Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts

12 August 2013

Cranberry Orange Chocolate Scones

Folks, I have a confession. Scones and other breakfast pastries are the way to my heart.

Cranberry Orange Chocolate Scones
Adapted from Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything

Ingredients
2.5 c flour
1 t salt
4 t baking powder
2 T sugar
5 T butter, cold
3 eggs
3/4 c milk
1/4 c dried cranberries
1/4 c chocolate chips
1 T orange zest
1 T water

Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. In a food processor, combine all dry ingredients and orange zest, reserving 1 tablespoon of sugar. Add butter, and pulse until mixture appears sandy. Separately whisk milk and 2 eggs. Combine milk mixture with the dry ingredients. Turn onto floured surface and gently knead in berries and chocolate chips. 

Pat dough into rectangle of 3/4 inch thickness. Cut into 8-10 triangles. Place scones on ungreased cookie sheet. Make egg wash with water and remaining egg, and brush mixture onto scones. Sprinkle scones with remaining tablespoon of sugar. Bake for 8-10 minutes until golden brown. 




07 June 2012

Chocolate Eclairs


Happiness in two bites. 

These little gems are eclairs. I generally make them on the smaller side. Maybe so there's more to go around. Or maybe so I have an excuse to eat 4...or 5...or 10.

But first! An apology! This blog has been sadly abandoned for much of the past year. Somewhere between finishing up my undergraduate thesis, taking a handful of graduate level courses, working 2 jobs, and applying to grad school, the blog got left behind. But now I'm BACK!


These guys are super great if you need a dessert for a fancy occasion. Or if you just need something indulgent. You can make the three components ahead of time and assemble just before serving. Keep the cream in a large ziploc bag or pastry bag fitted with a quarter-inch tip in the refrigerator until you are ready.

And resist the urge to eat it all straight from the bag.

Because there are three parts, eclairs can seem a little involved. Actually it is so much easier than it looks on paper. Just TRY, and you will be so pleased with yourself.

Or, if your pate a choux doesn't puff up the way it should or your pastry cream is too runny, you can just sit on your couch, and cry, and eat the ganache with a spoon. Not that I've done that.

It is a win-win, ladies and gents.



Pate a Choux
Makes about 3 dozen miniature eclairs
adapted from Martha Stewart
  • 1 stick unsalted butter
  • 1 t. sugar
  • 1/2 t. salt
  • 1 1/4 c. flour
  • 4 eggs, plus 1 white
Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.

Bring to boil butter, sugar, and salt in a saucepan. Remove from heat and add flour. Cook on medium-high heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, until the dough pulls away from sides into a ball. This is quite the forearm workout!

With a mixer on low speed, beat briefly until cool. Increase the speed, add eggs one at a time, until  the dough forms soft peaks when poked with a clean finger. With a pastry bag fitted with a large tip, pipe straight 2 inch logs about 2 inches apart on greased cookie sheets. Bake 10 minutes, reduce temp to 350 degrees F and bake for 10 more minutes or until golden brown. The shells should be hollow and light. Cool completely.

Pastry Cream 
Makes about 2 1/2 cups
adapted from Brown Eyed Baker (great tutorial!)

2 c. milk
1/2 c. sugar
1/4 t. salt
5 egg yolks
3 T. cornstarch
1/2 stick butter
1 t. vanilla
1/2 c. plain heavy cream (optional)

Heat milk in a saucepan until bubbling around the edges. In a medium-sized heat proof bowl, whisk together sugar, egg yolks, and cornstarch. Temper the egg mixture by slowly whisking in half of the hot milk, then add the entire egg mixture to the remaining milk in the saucepan. Cook, stirring constantly, until it boils and thickens.  

Remove from heat and add butter and vanilla. Place a sheet of plastic wrap on the surface of the cream to prevent a skin from forming, and cool completely. Store chilled in a pastry bag or ziploc fitted with a quarter-inch tip until you are ready for filling.

For a lighter pastry cream, whip heavy cream until billowy. Carefully fold whipped cream into pastry cream. I prefer it this way!

And finally,

Chocolate Ganache
Makes about 3/4 cup

  • 1/2 c. heavy cream
  • 1 c. semisweet chocolate chips
Heat heavy cream in small saucepan until a ring of bubbles forms around the edge. Off the heat, add chips. Let sit for 5 minutes. Stir until all lumps are gone. To make ahead, store in Tupperware until ready to assemble eclairs.  Microwave in 10 second intervals, stirring every time, until ganache is velvety.

To Assemble Eclairs:

To fill eclairs, carefully insert tip of pastry bag filled with pastry cream into end of the pate a choux logs. Fill slowly until full. Ice by dipping tops of filled eclairs into ganache. If you can wait long enough, the ganache will set up nicely if left to dry on a wire rack for about 15 minutes.

Store remaining eclairs in the refrigerator.


22 August 2010

Chocolate Chip Pecan Pie

At my dad's house, we have a few pecan trees, but the past couple of years there hasn't been much of a harvest to speak of. We've got our fingers crossed for this year! An increase in pecans yields an increase in these pies.

Now about the pie- this is probably the most decadent pie I have ever tasted. I cannot begin to accurately express how rich this pie is - you simply must make it yourself. I know that pecan pie is typically a fall dessert, but we've had a bag of pecans in the freezer that I've been eying for weeks now.

Adapted from the Joy of Cooking

Ingredients:
  • 9-inch pastry crust, baked, glazed with yolk
  • 1 cup toasted pecans, chopped
  • 1 cup chocolate chips
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup light corn syrup
  • 5 tbsp. melted unsalted butter
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1/2 tsp. salt
Position rack into center of oven. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Whisk in a medium sized bowl all ingredients except pecans and chocolate chips until blended. Stir in nuts and chocolate chips. Warm pie crust in oven until hot to the touch, then poor in filling. Bake 35-45 minutes, or until edges are firm, and center is almost set.

Now, I know this sounds ridiculous, but refrigerate the pie until cold and hard, then slice into 8 pieces. If you try to cut it when it is warm, it makes a big mess (a big, tasty mess). Then microwave the individual slices until warm and slightly melted and serve with vanilla ice cream. So, so good.

*If you don't care for chocolate, omit the chocolate chips and increase the pecans to 2 cups for a regular Pecan Pie.
*Check your pie about half way through - if your crust is getting dark, cover it with foil or those nifty pie-dough shields.
*Freezing Directions: Slice into individual servings, wrap in foil, and heat them up in a warm oven when you have that urge. I froze 3 slices. As for the others, 3 were eaten immediately and the last 2 went to a neighbor.
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09 August 2010

Chewy Chocolate Cakemix Cookies

Not bad for a $100 camera!

Sometimes I get overwhelming cravings for chocolate. Not just any chocolate, but warm, gooey chocolate derived desserts. Ladies, you know what I'm talking about!

My first instinct was to look for a box of brownie mix, but instead found a box of cake mix. Now, I'm not usually a boxed mix kind of girl, but this was an emergency and I needed chocolate, and I needed it fast!

Thankfully, I came across this recipe at Kirbie Cravings (coincidence!?).
This recipe made about 2 dozen cookies.

Prep time: 5 minutes
Oven time: 8-10 minutes
Ingredients:
  • 1 chocolate cake mix
  • 1 cup chocolate chips
  • halfway in between 1/3 and 1/2 cup oil
  • 2 eggs
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl mix together eggs, oil, and cake mix. Add chocolate chips. The dough will be very stiff! Drop by rounded tablespoon onto a greased cookie sheet, or use a cookie scoop (one of my favorite kitchen tools). Bake for 8-10 minutes, or until it passes the toothpick test.

I ate a warm cookie straight from the oven draped over the top of a scoop of vanilla ice cream. Chocolate emergency, averted!

02 August 2010

Chocolate Milkshakes


My mother and I have a big weakness in the summer: ice cream. We keep it under control with 100% fruit popsickles, half-fat breyer's, and lately skinny cow products. I found a recipe for these "magic milkshakes" on this new-to-me website. Mom said that Grandma used to make these all the time. They were very chocolate-y, creamy, and guess what? No ice cream required.

29 June 2010

The BEST Cocoa Brownies

These are DEFINITELY the best brownies I have ever had. And I will say that again without hesitation- The BEST. They are so dense and fudge-y that you cannot stop thinking about them if you know they are in your kitchen. My mom, brother, sister, and I finished a double batch in about 2 days, and fought over the last one, which we cut up into 4 cubes to share. I am not one to exaggerate, but you must try this recipe. I found the recipe here on smitten kitchen. No need to retype it.

One quick tip that she addresses
is to put your brownies into
the fridge to chill before slicing, this way you get a really lovely cut. Asking the Wooten family to wait for a pan of brownies to cool is a ridiculous idea. I cut up some of them, and here is what they looked like. Even if they aren't the prettiest, warm brownies are the best brownies. Even better with some ice cream. Another tip is to line your dish with aluminum foil so that you have "handles" to lift out your brownies. This facilitates a really easy cleanup and, with an extra long knife, easy slicing.

11 December 2009

Coconut Chocolate Chip Bars


This photo really doesn't do these justice. Imagine a gooey cookie bursting with melted chocolate and bits of moist coconut. Best part: they are so, so easy. None of that boring scooping that you have to do with cookies. This is adapted from the original, the best chocolate chip cookie- Nestle, of course. You should memorize this recipe by heart.

You'll need:
  • 2 1/4 c all purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 sticks butter (room temp, softened)
  • 3/4 c sugar
  • 3/4 c brown sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 c chocolate chips (often, I use an entire 12 oz bag for extra chocolatey-ness)
  • 1 c shredded coconut, sweetened
Preheat your oven to 350*F. Cover a 9x13 dish with foil, and spray the foil with a non stick spray. This makes clean up sooo much easier.

In a large bowl, cream together the butter and sugars until fluffy. Add eggs one at a time. In a separate bowl, mix thoroughly the dry ingredients. Add the dry to the wet, and stir. Mix in your chocolate chips and the coconut. Spread the batter into your pan and bake until golden brown, or your desired done-ness. Will take 20-25 minutes for a gooey center. Bake longer if you like. Share with your friends and family. They will love you for it.