You got butter on my oats!

I squealed with happiness last night when I finally, FINALLY got my walnut butter to be the right consistency! How exciting IS that?? Well.. if you don’t like walnut butter probably not very.. but I love the stuff! It is a nice break from peanut butter once in a while. Not that anyone really needs a break from peanut butter. Just to clear the air there. =)

Cocoa Walnut Butter
2 cups walnut pieces, unsalted
1/2 cup cashews, unsalted
1/8 teaspoon fine sea salt
3 teaspoons dark cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

All I did was roast the walnuts at 350 degrees until one burned my tongue when I tried it. Yep that was my judgement. I forgot to time them. It was probably about 8-10 minutes. I did the same for the cashews and then spun them in the food processor until they were perfectly smooth and glossy! Fantastic!

I did the best thing I could think to do with my perfect butter: I dripped it on my oats! Well gobbed it on, rather. I make oats nearly every morning. The only time I don’t have oats is when I have toast and fruit or use Ashley’s yummy recipe for Vanilla Bean Brown Rice. This morning my oats looked something like this:

Matcha Oats
3 tablespoons rolled oats
2 tablespoons wheat bran
1 tablespoon flax seed
2 teaspoons matcha powder
1/8 teaspoon cayenne
1/2 banana, sliced
3/4 cup almond milk
1/4 cup water

Bring the milk, water and banana up to a simmer over medium/low heat. Mix together oats, bran, flax seed, matcha and cayenne, then whisk into the simmering milk mixture. Cook over low heat until the oats get thick, whisking occasionally. Pour into a bowl and top with yumminess! I topped mine with the cocoa walnut butter, a sprinkle of unsweetened coconut and some maple vanilla granola. Mmmmm!

Enjoy!

Satisfying my latest craving

For weeks I’ve been craving chocolate peppermint cookies. Weeks. I’ve been searching for a recipe that had simple ingredients, cinch-like to pull together and TASTY! Of course, my craving is only part of the reason for the delicious morsels I’m about to share with you today. My friend out in Virginia is due for a Christmas package! What better to send at this time of year than chocolate peppermint crinkles??

I found this recipe a few nights ago online. I didn’t save the webpage, but I wrote down the name of the site. Well, I wrote down “love in the oven”, so I’m assuming that’s the website! When I went to search for it again today, I couldn’t find the recipe anywhere on the site! So if you’re the owner of the recipe and you happen across my blog, let me know and I’ll totally link your webpage here.

Back to the cookies:

Delicious. Sooooo good. Mmm, mmmmmmmmmmm, mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm!

Throw some together today and chow down!

Chocolate Mint Crinkles
1/4 cup dark cocoa powder
1/4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons canola oil
1 egg
1/2 teaspoon peppermint extract
1/2 cup all purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
3 teaspoons powdered sugar mixed with 1/2 teaspoon sea salt for “dusting”

Preheat oven to 350. Combine cocoa powder, sugar and oil in a large mixing bowl. Beat in egg and extract. In a separate bowl, combine flour, baking powder and salt. Add dry ingredients into wet ingredients and mix until well combined. Roll heaping teaspoons of dough into balls and roll in powdered sugar mixture. Place on parchment paper lined cookie sheet and bake 10-12 minutes. Makes about 18 cookies.

Truffles!?

Oh yeah, I made truffles tonight. You know what? They were easy. Totally easy. I have never considered attempting them because I’ve been afraid to make an ooey, gooey mess in the kitchen. (I don’t like getting my hands dirty while I’m cooking..)

I found a recipe on The Food Channel’s website for Matcha Green Tea Truffles.. pure genius! I halved the recipe followed the directions until I got to the last few steps. I didn’t coat the frozen truffles in another layer of chocolate; mainly because I ran out of semi-sweet chocolate and didn’t want to bust into my chocolate chips.

Once the chocolate chip bag is open, it will be gone within days.

Give these truffles a shot. Impress your family and friends!

Matcha Truffles

2 1/2 ounces chocolate (I like really dark chocolate, so I used 2 ounces unsweetened and 1/2 an ounce semisweet)

2 1/2 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon cream

2 tablespoons sugar

1 teaspoon matcha powder, plus extra for rolling

Chop chocolate with a serrated knife and set aside. In a small saucepan, heat cream over medium heat. Whisk in sugar and matcha powder until well dissolved, bringing the mixture up to a boil – stirring constantly. Remove the pot from heat and whisk in chopped chocolate until smooth. Spread chocolate mixture in a shallow dish and refrigerate until firm to the touch.

Using a spoon, scoop up about a half tablespoon worth of chocolate and lightly roll into a ball using your hands. You have to work quickly so the heat from your hands doesn’t melt the chocolate too much. Place on wax paper lined plate. Once you’ve got all your chocolate rolled into balls, stick the plate in the freezer until the truffles are, well, frozen.

Remove the truffles from the freezer and toss in loose matcha powder. Refrigerate in an airtight container!

Mmmmmmmmmmm…

 

Truffle-y!

Pierogies with a side of Cupcake

I’m a bad blogger.  Don’t hate me.  I would cry.

Its hard to make myself leave the house early in the morning to do that gym thing before work.  Its too cold.  I’ve been going after work instead.  It works for me, I’m happier in my nice warm bed for longer periods of time in the morning.  Unfortunately it leaves no time for me to tote my computer over to Starbucks or the B&N to abuse the free interwebz.  My weekends have been crammed with events, making me dizzy just trying to keep up.

I have created.  I have measured, mixed, whipped and baked.  I have rolled, stuffed and boiled.  I have made two fantastic creations.  Homemade pierogies with my Polish side of the family’s recipe and guinness cupcakes topped with a whiskey whipped cream cheese frosting.  Deeeee-lish!

Holy Cupcakes, Batman!

Starting with those cupcakes:  my sister in law turned 30 this year!  She’s so pretty, I love her!

What? You don't like the way we dress??

I made her these cupcakes.  These super-rich chocolate ones.  She wanted me to make something crazy and weird because, well, she knows I love to do that.  She helped me frost them.  Isn’t that swell?  I thought so too, seeing that there were 69 of those mini suckers to frost.  I returned the favor by painting her face on for her costume.  Did I mention these cupcakes were for her birthday party/first annual Halloween bash??  Oh it was a blast.  Oh was there food.

Even more food showed up after this picture was taken..

The sweet side.. including my sis-in-law's awesome rice krispie treat "caramel apple" creations!

Oh did I get a stomach-ache!  Totally worth it though.  (Not shown: the beer dip that created the stomach-ache.  Eaten with pretzels.  No, not eaten.  Devoured.)

Look how cute my niece is!  She was a strawberry butterfly.  What makes a strawberry butterfly?  I’m glad you asked.

A strawberry that’s mated with a butterfly, of course!  I love my family!

Guinness Cupcakes with Whiskey Whipped Cream Cheese Frosting
(cupcake recipe via cupcakeproject.com; frosting recipe via tastykitchen.com)
1 cup Guinness
1 stick plus 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1/2 cup dark cocoa powder
2 cups granulated sugar
1 teaspoon molasses
3/4 cup sour cream
2 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups all purpose flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking soda

8 ounces Philadelphia cream cheese, room temperature
1 cup powdered sugar
1/8 teaspoon sea salt
2 teaspoons whiskey (next time I’ll add more, you couldn’t taste the whiskey)
1 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream, cold

Preheat oven to 350 and line muffin tins with liners. I made mini cupcakes but you could make the big ones if you prefer. Combine the Guinness and butter in a large pot, heating to melt the butter. Once the butter is melted, whisk in the cocoa and sugar. Remove from heat and allow to cool a bit. In a separate bowl, whisk sour cream, eggs and vanilla. Add this mixture to the slightly cooled beer mixture (you don’t want the eggs to cook in there – YUCK. This is why we cooled it first =).. )

Combine the flour and baking soda, then fold gently into the wet ingredients. Spoon or pour batter into the liners and bake for 13-15 minutes (25 if you’re making the big guys), allow to stand in the tins for 5-10 minutes, remove from the tin and cool completely on a cooling rack overnight before frosting.

Speaking of frosting, this frosting is fantastic. The taste is divine, the texture is perfection and you can make it the night before, refrigerate it, drive it an hour unrefrigerated up to your party destination, stick it back in the fridge for an hour, frost the cupcakes and still have it look nice at the end of the night! How’s THAT for awesomeness? You want to know how to make it? Just beat the cream cheese, sugar, salt and vanilla until its smooth, then gradually beat in the heavy cream until its light and fluffy. That’s it! Yum!!

*****

Pierogies you say?  Pierogies I say.  Those little potato filled doughy dreamboats are heaven.  But let me tell you: if you decide to make this recipe, enlist some help.   I had somehow forgotten the fact that when my Aunt Judy had our family over to learn to make pierogies, there were a ton of us rolling and stuffing.

Pierogie making machines. Fueled by sangria.

Doing this recipe solo was a major accomplishment.  I was SO proud of myself!  I was making pierogies for 3 days (accidentally proving the dough keeps well and still rolls out perfectly after two days of refrigeration and bringing back to room temperature).  I ran out of potato filling, so I started filling them with whatever I had on hand – raisins, dried mango, apples..  (bananas and jam don’t work so well unfortunately)

Stuffing the pierogies...

My stepdad loved them (a major compliment since his sister’s been making them for years with a recipe handed down from their mother), but he teased me about the size.  “They’re Barbie pierogies!”

Oh well, they sure were wonderful tasting.  And now I have a whole freezer full of them to take out and boil up whenever my little heart desires!  Score!!

Bubble, bubble...

Homemade Pierogies
(family recipe from Aunt Judy)

5 cups all purpose flour
1/2 tablespoon sea salt
1 egg
1 1/2 cups water
2 tablespoons olive oil

In a stand mixer using your dough hook, add all of your ingredients and mix on low speed until the dough comes together and starts pulling away from the sides of the bowl. If the mixture looks too wet, add a bit of flour; too dry, add a bit of water. This is more of a feel than an actual recipe, so I apologize for the generalizations. Allow the dough to rest while you peel and boil up your potatoes. Now, Aunt Judy taught us to make the mashed potatoes using butter and cheese, then cook it on the stovetop to dry it out (your mixture can’t be too wet or your perogies will burst open). I was gun-shy on this part and decided to just mash up the cooked potatoes without anything but a bit of spice in there. It worked perfectly.

Cool your potatoes, then get to work rolling your dough. Flour your board and, with about 1/5 of the dough at a time (to keep from drying it out too much), begin to roll outward, turning and flipping the dough frequently to make sure it doesn’t stick too much. Of course, you don’t want too much flour either. (haha – sorry!) If you curse and mutter angrily at your dough for not staying rolled out on the cutting board, its the perfect consistency. No really! You want the dough to be thin, maybe a little less than 1/4 of an inch. Use a shot glass, a cookie cutter, the lid from your Pam non-stick spray; whatever you’ve got that’s round and a uniform cutting device; and cut out circles using as much of the dough as you can.

Now’s the machine part. On the stickier side of the dough circle, place about 1/2-1 tablespoon of potato filling (depending on the size you’ve made the circles you might need more. The most important thing is to not OVERfill them. You’ll get the feel to how much potato each circle needs as you go). Being careful not to get any potato on the edges, stretch your dough a bit and press it into the other side of your circle, making sure to really seal up those edges.  You can set the sealed pierogies on a cookie sheet and just keep making those bad boys until the sheet is full.  Then give your fingers a break and start the boiling process (before you have to repeat this process with the other portion of the dough…)

Bring a pot of water to a rolling boil, then salt it pretty heavily.  The amount of pierogies you can boil at one time depends on the size of the pot, just make sure not to crowd the little guys.  Boil the perogies until they float, then continue boiling them for an additional 3-5 minutes.  Remove from the water with a slotted spoon and place them back on the cookie sheet.   Here’s where you can freeze them if you choose to do so.  Just stick that cookie sheet in the freezer for about an hour, take the pierogies off the sheet and throw them in a ziplock bag.  Then throw them back in the freezer.  Voila! 

If you choose to eat them right away, you can do that, too!  Either straight out of the pot or tossed in some melted butter.  You could also fry them up in some butter.  Man they just taste good no matter what you do to them.  Yum, yum, YUM! 

I know my instructions are pretty weak so if you’ve got any questions or if you think I left out a step just let me know!

Ole!

A quick morning dose of chocolate to start off your hump day!

I made up this dough last night because I just needed to make dough.  Do you ever have that problem?  You don’t want to actually bake, you just want to whip up the ingredients leading up to it?  Maybe I’m just odd.  That’s a possibility..  My other reasoning for making the dough last night – my last experiment with dough refrigerated overnight was a raging success.  I wanted to try again with oatmeal cookies!

This recipe was inspired by two separate recipes:  a basic oatmeal chocolate chip cookie one and a mexican chocolate cookie one.  A few weeks ago Amanda and I whipped up and scarfed a recipe for mexican chocolate cookies with a big ol’ bottle of red wine.  Mmm, mmm, mmm… I’ve been craving them ever since!  Why the oatmeal?  Well who doesn’t love oatmeal?  Besides, since the cookies have oatmeal in them you could eat them for breakfast right?

Happy Hump Day everyone!

Mexican Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons canola oil
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon half and half (or milk)
1/2 cup dark rye flour
1/2 cup bread flour
2 tablespoons dark cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon (heaping)
cayenne pepper, to taste
black pepper, to taste
1 cup oats
1/3 cup chocolate chunks

Using a stand mixer, cream together sugar and oil; add egg, vanilla and milk and cream until smooth. In a separate bowl, combine flours, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon and peppers. Slowly add dry mixture into wet, mixing well after each addition until smooth. After the flour mixture is completely combined, add in oats and chocolate chunks.

Refrigerate overnight.

The next day preheat your oven to 350. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and drop dough by the tablespoon (using your nifty little cookie dough scoop if you’ve got one) about an inch apart and lightly press down on dough. Bake about 15 minutes, remove from the oven and allow to cool for 5 minutes on the cookie sheet before transferring to a cooling rack.

Pizza and (root)beer!

Kyle’s birthday was Tuesday!

Happy Birthday!!

It’s why I’ve been so absent! We’ve been busy beavers! Sunday I took him out to dinner to celebrate a bit early. Destination: Sanfratello’s. Pizza choice: Pan pizza with italian sausage, spinach, fresh garlic and black olives.

I like pizza... I... LIKE IT!

Everybody “mmmmmmmmmm…” with me!

Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm…

It was Kyle’s first taste of traditional Chicago style deep dish pizza.

Can I eat it now??

What did he think?

Clean Plate Club member

Since he had to work on his actual birthday until 10 PM, I used the few hours I had after work to bake him a birthday cake! I had planned on making a Dr Pepper cake but, after some research, decided it was going to be tooooooo sweet! I opted to whip up a Root Beer Float Cake I found over at Joy the Baker. And I got to use my castle bundt pan!


Oh man. Oh man oh man oh man. This cake is phenomenal. So rich and chocolatey (I mean, one CUP of dark cocoa powder, that’s right up my alley. And Kyle’s!) The only changes I made were to cut the granulated sugar by 1/4 cup and use 1/4 cup granulated sugar plus one teaspoon of molasses in place of the brown sugar. I also added 2 tablespoons of brown rice flour and one tablespoon of dark rye flour to make up for the lack of sugar mass. Oh yeah, and I could only get my hands on salted butter, so I emitted the salt from the recipe.

If you’ve never been to Joy’s site, I suggest you scoot on over and check it out. She’s got some amazing recipes and she’s a hoot to read. One of my favorite blogs!

Oh. And please do yourself a favor. Make this cake. You will NOT regret it.


*CHOMP*

Too-chocolatey-for-words sorbet

Speechless?

I tried.  I couldn’t think of the right way to describe this decadent chocolate sorbet I made with my brand new ice cream maker!

I picked this bad boy up at Sears for $40! I was so happy! I’ve been waiting to have an ice cream maker since the beginning of this year and I finally took the plunge! Now I can finally get all these crazy ice cream/frozen yogurt ideas out of my head!

My first thought was to do a watermelon basil sorbet. Of course, after a long morning of internet searches, I settled on a recipe from Smitten Kitchen for chocolate sorbet. Yeah, just looking at that title just changed my mind like that!

Well I decided to change it up just a bit since I like my chocolate darker and more bitter than most. This was still plenty sweet and oh-so-rich. Chocolatey heaven in a bowl. I could have let the ice cream maker run a bit longer but I was too impatient to wait!

A weakness. Oh well!

Chocolate Basil Sorbet
1 cup skim milk
1 cup water
3/4 cup special dark cocoa powder
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1 tablespoon fresh basil, finely chopped
3 ounces unsweetened chocolate, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon almond flour
1 cup broken graham crackers, optional (I used my homemade graham crackers)

In a large saucepan, whisk together milk and half the water, sugar, salt, cocoa powder and basil. Bring to a low boil, whisking constantly. Remove from heat and whisk in chopped chocolate, extract, honey, flour and remaining water until smooth. Pour mixture into another container and chill until thoroughly cooled. Freeze in ice cream maker according to manufacturer’s instructions. A few minutes before the sorbet is finished, add graham crackers. Then try not to devour the whole recipe. ;)

Update:  The leftover sorbet firms up pretty nice in the freezer!  At least I can’t dig into it so easily now that its more solid!

Mmmm.. graham crackers without the graham!

<insert chorus of angels here>

I have done it! I’ve made graham crackers! Oh man it was so easy. And they were SO good! Oh thankyouthankyouthankyou Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World!!

Switching up the ingredients until I was dizzy (true to form, I know), I ended up with some truly unique and awesome graham crackers. It was hard to even wait until they were cooked! I kept eating the scraps I sliced off instead of adding them to the re-rolling pile! But they were 100 times better after they were baked, so try really, really hard to not follow my (bad) example!

I think I’m going to try throwing these into some ice cream with my new ICE CREAM MAKER! More on that bad boy later!

Stack-o-goodness!

Cocoa Almond Graham Crackers
3/4 cup all purpose flour
1/2 cup dark rye flour
1/4 cup wheat bran
1/4 cup packed almond meal
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 tablespoon dark cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons molasses
3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
1/4 cup skim milk

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and set aside. In a large bowl, mix flours, cocoa powder, baking soda, cinnamon and salt. In a separate bowl, whisk together oil, molasses and extracts. Pour wet mixture into dry mixture and whisk gently with a fork. Add milk and keep stirring until mixed. Use hands to fully form a pliable dough. Place dough ball on a lightly floured surface, sprinkle a light coating of flour on top and roll out until about 1/8 inch thick. Using a pizza cutter, cut dough into desired sizes. (I got roughly 29 graham crackers) Strip away rough edges and add to “re-rolling” pile. Using a thin spatula, move slices to baking sheet and use a fork to lightly poke holes in cracker dough. Bake 12 – 14 minutes depending on size. Allow to cool completely on cookie sheet.

Nom nom NOM!

Finally, perfect cookies!

I am so proud I’m beaming! I’ve FINALLY found the secret to perfectly crispy, chewy cookies! FINALLY!

Perfection!

Better yet:

They’re made with olive oil, not butter. Oh yeah.


Chocolatey, olive oily and with a hint of roasted garlic. Yep. Garlic.

No I’m not crazy. I’m just adventurous!

So if you’re an adventurous soul as well, give it a shot. You’ll love it!

Drool-worthy for sure.

Just try to share so you aren’t the only one with garlic breath!

Garlicky Chocolate Chunk Cookies
1 cup all purpose flour
2 tablespoons dark rye flour
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup plus 3 tablespoons granulated sugar
2 teaspoons molasses
1 egg, room temperature
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 clove roasted garlic, crushed
1 cup chocolate chunks

Combine flour, salt and baking soda, set aside. With a stand mixer, beat oil, sugar and molasses until it starts to get a bit airy. It won’t get fluffy, poor olive oil. =( After the sugar and oil are combined, beat in egg, vanilla and garlic until well incorporated. Add flour mixture a bit at a time until well mixed, then add in chocolate chunks. Cover dough and refrigerate at least 24 hours.

The next day, preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and (without allowing it to come to room temperature) drop dough onto parchment paper by roughly 2 tablespoon rounds that are an inch to an inch and a half apart. Gently press dough down a bit to help flatten the cookies out as they don’t spread much. Bake cookies 12-14 minutes. Remove from oven and allow to cool for 5 minutes. Then chow down!

Nom nom nom!

Chocolate Pane Francese

Yesterday during some downtime at work I stumbled across a recipe for a heavenly treat. It was over at Chocolate and Zucchini, but, though it looked so deliciously decadent, a sourdough starter is a teensy bit out of my comfort zone. However I was not to be deterred! Armed with this awesome bread idea, I turned to that bread baking cookbook my mom gave me to suit my novice bread making skills!

I took the Pane Francese recipe and altered it a bit to include the ingredient of the hour! Since I had never made such a bread before, I went light on the cocoa powder and added in some chopped up bittersweet chocolate.

We were having issues with our internet service so we had to wait around all day for the company to come out and reattach the apartment to the telephone line… Then we had to reset the router… Only the determined bread maker can maneuver around the modem and router that have taken up a temporary residence under my mixing cart!

Haha!

Let me say this: the bread smelled utterly amazing while it was baking. Kyle and I were chomping at the bit to try it. Normally I can control myself and at least wait until the next morning to slice into a loaf – but not this bad boy! It made it about 5 minutes before the knife came out and the beautiful crust was broken.

Oh. My. God.

This bread was heavenly. Chocolatey but not sweet, crusty on the outside and soft on the inside. Wow. Perfection in loaf form.

This is going to be a staple in my house for sure.

Chocolate Pane Francese
1 package active dry yeast
1/4 cup warm water
3 cups all purpose flour
2 tablespoons cocoa powder
1 teaspoon turbinado sugar
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 cup ice cold water
1/4 cup skim milk
1 ounce bittersweet chocolate, roughly chopped

In a small bowl, sprinkle yeast over warm water, mix with fingers and let stand until foamy. In stand mixer, using hook attachment, combine flour, cocoa, sugar and salt. Add yeast mixture, milk and water then beat on medium speed until well blended, adding bittersweet chocolate about halfway through. On low speed, beat the dough until elastic and shiny, adding flour by teaspoons if the dough is too sticky. The dough should be sticky, but touchable.

Cover bowl with plastic wrap, a towel or the lid to a large bowl (as long as the dough can breathe it’s all good) and set in a warm place to rise until doubled in size, about 1 1/2 hours.

Sprinkle dough with flour and turn out onto a well floured surface. Knead by hand for a few minutes to incorporate the flour and make the dough easier to work with. Cut the dough in half and roll each half into long rectangles. Starting at the short side roll dough tightly, pressing down each seam as you roll. They will be long loaves, so don’t worry!

Cover lightly and allow loaves to rise for 30 minutes.

Preheat oven to 475. Transfer loaves to greased cookie sheet (or sheets in my case since my oven is so tiny). Set aside for 15 minutes to allow them to get slightly puffy.

Place bread in the oven and reduce heat to 425. Bake 20 minutes or until crust is nice and crispy feeling. Turn off the oven, crack the door and allow bread to sit in the cooling oven for 5-10 minutes. Remove from oven and immediately transfer to a cooling rack. Then DIG IN!