Pear Croustade

Yes, C-R-O-U-S-T-A-D-E Language of Origin:French Definition: a crisp shell (as of toast or puff pastry) in which to serve food Girl never ceases to amaze me. If it had been me that had been eliminated from a spelling bee on the word “croustade”, I never would have wanted to hear that word again, much less … Continue reading “Pear Croustade”

Yes, C-R-O-U-S-T-A-D-E
Language of Origin:French
Definition: a crisp shell (as of toast or puff pastry) in which to serve food

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Girl never ceases to amaze me. If it had been me that had been eliminated from a spelling bee on the word “croustade”, I never would have wanted to hear that word again, much less EAT one. But Girl, well, she never wants to pass up an opportunity to learn about something new, so she actually asked me to make her a croustade after her experience.

I found this recipe on Epicurious that looked pretty simple and tasty. It was VERY easy and quite yummy. All of us liked this a lot, even Boy, who does not normally like fruit desserts. It was great when it was still warm, with some ice cream.

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Before baking.

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After baking.

Pistachio French Macaroons (Macarons)

Yum. These are definitely going to be among my favorite flavors. The pistachio extract was a bit of a pain to find and took a while to be delivered, but it’s definitely essential. I ordered two different kinds to compare and contrast. They are similar in flavor, but the one from Jacksonville Mercantile is clear … Continue reading “Pistachio French Macaroons (Macarons)”

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Yum. These are definitely going to be among my favorite flavors. The pistachio extract was a bit of a pain to find and took a while to be delivered, but it’s definitely essential. I ordered two different kinds to compare and contrast. They are similar in flavor, but the one from Jacksonville Mercantile is clear and the one from Spices, Etc. is yellow-ish in color, so if you’re going to be baking something that is NOT going to end up being colored green, that might matter to you.

Sometime soon, I will type up my adapted version of this recipe, but it’s getting late tonight. I started out with the basic Martha Stewart recipe, but I used pistachios instead of almonds. Unless you’re lucky enough to find pistachio meal, you’ll need to grind the pistachios in the food processor yourself (be sure to start with UNROASTED and UNSALTED ones, and BEWARE: they’re not easy to find). Grind them with the powdered sugar, so that you don’t end up with pistachio butter. In both the meringues and the buttercream, use half vanilla extract and half pistachio extract (the pistachio extract is VERY strong, so I think it would be too much on its own, at the full recipe amount). I added a few drops (about 4?) of Leaf Green gel food coloring to both the meringues and the filling. I used Americolor brand, but any brand of gel will do. I prefer the gel because it’s very concentrated. You don’t need to use as much and it doesn’t mess with the consistency of your final product. I did find that the tops of the meringues browned a bit and it wasn’t quite as obvious, from the top, that they were supposed to be green, rather than just toasted, but they still looked green on the sides and the insides. I am going to try another batch soon, without the food coloring, because one of my guinea pig taste-testers has an allergy to the Yellow #5 dye that is an ingredient in the green dye.

These were YUUUUUUUUUUUUUMMY!

Chai French Macaroons (macarons) with Matcha Green Tea Filling

For this version, I used the original basic recipe, but bumped up the level of Chai spice to 1 tsp. and added some Matcha Green Tea (about 1/2 Tbsp.) to the meringue buttercream. The Chai flavor was EXCELLENT, but the green tea flavor really wasn’t noticeable. It gave the filling a beautiful green color, but … Continue reading “Chai French Macaroons (macarons) with Matcha Green Tea Filling”

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For this version, I used the original basic recipe, but bumped up the level of Chai spice to 1 tsp. and added some Matcha Green Tea (about 1/2 Tbsp.) to the meringue buttercream. The Chai flavor was EXCELLENT, but the green tea flavor really wasn’t noticeable. It gave the filling a beautiful green color, but didn’t have much of a green tea flavor. If I make these again, I will bump up the amount of tea in the filling. The Chai flavor may be too strong for this combination. The Chai meringues might be better with plain vanilla flavoring. The Matcha filling might be better with plain vanilla cookies, too. Obviously, I’m going to keep experimenting with these for while – I’m not sick of them yet! Many thanks to my friend Jennifer and her family, to my parents and to Boy’s 4th grade class for being my taste-tester guinea pigs.

Chai French Macaroons (macarons) with Chocolate Ganache Filling

All in all, not a raging success, but not awful, either. I only added 3/4 tsp. of my Chai Spice Seasoning Blend and it needed MORE, plus the very strong flavor of the ganache overwhelmed the delicate spiciness of the cookies. Back to the drawing board. Something potentially very special coming tomorrow.

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All in all, not a raging success, but not awful, either. I only added 3/4 tsp. of my Chai Spice Seasoning Blend and it needed MORE, plus the very strong flavor of the ganache overwhelmed the delicate spiciness of the cookies. Back to the drawing board. Something potentially very special coming tomorrow.

Chocolate French Macaroons, part 2

Here are the completed, filled chocolate macaroons. I used Martha Stewart’s recipe to make the chocolate meringue cookies, but just happened to have some leftover chocolate ganache in my freezer (doesn’t everyone?), so I used that for the filling, instead of using her version. The recipe that I usually use to make ganache can be … Continue reading “Chocolate French Macaroons, part 2”

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Here are the completed, filled chocolate macaroons. I used Martha Stewart’s recipe to make the chocolate meringue cookies, but just happened to have some leftover chocolate ganache in my freezer (doesn’t everyone?), so I used that for the filling, instead of using her version. The recipe that I usually use to make ganache can be found here:
Baking 911 chocolate ganache for piping

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Surprise after-school snack for Boy and Girl. They are SO spoiled and don’t even know it. They think it’s perfectly normal to have a tray of homemade French cookies, Cara Cara oranges and cold milk waiting for you in the car when your mom picks you up from school. I hope that they get really good jobs when they’re older, so that they can afford to continue to feed themselves in the manner to which they’ve become accustomed. I’d hate to see them holding up signs someday that says “Will work for artichokes and French cheese.”

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The chocolate meringues were definitely the hardest to make and a few of them cracked during baking. These should be refrigerated, like the other ones, but should be pulled out of the refrigerator a few moments before serving to allow the ganache to warm up a little. It’s a little too hard and the flavor is lessened if they are eaten right out of the fridge.

Chocolate…

Chocolate Macaroons coming soon…. Chocolate Meringues, fresh out of the oven, cooling before being filled with chocolate ganache. These will be an after-school surprise for Boy and Girl.

Chocolate Macaroons coming soon….

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Chocolate Meringues, fresh out of the oven, cooling before being filled with chocolate ganache.

These will be an after-school surprise for Boy and Girl.

Cara Cara Orange Macaroons

Cara Cara Orange Macaroons – sorry for the over-exposed photo. Mmmm….made another batch of the macaroons today (original recipe here), but added the very finely chopped grated zest of two Cara Cara oranges to the cookie batter and the juice of one of the oranges to the buttercream (after mixing in the butter). They were … Continue reading “Cara Cara Orange Macaroons”

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Cara Cara Orange Macaroons – sorry for the over-exposed photo.

Mmmm….made another batch of the macaroons today (original recipe here), but added the very finely chopped grated zest of two Cara Cara oranges to the cookie batter and the juice of one of the oranges to the buttercream (after mixing in the butter). They were FABULOUS. I whisked the zest into the almond meal-powdered sugar mixture before it was added to the egg whites. Adding the juice to the buttercream caused it to separate a bit at first, but I just kicked to high speed for a minute or so to incorporate it and it was fine. I undercooked the macaroons just a TINY bit, but they were still OK, just a little softer and not quite as crunchy/chewy on the outside. I like these MUCH better than the original vanilla/almond version. Hubby still prefers the original, but I’m just a big fan of ANY kind of citrus dessert, so I may be biased. Not sure which will be next: Chai or Chocolate. Stay tuned.

French Macaroons

French Almond Macaroons, worthy of being served on my great-aunt Lad’s antique Limoges china. I am feeling like the Goddess of Pastry over here this week. When we were in Europe last summer, we fell in love with Parisian macaroons (macarons). When we got home, I looked all around for a recipe to duplicate them, … Continue reading “French Macaroons”

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French Almond Macaroons, worthy of being served on my great-aunt Lad’s antique Limoges china.

I am feeling like the Goddess of Pastry over here this week. When we were in Europe last summer, we fell in love with Parisian macaroons (macarons). When we got home, I looked all around for a recipe to duplicate them, but got scared away by all of the reviews that I read that said things like:

Okay, I know that at one point in my life, I’ve actually succeeded in making chocolate versions of these little cookies, but recent attempts have resulted in something resembling what a Macaroon should be. They are either cracked, over dried, or so gooey that they fall apart. What’s worse was that they lack the shiney eggshell like sheen.

or

I used the recipe on a la cuisine, referenced in the thread. I think there were too many eggs. Or maybe it was a mixing problem? No smooth, shiny top, no feet. Just a sad, sad sight.

or

Okay, I know when to ask for help. ….I need help. Will any one out there send me any tips or a fool proof recipe for french almond macaroons (vanilla or chocolate). The last 5 days I have been trying to conquer Martha Stewart’s recipe, and have failed miserably. I have baked DOZENS of these ****** cookies to no success. The cookies are cracking on top. I am not able to achieve a beautiful smooth “cookie top”.

or

Tender, picture-perfect macarons are not easy to make. Les Macarons are all about technique, rather than about just following a recipe….I phoned my friend Rob who worked with the chef from Fauchon, and he warned that the batter for perfect macarons needs to be folded just-so.
One extra fold, and it’s all over. Not enough, and you won’t get that little foot.

I was starting to think that these darned things were the Holy Grail of patisserie!

I don’t know what gave me the courage, but I finally just decided this week that, against all evidence that this was a bad idea, I was going to give making these a try. I guess I figured that cat toilet-training alone wasn’t challenging enough…
(that IS progressing, by the way – slowly, but it is progressing)

Well, I have apparently done something right in a previous life or something, because the macaroons turned out perfectly. On the first try. I was absolutely shocked. I was prepared for failure. I had purchased extra eggs, powdered sugar and almond meal to be sure that I had enough ingredients on hand for the second attempt that I believed was going to be inevitable.

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Boy, enthusiastically enjoying a macaroon and what, thanks to my poor photography skills, appears to be (but really isn’t) the World’s Largest Glass of Milk

These were astoundingly delicious and, although I’m afraid that I’m tempting fate with my braggadocio and will be cursed and never able to replicate my feat…..I do think that my macaroons would give the ones that we had in Paris a run for their money. (I’m bracing for the lightning strike being hurled in my direction by the staff of Laduree.)

Seriously, though…they turned out with a shiny, smooth, domed top, a crunchy exterior yet chewy interior, a perfect, ruffly little “foot” and they tasted great (Mexican vanilla, you can’t beat it). My only criticism is that the filling wasn’t quite fluffy enough – it was more like regular buttercream. I think that I may have overcooked the eggs whites a little, so I’ll try to fix that next time.

I used Martha Stewart’s recipe. Here’s another link that has a video clip that you may find helpful.

I followed the recipe fairly closely, but did make a few very minor adjustments:

I decided to make only a half-batch of the buttercream, since that’s all that the macaroons called for and I didn’t want to have a lot left over. As it turned out, even that amount was excessive and I was able to use the remaining buttercream to complete a second batch that I made today (in other words, a half-batch of the buttercream was enough for me to completely fill two batches worth of the cookies).

I used the vanilla extract, but also added about 2 drops of almond extract to the cookie batter, just to “round out” the flavor.

I didn’t do the whole “cookie cutter dipped in flour” thing to mark circles on a Silpat (that just sounded silly and messy to me), but instead used a Sharpie to draw 1.5 inch circles on the BACKSIDE (you don’t want Sharpie ink in your cookies) of a sheet of parchment. The parchment is thin enough that you can see through it to see the circles when you’re piping the batter. I used the screw-top lid of a spice jar as a stencil to make the circles.

I didn’t get the cookie yield that Martha did. My first batch of cookies only made 13 macaroon sandwiches (26 meringues) and my second batch (where I made a concerted effort at uniformity of size) only yielded 20 finished cookies (40 meringues).

I beat the egg whites for the cookie batter a little past medium-soft as I was adding the sugar. Mine were more like medium-stiff.

I didn’t use a tip on my pastry bag, but just used a standard-sized coupler, by itself, instead. I think that a Ziploc bag (with an appropriately-sized hole cut out at one corner) would have worked perfectly fine, too. There is a sizable amount of batter, so if you use a baggie, I would recommend the gallon size.

I will DEFINITELY be making more of these. I’ve got all different kinds of flavor ideas running through my brain:

Cara Cara orange
(I have some delicious ones in my fridge right now)

Gingerbread (I found a recipe online from Spago’s pastry chef)

Chai (I just made a batch of my Chai seasoning mix)

Cinnamon (what’s not to like?)

and

then there’s always the traditional:

Lemon (My mother makes great lemon curd and said she’d make some for me to use as filling)

Chocolate (need I say more?)

Raspberry (ditto)

and Pistachio (although I will probably avoid making them artificially green, as is the practice in Paris)

Stay tuned, for I will definitely be making more of these in the near future…….

Gingerbread Cookies

We went to a friend’s house last night for a little gathering and I brought these for the kids to decorate for dessert. I used this recipe from Epicurious. It’s an odd (to me) recipe, in that you cook the molasses/sugar mixture before preparing the dough, but the dough was easy to work with/roll out … Continue reading “Gingerbread Cookies”

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We went to a friend’s house last night for a little gathering and I brought these for the kids to decorate for dessert. I used this recipe from Epicurious. It’s an odd (to me) recipe, in that you cook the molasses/sugar mixture before preparing the dough, but the dough was easy to work with/roll out and was not too crisp/crunchy after baking. Only 2 of the baked cookies broke during transport and decoration. I think it could have used a slightly stronger gingerbread flavor, so I may use a bit more ginger if I make these again.

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E.

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C.

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Girl.

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L.

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Z.

The siblings: J, D and Boy (and their dads), were at this disappointing football game, while the girls, youngest siblings and moms stayed at home with the cookies.

We resourceful moms also came up with a winter-inspired version of the Lime Basil martini. I’m still playing with the proportions, but it is a Ginger-Vanilla-Lime cocktail (fresh ginger-infused simple syrup, vodka, Mexican vanilla and lime juice). I’ll try and refine and post a recipe and photos soon.

Warren Buffett Blondies (cause they’re THAT RICH)

I don’t remember where I initially read about this pan, but I knew when I saw it that I HAD to have one. It allows you to bake lasagna, cookies, brownies, etc. and EVERY PIECE will have at least two sides of chewy, crispy edge (the best part, in my opinion). No more gooey, half-baked … Continue reading “Warren Buffett Blondies (cause they’re THAT RICH)”

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I don’t remember where I initially read about this pan, but I knew when I saw it that I HAD to have one.
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It allows you to bake lasagna, cookies, brownies, etc. and EVERY PIECE will have at least two sides of chewy, crispy edge (the best part, in my opinion). No more gooey, half-baked brownies from the inside of the pan? Sign me up!

I mentioned this pan to Hubby MONTHS ago and apparently (and uncharacteristically), he remembered. A box arrived today, addressed to Hubby and sent from “Bakers Edge”. Poor guy – he was going to try to surprise me and this was supposed to be part of my Christmas present, but the labeling gave him away. Of course, once I saw it, there was NO WAY that I could wait until Christmas to use it. I am NOTORIOUS for finding out about presents. I used to peek before Christmas when I was a kid (really sorry about that Holly Hobbie gazebo, Mom). I’m also AWFUL at keeping secrets (you’ve now been warned: don’t tell me any!), but I’m particularly awful at keeping secrets about gifts. When I was about 5, I told my newly-minted tennis enthusiast uncle that I couldn’t tell him what his birthday gift was, but that they were yellow and came three-to-a-can.

In addition to craving the pan, I’ve been craving Blondie bars (similar to a brownie without chocolate), ever since seeing the new Nancy Drew movie this summer (Nancy uses homemade lemon bars and blondies as bribes to elicit clues and confessions), so last night, when the pan arrived, my mission was clear.

Blondies
(inspired by Nancy Drew and Bakers Edge)

3 sticks butter, unsalted
2 cups light brown sugar, packed
1 cup dark brown sugar, packed
3 cups flour
1 Tbsp. baking powder
3/4 tsp. salt
3 eggs
1 Tbsp. vanilla extract, Mexican

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Spray Bakers Edge (or 9 X 13) pan generously with cooking spray.

Stir together flour, salt, baking powder and set aside.

Melt butter in a large saucepan over medium heat and then add sugars. Cook butter-sugar mixture until thoroughly combined and bubbly. Set aside to cool for about 2 minutes.

While butter-sugar mixture cools, whisk eggs and vanilla in a large mixing bowl until slightly frothy. Slowly pour butter-sugar mixture into the eggs, whisking constantly (to keep eggs from scrambling – eww!). This is much easier if you have someone to help you: one of you pours, the other whisks. Add the flour mixture and stir to combine. The batter will be VERY thick and caramel-y at this point.

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Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for about 40 minutes or until batter is barely “set” and edges (mmmm….LOTS of them!) are nicely golden brown. They will very likely be a little sunken in the middle of each “row” if you cook them in a Bakers Edge pan – and that’s OK! Let cool, in the pan on a wire rack, for at least 10 minutes before cutting into serving pieces (DO NOT use metal utensils on your Bakers Edge pan).

Makes about 24 (depending upon how you cut them, of course).
You can add chopped nuts, dried fruit, baking chips – or whatever else might strike your fancy, if desired, but additions aren’t necessary – they are plenty good plain.

These are AMAZING and make your house smell SINFUL while they’re cooking. I didn’t think that anything could replace Swedish Spice Cookies in my family’s eyes, but these are giving them a run for their money. Imagine if shortbread and caramel had a love child…that’s what they’re like.