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Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32368] Sat, 07 August 2010 18:05 Go to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
Messages: 2566
Registered: September 2008
Location: England, UK
Senior Member
[Moderator]
This is the place to post your recipe entries for the new competition to win a signed copy of the new edition of Sunshine. Good luck to all entrants. Smile

And a little reminder about copyright issues to bear in mind.

[Updated on: Sun, 08 August 2010 20:13] by Moderator


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32374 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sat, 07 August 2010 18:59 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mirkat  is currently offline Mirkat
Messages: 99
Registered: May 2010
Location: Wherever the Navy takes u...
Member
AWESOME Idea!!


Ok, I posted that I would make my modified chocolate chip oatmeal cookies so here goes:

Mirkat's Mouthwatering Mouthfuls (I need a better title... anyone?)
2 1/2 cups oatmeal
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup lard
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
12 ounces chocolate chips (1 package)
toffee bits [I apologize; I didn't write down how much I used]

Measure oatmeal (Old Fashioned Oats) and pulse in a food processor. You can leave 'em whole if you want, but I like the finer grain.
Cream butter and lard with both sugars. Yes, I mix my fats... lard (or vegetable shortening) makes it chewy, butter adds flavor. Add eggs and vanilla.
In a separate bowl, mix oatmeal, flour, salt, baking powder, and baking soda. Add to wet mixture; mix well.
Mix in chocolate chips and toffee bits.

Drop by rounded tablespoon on a greased cookie sheet. Bake for 10 minutes at 375°
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32377 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sat, 07 August 2010 19:44 Go to previous messageGo to next message
glinda  is currently offline glinda
Messages: 59
Registered: January 2009
Location: Bainbridge Island, WA
Member

Oh, boy. I'm infamous for this one - to the point that people have offered to buy ingredients for me. It's a lot of work, and destroys half the kitchen, and is sooooooooo worth it.

Glinda's Chocolate Decadence

Preheat oven to 275°F.

Butter, then line with parchment (and butter that!) a 10" springform pan. (Also make sure you have a larger pan to use for the water bath... the only thing I have that a 10" pan fits into is the turkey roaster, but hey, whatever works, right?)

Melt together over hot water (or in a microwave):
- 14 oz. semi-sweet chocolate (the darker, the better)
- 2 oz. bitter chocolate
- 1/4 c. strong coffee
- 1/4 c. brandy or liqueur*
Stir until satiny smooth; let cool while you're dealing with the cream and eggs.

Combine:
- 6 large eggs
- 1/2 c. sugar
Stir over hot water until eggs are lukewarm. Beat at high speed until mixture is pale yellow and very fluffy (about 5 minutes).

Whip:
- 1/2 pint heavy (whipping) cream
until fairly stiff.

Carefully fold eggs and cream into chocolate, maintaining as much volume as possible.

Pour into buttered, parchment-lined (butter the parchment**) 10" pan.

Bake in water bath in cool (275°F) oven until slightly springy in center, at least an hour. This depends a lot on your oven, even if it heats to exactly 275° - in one friend's oven, it took an hour an a half, with me testing every 10 minutes.

(This is where you clean up all the bowls, and the beaters, and the spoons.)

Chill for at least 4 hours.

Note: After it's out of the oven, it'll fall; unlike a souffle, this is supposed to happen.

To unmold: Slightly heat bottom of pan. Run hot, wet knife around edge. Invert on flat surface (I use my fanciest cake plate, or a silver tray). Peel off the parchment.***

To cut, use hot, wet knife, cleaning thoroughly after each slice.

May be served with whipped cream, powdered sugar dusting, or raspberry sauce.****

* the original recipe called for dark rum, but I don't like rum. I've made this with several different alcohols - I once made *five* of these, in one day, for the 1998 Callahanicon; consensus was that the flavor of berry liqueurs gets lost in all that chocolate. Cointreau works well, though. I've thought about trying Pear Williams.

**confession time: before baking parchment was readily available, I used parchment from my calligraphy stash.

***and of course you're going to scrap off every morsel that's on the parchment and devour it, right?

****my all-time favorite is fresh raspberries.

Unreferenced footnote: Halving the recipe works fine, but causes the same amount of kitchen chaos, and if you're going to this much effort, and it's chocolate... well... Smile




Still will I harvest beauty where it grows... -- Edna St. Vincent Millay
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32383 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sat, 07 August 2010 21:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wolf  is currently offline Wolf
Messages: 24
Registered: March 2009
Location: Virginia
Junior Member

Glinda- Yours reminds me of a Pavlova.}:)



Ghoraibi- Almond Butter Cookies (adapted by me)
2 cups unsalted butter, softened
1 cup powdered sugar
1 cup granulated sugar
4 cups all purpose flour, plus 2tbsp for dusting
1 cup sliced almonds
1 1/2 teaspoon clear almond extract
1 pinch of ground cardamom

Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Beat butter on mixing bowl until fluffy. Cream in both sugars. Gradually add almond extract and pinch of cardamom.

Slowly add in flour. If using a handheld mixer, add half the flour, then mix in the other half using spoon. Otherwise, use a standmixer for all the flour, adding half at a time. Dough will be slightly stiff

Chill in the refrigerator for up to one hour or overnight. Roll out chilled cookie dough on a lightly floured surface. Shape rope about 1 1/2 - 2 inches thick. Cut diagonally into 1/4" thick diamond shapes. Place on ungreased cookie sheets or baking stones. In the center of each cookie slice, add several sliced almonds.

Bake for 12 minutes-15 minutes, or until just lightly golden along the edges. Remove from oven, cool on saheet 2 minutes and finish cooling on cookie rack.

Devour before the hubby finds them.

[Updated on: Fri, 13 August 2010 16:49]


Without Chaos, there can be no Order.

Semper Fi, Once a Marine, Always a Marine.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32385 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sat, 07 August 2010 21:31 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Melda  is currently offline Melda
Messages: 2
Registered: August 2010
Location: Western Canada
Junior Member
I got this recipe out of a newspaper and have used it for years. The BEST chocolate chip cookies I've ever had. (I also registered for the purpose of posting in this thread Very Happy)

THE BEST Chocolate Chip Cookies

3/4 cup granulated (white) sugar
3/4 cup brown sugar, packed
1 cup butter, softened (I use half butter, half shortening or margarine)
1 teaspoon pure vanilla (I use normal vanilla and they're fine)
1 large egg
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour (often I do half white, half whole wheat)
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup chopped walnuts or pecans (optional)
2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips or chunks

Heat oven to 375 F.

With an electric mixer, beat sugar, butter, vanilla and egg on medium speed until creamy. Add and stir in flour, baking soda, salt, and nuts, mix, and add the chocolate chips/chunks last. You'll need to really crank the mixer to make sure they're mixed in thoroughly. Spray cookie sheets and drop dough about three inches apart, allowing for spread. I bake 13 minutes, switching the pans 6.5 minutes in, but you can adjust according to your oven. The edges will be set but centres will still be soft, and they'll be light brown underneath. If you like crunchy cookies, bake a little longer, but when in the oven for the right amount of time they have a WONDERFUL chewy texture. Cool 2-3 minutes to allow cookies to set, but no longer or they'll stick to the pan. Remove to rack.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32388 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sat, 07 August 2010 21:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
librarykat  is currently offline librarykat
Messages: 566
Registered: October 2008
Location: Redneck Riviera
Senior Member
My Key Lime Cheesecake is an unbaked cheesecake, so it's not for anyone who's leery of uncooked eggs. I've been making this for the past 9 years and no one has ever gotten sick from it, so ...

I've adapted this from several cheesecake recipes that I found online.

Use a 9-inch pie pan.

Crust - I use a standard graham cracker crust:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F
1 c graham cracker crumbs
3 Tbs white granulated sugar
1/4 c butter, melted

Mix the cracker crumbs and sugar in the pie pan, pour in the melted butter and mix thoroughly, then pat into the pan; it'll be a fairly thin crust, the idea is to have just enough to hold in the cheesecake. Bake for 5 minutes and let it cool.

Cheesecake:
1 envelope (or 2 1/2 tsp) unflavored gelatin
3/4 cup key lime juice
2 large eggs, beaten
1 cup white granulated sugar
8 oz tub-style cream cheese
8 oz cream cheese, at room temperature
2 egg whites
1 1/2 tsp key lime zest
3/4 cup white granulated sugar
1 1/2 cups whipped cream

1. In a medium saucepan, dissolve the gelatin in the key lime juice for 3 minutes. Add 1 cup sugar, the zest, and the 2 beaten eggs.

2. Heat on stove at medium heat, while stirring, and cook for 10 minutes or until mixture thickens. Remove from heat and let cool slightly.

3. In a large bowl, beat the cream cheese on medium speed with an electric mixer until creamy. Slowly add the lime mixture and beat on low until smooth. Refrigerate the mixture until it's thoroughly cooled, stirring it every 10 minutes.

4. In another bowl, beat the egg whites until foamy or until soft peaks form. Slowly add the 3/4 cup sugar until incorporated.

5. Fold the egg white mixture into the chilled lime-cream cheese mix, and pour into the prepared crust.

6. Refrigerate until set, about 2 hours.

7. Spread whipped cream over the cheese cake before serving.

If you can't find fresh key limes, use the bottled key lime juice and grate the zest of a regular lime.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32389 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sat, 07 August 2010 21:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Catlady  is currently offline Catlady
Messages: 230
Registered: December 2008
Location: Aurora, Colorado
Senior Member
Harry's House of Cats Peanut Butter and Chocolate Stuff*

2 sticks of margarine (I find Blue Bonnet works best)
4 cups of powdered sugar (or half a regular-sized bag)
1 cup smashed graham crackers (shortbread cookies work well too)
1 1/4 cup peanut butter
12 oz. milk chocolate chips.

Smash the graham crackers. It usually takes 3-4 full-sized ones to make a cup. If you like your candy-type substance a little lumpy, leave lumps. Dump them and the sugar into a bowl. Stir. Add the peanut butter. Pretend to stir. (It will not work. Fear not.)

Melt the margarine all the way. Pour it into your peanut butter/sugar/cracker mixture. It should now stir. Stir it up. Smear it into a pan that will fit flat in your freezer. I usually use 9x13, but I have a very small freezer.

Wash out the pot you melted the margarine in. Melt the chocolate chips in it. Make sure not to leave them too long: letting them dry out makes the next step nearly impossible.

Pour the melted chocolate on top of the peanut butter mixture and smear it around for almost even coverage. Don't lick out either bowl yet; they will burn you. Put the pan in the freezer.

After half an hour, take the pan out of the freezer and cut the lovely mess into squares. Put it back in the freezer. After another few hours, scoop it out of the pan and put it in tupperware containers back in the freezer. You now have enough decadent chocolate to last you a month.

*I'm Harry. It's short for something. [Not Harriet.] I was thrilled beyond belief to find Harimad-sol: look! Another GIRL named Harry!

Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32393 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sat, 07 August 2010 23:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
katinseattle  is currently offline katinseattle
Messages: 374
Registered: November 2008
Location: Seattle
Senior Member
I didn't post Mildred Haines' Tomato Cake with Mother's adaptations and my adaptations of the adaptations because it didn't sound exciting enough. But it's the cake I demanded for my birthday most of my life. Even though it wasn't chocolate. It makes a nice moist spice cake. With additions.

½ cup sugar (or 1/3 cup honey)
½ cup brown sugar (or Succanat)
¼ cup shortening
1 cup canned tomatoes, tomato juice, or pureed fresh tomatoes
1½ cup sifted flour
1 cup raisins and/or nuts
1 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon cloves
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon allspice

Bake in 300 degree oven for 1¼ hour.

1 cup of any or all of the following can be added if desired:

Chocolate or butterscotch bits*
Coconut
Any dried fruit; i.e., cut up apricots, figs, prunes,etc.
Marachino cherries or other fruit used in fruit cakes.

*Chocolate chips are a great addition. Butterscotch, well, um, you need to like butterscotch a lot better than I do. But that one got eaten, too.







Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32396 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 00:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Annagail  is currently offline Annagail
Messages: 68
Registered: August 2009
Location: PA
Member
It seems that most of my favourite recipes have not had a lot changed about them from their original (copyrighted) locations. However, this is the key lime pie that my mom makes. No idea of where the original recipe came from.


Graham cracker crust- sure you can buy one, but making one is so much tastier:

1 ½ cups fine graham cracker crumbs
1/3 cup butter (about 6 tablespoons)
3 Tablespoons white sugar or 4 Tablespoons powdered sugar

Prepare crumbs either by rolling them or using the food processor. Melt the butter over low ( or microwave). Remove from heat and add crumbs and sugar, blending well. Turn the crumbs into an 8 or 9 inch pie pan, spread evenly and firmly over the bottom and sides. Use a flat bottomed cup to press down. Bake at 325 degrees for 7 to 10 minutes ( watch it) depending on the thickness of the crust to firm the crust. Cool and fill.

Filling

4 or 5 egg yolks
1 can sweetened condensed milk
½ cup key lime juice
½ tsp. cream of tartar

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Beat egg yolks on high until thick and light colored. Turn off mixer. Add milk and slowly mix. With mixer on, slowly add in half of the key lime juice then cream of tartar then the rest of the juice. Mix until blended.
Put in cooled crust and bake in the center of the oven until firm and dry to the touch (about 15 minutes). Let cool completely.

Serve with fresh whipped cream with just a touch of sugar and vanilla.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32399 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 01:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
dagra7  is currently offline dagra7
Messages: 8
Registered: January 2009
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Junior Member
These are my infamous Death Brownies, which I admit to baking for any reason at all. They are intensely chocolatey; even a hardened chocoholic like myself can eat only 3 in one sitting Smile

Death Brownies

1/2 cup butter
2 squares unsweetened chocolate
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla
3/4 cups flour
Chocolate chips, usually about 1/4 cup

In a saucepan or in the microwave at medium heat, melt butter and unsweetened chocolate together. Transfer to a bowl and mix in sugar, eggs, and vanilla. Add flour and chocolate chips. Pour into well-greased 8" x 8" cake pan, and bake at 350 degrees F for 30 minutes, or until a knife poked into the centre comes out clean (ignore signs of melted chocolate chips!). When cool, ice with Chocolate Butter Icing and place in fridge until icing hardens. Cover brownies and refrigerate or freeze.

Chocolate Butter Icing
(Note: the amounts given here are for these brownies, and equal half of a normal cake recipe)

1/6 (or half of 1/3) cup butter
2 1/4 cups icing sugar
1/8 cup milk
3/4 tsp. vanilla
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa

Beat butter until fluffy (it helps to soften it up first!). Mix in 1 cup icing sugar. Add milk, vanilla, cocoa, and remaining sugar, and mix until combined. Continue adding milk until desired consistency is reached - it should be too thick to pour, but the more milk, the gooier the brownies.

Enjoy!

Adapted from Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book


Cheers,
Amanda
-------------------
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32401 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 01:33 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Marina  is currently offline Marina
Messages: 245
Registered: January 2009
Location: Near San Jose CA
Senior Member
I was going to submit my Left-Handed Elven Bread recipe, but it doesn't seem to have made it into the family recipe document. If it's on my disk *anywhere*, it's in an application or two back, and I haven't installed the software needed to extract the data so that I can (sigh) reformat it AGAIN (heavier sigh).

Here's another of my breads, developed in the 1980's, when I was baking bread quite often.


Gold of the Immigrants Bread
2 loaves

Source/comments: Marina Fournier:

“Multi-ethnic backgrounds at work often prompt parties with an international potluck. I’m ‘Heinz 57 American’ (born in Japan for good measure), and this was one of my contributions. This resembles Portuguese or Hawaiian Sweet Bread, but I’ve added a few ingredients to honor some of the wonderful flavors and some of the different kinds of gold brought by the various waves of immigrants to this country: how many ‘golds’ can you find?”

t=teaspoon T=tablespoon I expect you know what c. stands for, right?

2 envelopes yeast
1/2 c. hot tap water
1/2 t. honey
1/2 t. saffron threads
[about a gram: I buy mine by the ounce ( a good one of my handfuls) at Indian groceries. MUCH cheaper]
2 T. boiling water
1 c. milk 4 oz. butter
1 t. ground cardamom
1 c. honey
4 eggs
1/4 t. salt
2 c. unbleached flour
1/3 c. orange flower water
zest & juice of 2-3 lemons
ca. 7 c. unbleached flour

Put the water in a bowl that will hold at least a quart. Sprinkle the yeast and honey over it. Whisk well, cover, and set in a warm place to proof—when the growth oozes over, it’s “proofed”. Measure the saffron before toasting. Oven-toast the saffron at 350˚F for 10 min., or until dry enough to pulverize. Pulverize, put in a cup, and pour boiling water over the spice. Let cool. Isn’t the color glorious?

Scald the milk, add the butter, cardamom, and honey; stir. Let dissolve and cool, then add the yeast sponge to it. Beat the eggs with the salt until frothy, and add to the yeast mixture. Add flour and beat until smooth. This will prevent curdling by the citrus. Add the citrus ingredients, and beat until the batter is smooth again.

Begin adding the rest of flour by cupfuls, stirring until you have a dough that is soft, but ready to knead. Turn the dough out unto a floured surface, and knead for a few minutes. Place the dough in a greased bowl (you might try one of these oils: olive, hazelnut, apricot, to add a little more flavor to the loaf), cover, and let rise until doubled, about an hour.

Punch down this dough and divide into two equal pieces (or more—this makes wonderful buns). At this point, if you are so moved, add 1 c. of some golden dried fruit: raisins of white grapes, apricots, papaya, lemon or orange peel. . . . but it’s very nice without. Shape the dough into slightly flattened round loaves, and let rise for another hour, or until do


A. Marina Fournier
❦If you want a golden rule that will fit everything, this is it: Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful ❧ William Morris❦
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32406 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 09:02 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Jeanne Marie  is currently offline Jeanne Marie
Messages: 320
Registered: October 2008
Location: Kansas City
Senior Member
Comfortably Numb Cookies
(these are adapted from a Diane Mott Davidson recipe. I actually sent Diane a note with the altered recipe, and she wrote me back, teasing me about it, but was glad that I enjoyed the recipe enough to fiddle with it. So, I apparently have a HISTORY of writing to favored authors! These cookies are a bit of work, so I generally only make them at the holidays, and hand them out as presents - no one ever complains, except that I only do them once a year.)

1 cup slivered/chopped & toasted almonds (or other nut - opt)
2 cups bittersweet chocolate chips (the darker the better - I usually use Ghiradelli double chocolate)
1 cup sun-dried cherries
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
3 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 egg

2 ounces best quality unsweetened chocolate, melted gently then combined with...
2 tablespoons milk, allow that mix to cool a bit

1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract (none of that imitation stuff!)
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons flour (I am goofy with flour - I'll use whatever is handy around the house in combination - whole wheat, spelt, 10 grain, whatever. Feel free to be flexible)
1 cup old fashioned rolled oats
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup Dutch processed cocoa
1 jar marshmallow crème

Preheat oven to 325 degrees F.
Spread slivered/chopped nuts on an ungreased cookie sheet and toast for 7-12 minutes, until they are lightly browned. Set aside.
Butter 2 cookie sheets. In a large bowl, combine the chocolate chips, cherries and cooled nuts; set aside.
In another large bowl, beat together the butter, sugar, cream cheese and egg until very creamy and smooth. Beat in milk, melted chocolate and vanilla extract.
In a blender, ½ a cup at a time, blend the oatmeal until it resembles a powder. Sift together the blended oatmeal, flour, baking powder, salt and cocoa, then add to the butter mixture. Blend in the marshmallow creme, stirring until thoroughly combined. Add the chips, cranberries and nuts. Stir until well mixed. Batter will be thick.
Using a 1 tablespoon scoop measure, measure out batter and place 2 inches apart on cookie sheets. Bake 13 to 17 minutes, until puffed and baked through. Cool on sheet 1 minute; transfer to wire racks to cool completely.
Yields about 3 dozen.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32407 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 09:03 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jaccairn  is currently offline jaccairn
Messages: 152
Registered: November 2008
Location: Kent
Senior Member
jaccairn's Clootie Dumpling

This was originally my Great Aunt Suzie's recipe which she used to make from memory,it had been in the family for years before Mum persuaded her to write it down (which involved writing the amounts down as she made one as she couldn't remember the quantities otherwise.) We only tend to get it on Birthdays due to time required to watch the pot as it steams.


1 lb self raising flour
8 oz granulated sugar
Pinch of salt
4 oz margarine
1 oz cinnamon**
1 tsp mixed spice
¾ lb sultanas
¾ lb currants
½ - ¾ pt milk
1 tbsp syrup

1. Mix flour, salt and sugar together.
2. Cut margarine* into small pieces and add to mixture.
3. Add the spices a little at a time.
4. Add fruit.
5. Mix with milk until a soft consistency*** is achieved.
6. Mix in syrup.
7. Scald cloth**** in hot water then lay on surface and sprinkle inside with flour.
8. Place mixture inside and gather up sides and tie loosely.
9. Place a plate, raised slightly, into a pot and add boiling water. Ensure it does not cover the plate.
10. Place mixture in cloth on plate and steam for 3-4 hours. Do not allow to boil dry.^
11. Finish off in oven to form a skin. (About 170C, 10mins)


* Margarine (block type for baking) might be a holdover from the war time rationing (my Mum is eighty now so it's an old recipe) but I'm sure butter would work as well.
** Yes it does say an ounce of cinnamon, it used to say a pot of cinnamon but then they changed the packaging so we weighed what the pot held.
*** A soft consistency is basically enough milk so that you don't have any dry flour left. You want a strong wooden spoon as with all the fruit it is hard to mix.
**** A cotton cloth is best, you can use an old pillowcase if you have one, what you want is a large square of material.
^ If you have a large enough steamer I'm sure this will do. Plate wise we're talking a medium sized dinner plate, whatever will fit in your pot - the smaller the plate, the deeper the dumpling and the longer it will take to steam.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32430 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 11:31 Go to previous messageGo to next message
claning  is currently offline claning
Messages: 266
Registered: February 2010
Location: California
Senior Member
Betty's Butterscotch Brownies

Betty was my Mom. That was actually the name she was given at birth, and she always hated it when people thought it was short for Elizabeth. Her childhood friends used to call her "Lizz" just to watch her steam!

I have come to dislike dark chocolate because it's likely to give me migraines. When you begin to associate a taste with pain, it stops tasting quite so good. Mom was excellent at coming up with goodies I could happily eat.

These are chewy brownies, not the soft cake kind. This recipe probably originally came from a can or box or some other kind of label, because a lot of Mom's recipes did, but I have no idea what. At any rate it's been modified: among other things, the original called for 1/4 cup oil but I replaced half of it with yogurt.

Do not get the bright idea of using "butterscotch" chips in these. Commercial "butterscotch chips" are awful. We tried it: we know. The flavor called butterscotch is actually a combination of molasses and vanilla and caramelized sugar, so it's there already when these ingredients are mixed.

-------------------

2 Tablespoons cooking oil (flavored oil would probably be yummy)

1/4 cup plain nonfat yogurt

1 packed cup of light brown sugar (OR: 1 cup white sugar, 1 teaspoon blackstrap molasses. Yes, TEAspoon, it's strong stuff. I usually do it this way because I don't bake that often and brown sugar solidifies into concrete if you keep it around too long.)

1 egg

3/4 cup flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/2 cup chopped nuts (optional)

Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease an 8 by 8 inch pan.

Blend oil, yogurt and brown sugar. Add the egg.

In another bowl, mix the flour, baking powder and salt thoroughly (the recipe originally said to sift them, but my Mom was a maverick and declared that she never bothered to sift flour and could never see any difference). Add blended dry ingredients to wet ingredients.

Add the vanilla and nuts.

Pour into greased pan and bake for 25 minutes. Makes 16 at about 140 calories each (by my calculation).


O Chris Laning <claning@igc.org> - Davis, California
+
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32432 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 11:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jessicaemilymoyer  is currently offline jessicaemilymoyer
Messages: 3
Registered: August 2010
Junior Member
This is an old family recipe and yes I have permission to share as we've passed it around to anyone who asks for years.

Old Fashioned Blueberry Cake

The best way to eat blueberries.....

Preheat oven to 350

3 C flour
2 C sugar
3 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
2 C berries
2 eggs
1 C milk
1/3 C veg oil
1/2 tsp vanilla

Mix all ingredients (except berries) in large bowl with electric mixer until fully combined. Fold in berries, Spread evenly in 9 x 13 pan.

Top with 1/2 C sugar, 3/4 tsp nutmeg (combined), sprinkle evenly over batter

Bake at 350 for 40 minutes

This comes out somewhere between a cake and coffee cake is best enjoyed for breakfast with coffee or milk or an afternoon snack with tea.

Other berries can be substituted, raspberries and blackberries are especially good and the note from my mom says to try strawberries. I haven't yet as I love strawberries so much they rarely sit around long enough to be baked.

Jessica
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32436 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 14:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lazyfairy  is currently offline lazyfairy
Messages: 1
Registered: August 2010
Junior Member
This is one of my favorite cookie recipes. My family loves them and they are so easy to make. Feel lucky, I've been refusing to share my recipe with my sister for a while now. Guess I should!


Caramel Dreams Cookies

Ingredients:
1 egg
1/2 cup (1 stick) margarine, softened
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup brown sugar, packed
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 3/4 cup or so flour


Directions:

Mix egg, margarine and vanilla first. Then add brown sugar and mix thoroughly. Stir in soda and salt. Add flour last. The dough should be a little stiff and quite sticky. Roll into cylinder shape about 2 inches (5 cm). Wrap in waxed paper around and then wrap in plastic wrap to keep it from drying out. Chill for at least 6 hours.

Pre-heat oven to 400F. Cut in 1/4 inch slices. Place cookies so they do not touch on an ungreased baking sheet. Bake 8 - 10 minutes or until lightly browned. If they get overcooked, they will be dry and hard. Let sit on the pan for about a minute before you remove them and place on cooling rack.

These cookies are best when warm, but also great with coffee or ice cream. The dough is also really good too, especially after chilled.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32451 is a reply to message #32368 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 19:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
abigailmm  is currently offline abigailmm
Messages: 545
Registered: January 2009
Location: Texas, USA
Senior Member

Headline - mysterious world-wide outbreak of sugar-chocolate poisoning - only common factor appears to be reading of Robin McKinley novels


Ellen Donald Mount's Pound Cake (my grandmother)

nothing extreme here, no two or three cups of heavy cream. "Cake" in our family basically means this cake.

2 cups sugar
2 sticks (1 cup) butter (REAL BUTTER, preferably unsalted)
6 eggs
1 tsp. lemon extract (almond also works)
1/2 tsp. grated nutmeg
2 cups flour

Butter and flour a tube (angel-food) cakepan. Helps to have the kind where the center lifts out, or cut parchment to fit the bottom.
Preheat oven to 350°F

Cream butter and sugar till fluffy. Add lemon extract, then add eggs one at a time, beating 1 minute on high after adding each egg.

Add flour and nutmeg, mix on low just until blended in, pour the fairly thick batter into cakepan, and bake for 50-60 minutes. Don't open the oven to check till at least the 50 minutes is up. It should rise up, cracking the first crusting, and then bake and set so that toothpick comes out dry. Sometimes for no discernible reason it falls down again. Never mind, it tastes just as good.

It was offered for sale by the slice at our Unitarian Fellowship's fundraising craft sale in the 50s. One woman, seeing the nutmeg, said, "Mrs. Mount, you've got weevils in the flour." Grandmother was livid - "It's the NUTMEG!" I don't remember if there was any later fallout from this - it had been a gracious gesture for my Presbyterian grandmother to make these cakes for that free-thinking group her daughter had gotten mixed up in. But ever after, someone tends to ask me if I remembered to put in the weevils.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32463 is a reply to message #32432 ] Sun, 08 August 2010 20:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jessicaemilymoyer  is currently offline jessicaemilymoyer
Messages: 3
Registered: August 2010
Junior Member
I nearly forgot the most important part of the blueberry cake. It is best made with the tiny wild Maine blueberries that are only available for a few weeks in August. They do freeze nicely and the cake is nearly as good with frozen berries - no need to defrost, just warm them up enough that the individual berries separate and add to batter. Other berries, including what we in Maine call "New Jersey" blueberries are just fine but the little Maine ones are the best. Now I live in the Midwest I've been forced to try other berries and can attest that the cake is nearly as good.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32482 is a reply to message #32368 ] Mon, 09 August 2010 00:08 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jkribbitdesigns
Messages: 16
Registered: May 2010
Junior Member
For the first contest, I posted that I would make Cranberry Pop Cake. That recipe is from "Always in Season: A Collection of Recipes from the Junior League of Salt Lake City, Utah" and it's perfect the way it is so I'm not even going to try modifying it so I can post it here. It is fantastic, though.

I can, however, post my favorite peach pie recipe. My college roommate invented it and she went on to be the head pastry chef of a well respected Seattle bakery.

Randolpha's Famous Peach Pie

Crust:
1 cup flour
1/8 cup milk
1/4 cup oil
pinch of salt

Mix ingredients. Roll out (using wax paper), put in dish, poke holes with a fork, bake at 350 for 10-15 minutes or until golden brown. Let cool

Cream Cheese Filling:
8 oz cream cheese
1/2 cup powdered sugar
2 tsp vanilla
3/4 cup whipping cream

Mix ingredients. Poor into pie shell. Chill.

Fresh Peach Layer:
Slice fresh peaches onto cream cheese filling. (3-4 good sized peaches should be plenty for both peach layers.)

Cooked Peach Topping:
2 cups fresh peaches (sliced or chunked)
1 cup sugar
2 TBS corn starch
2 TBS water

Combine ingredients over medium heat until dissolved. Turn heat up and bring to a boil. Boil until thickened. Cool. Pour over fresh peach layer.

Chill pie at least one hour.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32484 is a reply to message #32368 ] Mon, 09 August 2010 00:24 Go to previous messageGo to next message
apple  is currently offline apple
Messages: 39
Registered: July 2010
Location: IL, USA
Member
This is a Christmas cookie recipe my grandmother used. It has been awhile since I have actually made the recipe so I can't remember what a good estimate for the amount of flour needed is.

Angel Wings

6 eggs
4 Tbsp vanilla
4-6 Tbsp sugar
pinch of salt
flour
confectioners sugar

mix ingredients together with as much flour as is needed to make a workable dough. Knead until well mixed.

Roll out the dough, cut into rectangles, slit each end with a diagonal cut about 1 inch from the edge and turn the corner through this to make cookie into a bow.

Fry in deep oil until slightly brown. Dust with confectioners sugar.

Store in a tin nestled in waxed paper.


Knowledge is power...power corrupts...study hard...be evil!
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32488 is a reply to message #32368 ] Mon, 09 August 2010 02:42 Go to previous messageGo to next message
amp15  is currently offline amp15
Messages: 96
Registered: February 2009
Location: Denmark
Member
The original Danish Cracker Cake is fairly much just sweet crackers embedded in a mess of shortening, sugar, cocoa powder and egg, and while it was a treat when I was a child, I really wouldn't want to eat it today. My own cracker cake on the other hand is a real luxury with the chocolate intensity of a Sacher Torte. You can make it with apricot or orange jam, but I prefer either amarena cherries or Sct. Dafour black Cherry Jam.

ANETTE'S INTENSE CHOCOLATE CRACKER CAKE (6 big portion ones)

12 digestive crackers/biscuits,
1 cup (2.5 dl) heavy/double cream,
6 oz (150-180 g) intense (70% cocoa solids) dark chocolate,
1 teaspoon real vanilla extract,
4 tablespoon rum and/or fruit syrup such as the liquid from amarena cherries,
30-40 amarena cherries (that's most of a cup-size jar),
4 oz (100 g) dark&acute;chocolate of the kind intended for glazing.

You'll also need a muffin tin for 6 big muffins or 6 ramekins, preferably big enough to contain a digestive without needing to break it.

Melt cream and chocolate together at low heat. Let it cool in the refrigerator for about an hour. In the mean time line the moulds with kitchen film/saran wrap, drain the liquid from the cherries in to a bowl, and carefully pat the cherries dry on kitchen paper. Reserve the 6 finest cherries for garnish.
Now add the vanilla and liquid to the chocolate and beat it to a smooth creamy consistency about like a medium peak whipped cream. If it's a bit too hard, let it stand on the table for a few minutes. If it's a bit too runny, just give it another 10 min in the fridge.
Next drop a heaped tablespoon of chocolate cream into the mould, place a digestive - top side down - on top, add another spoonful, press in 4-5 cherries, and add another digestive on top. Repeat in the other moulds. Press the cakes lightly together in the moulds, and let them harden in the fridge - either overnight or while you melt the glazing chocolate.
Once the chocolate has melted turn the cakes out of the moulds, and remove the film/wrap. Glaze the cakes and garnish with the reserved cherries. Put the cakes back in the fridge until about an hour before serving. Garnishing with fresh cherries, and serving with cherry ice cream and the remaining amarena liquid is pleasantly over the top. Smile




Anette, the Great Dane
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32509 is a reply to message #32368 ] Mon, 09 August 2010 11:33 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mori-neko  is currently offline Mori-neko
Messages: 365
Registered: October 2008
Location: Corvallis, OR
Senior Member

So many of these sound so very very good...

Anyhow, I've been wanting an excuse to make this anyway, so I figured I'd share.

Adapted from a recipe I found on Epicurious, raspberry cheesecake:

For crust:
~8 1/2 oz gingersnaps, finely ground in a food processor (makes approx 2 1/3 cups)
1 1/4 sticks (10 tablespoons) unsalted butter, melted and cooled

For filling:
20 oz cream cheese (2 1/2 eight-ounce packages), softened
8 oz mascarpone cheese at room temperature (about 1 cup)
3/4 cup sugar
3 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
2 teaspoons Chambord (or your favorite raspberry liquor)
1/4 teaspoon salt

For topping:
1 cup sour cream
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1/8 teaspoon salt

Process:

Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 350°F. Butter bottom and side of a 9-inch springform pan. Laying a parchment round in the bottom of the pan helps if you want to serve it on anything other than the springform bottom.

For the crust- Mix gingersnap crumbs and melted butter until all the crumbs are damp and pat into the bottom of the pan and slightly up the sides (1"-1.5" thick). Bake in the oven for about 10 minutes, then let cool completely. Leave the oven on.

Filling- Beat cream cheese, mascarpone, and sugar with an electric mixer at medium high speed until fluffy, 3 to 5 minutes. Add eggs 1 at a time, beat well after each addition. Add vanilla, lemon juice, Chambord, and salt and mix at low speed until everything is incorporated. Pour into cooled crust and bake until cake is set and puffed around edge but still trembles slightly when pan is shaken gently, 30-40 minutes. Pull it out of the oven while you mix the topping, but leave the oven on.

Top- Mix together topping ingredients (can add more liquor if you want), and spoon over the slightly cooled cake, leave ~1/4" around the edges for the topping to spread. Bake for a final 10 minutes.

Run a knife around the outside edge of the cake to loosen it from the sides and help prevent cracking. Cool completely on the rack and then chill for 6-8 hours (yes, it really needs it!). Serve with lots of fresh raspberries. It's worth the wait!

Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32543 is a reply to message #32368 ] Mon, 09 August 2010 21:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lirapkin
Messages: 1
Registered: August 2010
Location: Indianapolis
Junior Member
Lemon Tea Cake

A true six-word story about this recipe:

Made cake. Dropped cake. Bought cake.

Although, technically, I only dropped half of the cake. The other half was delicious.

* 5 oz. room-temperature butter
* 2/3 C granulated sugar
* 2 large eggs
* grated zest of 1 unwaxed lemon
* 1 C + 1 T self-rising flour (FYI, 1 C self-rising flour = 1 C AP flour + 1/4 tsp baking powder)
* 1/4 tsp. lemon extract
* 1/4 tsp. vanilla powder (or 1/2 tsp. vanilla extract)

Prepare a cake pan with butter and flour (and baking parchment, if you like; I certainly do).

Beat the butter and sugar together until the mixture is pale and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Add lemon zest, lemon extract, and vanilla, and mix to combine. Sift the flour into the mixture and fold until well combined. Bake at 350 degrees F (unrepentant use of Imperial measurements, thanks very much) for 20 minutes. (If you double the recipe in anticipation of dropping the cake, it'll take 50 minutes.)

While the cake is in the oven, dissolve 4 tablespoons of sugar in the juice of one lemon. Pour over the cake immediately after it comes out of the oven. Release the cake from the pan—very carefully—when it’s cool.

I've also been looking for a good occasion to make a lime version of this cake.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32559 is a reply to message #32543 ] Tue, 10 August 2010 05:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
DrRo  is currently offline DrRo
Messages: 5
Registered: August 2010
Location: Western Australia
Junior Member
Ok, I admit I just joined so that I could enter the competition... plus Robin said something about needing more forum members who bake Smile Plus I'm rereading Sunshine, AGAIN... and it always makes me want to bake things

This is an entirely original recipe in that the cake base probably originated from a golden Wattle cook book sometime in the 19560s... my mum baked a lot of cakes (6 kids can eat a cake like locusts on a pea plant - gone in seconds) so i learnt it from her - using wooden spoon measurements - as in, 2 spoonfuls of butter! I'm trying to convert back to real weights. The rest came from one of those happy accidents of wanting to use something up and not knowing what to do

Berry Crumble Butter Cake

Heat oven to 180 deg

185g butter
1/2 cup sugar
2 eggs
2 cups self raising flour
~1/4 cup of milk

Berry mixture
Any combination of ~ 3cups of stewed berries. It works really well with stewed apricots or apples as well. The key to this is that the majority of the liquid is removed. Do this by sitting in a fine-ish sieve for several hours, or by sitting a heavy ladle in the mixture, and spooning out the fluid as it fills. The final mixture should be almost thick enough hold its shape when a spoon is drawn through the middle.

Crumble mix

2 eggs
1/2 cup caster sugar
2 cups dessicated coconut

Method:

Cream eggs and sugar, beat in eggs, then flour and finally mix in milk. Should be a nice smooth creamy batter consistency. Put mixture into a buttered and papered 23cm round tin (or about a 20 cm square one). Top with berry mixture.

Mix together crumble ingredients and strew over cake.

Bake for 1 to 1.5 hrs, until a skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean. If the topping starts to over-brown, cover with alfoil

Yum!
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32577 is a reply to message #32368 ] Tue, 10 August 2010 15:12 Go to previous messageGo to next message
sundaymeister  is currently offline sundaymeister
Messages: 1
Registered: August 2010
Location: Oakland, CA
Junior Member
This is going to sound like a weird recipe, but I made it up all on my own and I stand by this easy-to-make snack!

How to Make Sunday's Freakish "Minute Crunchies"

Ingredients:

-2 Cups of Gemelli Pasta (this is the straight swirly pasta)
-Salt or any other seasoning you like. The powdered Mac n' Cheese sauce actually works well. TRUST ME.

Directions:

-Boil a pot of water with about 6 cups of water.
-Have a strainer reader to use in the sink.
-Cook the Gemelli pasta for a VERY short amount of time, only one or two minutes. The pasta should be crunchy, but you won't break your teeth on it.
-Drain pasta.
-Sprinkle with salt or seasoning of choice.
-Eat, to the shame of everyone who knows you. But trust me, once you try the Minute Crunchies, you'll never go back!





Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32578 is a reply to message #32368 ] Tue, 10 August 2010 15:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Caryn  is currently offline Caryn
Messages: 31
Registered: October 2008
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Member
Caryn's Cheesecake Montana

Makes enough filling for 1-10" pie plate plus a 6" baking dish, or some volume equivalent. Can slice off pieces of the smaller one and eat between graham crackers (digestive biscuits).

The recipe is from the US, and I'm living in Canada, so the amounts are in a mixture of metric and imperial. Recipe is fairly forgiving, so feel free to convert as needed.


Crust:

2 c. graham cracker crumbs (can buy a box of this in cookie aisle)
1/2 c. melted butter or margarine
1/2 t. cinnamon

Mix until all the same color, and press into the dishes to make the crust. Smooth with the back of a spoon to work it up the sides of the dish.

Filling:

2 - 250g bricks of Philadelphia-brand (ie, quality) cream cheese (two 8 oz pkgs US)
Beat well (it'll be stiff but smooth)

Mix together
1 c. sugar
1/4 t. salt

Cream into cream cheese (mix until texture changes and get slightly fluffier)

Mix together
3 large eggs (use a fork to beat until mostly plain yellow liquid)
1 t. real vanilla (not artificial which loses flavour when baked)
1/4 t. almond extract (in the baking aisle)

Add to above and beat well. Once it looks creamy and well mixed, turn off beaters and clean all the extra cream cheese and such off them into the batter and stir by hand.

Then gently fold in 500 ml full-fat sour cream (2 cups US) until the filling is -mostly- a single color. Some faint swirls of sour cream are okay, because you don't want to mix it too hard.

Pour into the pans, leaving a bit of space for the filling to puff up.

Bake at 375F for 35-40 minutes (smaller dish will be finished first usually).

They are done when they puff up and crack around the edges and the centre will still look soft.

Cool on the counter and then chill for four hours. Do not wrap too tightly when transporting as the filling will weep a bit on contact with plastic wrap.

cameron@sff.net
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32580 is a reply to message #32368 ] Tue, 10 August 2010 16:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
hhayes
Messages: 14
Registered: August 2009
Location: Seattle, WA
Junior Member
Well, I don't know if Sunshine is a pink kind of girl, but Robin sure is and this one turns out almost electric. It is one of those dishes that looks so strange you are almost afraid to eat it, but when you do you love it and it is perfect for summer.

It may pretend to be a Jello mold, but like sunshine should not be underestimated. It is so much more fun than a Jello mold.

Hilary's pink fluff (that's what my friends call it but it is my grandma's recipe)

Ingredients:
2, 3oz packages of Raspberry or strawberry Jello
2 cups boiling water (don't follow the back of the Jello box or you will get melting, pink, outer space creature, fluff)
10oz frozen raspberries or strawberries
1 pint whipping cream
1/4 cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 large angel food cake

1. Dissolve Jello in boiling water, add raspberries (if using ones that are packaged add any juice left over as well). Chill until partially thickened.

2. Break cake into roughly 1 1/2in pieces and set aside in a large (huge) bowl.

3. Beat whipping cream until thick, adding sugar and vanilla. fold into Jello mixture.

4. Pour mixture over cake pieces and toss with spatula to coat evenly. return to 10" tube pan and chill until set (about 8 hours)

can be made a day ahead but should be eaten the same day it is served (another reason this reminds me of Sunshine).
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32582 is a reply to message #32580 ] Tue, 10 August 2010 16:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Caryn  is currently offline Caryn
Messages: 31
Registered: October 2008
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Member
My great gran had a recipe like that, but since it involved slicing the angel food cake into layers and then filling between the layers, I've only made it once. This version sounds much more doable. Thank you!
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32598 is a reply to message #32368 ] Tue, 10 August 2010 21:18 Go to previous messageGo to next message
mayasings  is currently offline mayasings
Messages: 186
Registered: July 2009
Location: Jerusalem
Senior Member

okay, here we go.

this is based on a family browny recipe, but I've adapted it to make muffins.

Bloody Doomsday Chocolate Raspberry Swirl (Vampire) Muffins

ingredients:

300 gr' dark chocolate
200 gr' butter
1.5 cups white flour
3/4 cup sugar
4 eggs
pinch of salt
1 tbsp brandy (or liqour of choice)
1 tsp. vanilla extract (the real thing!)
1 tsp. baking powder
chocolate chips (optional)
raspberry preserves

melt 200 gr' chocolate, butter and sugar until smooth. add brandy (I used Drambuie cause I have no brandy at home just now) and vanilla. add eggs gradually, then flour, salt and baking powder. mix untill smooth. break apart the last 100 gr' of chocolate into chunks and mix in.
pour mixture into muffin tin (I use silicone), then swirl in a bit of the raspberry preserves into each muffin. bake for 20-25 mins at medium heat and enjoy!

a second option is to sprinkle the chocolate chips after swirling the preserves in, or to bake the mixture for 10-15 mins and only then add the preserves by injection. I made a couple of fang holes and filled them with the preserves. just a suggestion Wink everything works here.


"they say that absence makes the heart grow fungus".
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32617 is a reply to message #32368 ] Wed, 11 August 2010 01:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
SusFe
Messages: 27
Registered: May 2010
Junior Member
Oh my. So many yummy recipes already posted, so many clever names - yum! There's nothing terribly clever about mine, but these are tasty, and pretty to look at, too.

Rose Spirals

6 oz cream cheese (neufchatel works fine)
1/2 cup butter
2 cups flour
6 oz rose-petal jam*
1/2 cup chopped nuts of your choice

Cream the cream cheese and the butter together. Blend in the flour. Split the dough into two batches. Roll out first batch until it's about 1/8 of an inch thick. Spread 3 oz of the jam across the surface of the dough, and then sprinkle on half of the chopped nuts. Roll up the dough (carefully) into a log. Wrap in waxed paper and start chilling it in your refrigerator. In the meantime, roll out, spread, and roll up the second half of the dough in the same manner. (Or go crazy and use a different jam/nut combo in the second roll.)

Chill logs for a minimum of 3 hours. Slice each roll thinly and place slices on baking sheets. (These cookies will not spread when baked.) Bake in a 350-degree F oven for about 35 minutes. Enjoy with a nice cup of tea.

*I posted my recipe for rose-petal jam earlier this year. Or you can buy some in stores, or use your favorite jam or jelly.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32622 is a reply to message #32368 ] Wed, 11 August 2010 09:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Honey_Bee  is currently offline Honey_Bee
Messages: 86
Registered: October 2008
Location: Tennessee
Member
I created this recipe after my chocolate allergy arose and I had to turn away from the most delectible food in the world. I also credit CHALICE with heavily influencing this recipe.

The Next-Best Thing to Chocolate--Honey Cake
1/2 cup honey (I'd recommend a light honey: clove or orange blossom)
1/2 cup butter, softened
2 eggs, beaten
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup milk, warm
Additional flavorings optional (i.e. vanilla, citrus zest)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl, cream together honey and butter. Mix in eggs. In separate bowl, combine dry ingredients.
Alternate mixing in a portion of dry ingredients with the warm milk until you have a smooth batter. The alternating is to keep it from lumping, which it will!
Here is where you would add any flavorings you desired.
Pour into loaf pan or an 8-in cake pan or cupcake pan, which ever is your preference. (Personal note: I'd not recommend the loaf pan, it tends to be too deep and the cake doesn't always bake through but sometimes it does come out wonderfully...it's finicky). Bake for 30-45 minutes or until the top is firm when tapped.


"All knowledge is worth having."
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32649 is a reply to message #32368 ] Wed, 11 August 2010 22:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jojo068  is currently offline jojo068
Messages: 1
Registered: August 2010
Location: Pennsylvania, U.S.
Junior Member
Midsummer Bliss
(For when the temperature is soo hot you can't bear to turn on the oven!)

1 container (fresh or frozen) strawberries (size determined by personal preference) cut up
1 500ml bottle champagne (or asti spumanti)
2 tablespoons sugar (or to taste)
1 teaspoon REAL vanilla extract
1 angelfood cake
whipped cream
1 bar of your favorite chocolate bar, chilled

Place berries in sealable plastic bag or container, add entire bottle of champagne, sugar, and vanilla. Seal, then chill for at least 2 hours, giving bag or container a good shaking at least 3 times while chilling. Then slice cake, spoon some berries and liquid over slice(s), top with whipped cream and shave some chilled chocolate over the top.

You can substitute other berries,and this is also wonderful over cheesecake, just strain the liquid first.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32661 is a reply to message #32368 ] Thu, 12 August 2010 07:29 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Lissy  is currently offline Lissy
Messages: 42
Registered: November 2008
Location: New Zealand
Member
Ok, for another copy of Sunshine I said I'd bake Dawn Flambe Surprise Cookies - so I thought I'd better make up the recipe to go with the name (seems right, for Sunshine, to make up a recipe). After some thought I decided it would work better to flambe muffins, or a mixture on top of muffins - so I took a stock muffin recipe and fiddled with it a bit - changing spices, quantity of butter (increased by half) and amount of sugar (reduced - I know, Sunshine wouldn't have, but I like the effect). Oh yes, and adding fruit, pecans or walnuts, and chocolate.

Dawn Flambe Surprise Muffins
So, muffin mix:

1/2 cup butter, melted
1/2 cup sugar
1 egg
1 cup milk
2 cups flour
4 teaspoons (tsp) baking powder
1/2 tsp mixed spice
1 cup chopped canned peaches (fresh would probably work even better but I'm working with what's in the cupboard mid-winter)
1/4 to 1/2 cup walnuts or pecans
1/4 cup roughly chopped dark chocolate (I used 60% cocoa)
zest of one mandarin (this really lightens up the flavour, so to speak)

Mix wet ingredients, add dry ingredients and stir through fruit, choc and nuts at the end just before putting into muffin tins - with paper cups so you can remove and flambe them with ease. Bake at 200 degrees C for 20 minutes. Try not to eat them before applying flambe mix (this is tough, I lost three to sampling before getting the mix on).

So, while the muffins baked, I made a quick sticky fruit mixture to flambe. This turns out to be the tricky bit (for someone who hasn't done much flambe cooking anyway). I wanted to use raspberries, but only had peaches and a mixed berry combo with black currants, raspberries and blueberries. Actually the blackcurrants gave the mix a lovely zing that contrasts well with the muffins.

Berry flambe mix
1 cup berry mix
1/4 cup peaches
3 tablepoons soft brown sugar (molasses sugar might be a good substitute)
75 grams butter
brandy or amaretto to flambee

Melt together in a saucepan until berries are mushy but still holding their shape. Remove from heat, stir through liqueur of choice - I found some apricot liqueur, but brandy or amaretto would also work well.
Apply about a tablespoon of mix to each muffin just before it is consumed, making sure there is a small hollow in the middle of the mixture to contain the alcohol, and light! (Don't eat until the flames have gone out of course). ... I should mention that it took several goes for me to get the brandy to light. So much for instant vampire flambe.


icon7.gif  Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32675 is a reply to message #32368 ] Thu, 12 August 2010 13:08 Go to previous messageGo to next message
stephreese  is currently offline stephreese
Messages: 3
Registered: July 2010
Junior Member
This is a very easy, very rich chocolate torte recipe. I've been making it for years. It's great for a dinner party or birthday. Chocolate lovers will adore it. Enjoy!

Death by Chocolate

1 lb semisweet chocolate chips
1 lb butter
1 dozen eggs
1 cup sugar
4 tsp instant espresso powder
1 pint whipping cream

Preheat over to 350 degrees.

Melt the butter and chocolate together in a double boiler. The mixture should be very smooth. Add 2 tsp of the espresso powder to dissolve. Take off the stove to cool for about 5 minutes.

In a mixing bowl, whip 6 whole eggs and 6 egg yolks. Add the sugar. Mix thoroughly.

Add the egg mixture into the slightly cooled chocolate mixture. Add a little eggs at first, stir, and then add in the remaining ones.

Line a springform pan with parchment paper. Butter the inside of the pan.

Pour the cake mixture into the pan, place on a cookie sheet, and bake for 45 minutes. To prevent the cake from cracking, turn off the oven and open the door after 45 minutes. Let cool for 30 minutes still in the oven, with the door open.

Whip the cream with 2 tsp of the espresso powder.

Cake can be served warm or chilled. The consistency is lighter when it is warm. It is very dense and rich when it is cooled. Serve with a spoonful of the whipped cream.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32676 is a reply to message #32675 ] Thu, 12 August 2010 14:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
abigailmm  is currently offline abigailmm
Messages: 545
Registered: January 2009
Location: Texas, USA
Senior Member

Wait, wait, wait, are you sure that's all of it? chocolate, butter, eggs, and sugar? Isn't there any flour? How can it bake into a cake?
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32678 is a reply to message #32676 ] Thu, 12 August 2010 15:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
stephreese  is currently offline stephreese
Messages: 3
Registered: July 2010
Junior Member
It's also called a flourless chocolate cake! There is no flour.

Stephanie
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32697 is a reply to message #32368 ] Fri, 13 August 2010 00:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Melda  is currently offline Melda
Messages: 2
Registered: August 2010
Location: Western Canada
Junior Member
To jessicaemilymoyer -

I just made your blueberry cake Very Happy We've had a carton of them in the fridge for this whole week and I wanted to use them.

The only things I did differently was the buddy I was making it with suggested two teaspoons of lemon juice added to the batter, which I think gave it a nice edge. Also, we baked it for closer to an hour than 40 minutes.

Thanks so much! We're really enjoying it.
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32699 is a reply to message #32661 ] Fri, 13 August 2010 00:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Lissy  is currently offline Lissy
Messages: 42
Registered: November 2008
Location: New Zealand
Member
flambe recipe... works best if the brandy is heated too - and even then I've still been having touble - something to work on!
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32700 is a reply to message #32699 ] Fri, 13 August 2010 01:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
abigailmm  is currently offline abigailmm
Messages: 545
Registered: January 2009
Location: Texas, USA
Senior Member

I was at a dinner a few months ago where the dessert was flambéed, with the chef brought out to perform next to the tables. She had a little burner on a cart, and heated the alcohol/topping mixture over it and lighted it while she had it over the heat, then poured the blue flames over the platter of dessert (they turned off most of the lights, so it showed better.)
Re: Sunshine Contest - Round 2 [message #32703 is a reply to message #32700 ] Fri, 13 August 2010 04:34 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Lissy  is currently offline Lissy
Messages: 42
Registered: November 2008
Location: New Zealand
Member
I like the sound of that!
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