOT, just me.  The following morning, bright and early, we headed back to California…sans doggo. 😢

We stopped at a Raley’s Supermarket to load up on consolation, I mean road goodies, including Pepperidge Farms Soft Baked Santa Cruz Oatmeal Cookies.

BLEAH

Okay, maybe I was depressed but I took one bite and wanted to hurl it out the window!  It just tasted so FAKE to me.  Now, don’t get me wrong, I’m not a cookie snob (well, ok maybe I am), I LOVE PF’s Mint Milano, Bordeaux, and Chessman cookies. I guess I’m just not a fan of their soft-baked line.

So when Sturbridge Bakery’s Chewy BBCCC popped up, I thought I’d give it a whirl.  After all, gazillions of folks, like my hubby, love soft, chewy cookies.  I couldn’t let him continue buying Pepperidge Farms Soft-Bake, nope, nope, nope.

Holy jumpin’ chocolate catfish.  They’re REALLY good. Soft, slightly chewy, filled with chocolate, two kinds, dark and semi-sweet, with a rich buttery, caramel-ly cookie.  Damn delicious.

The Secret of Sucess, for Soft, Amazing Cookies

Brown the butter.  Everyone has been jumping on the brown butter wagon.  It intensifies the butter flavor and gives the cookies a nutty, caramel flavor. YUMMO. This is an added step but replaces having to cream the butter and sugar.  Not a bad trade-off.  Keep your eye on the pot, it goes quickly.

When browning the butter use a light-colored ceramic pot or a shiny stainless steel pot so you can see the browned bits easily.

Light (golden) or dark brown sugar.  I used golden but I’m sure dark would work too.  Brown sugar adds those yummy caramel overtones and moisture.

Sour cream makes up for the moisture loss by browning the butter and also tenderizes the cookie.

Two kinds of chocolate.  Dark, or bittersweet and semi-sweet are combined for a nuanced, complex cookie.  If you are making these for kids, skip the dark chocolate and use just semi-sweet.  Your kids will thank you.  You will have plenty of time to make these with dark chocolate when they are older. 😉.   Don’t let chopping a bar of chocolate stop you from making these cookies.  Don’t feel like chopping?  By all means, use chocolate chips.  I like the Guittard’s Super Chip or TJ’s Chocolate Chunks.  Nowadays the percentage of cacao in chips is provided, and you can tailor the sweetness or boldness of the chocolate in your cookies.

Pretty Little Cookies, Tricks of the Trade

Don’t put all of the chocolate chunks into the batter.  Reserve a chunk or two for each cookie.  After scooping each ball of dough, press a reserved chocolate chunk into the top of each cookie.  Portion the dough using a #24 scoop (~3 T/50 grams) ice cream scoop.  Give them plenty of space on your cookie sheet, they will spread.

Here’s the Scoop-Invest in a couple of different sized ice cream scoops like these.  This helps create uniform sized and round cookies.

The Sarah Move-If you like cookie crinkles.  A couple of minutes before the cookies are done baking, rap the sheet on the oven rack.  This causes the cookies to deflate creating the rippled edge.

Cookie cutters-If they are unevenly shaped, using a large cookie cutter, surround each cookie and swirl the cutter molding the cookie to a circular shape.  Ta-da perfectly round cookies, and you thought they baked that way.  This also creates more ridges for textural interest as you have compressed the cookies.

No Overbaking Zone-Don’t overbake these cookies.  Remove cookies from the oven when the edges look solid, slightly golden and there is still a little shine at the center of the cookies.  The cookies will continue to bake.

Salt but no Peppa Move-Sprinkle a bit of flaky salt or Maldon Salt on the cookies when you pull them out of the oven for that sweet-salty vibe.  Optional.

PSA-If you like to bake, invest in a scale, my mantra.

There you have it, soft cookies so you don’t need to buy “those” commercial cookies ever again.

Soft & Chewy Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

A soft, chewy, caramelly chocolate chip cookie made with brown butter and no nuts!
Course cookies, Dessert, drop cookies
Cuisine American
Keyword chewy, chocolate chip cookie, soft
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 11 minutes
Servings 18 cookies

Ingredients

Butter, Sugar & Wet Stuff

  • 211 grams 15 tablespoons unsalted butter browned you should have 170 grams or ¾ cup* after browning
  • 150 grams ¾ cup brown sugar light or dark is fine
  • 50 grams ¼ cup granulated sugar
  • ½ tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 large egg room temperature
  • 20 grams 1 heaping tablespoon sour cream room temperature Weigh if possible
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon cornstarch
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 225 grams all purpose flour about 1 ¾ cups + 1 tablespoon

The Star

  • 100 grams semi-sweet chocolate coarsely chopped Kid's cookies, use all semi-sweet Chocolate chunks or pieces
  • 100 grams dark chocolate coarsely chopped

Instructions

  • If using bar chocolate, chop your chocolate into chunks and set aside.
  • In a large pot, melt the butter over medium heat. It will start to crack and sizzle - let it do this while stirring occasionally. After a few minutes or so, the butter cracking/sizzling will subside and the butter will begin to foam up in the pan.
  • Every few seconds or so, swirl the pan around until you can see that the butter is golden brown. You should also be able to see some of the brown bits swirling around in the butter. Watch it carefully, you don't want it to burn. Once golden brown, immediately remove from the heat and pour the butter into a large bowl on a scale. You should have 170gms of brown butter or if you don't have a scale measure out 3/4 cup. Pour the measured amount into a bowl and put it in the fridge to cool for 10 minutes.
  • After 10 minutes, take the butter out of the fridge and add the brown sugar, granulated sugar, and vanilla extract. Whisk to combine.
  • Add the egg and whisk well until completely combined. Add the sour cream and blend.
  • Add the baking soda, baking powder, cornstarch, and salt, and whisk until incorporated.
  • Add the flour and fold it into the mixture using a rubber spatula until there are only a few streaks of flour remaining. Add the chopped chocolate and fold until evenly incorporated and the flour is fully mixed in.
  • Cover the bowl tightly and chill the dough for 3 hours. Once the three hours is almost up, preheat your oven to 350F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  • Scoop the dough using a cookie scoop (use a 1.5 oz scoop #24, about ~3 tablespoons or ~50 grams) and space them 2-3 inches apart on your baking sheet.
  • Bake for 10-11 minutes until the edges are set and the centers still look slightly underdone. Rotate pan halfway through baking. Let cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes, then enjoy warm or transfer to a baking sheet to cool completely. See post for notes on perfectly round cookies with ridges.

Notes

You will need ¾ cup or 170 grams of browned butter for the recipe. Water from the butter evaporates during browning and we need to account for the lost moisture which is why we start with more butter and add sour cream.
 
Scallion Mac and Cheese from Little Fat Boy

Scallion Mac and Cheese from Little Fat Boy

I have been focused on cookbooks from the Asian Diaspora.  With the way the world is turning, on a definite lopsided tilt, I want to support my community.  Representation matters, and we need to see POCs, LGBTQ, you know, EVERYONE represented in all walks of life.  The gold standard should be human + compassion, empathy, and vision for a better, kinder, world.  A world you are proud to leave your kids.

Recently I dashed into the city for another book signing at Omnivore Books on Food.  Frankie Gaw, author of the long-awaited, First Generation:  Recipes from My Taiwanese-American Home was in town and I couldn’t pass on his book signing.

A graphic designer by trade, his evenings were spent creating the blog, Little Fat Boy.  Stories, beautiful photographs, and recipes, woven together in this mash-up of his Taiwanese roots, midwest upbringing, and Southern ties to Memphis. His recipes are fun, a fusion of his upbringing and later West Coast migration.  His recipes make me happy.  Yep, Cinnamon Toast Crunch Mochi or topped with Pepples cereal, tell me you’re not smiling right now.

It’s VEGAN, yeah baby…More, Please

I LOVE mac and cheese. Frankie’s Vegan version is a riff on this much-loved dish.  Is it Mac and Cheese? Nope.  Is it delicious? YEP.  In place of butter, milk, and cheese you’ll find scallion oil, cashews, garlic, and my own little tweak, nutritional yeast.  Pureeing cashews into a creamy, lovely sauce, is really so good, this may become my go-to mac and cheese when I am feeling a little lactose intolerant, lol.

Not gonna lie, cashews are not diet food, just like a lot of nuts.  The upside is they do supply protein, healthy fats, vitamins, and minerals.  Plus, no animal products were used in the making of this..so there is that.  To offset some of the calories in this dish I reduce the pasta and substitute roasted or steamed cauliflower florets.  Yummos.

I like my mac and cheese super saucy so I decrease the amount of pasta, add more cauliflower florets and throw in some mushroom broth to extend the sauce.  The kid in me likes the macaroni cooked beyond al dente, really who eats mac and cheese that’s not soft and squishy?  This is two very generous servings, actually, I think it serves 3-4 people…see the calories won’t be that bad!

Scallion Mac and Cheese

A delicious vegan version of mac and cheese with loads of umami from scallions, nutritional yeast and garlic adapted from Little Fat Boy
Course dinner, one bowl meal, Side Dish
Cuisine Asian-American
Keyword Crazy good mac and cheese, scallions
Prep Time 17 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Servings 4
Calories 425kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 cup raw cashews
  • 4 scallions finely chopped white and green parts divided
  • 1/8 cup olive oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, smashed
  • 11/2 tsp kosher salt
  • 1/2 tsp granulated sugar
  • 1/8 tsp paprika
  • 1 tbsp nutritional yeast
  • 1/4 lemon, juice of
  • 1/2-1 cup water, or pasta water or mushroom boullion
  • 1 tsp hot sauce to taste optional

Toppings

  • 1/4 cup panko
  • 1 scallion, Thinly sliced

Noods

  • 4 ounces macaroni
  • 1 cup cauliflower florets or broccoli approx 4 oz

Instructions

Cashews

  • Before making dish, place cashews in a medium bowl and cover with water by 1 inch. Let the nuts soak for 2-3 hours.

Carbs & Veggies

  • Cook your pasta as directed on package. With about 3-4 minutes to go, add the cauliflower to the pot. Return to boil and cook until al dente (from original recipe-lol. In my book mac cheese needs pasta cooked beyond al dente). Drain and place back in pot. Set aside.

Sauce

  • In a skillet, heat olive oil over medium-high heat. Add scallions and garlic. The oil should not be smoking but hot enough that the aromatics sizzle when added. Stir and cook for about 2 minutes. The scallions should be soft and your kitchen should smell delicious from the scallions and garlic. Transfer all of it to a blender. Set skillet aside, do not wash! You will be using this to brown the Panko Crumbs!
  • Drain the cashews and add to the blender along with the lemon juice, paprika, salt, sugar, nutritional yeast, and water or pasta water.
  • BLEND til smooth. Add additional water or pasta water to desired consistency.
  • Add sauce to macaroni, and stir to combine. Pour into a casserole dish and spread evenly. Sprinkle Panko Crumbs and diced green onions on top, and serve immediately.

The Crumbs

  • The skillet used to fry the scallion and garlic will have residual oil to brown the Panko crumbs. On medium-high heat toss the panko in the skillet until toasty brown.

Notes

This recipe can be doubled for those times you are feeding a big crowd.  In fact,  the original recipe is double this, I cut it in half cause it's a lot of pasta.