Best of 2010


With 2010 ending tonight I can't help but get a little nostalgic. It's been quite the year, with many changes in my life, some I've loved and others I've merely tolerated. It's a little humbling to looks through all of the 140 posts I've put up this year, see how I've grown (and also grimace while planning to retake some photos). Above are the five most popular posts I put out this year old fashioned sugar cookies. butterbeer ice cream sandwichesapple rosette crostata, the oatmeal cookie bake off, and chocolate buttermilk cake donuts topped the lists. Thank you for sharing them. :) 

2010 was filled with ice cream, and not that I won't be making ice cream anymore, but surely not once a week. (My waistline is very happy about this!). People ask me often what my favorites of them were, and I have to say it's hard to choose! Brown butter baked alaskabrownie batter ice creamcannoli ice cream sandwichesricotta lemon cardamom ice cream & gingersnap sandwichessalted caramel ice cream and triple chocolate cookie dough ice cream were at the tops of my list. Of all the ice creams I made I loved....most of them (frankly, I'm still deciding about white truffle ice cream) I'd call a year in studying ice creams to be a success. 


So what's for next year? Oh so many things! But for my focus of the year? Let's call it "condiments." This year I will be making sugars, salts, jellies, jams, syrups, butters, spices and oils. It's not as closely focused as ice cream, but will be SO much fun. :) To confess, I've already made one sugar, two jellies, one jam, one syrup, and two butters in my excitement! It's going to be a very flavorful year! There will be some canning involved, preserving, drying, and freezing. By the end of the year my pantry will be stocked full of amazing things! 


I hope that you all have a lovely New Years! I'll see you again in 2011! 


Cheers!



Five Spice Macarons with Caramel

Chinese cassia cinnamon, star anise, anise seed, ginger and cloves are added to these dainty french cookies sandwiches with caramel and loaded with flavor. 
I was trying to come up with a way to make our gingerbread houses into a post. Though they are rather cute, I highly doubt that gluing kit-kats together with royal icing constitutes a recipe! So instead there will be a juxtaposition in this post. Successful macaron recipe and attempts at gingerbread houses. 
I'll give you a few guesses on the top left gingerbread house before I tell you what it is. No, it's not a shack from Deliverance. Guess again! Nothing Tim Burton whatsoever, though yes, there is some resemblance to his Hansel and Gretel project. Good guess! Try once more. Oh, and here's a clue....that gummy bear at the bottom that looks like he met the business end of a gingerbread Narwhal, he's meant to look like he's fishing. Oh, sad! You wasted your last guess on Tom Sawyer. Nope. ....okay, so I have no idea what you guessed, most likely it was far more entertaining that my guesses. 

The real answer is Falling Water by Frank Lloyd Wright. Bonus points for creativity. This was Brandon's invention. The rest of us at our gingerbread house competition were a bit more traditional.

By traditional I mean that my roommate Julie and I made houses not out of architectural guide books. Julie made a good solid structure. She was not taken in by the guiles of our competition. No, no. She built the only house that was still standing by the end of the night. (Brandon, I ate your house's roof as soon as I saw your taillights. Sorries!). I on the other hand.........well...........

Falling Water taken from this site
I made a Victorian house. It had cellar doors, a bay window, a chimney, and about 32 pieces that I baked up. I got the pattern from an online site and should have been VERY wary that there was no completed picture! I can only assume that there is no actual way of completing this house! In the end I had an okay structure, without the cellar, bay windows or chimney. It did have a nice roof and snow (bottom right of the collage) but it was not a Victorian house by any stretch of the imagination. In all reality it was a basic stucco cookie cutter home I could see anywhere in the Southwestern section of the United States. SAD! After cutting and re-cutting all those little pieces, half of them just wouldn't work out......and to top it all off the darn thing collapsed. (I blame my fake snow. I think it was too heavy for the load bearing walls to manage). It was an excellent learning experience.

Gingerbread Tips (that I learned from failure) 

1. keep it simple people! 
2. decorate the walls before assembling the house. 
3. know what your completed house looks like. gingerbread puzzles are not fun. (I had to re-arrange the walls a few times before they were in their proper places). 
4. re-cut all the walls after baking. they spread out and that's no good. 
5. watch the weight of your roof! I used fondant to cover the roof. be wary! 

After all that I have to now find a way to transition to the juxtaposed macarons. Ha. I'm not that great a writer. Not. Gonna. Happen.

These macarons were ones I made at my mother's house and took to the family Christmas dinner. I made them a bit "spicy" shall we say. Very flavorful. I used my Chinese Five Spice powder (Chinese cassia cinnamon, star anise, anise seed, ginger and cloves) which is not the traditional mix with Fennel in it (thank heaven!). Consider them my redemption for failing miserably with gingerbread this year. I found the spice to be strong and addictive, my mother would have halved it. Take your pick! One teaspoon or two you can't go wrong with five spice and caramel! 

Caramel Filling

As adapted from Epicurious

2 large egg yolks
6 tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature
1/4 cup whipping cream
2 cups powdered sugar
5 tablespoons water

Place yolks in a stand mixer. Bring 4 tablespoons butter and cream to simmer in heavy small saucepan. Gradually whisk hot cream mixture into yolks.

Stir sugar and 5 tablespoons water in heavy medium saucepan over low heat until sugar is dissolved. Increase heat and boil without stirring until syrup is deep amber color, occasionally brushing down sides of pan with wet pastry brush and swirling pan so caramel will color evenly, about 10 minutes.

Slowly whisk hot caramel into yolk mixture, then whisk until smooth. Transfer caramel mixture to small bowl; let stand until no longer warm to touch about 1 hour. Whisk in remaining butter. Cover and chill one day prior to use. 


Chinese Five Spice Macarons 

100 g. egg whites
25 g. white sugar
200 g. powdered sugar
110 g. ground almond meal
1 tsp. (or 2 tsp. for a kick) chinese five spice powder (without fennel! see above! there are different variations on five spice powder)

Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. 

In a stand mixer, fitted with the whisk attachment, whip the egg whites into a foam, gradually adding the sugar. Continue to beat into a meringue. 

Sift together powdered sugar, spices, and almond meal to remove any clumps. Gently sift into meringue gradually folding in, usually as few strokes as possible.  

Moving quickly fill a disposable pastry bag with the macaron batter with a 3/4 inch wide cut end. Pipe small rounds one inch in diameter and one inch apart, onto the baking sheets. Allow to rest for half an hour. 

Preheat the oven to 300. 

Bake for 15-20 minutes. My experience is that if the macarons are hard to remove from the paper, they need more time to bake. Allow to cool on the pan and then remove. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator until ready to fill. 

To Fill: 

Scoop and roll two teaspoons of caramel, gently flattening into a disc roughly the size of the macarons, gently sandwich between two. 

Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator. 



Parmesan Thyme Shortbread

After all the sweets at Christmas some salty shortbread is a great way to ease the sugar rush. The thyme accentuates the flavor of the Parmesan and makes for a bright cookie that would easily pair with a sparkling wine (or Sparkling grape juice!) for New Years. 

I promised you when I went to the  Metropolitan Cooking & Entertainment Show that I was going to try my hand at making the Parmesan thyme, cheddar (and rosemary) and white chocolate salted oatmeal cookies I tried from Cookie Zen.....and I came through! I've already made the sharp cheddar Scottish shortbread and the  white chocolate salted oatmeal cookies so it was time to round out the batch! The Scottish shortbread should go well with red wines, and the oatmeal would be similar to these lovely little Parmesan ditties and go well with the sparkling wines (and juices). Wondering about all the (things in parentheses?). I don't drink. I'm dry tipsy. The alcohol in cough syrup is enough to make me dance on a table! Okay, so that's an exaggeration, but I trust these wine suggestions from Cookie Zen. 

I have recipes for plenty of the cookie pairings they recommend, so for New Years why not whip up batches of these cookies to pair with the wine you'll be drinking at your parties? Fun and inventive, I'm sure your guests will enjoy it. And the kids can join in too with their sparkling juices (like me)! 

Cherry Tea Cakes Pairing Guide: 

Sparkling Wine/Sparkling White Grape or Peach: Parmesan Thyme Shortbread (recipe below), white chocolate salted oatmeal cookies and lemon basil shortbread

White Wine/ Sparkling White Grape or Pear:  gingersnaps, lemon coconut sables, and macarons



It's a really fun idea, for New Years or book club parties! I hope you enjoy it and these cookies! 

Parmesan Thyme Shortbread

1/2 cup unsalted butter
1/2 tsp. kosher salt
1/4 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
1 cup shredded Parmesan cheese 
1 cup flour
1 tsp. thyme 

Using electric mixer fitted with paddle attachment, beat together butter, salt, and black pepper at medium speed just until blended. Add Parmesan and flour and mix at low speed just until mixed thoroughly. Use your hands to gather the dough into a ball and then press into a disk, wrap in plastic wrap and chill for half an hour.

Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.

On lightly floured surface, roll out dough to 1/2-inch-thick round. Sprinkle thyme over top and proceed to roll dough to 1/2 inch thick. Cut dough into one inch squares and place one and a half inches apart on the lined cookie sheets.

Bake until lightly golden and beginning to brown on edges, about 11 to 13 minutes. Cool on sheets.

Stollen

Stollen is a traditional German Christmas bread. This version replaces the candied fruits with cinnamon, sugar, and nuts for a new twist on an old classic!

Merry Chrismas Eve! ....well for the Christmas celebrators. For everyone else, happy day after festivus, and a few days to kwanzaa and happy friday should cover just about everyone else! :) 

I'm back in Arizona! Glorious, warm, sunny, beautiful, cactus filled Arizona! For the next four days I'll be running around spending time with family and friends, eating, baking, and laughing the days away. WOOT! This is a much needed warm vacation. London and Edinburgh were a delight, and London, I know you guys are broke but seriously CRANK THAT HEAT UP!  I love the home vacations because I get to sleep in, be lazy, and my mom will probably make me a sandwich if I ask nicely, which as a grown adult I should be ashamed of myself for but I'm not! Oh, well, and there's presents. Who doesn't love that? 

I'm about to go shopping with my mom actually. We're running over to one of my favorite stores to buy her present! Yes, she has to be there. Why? My mother has built herself a cabin and that means she has a whole new kitchen to outfit! Now, she really does own two of just about everything (and fifteen if it is something for cake!)......except for spices! Yes, I'm telling you because I know she won't be on the internet before we leave. Ha! I'm sneaky. I am taking her spice shopping to make sure she has everything she needs to bake herself silly up in the mountains! And wow does she L-O-V-E baking in the mountains! When we go camping she's a gourmet. While camping? Yes! It's a great accomplishment! So I want to make sure she has some gourmet spices to cook with! So excited. I love spice shopping...and it means we can pick up some wonderful Vietnamese cinnamon like I used for this stollen! 

The 2010 December Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Penny of Sweet Sadie’s Baking. She chose to challenge Daring Bakers’ to make Stollen. She adapted a friend’s family recipe and combined it with information from friends, techniques from Peter Reinhart’s book.........and Martha Stewart’s demonstration.

I turned my stollen into French toast! It has made for a perfect breakfast! Absolutely delicious! I highly recommend it! Perfect for a Christmas breakfast! 

Happy holidays! 

Holiday Stollen

¼ cup lukewarm water about 110Âş F
2 packages (4 1/2 teaspoons) active dry yeast
1 cup milk
10 tablespoons unsalted butter
5½ cups all-purposeflour
½ cup sugar
¾ teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon Vietnamese cinnamon
3 large eggs, lightly beaten
3 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 cup hazelnuts, chopped cooked chestnuts, almonds, or pecans
1 1/3 cups packed golden brown sugar
2 1/2 tablespoons Vietnamese cinnamon
3 tablespoons flour
Melted unsalted butter for coating the wreath
Confectioners’ sugar for dusting wreath

Pour warm water into a small bowl, sprinkle with yeast and let stand 5 minutes. Stir to dissolve yeast completely.

In a small saucepan, combine milk and butter over medium - low heat until butter is melted. Let stand until lukewarm, about 5 minutes.

Lightly beat eggs in a small bowl and add vanilla extracts.

In a stand mixer with paddle attachment, stir together the flour, sugar, salt, and cinnamon.

Then mix in the yeast/water mixture, eggs and the lukewarm milk/butter mixture. This should take about 2 minutes. It should be a soft, but not sticky. When the dough comes together, cover the bowl with either plastic or a tea cloth and let rest for 10 minutes.

Begin kneading mixing with the dough hook adding additional flour if needed. The dough should be soft and satiny, tacky but not sticky. Knead for approximately 6 minutes by machine.

Lightly oil a large bowl and transfer the dough to the bowl, rolling around to coat it with the oil. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap.

Put it in the fridge overnight. The dough becomes very firm in the fridge (since the butter goes firm) but it does rise slowly… the raw dough can be kept in the refrigerator up to a week and then baked on the day you want.

Let the dough rest for 2 hours after taking out of the fridge in order to warm slightly.

Line a sheet pan with parchment paper. Punch dough down. Divide dough in half. Pat each half into 10 x 16-inch oval.

Mix together nuts, cinnamon, brown sugar and flour. Sprinkle over top of the two halves.

Roll each half up as you would a cinnamon roll or a jelly roll; pat gently. Place on prepared sheet. Cover and let rise in warm draft-free area until almost double in volume, about 2 hours.

Position rack in lowest third of oven and preheat to 350°F. Bake until loaves are golden and sound hollow when tapped on bottom.

Transfer to a cooling rack and brush the top with melted butter while still hot. Immediately tap a layer of powdered sugar over the top through a sieve or sifter. Wait for 1 minute, then tap another layer over the first. The bread should be coated generously with the powdered sugar.

Let cool at least an hour before serving.

Slice and serve! And it makes great French toast!

End of Year Survey!

Hi all!

I have LOVED writing this blog over the last year. Pretty please help me out and let me know what I do well and what I.......well DON'T! :) I want to get better and this will totally help me!

Thank you and happy holidays!

Peppermint Marshmallows & Chocolate Spoons

If you want to add a little zing to your winter's hot cocoa try out these adorable peppermint flavored pink and white swirled homemade marshmallows! 

Oh what a week! I have spent the majority of my time pouring over food trends lists for 2011! I must say...I'm not incredibly impressed. There are a few things I am wildly excited over, but it just felt like a whole lot of the same things we've been seeing for years! Such a shame! I just wrote an article on it for the Washington Examiner on it (that just posted! yay!). It's somewhat sad but true, but the opening five words are really all you'll need to know for the trends.

I am really looking forward to Korean food taking off. I am passionate about bulgolgi and love my little trips out to Annandale (just don't go to Gom Ba Woo easily the worst I've had).

Okay, I need to think about ANYTHING but food trends. It's been making my eyes hurts to stare and read through most of these lists............so let's think about peppermint marshmallows!

A little while back I fell in love with making my own sugar out of peppermint candies. Thirty seconds in a food processor and I would have the perfect peppermint flavored powdered sugar. Delightful! I've been having fun making ice cream with it and decided it was about time to try out something else! So why not marshmallows! I thought up some adorable marshmallows and off it went! I hope you enjoy them! My favorite part right now...the mint is SO calming. Which is fantastic to calm my nerves about food trends.

Another little thing I did was to cover spoons with dark and white chocolates. The instructions are so simple! Melt chocolate, dip a spoon in to cover, and put on a sheet of wax paper in the freezer to set. Repeat with white chocolate! They are perfect for stirring hot chocolate with and add a little decorative flair. I have away the spoons and bags of marhsmallows to my friends for them to enjoy.

Cheers!

Homemade Marshmallows
Adapted from Alton Brown

1/4 cup confectioners' sugar
1/4 cup cornstarch
Nonstick spray

3 packages unflavored gelatin
1 cup ice cold water, divided
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 cup powdered peppermint candies
1 cup light corn syrup
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
red food coloring

First things first prepare your pan! Spray the pan heavily with cooking spray (or grease with shortening if you prefer). Mix cornstarch and powdered sugar in a separate bowl. Pour about half the mixture into the pan and shake around the coat. Over wax paper, tap out any excess powder. Picking the wax paper up, return the excess powder to the bowl.

Fit your stand mixer with its whisk attachment. Pour the gelatin and ½ cup of the ice water into its bowl. Allow to sit as you continue to make the marshmallow syrup.   
In a small saucepan combine: 1/2 cup water, granulated sugar, peppermint sugar, corn syrup and salt. Cover and cook on medium or medium high heat for about 3 minutes. No need to stir.

Take the lid of the syrup, and attach your candy thermometer to the side of the pan. Continue to boil for about 7 minutes until the syrup reaches 240 degrees and remove from heat immediately.

Put your stand mixer on low speed churning the gelatin mixture for a few turns and then, while running, SLOWLY pour the syrup down the side of the bowl. When all the syrup is incorporated, increase to a high speed. I cover the stand mixer with a tea towel for the first few minutes to prevent hot syrup from flying around my kitchen.  Continue to whip until the mixture becomes very thick and is lukewarm, approximately 12 -13 minutes. Add the vanilla, during the last minute of whipping.

WARNING: This part is tricky and requires you to move FAST! Pour the majority of the marshmallow cream into a the prepared pan. Leave a small bit into the bowl. Work quickly and add in some food coloring until it reaches the color you prefer. Quickly drizzle over the top and swirl the marshmallow with a knife in a figure 8 pattern. 

If you have a sugar shaker, I recommend shaking on a little powdered sugar (or peppermint powdered sugar) to coat slightly. Then take a few tablespoons of the powdered mixtures and brush on over top of the marshmallows. Allow to sit for 4 hours or overnight. Keep the remainder of the powder mixture.

When you cut the marshmallows, you’re going to want to dip each side in the powder sugar mixture to keep it from sticking to everything it touches. At this point you’re ready to eat them!

Sharp Cheddar Scottish Shortbread

The sharp cheddar crisped inside and out of this Scottish shortbread is addictive. These savory cookies are hard to put down.
Did I say they were hard to put down? Apparently they are also hard to keep your hands on! Butchie picked out an "ugly" cookie for us to split. I turned my back and she ate my half! So she picked out another less-than-ideal cookie for me to try. She. Ate. It. Too. [I apologize for nothing. Move faster next time. --B.]

Needless to say SHE loved these cookies right off the bat. Took me a few hours to actually get to eat one for myself! Not fair!....okay, so I was horribly busy. These little ditties are just one of the many treats we put together for joint efforts at holiday treat boxes for our friends. Butch made a few things, I made a few things, and then we spent a whole night making cookies together. By the end of the night we had twenty different "combo packs" of two very different varieties, hurting feet and bags under our eyes. It was a LONG night. [So long I needed to eat extra cookies for fuel. Lots of extra cookies. --B.]

I've hardly finished eating the last of the cookies and I already and plotting my next batch. Butchie may not be invited, but only so I can get a few to eat as well!

If somehow this post makes it up without her additions (sad! they are so funny!) it is because she is out West for her father's retirement from the Air Force. [24 years as an F-15 pilot, with more time spent in the cockpit of that plane than anyone on active duty as of today. Why yes, my dad IS a rock star. Oh hey, I made it to the post in time! --B.] He's getting a nice big ceremony that she wouldn't miss for the world. [Lucky you, I managed both :) Anyway, these cookies are delicious, even if they're more like a cheese cracker than a "cookie," exactly. Enjoy! And many congratulations to my dad, who might just end up lucky enough to have a batch of these made for him while I'm home. --B.]

Cheers!

Sharp Cheddar Scottish Shortbread

1/2 cup unsalted butter
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Pinch of cayenne pepper
8 ounces extra-sharp white Cheddar cheese, grated
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour

Using electric mixer fitted with paddle attachment, beat together butter, salt, black pepper, and cayenne at medium speed just until blended. Add Cheddar and flour and mix at low speed just until smooth. Press dough into disk, wrap in plastic wrap and chill for half an hour.

Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.

On lightly floured surface, roll out dough to 1/4-inch-thick round. Using 1 1/2 round cutter, cut out rounds and arrange 1 1/2 inches apart on baking sheets.

Bake until lightly golden and beginning to brown on edges, about 11 to 13 minutes. Cool on sheets.

Pumpkin Ice Cream Pie with a Gingerbread Crumb Crust

Pumpkin pie is traditional for the season, but I went for a new take and made pumpkin ice cream pie! The gingerbread crust is a flavorful addition. 

I simply have to tell a horribly funny story.....well, funny for foodies. 

Yesterday was my office's "Christmas Party" which is a Christmas party, because our boss is staunch that saying "happy holidays" is wrong! Wrong I tell you! WRONG!.....I celebrate Christmas. I do. His vigor is far past insensitivity. In most ways he's a Scrooge, but heaven forbid you wish him a happy holiday.....in any event, a holiday lunch at The Palm. 

So, the waiter comes over to tell us the specials. He tells us that the soup of the day is a vichyssoise. He has to repeat it to every other person because the restaurant is so crowded and loud. So I hear him explain, not once, not twice, but five times that the vichyssoise is like a corn chowder with lobster. I had to bite my tongue to keep from asking the waiter how much corn France grows annually. I know the answer but it's not an obvious one. In fact France is the 6th largest corn producer in the world, and has been growing corn since the 1550s. However, I also know the cultural stigmas surrounding corn and that only in the last few decades has it become a somewhat accepted vegetable. None of these facts changes the point that Vichyssoise is a leek and potato soup. 

Each time he kept explaining that a vichyssoise was a warm corn chowder I laughed on the inside....and of course, I ordered it. I actually had the audacity to call the front desk and ask them what the soup of the day was. They told me it was a corn bisque with lobster. Close enough. The soup was closer to a bisque than a chowder. Our waiter had to have been new. Either way, I was amused. The soup conundrum kept me laughing for the rest of day. 

Okay, so none of that has to do with ice cream, and I can see no way to segue into it. So, I won't. 

Cheers!

Pumpkin Ice Cream 

2 eggs
1 cup packed brown sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp ginger
1 tsp. nutmeg
pinch of kosher salt
1 cup pumpkin puree 
2 cups cream
1 cup whole milk 
15 small gingerbread cookies
3 tablespoons melted butter

In a stand mixer combine the eggs and sugar.  Beat for one minute until light and fluffy. 

Gently mix in the cream, milk, pumpkin and seasonings. 

Transfer the mixture to an ice cream maker. Allow the ice cream to churn until finished and freeze according to the manufacturer’s instructions, or into an gingerbread pie crust to freeze. 

To make a gingerbread crust simply crumble gingerbread cookies and drizzle some melted butter onto the crumbs. Mix together and press into a pie mold. Layer ice cream over top and allow to chill until just set. Serve immediately. 

The Christmas Countdown!

As it turns out I have one of the craftiest, cutest mothers in the world. Today I opened a package and found a few glorious things inside. 
My mother sent me a package!!! She's always been good with packages. When I was Elle Woods from Legally Blonde for Halloween I recieved a package full of everything from pink slippers, to pink nail polish, and pink scarfs. I own glittery shamrocks, pumpkin table runners, and nearly my entire movie collection thanks to these packages that started my freshman year of college.

This package has easily topped them all.

I opened a very large box to find instructions and 25 decorated match box magnets decorated for the holiday season! SO CUTE! When I opened the first one it said to open envelope 1, which instructed me to buy a Christmas wreath for my front door! My mother is adorable!

So now I have a wreath with berries and pine cones hanging  on my bright red front door, calling out Christmas cheer to anyone who looks out way.

I'm very excited to see what is in all the match boxes! Not to mention the numbered gifts that go with them!
day 1: wreath a symbol of the never ending nature of love...having no beginning and no end. 
Day 2: Cookies! An envelope filled with Cookie Recipes! 
day three: TREE! my mother bought me silicone bake ware in the shape of trees! you'll see these in an upcoming post for sure!
day four: candles! i was instructed to go a buy some pretty ribbons and such to make a lovely display in my home with these battery powered candles! so cute! 
Day Five: This one won't have a pictures. I opened up the envelope for day five only to find another envelope inside for me to give to someone else. My instructions were to write a letter to my cousin J.D. who is currently serving out of the country and will not be with us this Christmas. It's not photogenic, and it's not a flashy present, but I think it might have the most holiday spirit out of any of the gifts yet. I'm proud of my cousin and am very happy to wish him a merry Christmas!
day 6: STAR! I received lovely star shaped red and green ramekins!
day 7: MUSIC! I got a gift card instructing me to buy Christmas music! 
day 8: GIFTS! yay! I got a nice little parcel with a nice little gift bow that had a lovely gift card in it! 
Day 9: A chocolate orange in honor of the sweet story of the Christmas Orange and the true meaning of Christmas!

Day 10: Baby, It's Cold outside! My mother gave me some money and told me to buy clothes to bundle up in! I NEED THEM SO MUCH!

Day 11: Give Service! My matchbox had a note in it telling me to do some small acts of service around my house for my roommates. :)

Day 12: Give Thanks! I received a box full of thank you cards and envelopes for me to send out to people who have helped me this year!

Day 13: Give Treats! Pictures coming soon! Butchie and I spent all Monday night baking up a storm for our holiday gift boxes! Gingersnaps, oatmeal cookies, truffles, hot chocolate, etc. Posts coming soon!

Day 14: Give Meals! My mother gave me money with the instructions to take someone to lunch. :) It's me, so I gave the money to the Capital Area Food Bank. I just took 60 less fortunate people to lunch. They do great work with the money they get.

Day 15: Give Money! My mother gave me money with instructions to give it to someone in need. It's been below freezing for days, so I'm grateful I haven't seen many homeless on the streets. I am hoping they are in warm shelters, and not hospitals. Please, if you live in cold areas, below freezing look for a hypothermia hotline in your area.

HYPOTHERMIA HOTLINE: I can give money, and I can meals, but one thing I wish more people knew about was the DC hypothermia hotline. I'm sure there are others elsewhere. I can't give every homeless individual a place to sleep during the cold winters, but I can call the people who can. If you live outside of DC please look for one in your area.

So many more to come! I'll update daily! :) Happy Holidays!

Mojito Snowball Cookies

A take on a classic snowball cookie, these cookies have a hint of lime, mint, and rum flavoring to give them a hint of the refreshing taste of a mojito. 
Sunday's Iron Chef Lime dinner was INSANE! We have never had such a large turnout! I could hardly breathe! The votes were in and everyone LOVED the lime challenge! We had dishes in every shape and size! Fiesta Chicken Fettuccine, turkey, lime bars, three cheesecakes, lime sherbet with blueberry coulis, pad thai, pulled pork salad with lime cilantro dressing, nachos, four different drinks, yogurt, lime coconut cake, and the list goes on and on!

It took THREE of us to gather the votes and its was close! One vote either way and we were looking at a three way tie between the lime sherbet with blueberry coulis, the pulled pork salad with lime cilantro dressing, and a lime and white chocolate no bake cheesecake. Personally I voted for the pulled pork....because I left the dressing off and was happily oblivious to the taste of lime! After five minutes of calling out votes we had a winner! The no bake cheesecake! Congratulations to Eve and Dave on their winning dish! The recipe is posted below!

If your new to my blog, you may not know that I am not a huge fan of lemons and limes. I love oranges, tangerines and clementines....but....lime? lemon? Not my favorite. I'm sure you know the feeling where, if you don't like a certain flavor it's ALL you taste in the dish. So while I can taste the lime easily in my cookies, it turns out that others couldn't! I HATE that. Everyone agreed the cookies were delicious, just not as "limey" as a mojito cookie should be. Booooo. So, take my recipe and consider it to be a "to taste" guideline. If it were up to me, the cookies would just be mint. No lime. But that's not the challenge!

Cheers!

Mojito Snowball Cookies

1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
1/2 cup cornstarch
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1/2 cup powdered sugar
2 tablespoons lime cocktail syrup (to taste. I prefer a very light lime flavor)
2 tablespoons rum or 1 tsp. rum extract
2 teaspoons peppermint sugar (made from a handful of peppermint candies)
1 cup powdered sugar

Using a food processor, grind a handful of peppermint candies into a fine powder.

Whisk flour and cornstarch in medium bowl to blend. Using electric mixer, beat butter and 1/2 cup powdered sugar in large bowl until light and fluffy. Mix in lime juice, rum or rum extract, and peppermint sugar. Beat in flour mixture until smooth. Refrigerate dough until just firm, about 45 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

Using scant 1 tablespoon for each, form dough into balls and place on prepared sheets, spacing 1 inch apart.

Bake cookies until pale golden on top and browned on bottom, about 23 minutes. Transfer baking sheets to racks; immediately sift generous amount of powdered sugar over cookies. Cool cookies completely on baking sheets.



Key Lime Mousse Pie
as adapted from Paula Deen

2 cups crushed graham crackers
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter, melted
6 tablespoons fresh key lime juice
1 1/4 ounces (1 envelope) package unflavored gelatin
2 1/2 cups heavy cream, divided
10 ounces finest quality white chocolate, chopped
24 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons lime zest
1 1/2 ounces white chocolate, grated or shaved into curls, for garnish

Mix together the cracker crumbs, sugar, and butter. Press the mixture into the bottom and 1-inch up the sides of a 10-inch springform pan. Set aside.

In a medium saucepan over medium heat, add the lime juice. Whisk in the gelatin and 1/2 cup of the heavy cream and bring to a simmer. Remove the pan from the heat. Add 10 ounces of white chocolate and stir until smooth. Allow to cool.

Using an electric mixer, blend together the cream cheese, sugar and lime zest in a medium bowl, until smooth. Slowly beat in the cooled white chocolate mixture into cream cheese mixture.

Using clean, dry beaters, beat the remaining 2-cups heavy cream in a small bowl, until it forms soft peaks. Fold it into the white chocolate mixture and pour into the pie crust. Cover and freeze overnight.

Remove from freezer and run a sharp knife around inside of springform pan to help loosen the pie. Release springform ring from the bottom of the pan and transfer the pie to a serving plate. Grate or curl the white chocolate over the top. Cut into wedges with a knife that has been dipped into hot water and serve.

Chai-Spiced Arroz Con Leche with Cinnamon-Stewed Pears

Arroz Con Leche is more custard like than your standard rice pudding and when combined with Chai spices and Cinnamon-Stewed Pears is a winning and flavorful combination perfect to win over rice pudding skeptics. 
It's so nice to have my Butchie back! It's been nearly two weeks since we've had a proper baking night...and that is just TOO long!

So last night we made....um.....well I'm going to call it rice pudding, as I honestly cannot tell you the name of what we made. Perhaps saying we made it might even be stretch. Really, Butchie made it and I had a nice venting session. I am fairly certain that I did not chop or measure one darn thing in this recipe. Yep. [Slacker, j'accuse! --B.] But I did buy the condensed milk, and provided the cinnamon sticks. Major contributions. Huge. Epic.

For months now Butch has been lobbying for us to make a rice pudding. I've been skeptical. I have never made rice pudding, which, after last night, technically I still haven't, but at least now I have eaten rice pudding and that is a step in the right direction. For a brief mad moment I considered making it into ice cream today...only to realize that I was perhaps being too ambitious for a food I've only just tried for the first time. [Baby steps, cherie. --B.]

For the first few bites I was eying it like a five year old does Brussels Sprouts. I was leery. Skeptical. I have rarely looked at a food with so much distrust. If the pudding would just make up its mind about whether it is a solid or a liquid we would have a basis for a budding relationship. [Seriously, her FACE. It really was like giving a toddler the first taste of something. I was actually holding the spoon to her mouth. Five seconds away from making airplane noises. --B.] After a bit I enjoyed it decently, it wasn't until today, day after, that I have decided I really do enjoy rice pudding, and I especially love the pear topping we made. But that last part was never in question. Pears have never been ambiguous with me. They are a solid which can be made into a juice. That I understand.

[A note on our recipe, which is based on this one from Smitten Kitchen: arroz con leche is a little more custardy than standard rice pudding, probably because it is cooked so long and with sweetened condensed milk so that it gets really smooth and gooey. We added chai spices to ours, for extra warmth. I happen to like arroz con leche best cold for breakfast the next day, for what it's worth. --B.]

One thing I am pleased about is that it comes across rather lovely when you layer it. I decided to put some in jars and seal them up. I gave them out to a few of my friends. I love edible gifts and this was a nice way to get ahead on my holiday treats list. :)

I hope you enjoy making whatever it is that Butchie made. Haha. I promise to be more participatory the next time!

Chai-Spiced Arroz Con Leche

1 cup arborio rice
2 cinnamon sticks
1/2 tsp lemon zest
2 whole cloves
4 cups water
1 egg
3 cups whole milk
1 14-oz can sweetened condensed milk
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon vanilla
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp ginger
1/4 tsp cardamom
1/4 tsp allspice

Soak the rice, cinnamon sticks, lemon zest and cloves in the water in a heavy saucepan for 1 hour.

After soaking, remove cloves and cinnamon sticks and bring the rice mixture to a boil on high heat, uncovered. When it starts to boil (about 5 minutes), lower the heat to medium and cook for 10 to 12 more minutes or until water is almost evaporated.

While rice is cooking, beat the egg in a bowl. Add the milk and stir well to mix. Add the egg mixture, condensed milk, salt, vanilla extract and spices to the rice and cook over medium-low heat, stirring carefully, about 25 to 35 minutes. The grains should be coming to the surface of the pudding and you'll feel some resistance when you stir. Several cups of liquid will have evaporated. Allow to cool at least 10 minutes--it will thicken considerably once taken off the heat.

Cinnamon-Stewed Pears


3 pears, not quite ripe (we used Red Bartlett), diced
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tbsp butter
2 tbsp sugar

Melt butter and sugar together, then add cinnamon and pears. Stew everything until pears are just getting soft--you don't want compote.

Layer over thickened pudding and enjoy!

Gingerbread Ice Cream

Easily my favorite of the holiday ice creams I have made, this gingerbread ice cream is full of all the spicy goodness of molasses and cinnamon. I have to say I like it better than gingerbread itself!

Okay, okay, so the cutesy little gingerbread mittens may be just a smidge too adorable. I love them. I simply love them. Not to mention how much fun I had decorating them. It's a shame though that I didn't actually make the gingerbread so I don't have a recipe to share with you! All I did was decorate the lovely little cookies! So sad. 

As it turns out I realize I've never made a true gingerbread house. I've made the houses out of graham crackers sure, but it's just not the same. A few years ago my cousins held a gingerbread house decorating contest with my mother and I invited over to be the judges. It was amazing! They had a whole gingerbread neighborhood! Between two parents and their five children (all full grown adults mind you) and their spouses it was a sight to be seen! I tried to convince some of my friends into holding a gingerbread house contest....they weren't up for it! LAME! I miss my family. Two weeks and I'll be home with them! 

But, until I'm home with them at least I have ice cream! Not as good as family, but I'll take it! This gingerbread ice cream is easily my favorite of the holiday ice creams. Peppermint is a definite second, unless we count the Mexican Hot Chocolate Ice Cream as a holiday ice cream....it's a bit of a stretch but it's so good I just want to include it! 

Enjoy!  


Gingerbread Ice Cream

2 eggs
1 cup packed brown sugar
2 tablespoons molasses
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp. fresh ground nutmeg
1/2 tsp. cloves
pinch kosher salt
2 cups cream
1 cup milk 

In a stand mixer combine the eggs and sugar.  Beat for one minute until light and fluffy. 

Gently mix in the cream, milk, molasses, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, and salt. 

Transfer the mixture to an ice cream maker. Allow the ice cream to churn until finished and freeze according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

Edinburgh

I am so in love with Edinburgh I simply can't stop raving about it. The architecture is amazing. The people are wonderfully friendly, haggis is not too shabby, and I just LOVE the accent! 
Holyrood Palace, where Queen Elizabeth holds garden parties
Brandon and I did a slightly dumb thing. We took a BUS to Edinburgh. Going to Edinburgh is not dumb at all, in fact I would call it an incredibly intelligent thing to do, as the city is lovely, but taking the bus is not such a fabulous idea. We took the night bus thinking we'd just sleep on the way.....hahaha. I would call the trip up the worst night's sleep I've ever gotten, but the trip back topped it! About every hour, Brandon...who bobs and weaves as he sleeps sitting up, would bob, and my head would fall from his shoulder onto his back....which was fine. I'd sleep through it. But then he'd weave, crush my head against the seat, and wake us both up. Ha ha ha. Needless to say, by the time we made it to Edinburgh we were ready to go to bed....at 8 am. Not good timing.  

We joke about our fake marriage, as our first hotel had us listed as "Mr. and Mrs. Lee"....well, turns out our fake marriage went south FAST. We were sleeping in separate rooms in just under 3 days! YIKES! Let's hope when I do get married for reals it goes a bit better than that!

After a short rest, and hot showers we were finally feeling up to exploring the town. 
the street fair in Princess Gardens with the Scott Monument behind, along with haggis and other fair sites
We headed down to the Royal Mile but got side tracked when we ran into the absolutely delightful fair surrounding the Scott Monument! I admit to having a small weakness for carnivals. I love them. Love, love love them. We walked through the little holiday village looking at the baked goods, food, and holiday decorations, and then a splendid thing happened. Brandon, the vegetarian, agreed to try haggis!

Haggis is one of those foods that I am still not entirely sure how I feel about. It's a sausage of sheep's 'pluck' oatmeal, suet, spices and such that is simmered in a stock. See how much better it sounds when you leave out words like, liver and intestines? It reminded me of scrapple in a way, but then again, how different are meat puddings really? Brandon's only reaction was "After years without meat, that really was not what I would have picked to cheat with." Not a fan sadly.

We also tried some Irish Cream Marshmallows covered in chocolate (that really did not taste like anything) and ran off to ride the carnival rides. My second great accomplishment for the day was getting Brandon the haggis eating vegetarian who is afraid of heights to ride the ferris wheel! I am SO happy we did because the aerial view of the Scott Monument is completely worth it! The building is so beautiful despite all the soot staining Auld Reekie has put on it!

It was hard to pull me away from the holiday fair, but on we went to the Royal mile....and walking and walking and walking! Yikes! We stopped into Saint Giles Cathedral (which I also fell in love with) and came up with a plan of attack: dinner and going back to our hotel, warming up, and taking a break. We did not plan well for the cold, cold, cold that is Edinburgh! Unlike the women of Edinburgh, who are beautiful, and INSANE wearing mini skirts and tights in that weather, I am human and susceptible to cold!

So what was for our first dinner? All you can eat at Jimmy Chungs Chinese Buffet! Ha. I love that we went to Scotland and ate next to no Scottish food. I get a kick out of eating Chinese food in every country I visit (Paris has the worst in case you were wondering).  Brandon was having a bit of a hard time adjusting. He's Asian, and somehow being surrounded by Asians with Scottish accents was a bit different for him...it was for me too I must admit. I kept flashing back to that ridiculous Starburst commercial about being Scotch-Korean and not making a wee bit of sense....in any event the food was surprisingly okay, especially when I hold it to all you can eat buffet standards....except dessert. I took one bite of my ice cream, and by this point in the trip Brandon was well aware that I make a face when I first taste things. That face tells you exactly how I feel about my food. Needless to say, I took one bite and before I could take another (not that I would have) the ice cream had been whisked away so I wouldn't glare at it for the remained of our time there. I have strong feelings about ice cream now. Very strong feelings.

After a few hours of warming up, hot chocolate, blankets, and prepping, we put on enough layers that we had to run out of the hotel because we were boiling inside....but as soon as we got outside it just still didn't feel like enough! But we headed off to David Bann's for our Thanksgiving Dinner!

We went and met up with my cousin Lexi and her wonderful husband Ry, and their wee baby Lani! She's all of two months old now, for a family dinner...which the Americans are calling Thanksgiving Dinner and I'm sure Ry was calling "simply mad." Ry is a Scot but he took it in good cheer when we toasted a happy thanksgiving....most likely because he could do the math and was outnumbered three (and a half) to one (and a half).

I had the Beetroot, apple and Dunsyre Blue pudding, which their site calls "a light soufflĂ© of Dunsyre Blue cheese, beetroot and apple, served with roasted potatoes, roasted swede and savoy cabbage with tarragon butter." I admit to being somewhat sad. I was hoping for more emphasis on the apple and cheese, and little less on the beetroot, but even with that the dish was lovely. David Bann is one of my cousin's favorite restaurants, so much so in fact they had their wedding luncheon there. I do recommend it, especially for the "Assiette of desserts for two to share: Malt whisky pannacotta, raspberry and whisky chocolates, hot pear and passion fruit tarts with raspberry ice cream and pineapple sorbet." Um. delicious. Brandon was rather full by this point and I was THRILLED about it. I fell madly in love in the pannacotta. Easily my favorite dessert on the platter.
Clockwise: Scott Monument, the Holyrood Palace, The Edinburgh Castle and Cow Gate (which we found to be ridiculously funny)
After that we gave up for the day. We were simply too cold, and since we knew we had a whole other day to explore the Royal Mile with all it's shops, churches, museums and the like we gave in and headed straight back to our separate bedrooms. (I don't know how we let our fake marriage fall apart the way we did).

The next day we went all around town, up and down and up and down the Royal Mile until we had the thing memorized. We didn't leave one stone unturned. Not one. In fact, we turned them all three times.

We decided to go on tour after tour....mainly because they took us inside and away from the wind and the cold. We took the Mary King's Close tour and got to go around the underbelly of Auld Reekie and see the horrid little places burried beneath years of improvement where the impoverished would have lived, where disease and crime ran rampant. It was a very well done tour, though if you are claustrophobic I would not recommend it. As it was I was feeling a wee bit stifled and  had to take off a few layers to not feel so confined (an odd little mental game I know).
underground in the Crosses and a Wiccan worship room

We also took a ghost tour.....which frankly was not scary at all. Interesting, but not scary. Brandon may say differently, as my fake Asian husband is really a wuss about such things, but I found it more interesting. We were told stories of serial killers who would put the bodies dressed up sitting around a table in some morbid tea party, and saw Wiccan worship rooms (which are not Witches, so I'm not sure why they would allow their room to be visited on the tour. I feel like that just is sending misinformation rampantly about). For the most part the tour was fine....I kinda had higher expectations. I photographed no ghosts, and didn't find the stories frightening. Oh well. Maybe the next ghost tour I take will produce. Thus far Savannah and Edinburgh has been a bust.
the carnival at night, a fried Mars bar, and the place that sells the "chypsies"
With out last few hours to kill we went in search of the elusive fried mars bars of Scotland. I believe it is nearly as hard to find as Nessie herself! We randomely began walking down Rose Street, which we promptly adored for it's charm and vivacity, and saw a sign in a hole in the wall take out place (pictured above). If anyone tells you that Scots do not eat fried Mars bars, I think you need to tell them to visit this little establishment. All the Scots in front of us ordered the fried Mars bar, and every Scot behind us did as well....and it was while we were waiting for our fried Mars bar that the "Tale of the Old Bitty and the Chypsies" occurred, which alone made our ENTIRE trip worthwhile. 

The Tale of the Old Bitty and the Chypsies

Not so long ago, in a not so distant land, a beautiful young girl and her fake asian husband were waiting curiously in the warmth of a small dining establishment. As their wait lengthened, a swarthy group of Scottish men entered, having had a bit too much whiskey already, they began brashly hitting on the lovely girl who working as quickly as she could to serve all her customers. 

This sweet girl was trying to say that the plural of chips, is chypsies, somewhat like gypsies. Though it was humorous enough, and delightful to consider what the grammatical equivalent of two orders of chips would be, the brash young men, thought this would make a good seqway into conversation with the lovely girl. 

"Eh, whereabouts are you from?" 

"This planet" 

"I said where about are you from?"

"This planet. You are not welcome here!" 

The lovely girls father is now yelling at a little old bitty who has given him criticism after criticism about how he is preparing the food, and at the moment is paying with spare change. 

"If you don't like the way I do things my door is ALWAYS open." 

By this point beautiful young girl and fake Asian husband are rolling on the floor laughing, as father and daughter start huffing at one another "well you heard all of it!" and the rowdy boys are finally kicked out to wait in the street and the old bitty takes off her coat to get comfortable. 

Fried mars bar in hand, the beautiful young girl and the fake Asian husband reluctantly stroll away down Rose Street....only to return, half an hour later to see the old bitty, still sitting inside the shop, still attempting to pay with change, ordering more "chypsies," while the father and daughter continue to yell. 

The End. 

Needless to say I have not been able to call fries anything but chypsies since. We couldn't believe that half an hour later the old bitty was still there! It was amazing to watch a perfectly calm restaurant implode like that in the course of a minute! The entire trip was worth if for nothing else than that moment alone. 

Also, I do not recommend the fried mars bars. Though it isn't necessarily bad, it's simply very soft, very messy, and lacking in flavor. I personally would have seasoned the batter a bit. It came as a tempura fried mars bar to be more descriptive, and I think it could have been done a wee bit better. 

After that, all that was left was to catch a night bus back to London.....which got stuck in snow....took thirteen hours....was FREAKISHLY warm, and had be trying to figure out how to remove layers of clothing without being scandalous. Oh what a trip. Easily the worst bus ride of my life, though thankfully a week later it seems incredibly funny! 

I highly recommend Edinburgh. I really do. 

Cheers!