My Photo

Inspiration and Ideas

Upcoming Classes I'm Teaching

  • Great Grilling Gone Gourmet

    North Seattle Community College
    Wednesday, July 19, 2006
    6:30- 9:00pm

    Turn good grilling into great grilling by experimenting with brines, marinades, dry rubs, and herb pastes. In this hands on class we'll learn how to turn simple grilled foods into gourmet treats.
  • Little Yeast Breads of the World

    North Seattle Community College
    Monday, July 10, 2006
    6:30- 9:30pm

    A hands-on class which teaches basic yeast bread techniques to create 5 little breads from around the world. We will also make simple accompaniments for each.

Courses I'm Taking

  • Sensory Evaluation of Wines

    South Seattle Community College
    Northwest Wine Academy
    Spring Quarter 2006
Powered by TypePad

September 24, 2006

Got Crust

Dscf1064

Four weeks of Craig’s List, one job fair, dozens of emailed resumes, a few interviews, and still, no job.

Actually, I was already offered perfect employment. My first week here, I stumbled into a cooking shop on a beer buying errand in Pacific Beach. The shop was well stocked with all the good kitchen toys and had a beautiful, state of the art cooking school facility in the back third of the store. I picked up a course schedule which offered a huge array of classes taught by talented local chefs. Of course, I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to drop off a resume at the shop, which I did later in the week. The retail manager never returned any of my phone calls, but eventually I did hear back from the cooking school director, who called me in for an interview. The interview went well so the following week, I observed a class on entertaining, which was a great class, expertly taught. The whole operation was smooth and professional, and the people were friendly and welcoming. I would loved to have been a part of it all. The director offered me a job assisting guest instructors with their classes which would have been a great opportunity to get paid to learn. I didn’t take it. I left two really good jobs in Seattle to move to San Diego to make a go of a relationship. I wasn’t about to be working nights and weekends so that I could spend all day by myself wondering what Nick was doing at work. I need to find myself a day job. Or at least a job that pays well enough to warrant a few late evenings in exchange for spending time with Nick on the weekends.

The experience wasn’t a total loss, however. I got crust. The menu for the class I observed was tasty, although not terribly exciting. The instructor made the class worthwhile, though, with her tips and tales of catering experiences. The dessert she chose is one of my favorites- fresh fruit galette, a sort of free-form rustic pie. She chose to use apple which she expertly peeled with a paring knife, the green skin falling to the cutting board in one elegant strip. She sliced the apples thinly and arranged them in a barely overlapping pattern from the outside to the center. It looked lovely, but to me, defied the rustic nature of a galette. And there just wasn’t enough apple flavor in the final product, with such thinly layered fruit. It’s a good thing the crust was so darned delicious. She made the dough in a matter of minutes, pressing the butter into the flour with her fingers and then tipping ice water from a cup until the dough began to hold its shape. It’s the easiest technique and the results were fabulous- a flaky, tender, buttery crust.

Here’s my version of the galette, with more apples! You could use other fruit as well or a combination of fruits. Just be sure to sprinkle a few tablespoons of flour onto the dough after it’s rolled out, if you are working with very juicy fruit. The flour will help thicken any fruit syrup.

Dscf1069 Rustic Apple Galette

For the crust: (you can double the recipe and freeze one)
1 ½ cups flour
½ cup unsalted butter, cut into chunks and cold
a few pinches of salt (I like a bit of salt, she used none)
1/3 or so cup ice water

Measure the flour into a large bowl. Stir in the salt. With your fingers, press the chunks of butter into the flour. Leave some visible pieces of butter in the flour (they will be flattish but don’t make them too small). Add enough ice water just to pull the dough into a ball. You can always sprinkle a bit more so don’t over do it. The dough should come together nicely. Flatten it into a round and put it in a clean Ziploc bag, gallon size. Flatten it some more while it’s in the bag and the refrigerate the dough at least one hour.

For the filling:
5-6 apples (I used two largish Granny Smiths and 4 small Galas)
¼ cup of sugar- more or less to taste
Cinnamon to taste
A sprinkle of lemon juice

Peel, core and slice the apples into ¼ inch slices. Toss with the other ingredients.

To assemble and bake the galette:

More butter – 2 or so tablespoons
Sugar for sprinkling
Apricot or apple preserves, warmed (you can also add a splash of Cognac or Calvados)

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Roll out the dough about 1/8 inch thick. Pile the apples in the center (you can arrange them if you have the patience) and leave the outside few inches free from filling. Fold the sides casually up onto the apples, letting it crease naturally, every few inches. (I rolled the dough on a square Silpat baking liner so I didn’t have to transfer it.) Slide the Silpat onto a baking sheet or pizza stone and readjust the folds if you need to. (If you’ve rolled on the counter, transfer the dough to a parchment lined cookie sheet BEFORE filling it.) Sprinkle the crust with sugar and then dot the extra butter around the top of the fruit. Bake at 400 degrees for about 50 minutes or until the crust is golden and flaky.

Brush the fruit part of the galette with the warmed preserves to give it a nice sheen. In a pinch you could use honey or maple syrup too.

Serves 6 to 8.

July 07, 2006

The Pound Cake Test

Dscf0884 I felt very official when the email arrived--  I was sent a recipe to test for Cook's Illustrated Magazine. Although anyone with a subscription to their website can participate in the testing program, I was excited to be chosen to actually do it. So just at the height of our short lived heat wave here in Seattle, I received a recipe for a pound cake that needed to bake for 60 to 70 minutes. I had figured I would test the recipes at work, where there are always willing tasters of sweets. The 3 year old there usually cuts right to the chase. “What are you making for dessert?” she asks, not seeming to care what sort of meal she needs to slog through before it. But I couldn’t bear to run the oven in their already overheated kitchen, so I decided to do my recipe testing at home, at night. Gretchen came over to help and she made brownies to send to Nick in Kuwait, while I worked on the pound cake.

As a cook, I tend to use a recipe as a guideline, adding and subtracting as I see fit, and measuring by eye rather than by cup and spoon. As a baker, however, I am much more precise, although still one to improvise within the parameters that I know will work. So as an official C.I. Recipe Tester, I had to be on my best behavior. First I read the recipe thoroughly (a novel idea) and then assembled my ingredients. I also read through the evaluation sheet so I would know what kinds of questions I’d have to answer about the final product. And so I began, carefully measuring and mixing, according to the instructions. I weighed some ingredients and measured others with a cup. Having the ingredients at the right temperature is key to getting the proper texture, so I even measured those with a metal stem thermometer from the health department. My only deviation was that I forgot to keep track of the exact active preparation time, but I figured the assembly took about a half of an hour, which is really pretty quick for a cake.

And the results? It turned out splendidly. It had a fine crumb that was dense but light in texture. The flavor was buttery with just a hint of vanilla. And if the recipe didn’t take an hour to bake, I would say that it is the perfect accompaniment to summer berries.

I brought some of the pound cake to work the following day for my official tasters to try. Coincidentally, they were looking for a good pound cake recipe to add chocolate chips to for a special birthday. We looked the Best Recipe cookbook by Cook’s Illustrated, and to my surprise, there was the recipe I “tested,” in print, for everyone to make. Now I would never scoop Cook’s Illustrated on a new recipe that they would be working on and sharing with their magazine readers, but since the recipe I tested is the one from their book, I thought I’d pass it along. Make this at midnight in the cool of your summer kitchen.

Cook’s Illustrated Classic Pound Cake

1 cup unsalted butter  (2 sticks), softened (8 ounces) 
1 1/3 cups granulated sugar  (9 ounces) 
3 large eggs  (5.25 ounces, without the shells) 
3 large egg yolks  (2 ounces) 
1 ½ teaspoons vanilla extract   
1 ½ teaspoons water   
½ teaspoon table salt   
1 ½  cups cake flour  (6 ounces) 
 
Adjust oven rack to center position and heat oven to 325 degrees. Grease a 9-by-5-by-3 1/2-inch loaf pan (7 1/2-inch capacity) with vegetable shortening or spray. Line the bottom and sides of pan with parchment paper or foil.

Beat butter in bowl of electric mixer set at medium-high speed until smooth and shiny, about 15 seconds. With machine still on, take about 30 seconds to sprinkle in sugar. Beat mixture until light, fluffy and almost white, 4 to 5 minutes, stopping mixer once or twice to scrape down sides of bowl.

Mix eggs, yolks, vanilla and water in a 2 cup glass measure with a pour spout, set in a pan of tepid water until mixture is about 70 degrees. With mixer set at medium-high speed, take 3 to 5 minutes to add egg mixture to butter/sugar mixture in a very slow, thin stream. Finally, beat in salt.

Remove bowl from mixer stand. Turn 1/2 cup flour into sieve or shaker; sprinkle it over batter. Fold gently with rubber spatula, scraping up from bottom of the bowl, until flour is incorporated. Repeat twice more, adding flour in 1/2-cup increments.

Scrape batter into prepared pan, smoothing top with a spatula or wooden spoon. Bake until cake needle or tester inserted into crack running along top comes out clean, 60 to 70 minutes. Let cake rest in pan for 5 minutes, then invert onto wire rack. Place second wire rack on cake bottom, then turn cake top side up. Cool to room temperature, remove and discard parchment, wrap cake in plastic, then in foil. Store cake at room temperature.

Serves about 10.

June 27, 2006

So Simple the Syrup

Dscf0868Summer has arrived in Seattle on the fast train. I was doing some laundry this weekend and in my laundry basket was a crazy mix of polypropylene long underwear, fleecy things, tank tops, and shorts. It’s June in Seattle!

Being from Sacramento, and spending much of the last 15 years in the Rogue Valley of Southern Oregon, one would think I should be accustomed to hot weather. A few years in Seattle and I’m melting in the mid-80 degree heat. Most of the year, I shun iced drinks in favor of room temperature beverages, but on Friday night, I dumped the igloo that had formed in my ice bin and got a whole new batch of ice going to cool my summer drinks. Ice ice, baby.

I’ve been seeing in the gourmet stores lately big, expensive bottles of simple syrup for making summer drinks. Simple syrup is just that, though. Simple. No need to buy it. I’ve been experimenting with steeping herbs in the syrup to make my own flavored syrups. But there’s no reason to stop at herbs, syrups can be infused with anything! Tea, spices, roots like ginger, citrus zest, reduced fruit juices, flowers, and there is no limit to the combinations you could create.

Simple syrups are handy to have around in the summer (they should be kept in the fridge) because they work better than granulated sugar for sweetening cold beverages. For sweetening hot coffee, granulated sugar works just fine because the heat from the coffee dissolves the sugar. But in an iced coffee drink, granulated sugar just falls to the bottom and doesn’t do much to sweeten the bulk of the liquid. (Although I love the sugary ice cube crystals left in the glass!) Simple syrups can be used to make cocktails, iced coffee drinks, lemon and limeades, and Italian sodas. In addition, they can be used for all sorts of summer preparations- syrups can sweeten sorbets and granitas, they can be mixed with fruit and drizzled over desserts, or colored syrups could be dabbled onto white plates for a simple plate garnish. It’s easy to get creative with flavored syrups if you have them made and chilled in your fridge.

Herb Infused Simple Syrup

Dscf0860Equal parts sugar and water (I used 2/3 cup of each)
Sprigs of fresh herbs- I used 4 large sprigs of lemon verbena. I also made one with mint and one with rose geranium leaves.

Dissolve the sugar in the water over medium heat in a small saucepan on the stove. Once the sugar has dissolved, turn off the heat and add the herbs, crushing them in your hands to release their oils. Submerge them into the liquid and cover. Let them steep for about 30 minutes. Drain into bottles pushing on the herbs to extract a bit more flavor. Cap and refrigerate.

Herban Lemonade

1 ounce citron Vodka
½ ounce lemon verbena syrup (more if you like sweeter drinks)
Sprig of verbena for garnish
Ice to fill glass
4 ounces soda water
Wedge of lemon

Mix the vodka and syrup in a glass with the ice. Add the verbena and crush lightly with a spoon or muddler. Add soda water and stir to blend. Squeeze the lemon into the drink and then drop it into the mix. Stir again and adjust taste to suit your preferences.

June 21, 2006

The Return of the Sunday Night Dinner

Dscf0826My old house mate, Chuck, and I used to host Sunday night dinners at least a couple of times a month. Chuck would sit on the barstool and commentate while I chopped and sautéed and grilled. He was the appetizer man. Olives, fig bread, manchego. Chuck could always be counted on to purchase a fine spread of apps. It’s been a while since Chuck bought his own place, took on his own house mate, and hauled a grill up to his own patio. At least now he’s eating his own peanut butter, and drinking his own wine ;)

Last Sunday I stopped by my friend Gretchen’s house to pick strawberries. She has an amazing patch of strawberries that spiral around the outskirts of her back yard. She also gave me some rhubarb that she had picked from her plot in the P-patch the day before. With such an amazing bounty, I decided to have people over for dessert. I called Gretchen first but she couldn’t make it so I called a few more friends. What began as an invitation to dessert ended up as a Sunday Dinner Reunion. Matthew was cooking Mexican food, and there is no better time to be invited for dinner. He fixed a phenomenal fajita spread, with all of the extras, and his wife, Amy assembled some delicious salads. I knew dessert was going to have to be sensational.

I scoured my vast assortment of cookbooks for something fun to do with rhubarb and strawberries. I decided to just wing it and headed to Larry’s Market with the old dog, Baci, to gather some ingredients. Cobbler always sounds good to me, so I decided to do some version of that. I began with my favorite Cream Scone recipe and adapted it to become the topping for the cobbler. The fruit part I wanted to keep simple since I had such beautiful raw ingredients to work with. I looked into using Minute Tapioca to thicken the fruit mixture (as recommended in Cooks Illustrated) but the cost was $4.00, I only needed a tablespoon, and I had cornstarch at home. Settled.

Pinched for time, I worked quickly, but even so, I was thankful that Sunday dinners are on ultimate time. Ultimate Frisbee players are notoriously late for everything and Sunday dinner is no different. So I stuffed the steaming hot cobbler into the trunk of my car and zoomed to Wallingford. I could smell how delicious it was going to be all the way there.

Strawberry Rhubarb Cobbler with Coconut Vanilla Scone Topping

6 cups of mixed strawberries and rhubarb (strawberries sliced or halved if they’re small, rhubarb cut into ½ inch pieces)
¾ cup sugar
1 Tablespoon cornstarch
¼ teaspoon vanilla

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Mix the fruit, sugar, cornstarch, and vanilla together and tip into a 9 inch deep dish glass pie plate. Bake for about 10 minutes or until the filling is quite hot. By adding the topping to already hot fruit, one eliminates the soggy topping problem that many cobblers have. Meanwhile, prepare the topping…

Coconut Vanilla Scone Topping

1 ¾ cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder   
3 tablespoons sugar   
1/2 teaspoon table salt   
5 tablespoons unsalted butter , chilled and cut into 1/4-inch pieces 
½ cup unsweetened coconut, toasted until golden 
1 cup unsweetened coconut milk (not the light kind)
1 tablespoon vanilla

sanding sugar and extra coconut milk for topping (brush and sprinkle)

Place flour, baking powder, sugar, and salt the food processor fitted with steel blade. Pulse to blend. Remove cover and distribute butter evenly over dry ingredients. Cover and pulse until butter is broken into pieces and distributed throughout the flour mixture. It should look like very coarse breadcrumbs. Transfer dough to large bowl. Stir in the coconut. Stir the vanilla into the coconut milk and stir that mixture into the dry ingredients with a rubber spatula or fork until dough begins to form, about 30 seconds.

Transfer dough and all dry, floury bits to countertop and knead dough by hand just until it comes together into a rough, slightly sticky ball, 5 to 10 seconds. Scrape up dough and lightly flour the counter underneath. Roll out the dough to the size of your pie plate and transfer it onto the hot fruit. Try to crimp the edges but be careful, since the pie plate is hot. Slice and open some vents atop the cobbler. You have to really separate the dough if you want the vents to stay open. Brush with some extra coconut milk and sprinkle with sanding sugar, if desired. Bake until the top is light brown, about 15 minutes. Cool on wire rack for at least 10 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature, with whipped cream, ice cream, yogurt, or just plain.

Serves 8 generously.

June 18, 2006

Solstice in Seattle

I’ve been remiss. Last week the Seattle summer finally caught up with me. It’s not exactly the midnight sun, but Seattle’s extended daylight hours have a similar effect on me. I get up early, work all day, have dinner at 10 o’clock, stay up way too late and then do it again. Until Thursday, when I finally crashed.

Dscf0794 But there’s nothing like the Fremont Summer Solstice Parade to start the cycle all over again! For the most part, Seattle is a little stuffy when it comes to celebrations. Our attitude seems to be, “Fine idea for a party, but not in MY neighborhood!” But not Fremont. Fremont opens its arms to Seattle for the annual Solstice Festival, and renews my faith that Seattleites can indeed, shake it. Any event that starts with hundreds of nude cyclists in all manors of exotic body paint cannot, by definition, be stuffy. And the parade continued on from there with great music, dancing, humor, costumes, creativity, political commentary, and the occasional strange spiritual displays that I couldn’t figure out. Fremont in a nutshell.

Dscf0748 Every year my friend, John, hosts his annual pre-parade brunch. It begins with his own parade of furniture down to the parade route to stake a claim of sidewalk, this year under the shade of a big tree. Each year I expect John, an avid cyclist, to disappear before the start of the parade only to reappear beautifully painted and peddling by. Perhaps next year. But this year, his house was the staging ground for the fabulous costuming efforts of the “Fantasia Girls” who danced with a samba group. He’s going to be sweeping up feathers and glitter, with a smile on his face, for weeks to come. While we were eating a fabulous brunch, we had our own little parade of peacock feathered and bejeweled beauties swooping in and out for mimosas.

As usual, John hosts a mean brunch. There were lots of delicious homemade treats- James’ salsa and feta eggs, John’s garlic and goodies eggs, some vegan scrambled tofu with mixed greens, Gretchen’s gluten free banana muffins and garden grown strawberries, some lovely fruit salads, and my contribution, a raspberry breakfast cake. I got the recipe from Alanna's blog, a few weeks ago and have made it twice, it’s so delicious. I changed a few ingredients to make it a bit more breakfast friendly, but it’s a great recipe as is, and could be served for dessert as well. I changed the all-purpose flour to a combination of all-purpose and whole wheat pastry flours, and oat bran. And I cut down the sugar to a scant 1 cup. I also bumped up the buttermilk to accommodate the hardier flours and omitted the glaze. The first time I made it, it came out of the pan beautifully, but the second time, part of it stuck and it had to be puzzle-pieced back together again. A quick garnish of powdered sugar, with a tiny bouquet of roses, lavender, and mint in the center, fixed it right up again. With the berries beginning to ripen here in Seattle, I’ll be sure to make this again before the season’s over.

This would make a great breakfast with a dollop of yogurt.

Dscf0702 Raspberry Breakfast Cake

¾ cup unsalted butter, softened
scant 1 cup sugar
Zest from 1 orange, or 2 limes or lemons
1 Tablespoon vanilla
3 eggs at room temperature
1 ½ cups all purpose flour
1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
½ cup oat bran
1 Tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
scant 1 cup buttermilk

12 ounces frozen raspberries
1 tablespoon flour

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350F.

Cream butter and sugar in large bowl with electric mixer on high speed. Add zest and vanilla. One at a time, beat in eggs.

In a separate bowl, stir together the flours, oat bran, baking powder and salt.

On the lowest speed of the mixer, gently add 1/3 of the buttermilk, ½ of the flour mixture, 1/3 of the buttermilk, ½ of the flour mixture, 1/3 of the buttermilk. (Begin and end with the buttermilk and scrape down the mixer after each addition.)

Separately, stir together berries and 1 tablespoon flour. By hand, stir berries into batter.

Transfer batter to well-greased and sugared Bundt pan. Bake for 60 – 75 minutes, until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean. Let cool 30 minutes, gently turn onto serving plate. Let cool another 30 minutes. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve.

Serves 12

May 26, 2006

2 for 1 Ginger Desserts

Dscf0593It’s Sugar High Friday and the theme today is Ginger! I was scrolling through my imagination to think of ginger desserts that I love. I couldn’t come up with one single ginger dessert that I don’t love! Gingersnaps, gingerbread, ginger anything appeals to me, in both sweet and savory styles. And the dessert ingredients that accompany ginger are some of my favorites as well- apples, pears, baking spices, and molasses. Somehow those deep, dark, homey comfort desserts never fail to entice me. I’d choose gingerbread over any cake any day.

But since this was a special event, I wanted to make something a little more interesting than basic gingerbread, so I decided to combine two of my favorite old fashioned desserts into one very delicious Pineapple Upside Down Gingerbread. Whole Foods has had pineapples on sale all week and they’ve been really delicious, which inspired me to include them in my dessert. Just a quick little aside about choosing pineapples- I look for ones with good golden color that shows through the brown of the rind. (In between the diamond like shapes on the skin.) I feel it- it should give slightly when you squeeze it but it shouldn’t have any soft spots. Then I smell it. It should smell like, well, like a pineapple. I’ve heard that if leaves pull out easily from the center of the top of the pineapple, it’s ripe, but I haven’t found that a reliable method. Look, touch, smell, buy. It works for me.

So I started with two recipes from Cooks Illustrated that I combined into one- a gingerbread recipe and a pineapple upside down cake recipe. And I think this dessert is better than the sum of its parts…

Pineapple Upside Down Gingerbread

The Pineapple Topping (which would be delicious over ice cream)

1 medium fresh pineapple (about 4 cups prepared fruit) peeled, cored, and made into small chunks
1 cup firmly packed brown sugar
2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger (Microplane grater works great here)
3 tablespoons unsalted butter   
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract   

For the pineapple topping: Combine pineapple, brown sugar, and ginger in 10-inch cast iron skillet; cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally during first 5 minutes, until pineapple is translucent and has light brown hue, another 6-7 minutes. Empty fruit and juices into mesh strainer or colander set over medium bowl. Return juices to skillet, leaving pineapple in strainer (you should have about 2 cups cooked fruit). Simmer juices over medium heat until thickened, beginning to darken, and mixture forms large bubbles, 6 to 8 minutes, adding any more juices released by fruit to skillet after about 4 minutes. Off heat, whisk in butter and vanilla; let the syrup cool in the pan. Set aside while preparing cake. (Pineapple will continue to release liquid as it sits; do not add this liquid to already-reduced juice mixture.)

The Gingerbread (which is great on its own as well)

2 ¼ cups sifted unbleached flour
½ teaspoon baking soda   
½ teaspoon table salt   
2 teaspoons ground ginger or 3 Tablespoons fresh ginger, minced or grated
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon   
½ teaspoon ground cloves   
½ teaspoon ground nutmeg   
½ teaspoon ground allspice   
1 teaspoon Dutch-processed cocoa powder   
8 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 stick)  melted, then cooled to room temperature 
3/4 cup molasses   
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1 large egg   
1 cup buttermilk   
 
Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 350 degrees.

Whisk together flour, baking soda, salt, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, allspice, and cocoa in medium bowl.

Beat butter, molasses, and sugar in large bowl with electric mixer on medium speed until combined. Beat in egg until incorporated. Gradually add buttermilk until combined.

Add dry ingredients to liquid; beat on low speed until batter is smooth, about 1 minute, scraping down sides of bowl with rubber spatula as needed. Do not over-mix. If using fresh ginger, batter will be lumpy.

Add pineapple to the caramel in the skillet and distribute the chunks evenly. Scrape batter over the pineapple spreading it to the sides. I found that the caramel oozed a bit from the skillet, so put the skilled onto a parchment lined cookie sheet. Place in the center of the preheated oven.

Bake until top springs back when lightly touched, and edges have pulled away from the pan sides, about 35- 40 minutes. Set pan on wire cake rack and let cool for 10 minutes. Place a serving plate over the top of the skillet and invert onto the serving plate. Replace any pineapple that may have stuck to the skillet. Serve warm, or at room temperature. (Gingerbread can be wrapped in plastic, then foil, and refrigerated up to 5 days.)

Serves 8 to 10.

May 21, 2006

Breakfast Brownie

Dscf0535The great thing about being an adult is that you get to eat whatever you want. I don’t have to finish my broccoli, eat two more bites of chicken, or at least taste the split pea soup. And if I really want to, I can eat brownies for breakfast. And the truth is, there is little that tastes better in the morning with a cup of strong coffee than a brownie. And indeed, that’s what I’m having right now. Just one.

We all are at liberty to make our own choices about food. I try to buy organic and seasonal, I avoid trans fats, and only occasionally do I eat brownies for breakfast. Living in Seattle makes  these choices easy to accommodate. We are blessed with farmer’s markets, great natural foods stores, organic bakeries, community supported agriculture programs, and a populace who is willing to support them. I’d have a hard time giving up all of that good food freedom.

Poor Nick, my boyfriend who is deployed right now with the Marine Corps, for he has little freedom of choice about the foods he is eating. A choice between overcooked, canned corn, beans, or peas isn’t really a choice I’d like to be making. If you think about it, the choice of what foods you put into your body is one of the most important and personal of all choices. And it seems so very wrong to me to not be given the option of choosing a healthy diet- it’s like saying that I’m not important enough to fuel properly. And rather ironically, fuel is the root of the conflict for which Nick and so many other Americans are risking their lives. Most people pay more attention to what they are putting into their vehicles than what they are putting into their bodies. And perhaps a brownie for breakfast seems an irresponsible choice, but one brownie breakfast, once in a while is my choice to make.

And if it’s going to be a brownie, it’s going to be a good one. This recipe is adapted from the one on the Cook’s Illustrated website.

Chocolate x 3 Brownies

5 ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped (I like Callebaut)Dscf0526
2 ounces unsweetened chocolate, chopped 
½ cup unsalted butter (1 stick), cut into quarters 
3 tablespoons cocoa powder (I like Dutch processed cocoa)
3 large eggs   
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar   
1 Tablespoon vanilla extract   
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt   
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour 
1 cup toasted nuts, chopped (I used sliced almonds)

Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a 9 x 13-inch rectangular brownie pan with nonstick vegetable cooking spray. Line it with a piece of parchment folded in half to cover the bottom and two of the sides of the pan. It should fit perfectly across the width of the pan. Spray parchment with nonstick cooking spray.

In medium microwavable bowl, melt the butter in the microwave. Stir in the chocolates and microwave at 50% power for about 2 minutes or until chocolates are melted. Stir occasionally until mixture is smooth. Whisk in cocoa until smooth. Set aside to cool slightly.

Whisk together eggs, sugar, vanilla, and salt in medium bowl until combined, about 15 seconds. Whisk warm chocolate mixture into egg mixture; then stir in flour and nuts with a rubber spatula until just combined. Pour mixture into prepared pan, spread into corners, and level surface.

Bake until slightly puffed and toothpick inserted in center comes out with a small amount of sticky crumbs clinging to it, 18 to 24 minutes. Cool on wire rack to room temperature, about 1 hour, then remove brownies from pan by sliding them out with the parchment paper as a handle. You may need to loosen the short sides of the pan by running a knife along the edge. Cut into squares and serve. (Do not cut brownies until ready to serve; brownies can be wrapped in plastic and refrigerated up to 5 days.) 

Makes one 9 x 13 inch tray of brownies.

May 17, 2006

The Wisdom of Pearls

Dscf0484It’s a texture thing. You either love it or you hate it. I haven’t met too many people who are indifferent to tapioca. I find the texture appealing, the swirl of tiny little jellied pearls over my tongue. To those who find tapioca less alluring, the mouth feel resembles something more akin to tiny fish eyes or the salmon eggs that are pressed into little jars and dyed pink for bait. Even though eating tapioca pudding is largely a tactile experience, there’s no reason it can’t be a delicious one too.

I’ve been experimenting with all sorts of flavor combos for sweet tapioca puddings. It’s such a fun food to play with since there are so many possibilities for varying the taste. Tapioca pudding, in its simplest form, has few ingredients. Tapioca pearls, which are tasteless, provide the texture and thickening agent for the pudding. Sugar, of course, provides the sweetness. You can vary the sugar flavor by using dark or light brown sugars, or any of the fancy new sugars on the baking aisle. Eggs, another essential ingredient, provide thickening power, nutrition, and if you separate the whites and whip them separately, they provide an airy texture as well. Milk and water make up the liquid portion of the pudding and they set up into a custard sort of consistency. I have varied the milk to make lactose-free versions by using soy milk or a combination of light coconut milk and soy milk. And then the flavoring agents provide the greatest room for creativity as far as creating interesting new puddings. Traditional flavorings include vanilla, lemon zest, cinnamon, and nutmeg. But the possibilities are endless! You can make herbal infusions (mint, lemon verbena, anise hyssop) in the milk, or use aromatics like ginger or lemongrass. Any dried fruits are great additions, like raisins, cranberries, blueberries, or cherries. Splashes of liquors are fun- Frangelico, Limoncello, spiced rum or bourbon. Citrus zest of any color adds zing. Toasted nuts or coconut add another layer of texture and flavor. Unsweetened cocoa powder can be stirred into the tapioca as it cooks for chocolate tapioca pudding. Tea could be used instead of water- a jasmine green tea and ginger pudding would be lovely! Fruits can be added either raw, like strawberries, or cooked, like sautéed apples. And you can layer tapioca with fruit purees to make beautiful parfaits. With the resurgence of comfort foods to the American culinary scene, I’m surprised tapioca pudding isn’t on more restaurant menus. Perhaps it’s a hard sell, but I doubt you’ll be disappointed with this recipe. I’ve made tapioca lovers out of many suspicious souls.

I use Bob’s Red Mill brand of small tapioca pearls. It comes in 24 ounce bags. The recipe on the back is great! This is that recipe with a few minor changes…

Old Fashioned Tapioca Pudding
1/3 cup small pearl tapioca
¾ cup water
2 ¼ cups milk, or soy milk
¼ teaspoon salt
2 eggs, separated
½ cup sugar
½ teaspoon vanilla
Zest of one lemon or orange

Soak tapioca in water for 30 minutes in a medium saucepan. Add milk, salt, and egg yolks and whisk to blend. Over medium heat, continue to stir the mixture until it comes to a boil. Turn the heat all the way down and cook for 10 to 15 minutes or until tapioca softens. Meanwhile, beat the egg whites until they are foamy, add the sugar gradually and beat until soft peaks form. Fold in about ¾ cup of the hot tapioca mixture to the egg whites to temper them and then fold the egg whites back into the tapioca in the saucepan. Whisk over medium heat for 3 minutes. Cool for about 10 minutes and then add the vanilla and citrus zest. Serve warm or chilled.

See above for some variations. Makes 3 1/2 cups.

May 14, 2006

Sweet Polenta Birthday Cake

Dscf0459 Called Polenta Dolce in Italian, it seemed the perfect birthday cake for Kendall, who will be spending her junior year abroad in Florence this year. Not an overly sweet cake, Polenta Dolce can be dressed up in countless ways depending on the season. I’ve made it in the fall, accompanied by pear and apple compotes, in the winter, filled with marmalade and cream,  and in the summer with fresh peaches or blueberries macerated in Prosecco. May brings the beginning of strawberry season, so I chose fresh berries to adorn Kendall’s simple cake.

The cake itself is quick to make but does require separating eggs. I’ve found the easiest method for this is simply cracking the egg into a small bowl and then scooping the yolk out with my fingers. I use three bowls, one for the egg yolks, one for the whites, and one for the separating. That way if I bungle one egg, I’ve only ruined that one, not the whole batch of whites. Eggs separate most easily when they are cold, but they whip up best at room temperature. So to accommodate this quirky egg characteristic, I separate the eggs first and then preheat the oven, prepare my pan, and then gather and measure the other ingredients.

The only other even slightly tricky part of the recipe is making sure the bowl and beater are completely clean after beating the egg yolks. If there is any residual fat from the yolks left in the bowl, or traces of yolks in the whites, the egg whites will not beat up properly. So I use soap and hot water on the bowl, the beater, and the mixer itself. Then I dry everything completely before going on to whipping the whites.

Happy Birthday, Kendall! Oh, to be 20 and spending a year in Italia…

Dscf04605 Polenta Dolce

¾ cup all-purpose flour
¼ cup polenta or stone ground yellow cornmeal
4 large eggs
¾ cup sugar
Grated zest of one orange
Grated zest of one lemon
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Sugar for dusting the pan

Separate the eggs and place the yolks in the bowl of a standing mixer. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Make a parchment circle the size of the Dscf04615bottom of an 8-inch cake pan. (Just draw around it and cut.) Spray the pan with non-stick spray and line with the parchment. Lightly spray the parchment. Dust the pan with sugar and shake out.

Stir together the flour and cornmeal in a small bowl and set aside. In the mixer, beat the egg yolks with the whip attachment on low speed. Gradually add 1 /2 cup of the sugar and increase the speed to high. Beat until the yolks are thick and light yellow, about 3 minutes. Add the zests and vanilla. Transfer to a large bowl.

In a clean mixing bowl, beat the egg whites on medium speed until foamy. Gradually add the last ¼ cup of sugar, beating until the whites are stiff and glossy. Fold the egg whites into the egg yolk mixture. Fold in the flour mixture. Transfer the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top.

Bake for about 20 to 25 minutes or until the center is puffed and springs back when you touch it. Place on a cooling rack to cool. After about 10 minutes, unmold the cake onto a plate, peel off the parchment and then turn the cake back right side up on the cooling rack. Let cool completely.

With a long serrated knife, cut the cake horizontally and set the bottom of the cake on a serving platter. Spread with the filling and replace the top layer. Dust with powdered sugar and garnish with fresh fruit.

The filling:
About 1 1/2 cups ricotta cheese
Honey to taste

Mix the ricotta with honey to taste and use it as a filling in the center of the cake.

The topping
1 to 2 pint baskets of strawberries, sliced
Sugar to taste
A splash of lemon juice

Slice the berries and toss with sugar to coat. Let them sit at room temperature to macerate. The berries should make a light syrup. Use this to top the finished cake.

Serves 8.

May 11, 2006

Pretty in Pinks

Dscf0448 Dirt is precious. My nursery ambitions have probably outgrown what little dirt I own, and it’s only May. I have two small flats of vegetables and flowers, still unplanted, in my entry hall, and I haven’t even gotten to buying the tender annuals, like basil. I live in a townhouse, and my yard is not small, by townhouse standards. Yet every year I find myself uprooting what little remains of the original low-maintenance (boring) landscaping that came with the house, and planting things I can eat. Why grow it if you can’t eat it? Well, surely if you have the luxury of an expansive yard, by all means, grow whatever suits your fancy. But as a townhouse dweller (dirt challenged) one has to be particular. My little yard is full of culinary herbs, as well as some medicinal ones. The flowers of all of these plants are edible, and beautiful. They make lovely garnishes and can be tossed into salads for added texture and color. I will often sprinkle the lavender colored spring rosemary flowers atop dishes seasoned with rosemary. Likewise with chive blossoms, sage flowers, or lavender. But why stop at herbs when so many flowers are edible? I browse the nursery aisles looking for exotically colored and textured plants and flowers to add to my salads, sprinkle over pastas, or adorn summer desserts. Here is a list of a few flowers that make lovely landscapes, both in the garden and on the table.

  • Dscf0348 Anise Hyssop (sweet, anise-like, licorice, pink to purple flowers) Leaves pictured above.
  • Arugula (nutty, spicy, peppery flavor, white flowers)
  • Bee Balm (pungent, variety of colors, pinks and reds are striking)
  • Borage (light cucumber flavor, incredibly beautiful purple blossom) Pictured at right.
  • Calendula (spicy, tangy, peppery, adds a golden hue to foods, oranges and yellows)
  • Chamomile (faint apple flavor, good as a tea, little white daisy-like flowers)
  • Chrysanthemum (slightly bitter flavor, pungent, many colors)
  • Citrus Blossoms (waxy, pronounced flavor, use sparingly as an edible garnish, white)
  • Cornflower (“Bachelor's Buttons”- sweet to spicy, clove-like, blue blossoms)
  • Dianthus (spicy, peppery, clove-like- also called “Pinks”) Pictured above.
  • Gardenia (light, sweet flavor, white blossoms)
  • Hyssop (pungent, use sparingly, blue is striking)
  • Jasmine (delicate sweet flavor, used for teas, white to light pink)
  • Johnny-Jump-Up/Viola (bland flavor but lovely, many colors) Pictured above.
  • Mallow (sweet, delicate flavor, pink to purple flowers)
  • Marigold (spicy to bitter, oranges and yellows)
  • Nasturtium (buds can be pickled and used like capers- tastes peppery, warm colors)
  • Pansy (very mild sweet to tart flavor, many color choices)
  • Rose (sweet, aromatic flavor, stronger fragrance produces a stronger flavor. Be sure to remove the bitter white portion of the petals. Rose hips are also edible. Wide color variety
  • Scented Geranium (varies with differing varieties from lemon to mint- the citronella scented ones are not good to eat, white to pink)
  • Violet (sweet- purple, blue, pink)

Sugared Edible Flowers for Garnishing

This is a great way to preserve your flowers. It will help prevent wilting on warm days.

1 small container pasteurized egg whites (they have them at Trader Joe’s)
Edible flowers
Super-fine sugar
A small paintbrush

Whisk the egg whites to lighten them. With a soft paintbrush, paint the flowers with egg white and dust with super-fine granulated sugar. After painting flowers with egg whites, allow the flowers to dry. Store preserved flowers in an airtight container in a cool, dark place. They’ll last a week or two.

Happy gardening!

May 07, 2006

Plants and Pie

Dscf0381I’m all for celebrations, especially when they involve food. Seattle does have its share of hoopla, but we don’t have one single city-wide, all-inclusive, can’t book a room in town, jam-packed, world renowned party. It’s just not that kind of city, I guess. We had opening day of the boating season and the Windermere cup crew races this weekend. Can’t say I’ve ever been to either event, although I’m sure they’re fun. The yachts were rafting up in the Montlake Cut, along the racing course, Friday night as I drove home from work. The visual distraction backed up traffic on 520 almost to Bellevue! Party gawkers.

What brought the hordes of Seattleites out en masse this weekend, though, was the annual
Edible Plant Sale at the Seattle Tilth. There were no costumes, fancy hats, specialty drinks, or steel drum music involved. Just plants, and about a zillion people. This event is not without celebration or tradition, though. Every year I get better at navigating the scene. First up, it’s a couples event. Shopping alone at the sale, unless you don’t mind queuing up before the civilized Saturday hours, is an all morning event. Better to bring a friend. One shops, one waits in the check-out line. Then you swap. Secondly, you need to bring something in which to carry your loot. Gretchen and I used a blue plastic laundry basket, but we saw great ingenuity in plant moving devises- little red wagons, lovely woven baskets, fruit boxes, and a particularly clever milk crate and hand truck contraption that wheeled a whole garden’s worth of plants quite efficiently. Third, you need to bring a list of what you’re after, which can be assembled from the tilth website ahead of time. Most importantly, though, having a sense of humor and community is a must. Even with a shopping buddy, there promises a long wait in line with fellow Seattle gardeners. No point in fretting the lost hours of weekend. May as well socialize. This year, though, was crazier than normal. The check-out line snaked around the sale, through the entry way and well out into Meridian Park. I’m all about socializing with Seattle plant lovers, but I wasn’t sure I had the fortitude to endure that line. As luck would have it, I spotted my friend Jeff, another ultimate player, who was very near the front. I gave him cash, a dinner invitation, and a huge thank you, and we were out of there in 15 minutes. Gretchen and I did our socializing over pastries at the Essential Bakery.

And in honor of places with long standing traditions of parties, I came home and made a Derby Pie, of which our fancy hat wearing, julep sipping, blue-grass stomping Southern cousins might just be proud. And to pay homage to the plant sale, I made a special herb-infused, bourbon laced cream to compliment the pie, which is really more like a gooey, nutty, high-octane brownie.

Derby Pie

Crust:
5 ounces graham crackers, ground finely (I used Newman’s Alphabet cookies, cinnamon)
3 Tablespoons melted butter

Filling:
3 eggs
2 egg yolks
1 ¼ cups brown sugar
½ cup butter, softened
¾ cup corn syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla
Pinch of salt
4 ounces unsweetened chocolate, melted and cooled
3 ounces bourbon (I used Knob Creek)
4 ounces toasted pecans, coarsely chopped

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Mix the graham crackers and butter together and press into a pie plate or 8 or 9 inch square baking pan. Bake at 350 until the edges start to brown lightly- about 8 minutes. For the filling, first combine the eggs and yolks in a medium bowl. Whisk in the sugar. Set aside. In the bowl of a standing mixer, cream the butter, corn syrup, vanilla, and salt. Add the egg mixture to the mixer. Scrape down the sides. Add the melted chocolate and then the bourbon. Sprinkle the nuts over the cooked crust and pour filling over them. Bake for about 40 minutes or until puffy on top and not wiggly in the middle. Remove from oven and let cool. Sprinkle with powdered sugar for serving.

Mint Julep Infused Cream (do this early!)

1 cup heavy whipping cream
3-4 sprigs mint
Powdered sugar to taste
Splash of vanilla
Splash of bourbon

Heat the cream on medium heat until it just begins to boil. Remove from heat and add the mint. Push it down in the cream so it is covered. Cover the pan and let steep for 30 minutes. Pour cream through a strainer into a medium bowl and refrigerate until well chilled. With a whisk or in the mixer, whip the cream until it’s medium stiff. Add the sugar and whip to desired consistency. Stir in the vanilla and bourbon. Go easy on the bourbon since the pie is already pretty well fueled.

May 03, 2006

Herb Notes

Dscf0361 It’s hard to rival Seattle on a glorious spring day. Wednesdays are my “work from home” days which are usually occupied with menu planning, research for classes I’m teaching, studying for classes I’m taking, paperwork, laundry, errands, and housekeeping. I don’t know how people manage without a “work from home” day. I’m lucky to have it.

So in honor of this tremendous weather, I ignored all of the pressing indoor work in favor of tending the herb garden. When you think about how much fresh herbs cost when you buy them in the grocery store, I guess you could say I was managing my investment. Financial planning in Barbie-pink garden clogs. And old Baci dog was sleeping on my assets.

I don’t have a large yard, but the majority of what I have planted is edible. Why waste dirt on something you can’t eat? Today I replaced the marjoram that succumbed to the cold, added to the chives, planted summer savory, (an annual in this climate) and put in a few new herbs- some lovage, blue hyssop, and a tall Provençal lavender. I also planted some mixed lettuce and radicchio seeds that my dad brought back from Italy.

I can’t imagine how I would cook delicious meals or plate food beautifully without the addition of the fresh garden herbs and edible flowers that grow outside my front door. Simple foods are made elegant with the last minute flavor boost that fresh herbs add. And a quick arrangement of flowers turns a simple cheesecake into a gorgeous dessert. This cheesecake recipe uses fresh goat cheese, or chèvre, which imparts a tangy edge, well suited to the season. The recipe was adapted from the Cooks Illustrated website. 

Dscf0324 Lemon & Chèvre Cheesecake with Hazelnut Crust

The cheesecake is baked in a  hot water bath to keep it moist.. To prevent water from leaking into the pan during baking, wrap the pan a double layer of foil. (The wider size of foil works best here.)

Cookie-Crumb Crust:

Ingredients:
2 ounces hazelnuts (generous 1/3 cup), toasted, skinned, and cooled 
1 tablespoons granulated sugar   
5 ounces Bunny Grahams   
3 tablespoons unsalted butter , melted and kept warm 

Directions for the Crust:
Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 325 degrees. In food processor, process hazelnuts with sugar until finely ground and mixture resembles coarse cornmeal, about 30 seconds. Add Bunny Grahams and process until mixture is finely and evenly ground, about 30 seconds. Add warm melted butter in slow, steady stream while pulsing; pulse until mixture is evenly moistened and resembles wet sand, about ten 1-second pulses. Transfer mixture to 9-inch springform pan; using bottom of ramekin or dry measuring cup, press firmly and evenly into pan bottom, keeping sides as clean as possible. Bake until fragrant and golden brown, 12 to 15 minutes. Cool on wire rack to room temperature, about 30 minutes. When cool, wrap outside of pan with two 18-inch square pieces heavy-duty foil; set springform pan in roasting pan or on a sheet pan with sides.

Cheesecake Filling:

Ingredients:
1 tablespoon grated lemon zest (use a fine grater like a Microplane)
1/4 cup lemon juice   
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
1 pound cream cheese , (two 8-ounce packages), cut into rough 1-inch chunks and left to stand at room temperature 30 to 45 minutes 
8 ounces mild goat cheese , left to stand at room temperature 30 to 45 minutes 
4 large eggs , room temperature 
2 teaspoons vanilla extract   
1/2 cup heavy cream   

Directions for the Filling:
Mix the lemon zest and sugar in a small bowl. In standing mixer fitted with paddle attachment, beat cream cheese and goat cheese on low to break up and soften slightly, about 5 seconds. With machine running, add sugar mixture in slow steady stream; increase speed to medium and continue to beat until mixture is creamy and smooth, about 3 minutes, scraping down bowl with rubber spatula as needed. Reduce speed to medium-low and add eggs 2 at a time; beat until incorporated, about 30 seconds, scraping sides and bottom of bowl well after each addition. Add lemon juice and vanilla and mix until just incorporated, about 5 seconds; add heavy cream and mix until just incorporated, about 5 seconds longer. Give batter final scrape, stir with rubber spatula, and pour into prepared springform pan; fill roasting pan with enough hot tap water to come halfway up sides of springform pan. Bake until center jiggles slightly, sides just start to puff, surface is no longer shiny, and instant-read thermometer inserted in center of cake registers 150 degrees, 55 to 60 minutes. Turn off oven and prop open oven door with potholder or wooden spoon handle; allow cake to cool in water bath in oven for 1 hour. Transfer springform pan without foil to wire rack; run small paring knife around inside edge of pan to loosen sides of cake and cool cake to room temperature, about 2 hours.

When cool, remove from pan. When ready to serve, top with fresh herbs, berries, mint, and a sprinkling of powdered sugar.

Serves 12 to 16.

April 15, 2006

Tales of Cottontails

Dscf0184 You might not realize that the Easter bunny starts his basket delivery rounds from the west side of Greenlake, just north of the ship canal, in Seattle. Or so the story goes. Auntie Kat always tries to make something special for her nephews, Alexander and William, for the holidays, and this year there’s a little story to go along with the Easter treats. I didn’t feel like making fancy cut out cookies so I made a variation of my favorite powdered sugar cookies, Russian Tea Cakes, and renamed them “Cottontails,” to suit the Easter holiday. And so begins the story of how the bunnies lost their tails…

Download the_tale_of_the_magic_cottontails.doc

And if it’s too late to collect cottontails in your neighborhood, here’s a recipe that’ll do just fine.

Cottontails
1 cup unsalted butter
½ cup powdered sugar, sifted
½ teaspoon vanilla
½ teaspoon almond extract
2 ¼ cups flour
¼ teaspoon salt
¾ cup toasted coconut
About 1 cup extra powdered sugar for rolling, sifted

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. In the bowl of a stand mixer, cream the butter and sugar until light a fluffy. Add the vanilla and almond extract and beat again. On low speed add the flour, salt, and toasted coconut. Mix only until the dough comes together.Dscf0165

With a small cookie scoop, make 1 inch balls and place on parchment covered baking sheets. They don’t spread much so you can get 16 per sheet. Bake for about 12 minutes or until lightly golden. Remove from oven and let set on the sheets for a few minutes. Roll the warm cookies in the extra powdered sugar and place on cooling racks to cool. Reroll cookies again before storing, if desired.

Makes about 2 dozen cottontails.

April 12, 2006

Cookies for the Corps

Dscf0144So I knew it wouldn’t be long before I had to start writing about cookies again. I didn’t mention that my cookie baking reputation has gone international. In the Pacific islands, Singapore, and soon to be Kuwait, I have fans. Well, perhaps that’s not quite true. My influence extends through the ready room of a small group of Marine Corps pilots who are floating around the world on a Navy ship, eating cookies, and defending our American freedom to eat cookies. My boyfriend, Nick, who is the intelligence officer for the pilots, is kind enough to share. And so my reputation for cookie baking has gone global. I guess there are worse reputations to have amongst a group of ship-bound Marines.

In a million years, I never thought I’d be dating a Marine. And I could say that he’s not a typical Marine but since he’s the only Marine I know, I’ll just say he’s not typical. I haven’t tied a yellow ribbon around the little pear tree out front, but I’m waiting, and baking, and writing letters and emails, and wishing for his safety. He’ll be returning in mid-August, (fingers crossed)  and I’ll be the happiest blogger on the web.

Meanwhile, I’m trying to keep his tiny stateroom filled with good things to eat, since the wardroom is most certainly not. He seems to enjoy reading about the delicious meals I prepare at work, although I would think it would only remind him of how badly he’s eating on ship. Seems that here in America we serve our poorest quality food to our school children, our sick in hospitals and institutions, our elderly, and the people who are out sacrificing their lives for us. It doesn’t make any sense. So if you know anyone overseas who might need a little care package, here are some things that I’ve been sending:

Cookies (ok, not the healthiest but good for morale)
Dried fruit and nuts
Trail mix
Beef or other jerky
Sugar-free gum
Hand sanitizers and wipes
Savory spreads and crackers (Trader Joe’s has a great selection)
Coffee and tea
Pictures
Magazines
Books
Seasonal goodies (an Easter basket in April)
Toiletries

And for packing, I’ve found the USPS flat-rate boxes to be the best deal. At $8.10, you can stuff them full without worrying about weight. And although you will have to fill out a customs declaration, the postage rate is domestic. And it’s surprising how much can fit in one box! I usually pack the cookies in Ziploc baggies with layers of parchment in between to keep them separate. Yet another good use for parchment.

So here’s an all-American favorite… a recipe for chocolate chip cookies that I’ve adapted from the infamous Neiman-Marcus (urban legend) cookie recipe that circulated the web way back when.

Chocolate Chip CookiesDscf0139

1 cup butter (again, use the real stuff), softened
1 cup sugar
1 cup packed brown sugar

2 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla

2 ½ cups old fashioned oatmeal, measured and then ground in the food processor
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon salt

1 bag chocolate chips
1 ½ cups nuts, toasted and chopped (optional)

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Cream together the butter and sugars until light and fluffy. Mix in the eggs and vanilla on medium speed. Combine the flour, ground oats, baking powder, and salt in a medium sized bowl and stir to blend ingredients. Mix them into the butter mixture on low speed.
Then mix in the chocolate chips and nuts.

Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Using a cookie scoop, scoop 12- 15 cookies on each sheet. Bake for about 10 minutes, rotating top to bottom and front to back half way through. When the cookies are golden, take them out of the oven. They should be slightly under-baked since they will continue to cook on the sheet. After the cookies have set-up- between 5 and 10 minutes- slide the parchment onto a cooling rack to finish cooling. When completely cool, they can be packed for shipping or eating!

Makes about 4 dozen good sized cookies.

April 08, 2006

Kat on Cookies

Dscf0082It seems that my first entry should be about something monumental, some grand feat of culinary engineering that will endear and impress any curious reader who might happen upon my page. And so it is. And it isn’t. For my first entry I want to write about the humble cookie. I’m sure this will be one of many entries about cookies. I love cookies. And they seem a universal love.

For all practical purposes, cookies are a simple dessert, more at home in a lunch box than on a restaurant menu. I have made thousands of cookies- rolled, dropped, spread, hand shaped, or cut. Cookies are my signature food, my offering for friends, my apologies for transgressions, my road trip companions, and strangely enough, once my tuition for a university class. The professor never said I could stay, but he never kicked me out either, and never complained about the Ziploc baggie of cookies tucked under the podium every week. Cookies are never a bad idea and always a welcome guest.

When I was sailing on tall ships, I was known as “Kat, the steward who makes THE COOKIES.” And when I graduated to making cookies for the privileged classes aboard luxury yachts, I prepared all sorts of fancy meals, and elegant plated desserts. Yet most often, people raved about the cookies. “Oh, the guava-glazed, key lime cheesecake was lovely, but the snickerdoodles were to die for!” Even the rich folks love cookies. And so it goes, I’ve developed a reputation for cookie baking.

This recipe that follows got me a job. It isn’t the first cookie that landed me employment, nor will it probably be the last, but indeed, this one’s never failed me. I showed up for my personal chef interview with my portfolio and a nicely wrapped box of chewy goodness and voila! A job that I adore. Here’s the recipe for THE COOKIES.

Mint Chocolate Chip Cookies

¾ cup unsalted butter (use the real stuff)
½ cup packed brown sugar
½ cup white sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon peppermint extract
1 ½ cups unbleached flour
¼ cup unsweetened cocoa, sifted (Dutch processed- that’s a whole entry itself!)
1 teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon salt
1 ½ cups chocolate chips

Preheat the oven to 350. Line 2 cookie sheets with parchment paper. Cream together the butter and sugars. Add the egg and extracts to the creamed mixture and mix briefly on medium speed. Whisk together the dry ingredients and add to the butter mixture on low speed. Add the chocolate chips and mix to blend. Scrape the sides of the bowl and mix again, just until incorporated. Drop with a cookie scoop, 1 dozen onto each sheet. Bake about 12 minutes rotating half way through. It’s kind of hard to tell when these cookies are done since they’re already brown. Look for puffed centers and a dry exterior. They are better slightly underdone than overdone. Let them cool on the sheet for a few minutes and then slide the parchment paper to the rack to cool. This recipe makes a little over two dozen if you don’t eat too much of the dough. The recipe came originally from the book Still Life with Menu by Mollie Katzen.

I’ve also varied it to make the following yummy kinds…

Orange Chocolate Chip Cookies: substitute orange oil for the peppermint extract, and add the zest of one orange with the butter and sugars.

Mexican Chocolate Chip Cookies: (these are actually the ones in the picture) substitute almond extract for the peppermint and add 1 to 2 teaspoons cinnamon to the dry ingredients. You could also add some chopped, toasted almonds if you like (maybe ¾ cup). I use baking powder instead of soda for this one since the pH is higher. We’ll talk more about that later…

I hope you enjoy the cookies and thank you for checking out my site. I welcome comments and suggestions!

P.S. If you’re feeling particularly indulgent, these cookies make amazing ice cream sandwiches- just squish a scoop of vanilla (or whatever flavor you like) ice cream in between two cookies and mmm! Pure deliciousness.

Search


  • Kat-on-Thyme
    Web

Recent Posts