Dec.
16

Buttery Jam Cookies – TwD

Another week, another Tuesday with Dorie.  I don’t know where to begin in talking about this week’s recipe. I’ve had the book over 6 months now and I’m sure I passed by the Buttery Jam Cookies recipe a time or ten. But never did I give this one a second glance.  In hindsight it saddens me a great deal to know how many times I passed over these cookies.  I guess it’s a weirdness of mine that I like a picture of the finished product so I know what I’m aiming for.  Dorie doesn’t include a picture of the butter jam cookies alongside the recipe so that kinda put me off.  Hopefully my picture above will entice you… if not, I’m going to give it a try with my words!  If you’re looking for a cookie that’s both familiar and different at the same time… one that is versatile while being both contemporary and traditional at the same time… you’ve found the right one.  I chose to use orange marmalade and cardamom spice.  O-M-G!  These are faaaaaaaaaaaaantastic!  Whatever you’re doing tonight… it can wait for tomorrow because you really have to make these.  Tonight?  Yes tonight!  If necessary, stop at the market and buy the orange marmalade and ground cardamom spice on the way home from work just so you can make these cookies.  Holy mother of pearl, these really are just that good!

Dorie suggests using apricot jam and ground ginger.  Usually I have apricot jam on hand but I used the end of the jar a couple of weeks back when making the Linzer Sable cookies.  I toyed with the idea of using strawberry jam or cranberry jam but I didn’t want the red color.  I knew I had orange marmalade and since I find the combination of orange flavor with cardamom spice to be simply fabulous the decision practically made itself!  I followed the recipe exactly as written… no halving this week… only subbing the ground cardamom for the ground ginger, and the orange marmalade for the apricot jam. 

If you’re not familiar with cardamom, it’s a spice used quite often in baked goods.  I think perhaps mostly in the dough used for danishes.  I first was introduced to cardamom earlier this year when I was making danish braids and it was pretty much love at first bite :)  The flavor is a rather subtle but it gives a certain je ne sais quois that makes your taste buds very very happy!  I’ve tried making orange cardamom creme brulee and learned my lesson the hard way that while a little cardamom is lovely, a lotta cardamom not so much! LOL!!  So please, learn from my mistake and go easy on the cardamom – not so easy that you don’t get the flavor… but not so much that you seriously regret it.

These cookies are amazingly simple to make.  I can’t imagine them being any simpler since the ingredients are pretty much items you have on hand!  The dough came together easily and I found that baking for 12 minutes (rotating the pan half-way thru) was pretty much the perfect timing as they are nicely browned on the bottoms and only slightly browned around the edges.  Mine came out somewhat cakey… not at all crispy, not at all crunchy and definitely not at all chewy.  I really have to say these are my new favorite cookie!  I hope my family, friends and neighbors like them too because they surely will be in the holiday cookie-baskets I create this year!

Thanks to Heather of Randomosity and the Girl for choosing this week’s recipe. Big Big Thanks!!!  If you’d like the recipe be sure to visit Heather’s blog or buy a copy of Dorie Greenspan’s book Baking from My Home To Yours.  Please take a moment to check out the others who also bake Tuesday with Dorie – I’m betting they came up with some great flavor combinations as well :)

Have a delicious day!

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Dec.
09

In life, when it comes to certain important moments, we do a practice run…  a run through… a dress rehearsal… before the big event.  I’m glad I did a dry run for decorating my holiday sugar cookies this year because I discovered that boy, I really stink at it! LOL!  Good thing I can bake a tasty cookie  because this post is proof positive that I cannot decorate a pretty cookie.  But that’s okay, that’s why I used this as an opportunity to practice because I’m determined to improve… and hopefully rather quickly because Christmas is right around the corner and my co-workers are  already talking about how they’re looking forward to my cookies!

That’s right – it’s Tuesday and we’re baking with Dorie.  This week’s recipe was for Grandma’s All Occasion Sugar Cookies and was chosen by Ulrike of the blog Küchenlatein. I halved all the ingredients and made only a half batch of cookies as slice-and-bake as opposed to rolling out and using cookie cutters.  I did this primarily because I just wanted to try out the recipe… but I also wanted to try out making royal icing and doing simple decorating.  The cookies do taste very good – I will not lie one bit!  These cookies are incredibly tasty!  Instead of just using vanilla extract I used half vanilla and half lemon.  I find this gives a “cleaner” tasting cookie.  I had no trouble getting the dough to come together or roll into logs although quiet obviously my logs were too skinny and my cookies turned out just slightly larger than the size of Ritz crackers. The recipe says they puff up but I didn’t find that to be the case – I sure wish they would’ve puffed up because then perhaps my cookies would’ve been a decent size! LOL.  Oh well, live and learn.   Perfect practice makes perfect so I’d better start perfect practicing because these are far… far… from perfect.  But that’s okay…

This is why we do a practice run….. right?     HAHAHAHAHAHA

If you’d like this recipe it is on pages 146-147 of Dorie’s book “Baking From My Home To Yours”.  Additionally you can find it on our hosts blog.  Also, take a moment and check out the other TwD bakers because I’m sure they can decorate :)

Have a delicious day!

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Dec.
06

Pumpkin Cheesecake

Recall there were three pies that I made for Thanksgiving… Coconut Custard, French Silk Chocolate and this sumptuous one right here, a Pumpkin Cheesecake.  I love cheesecake to start with – a good cheesecake, that is ;-) And I love pumpkin pie.  For years I’ve coveted pumpkin cheesecake no matter the time of year.  The way I feel about pumpkin cheesecake is pretty much the way my family feels about egg nog… I wait for it all year.  I mean wait all year. I reminisce about it in spring… talk longingly about it in summer….  anticipate it in early autumn… and come close to Thanksgiving I begin to pretty much stalk restaurant menus.  But this year I declared my freedom from all that and made my very own pumpkin cheesecake.  The fact that it turned out so amazingly good can only mean one thing – my waistline is in trouble!  And that’s trouble with a capital “T” :)

This picture above gave me the giggles.  Isn’t that just the cutest little, petite, small, diminutive, lady-like, bite-sized morsel on the fork?  Certainly nothing like the big ol honkin bites I tend to take of pumpkin cheesecake!  I can’t help myself.  Really, I can’t.  I love it so much!  But with most things in life we need to slow it down… remain in the moment… savor it… enjoy it… not rush thru it so fast that it’s just a fleeting memory in only a matter of minutes.  I believe in that.  The problem is for me it remains a goal, not a reality.  Especially when I’m eating pumpkin cheesecake for heaven’s sake!  When I made this I had every intention of taking it to work and sharing it with my co-workers.  The problem was that as much as I like my co-workers and know they’d enjoy it, I was certain they wouldn’t enjoy it more than me… and I just couldn’t bear to part with it! hahahahah.  But I also knew another problem was that if I were left to my own devices, I’d eat the entire thing  since my family has no interest in it whatsoever (oh sure, integrate some chocolate into it and that might change but that would detract from my enjoyment of it and hey, this one is most definitely, without a doubt, all about me!!).  The solution?  Cut the entire thing into slices, freeze them individually and stick them outside in the deep freezer in the garage.  Out of sight – out of mind :)  And yes, this baby freezes and thaws just beautifully – you can take my word for it!!! =)

 Now there, that’s more like it.  That’s a more realistic sized bite for me ;-)

 

Pumpkin Cheesecake

Ingredients

2 cups graham cracker crumbs

6 tablespoons butter, melted

1 cup granulated sugar, plus

2 tablespoons granulated sugar

3 8oz packages cream cheese

1 tablespoon vanilla

2 cups canned pumpkin

3 eggs

2 teaspoons ground cinnamon

2 teaspoon ground nutmeg

2 teaspoon allspice

1 teaspoon ground ginger

 

 

Method

Preheat oven to 350° F.

Make the crust by combining the graham cracker crumbs with the melted

butter, 2 tablespoons sugar and 1 tsp each of cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and

ginger in a medium bowl. Stir well enough to coat all of the crumbs with the

butter, but not so much as to turn the mixture into paste. Keep it crumbly.

Put foil partway up the outside part of an 9-inch springform pan.

Press the crumbs onto the bottom and about two-thirds of the way up the

sides of the springform pan. You don’t want the crust to form all of the way

up the back of each slice of cheesecake.

 

Bake the crust for 5 minutes, then set aside until you are ready to fill it.

 

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment combine the

cream cheese, 1 C sugar, and vanilla.  Mix until smooth.

Add the pumpkin, eggs, remaining cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and ginger and

mix thoroughly on medium speed.  Switch to the whisk attachment and continue

beating until smooth and creamy.

Pour the filling into the pan.

Bake in a water bath for 70 minutes.

Turn off oven and prop the door open with a wooden spoon.  Allow the

cheesecake to come to room temperature while still in the oven – about 3

hours

Remove cheesecake from oven and refrigerate while still in the springform

pan

When the cheesecake has chilled, remove the pan sides and cut into slices

 

Have a delicious day!

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Dec.
03

French Silk Chocolate Pie

I’m certain there’s a way to cut a perfect slice of pie… and I’m just as certain that I have no idea what it is. Honestly. I can’t seem to get a picture perfect slice of pie to save my life. But I know there must be a way because I see pictures of pie slices that look, well, perfect. Sadly mine do not. But we’ll just have to live with my “rustic” looking slice :) As previously posted, I made three of my absolute best pies this Thanksgiving. One was a coconut custard pie and one was this truly incredible french silk chocolate pie. It’s rich, full of flavor, can be dressed up elegantly for a holiday table or dressed down for a barbecue. Best of all, it’s easy and soooooo good!  

I think I’ve mentioned a time or ten that I’m not a big fan of chocolate ;-)  I made other desserts for Thanksgiving but I wanted something special that I knew DH and the kids would rave over… and what else could I choose besides something chocolate.  I remember one time many years ago DH and I were out on a date and I found out his favorite pie is French Silk Chocolate.  I considered it odd that a grown man would love what I thought was “chocolate pudding pie” but years later, I now know I was totally wrong and that French Silk Chocolate is not at all the same at chocolate pudding! LOL.  It’s lighter than pudding… but not light as mousse. 

If you decide to make this pie (and I most surely hope you do!) my one piece of advice would be the following… when you think you’ve mixed it enough…. you haven’t, keep mixing!  This goes for creaming the butter and sugar… and it goes for adding the eggs.  Because I wanted the creamiest, lightest mouthfeel possible, I used caster sugar since it’s so very fine and blends pretty easily.  Even so, I decided to mix, mix, mix a long time. But the end result was certainly worth it :)   This pie was indeed something special… DH loved it… the kids loved it and even a non-chocoholic like me, well I loved it too.

 

If you’d like the recipe, click here.  I added a layer of freshly whipped cream (sweetened with a touch of vanilla sugar) and some freshly grated chocolate over the whole pie.  I’m so glad I made it – being that it’s DH’s favorite I have a sneaky feeling he’ll ask me to make it again.  Today is our wedding anniversary… maybe I shoulda saved this pie for tonight?  Naaaaaah, never postpone dessert ;-)

Have a delicious day!

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Dec.
02

Linzer Sable Cookies – TwD

After sitting out last week I was pretty late to the party with this week’s recipe but luckily these were rather quick and everything came together in a single evening.  It’s Tuesday, we’re baking up something from Dorie.. and this week it’s her Linzer Sable cookies!  These will look gorgeous on your holiday table :)

This week’s TwD host was Noskos of the blog Living the Life and she chose Dorie’s recipe for Linzer Sables. Several months ago I purchased a set of Linzer Cookie cutters when I came across them on sale at a little housewares store. Linzer cookies look so elegant whenever I see them and I’m glad Noskos chose this recipe.  I got to finally use my cookie cutter set and make these beauties :)

The recipe calls for a cup and a half of ground almonds.  Blessed be the food processor… and the person who invented it! LOL!  I discovered that one 6oz bag of sliced almonds becomes almost exactly 1 1/2 cups of ground almonds.  And it’s a good thing, too, since that’s the size bag I had :)  

There’s also a good amount of cinnamon and a bit of ground clove which, for me, made the raw cookie dough extreeeeeeeeemely tasty!  Lately I’m finding I like raw cookie dough a lot more than when it’s baked.  No idea why.

The dough came together just fine, I had no trouble rolling it out and letting it stiffen up in the freezer.  What I did have trouble with is the dough got too soft, too quickly, after I took it from the freezer.  The first few cookies I cut out worked out just fine and dandy but after about 5 minutes the dough was so soft I couldn’t get it off the waxed paper very easily.  This meant I had to refreeze the rest of the dough… and this happened more than once so it took a lot longer than anticipated.  I think it was because I rolled the dough too thin – it was supposed to be about 1/4″ and mine surely wasn’t that. Oh well, live and learn :)

I filled some with strawberry jam and some with apricot jam.  I liked the raw dough better than the baked cookies but I still think they look elegant and I’d be proud to serve these anytime.  If you’d like the recipe, it’s in Dorie’s book on page 134… or visit our host’s blog.  While you’re at it, check out the rest of the TwD bakers and their Linzer Sables as well. 

Have a delicious day!

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