Category Archives: Desserts

Cheap Foodie Thrills

In this time of economic austerity, splurges (over-the-top vacations, frequent meals out, all-you-can-eat organic produce, seasonal wardrobe refreshers) are off of the table for most of us.

Fortunately, we can still indulge in gourmet food. After all, a few $6 chocolate bars, $5 fig preserve jars, and swoon-worthy cheeses won’t break the bank. Here are some ways to treat and nourish yourself in this stressful period:

  1. Dalmatia Fig Spread: Not just any jam, this dark, seed-studded spread has an intense flavor reminiscent of brandy and dried fruit. Try it alongside a cheese plate, on toast, swirled into yogurt, dolloped atop vanilla ice cream…(about $5/jar)
  2. TCHO Chocolates: I recently tried the company’s new SeriousMilk bars: “Classic” and “Cacao,” and was completely blown away. Milk chocolate perfection: a rich and creamy texture, with serious cocoa flavor and a slight tang. For all of you milk chocolate skeptics, head over to the TCHO Web site (www.tcho.com), and order a bar. You won’t be sorry. (About $11/2 58-gram-each bars)
  3. Groats: With a name like “groats,” you’re probably far from tempted. But this unrefined form of oats becomes perfectly tender after an overnight stint in the slow cooker (rather than overcooked, as with steel cut oats). Purchase the steel cut variety of groats, add some flavorings, and wake up in the morning to a comforting, aromatic bowl of goodness. (Just a few dollars, buy in bulk at health food stores or Whole Foods Markets)
  4. Pecorino Cheese: Made with sheep’s milk, Pecorino is arguably as delicious as Parmigiano-Reggiano, but much lower in cost. Try this snowy white, salty cheese with a rich, meaty taste grated over pastas and stirred into meatballs. (around $5/half pound)
  5. Seasonal Produce: If you buy produce in season (one example: persimmons right now), you’ll glean the best product for the least amount of dough. Lately, I’ve been buying less organic–but more seasonal–produce, and doing so has made a large dent in my grocery bills.
  6. Lindemans Fruit Lambic: For those who don’t like beer, try this fizzy, fruity, sweet-but-not-saccharine product. The raspberry flavor is the perfect accompaniment to chocolate, such as TCHO SeriousMilk. (around $9/large bottle)

Do you have any other budget food and drink favorites? Let me know – I’d love to hear about them!

Getting My Matcha Fix

Cup of Matcha

Ever since my first time trying matcha (powdered pure green tea) in Tokyo several years ago, I’ve been hooked. I still recall sitting in the middle of a garden watching a presentation of the traditional tea ceremony: such a formalized, elegant, meditative affair.

Once the tea was ready, we were each given a small cup of grassy, slightly bitter, and velvety verdant matcha along with a few sweets to counteract the bitterness. Up until that point, I’d tasted high-quality teas, usually black varieties at English-style tea rooms. Yet, this was something else. Something completely new (at least, to me; after all, matcha’s been around for over 800 years) and different.

After that trip, I started chasing matcha: incorporating lower-grade varieties into sweets (such as the Almond-Scented Green Tea Shortbread with Cardamom Sugar from my first book, Tasting Club), making matcha at home, and obsessively searching for–and trying–any sweets incorporating matcha. The few that come to mind right now: the green tea truffles from Kee’s Chocolates and Dean & Deluca and the matcha sweets from Kyotofu. (If you know of any particularly delicious sweets or snacks incorporating matcha, please let me know!)

My matcha obsession thus established, you won’t be surprised to learn that I was particularly riveted by a press release I received the other day. The release described three different matchas from Breakaway Matcha, based out of California. The owner, Eric Gower, also a cookbook author, tried countless matchas before picking the three he considered the best. Of course, I couldn’t stop myself from ordering the highest-grade variety, as well as a kit for preparing authentic matcha. (My husband was none too pleased: high-grade matcha is very pricey. My defense: I only splurge on food and drink!)

I received the coveted package last night and just prepared a cup of Breakaway Matcha’s Blend 100. The small silver bag contained a small amount of matcha; after all, this powdered tea is very valuable, akin to saffron or gold leaf. The matcha was slightly sticky and an ultra-saturated grassy green (warning: it stubbornly sticks to your fingers).

After taking in its color, I began to prepare it. I heated a creamer with hot water. Then I boiled water and let it sit for a couple of minutes. I placed a small strainer over the creamer and spooned in 1/2 teaspoon of the powdered matcha. I then scraped the powder into the creamer (to prevent clumping). Next, I poured an inch of the almost-boiling water over the strainer and frothed the tea (with my Aerolatte) for about 10 seconds. I poured in a bit more almost-boiling water, frothed it again, then poured the matcha into a cup. Finally, I sat down to taste.

Tools for Making Matcha

The matcha was the vibrant green color of creamy pea soup. A bit like an espresso, it bore crema–froth–on top. Underneath the bubbles, the tea was  thinner and darker, a swampy green. Its scent was subtle: a mix of grassy, nutty, and earthy. Its mouthfeel was velvety, a bit like melted ice cream. Unlike many matchas, there was virtually no bitterness. Instead, what stood out were the matcha’s floral, grassy, nutty notes. The last sip of the concentrated, intense tea was thick and creamy. If only I’d had some wogashi (traditional Japanese sweets, a bit like petit fours) to taste alongside it.

Imagine a much more creamy, velvety, complex, floral version of green teas you’ve tried, and you can begin to get a sense of matcha’s character and allure.   (I don’t want to sound like a food snob, but the green tea from your local Japanese restaurant is like water when compared to high-grade matcha.)

Even if you don’t want to splurge for the high-grade drinking matcha, try purchasing lower-grade varieties to make these cookies (from Tasting Club). They’re one of my absolute favorite indulgences and ways to get my matcha fix.

Almond-Scented Green Tea Shortbread with Cardamom Sugar

Makes about 24

These flavorful and complex bright green cookies are not only delicious tea accompaniments–they actually contain tea! If you can’t find matcha, just purchase another type of Japanese green tea, and grind it into a powder with a spice grinder. Technique adapted from Bon Appetit Magazine, March 1997.

2 cups all-purpose flour

½ cup powdered or confectioner’s sugar

1 tablespoon plus 1½ teaspoons matcha (powdered Gyokuro green tea)

1 teaspoon ground cardamom, plus a heaping ½ teaspoon for dusting (divided)

½ teaspoon salt

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature, plus 1 tablespoon for greasing baking sheets

1 teaspoon almond extract

3 tablespoons granulated sugar

1. In a medium bowl, mix the flour, sugar, matcha, cardamom and salt until well combined. Using an electric mixer, beat the butter in another bowl on high speed until light, about 2 minutes. Add the extract and beat until combined. Beat the flour mixture into the butter mixture in four additions on low speed until well combined.

2. Transfer the dough to a flat surface and divide in half, forming each half into a six-inch-long log. Then, form each log into a 2-by-1-by-6-inch rectangle. Cover in plastic and refrigerate for two hours.

3. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. Grease two large baking sheets with butter. Remove dough from the refrigerator and cut into ½-inch-thick slices. Place slices on the baking sheets, making sure the cookies are at least 1 inch apart. Transfer to the oven. After 10 minutes, switch the sheets so that the one on the bottom rack is now on the top (and vice versa). Bake until the cookies are lightly golden on the edges, about 25 minutes total. Let cool about five minutes.

4. In a small bowl, mix the 3 tablespoons of granulated sugar with the remaining ½ teaspoon of ground cardamom. One by one, carefully toss each cookie in the mixture, coating both sides in the sugar. Let cool. Enjoy!

Best Gluten-Free Baking Mixes

A few months ago, I found myself buying a ridiculous amount of eggs, oil, and disposable baking pans (insert “green” guilt here) at the grocery store. The reason: I needed to test 55 gluten-free baking mixes (10 pizza crust, 15 pancake, 9 muffin, 10 yellow cake, and 11 brownie) for my “Taste Test” column for Everyday with Rachael Ray Magazine. After days of stirring and oven use and a group tasting, we ended up with five winners, profiled in the March 2011 issue.

In general, I was beyond impressed with the cakes and brownies–so much so that I served a gluten-free chocolate cake at my oldest son’s last birthday dinner (even though none of the attendees had dietary constraints)! The muffins and some of the pancakes were also pretty good, tender and flavorful. However, the pizza crusts were the least successful.

So, in celebration of Celiac Awareness Month, here’s a listing of the winners and finalists:

Pancake: The winner was Kinnikinnick Foods. The finalists included King Arthur Flour, Bisquick, Hodgson’s Mill, and Pamela’s.

Pizza Crust: The winner was Bob’s Red Mill. The finalists were Namaste, King Arthur Flour, Kinnikinnick, and Gluten Free Pantry French Bread and Pizza.

Muffins: The winner was Authentic Foods Chocolate Chip. The finalists were Authentic Foods Blueberry, Really Great Food Corn, and Pamela’s Corn. (I’m still seriously craving those moist corn muffins!)

Yellow/White/Vanilla Cake: The winner was Really Great Food (with a subtle note of nutmeg-like mace). The finalists were Authentic Foods, Betty Crocker, Gluten Free Pantry, and Pamela’s.

Brownie: The winner was Gluten Free Pantry. The finalists were Trader Joe’s, Cherrybrook Kitchen, Authentic Foods, and Pamela’s.

Best Frozen Waffles

Having two toddler sons, I was thrilled to get charged with evaluating frozen waffles! After all, other than homemade pancakes and French toast (when I have more time) or cinnamon toast, scrambled eggs, and oatmeal (when I have less), they’re my boys’ most frequent breakfast.

Ever since conducting the research for an article for Everyday with Rachael Ray Magazine, my family’s breakfast (and dessert) habits have indeed changed. Now, when we want a decadent treat, we rush to pick up Julian’s Recipe Natural Butter Waffles in any flavor — one of the most delicious product lines I’ve ever tasted. For healthful, tasty staples, we turn to waffles from Nature’s Path (in addition to the winning Homestyle Gluten-Free product, we love the Hemp Plus and Buckwheat Wildberry), 365 (the winning Organic Flax variety), or Kellogg’s Eggo Nutri-Grain line, especially the blueberry flavor.

Here are some other products that really stood out (but didn’t make it into the article): Aunt Jemima Homestyle and Buttermilk waffles (for tender, white-flour goodness); Smucker’s Snack’n Waffles, especially blueberry (another dessert option); and Eggo Blueberry (for pillowy treats).

 

 

Holiday Helper: Best Cookie Dough

Did you intend to whip up several batches of cookies this holiday season, but realize that you simply don’t have the time? No worries. Just pick up some of these seriously delicious (and widely available) packaged cookie doughs, and no one on your gift or guest list will be the wiser.

For the product list, check out the “Taste Test: Packaged Cookie Dough” article I wrote for the November issue of Everyday with Rachael Ray Magazine. Then scroll down for a list of the runner-ups:

Oatmeal: Nestle Toll House Oatmeal Raisin and Immaculate Baking Oatmeal Cranberry White Chocolate

Peanut Butter: Nestle Ultimates Peanut Butter Lover’s and Target Market Pantry Peanut Butter Cup

Oddball: Nestle Walnut Chocolate Chip

Chocolate Chip: Nestle Ultimates Chocolate Chip Lovers and Pillsbury Big Deluxe Chocolate Chip

As a side note, the 600 Lb Gorillas products were also fabulous; yet at the time I wrote this article, they were not available nationwide. Hopefully, they are now…

Happy holidays!

Chocolate: For Me and My Three-Year-Old

It had been a long time since I’d indulged in a chocolate bar. After all, I’m a disciplined person–except when it comes to chocolate. I’ve been known to devour an entire box of truffles in one sitting. So you see why I need to be careful when it comes to my drug of choice.

Then the other night, I remembered my stash in the basement (which, being cool and dark, is an intelligent place to store chocolate, as well as wine). White styrofoam on the outside, the plain exterior of my storage box offers no clue to the treats within.

My bar of choice that evening: an Askinosie Davao Dark Milk Chocolate Bar + Fleur de Sel, which–along with the company’s El Rustico Dark Chocolate Bar (with vanilla bean morsels and sugar crystals)–is one of my favorite chocolate bars around. (While we’re on the subject, I’m also an ardent fan of Amano Chocolate, Michel Cluizel, Valrhona, Vosges, and Dolfin.)

Inspired, I decided to share the wealth, removing some Scharffen Berger semisweet chocolate for my three-year-old son, Max. While he eagerly waited, I melted the chocolate in the microwave.

Soon, I was teaching him to dip pretzel sticks into the molten chocolate. “This is a nice combination!” he pronounced. Over the past few nights, we’ve varied the routine a bit, sometimes substituting apple or pear slices (note to parents: if you’re having trouble getting your little ones to eat fruit, try this).

The only downside: Max now requests Scharffen Berger chocolate more than I’d like…he’s developed an expensive habit. At least, Max is getting healthful antioxidants, I tell myself (the bar has a cacao content percentage of 70%).

Chocolate and Avocado Mousse

Strawberry and Mexican Chocolate Mousse Parfaits

You probably scrunched up your nose and regarded the computer screen skeptically after reading that recipe title. But, stay with me for a moment. I too was doubtful as to whether chocolate and avocado would mesh well.

Still, the idea had intrigued me ever since I began eating more healthfully a few months ago. After all, I’d heard that avocado (whose fats are mostly heart-healthy monounsaturated, the same type found in extra virgin olive oil) could substitute for heavy cream and/or egg yolks in uncooked dishes. No need to worry about raw egg, an ingredient in many recipes for chocolate mousse.

That’s why, preparing brunch for some friends and their kids this weekend, I found myself pureeing avocado with a bit of organic coconut oil, plus maple syrup, vanilla extract, and salt. The result was creamy and smooth. I dipped in my spoon, and marveled at the tropical flavor. I made a mental note to stop at this point in the future, layering the mousse with tropical fruit (like passion fruit and diced papaya) and garnishing it with shredded coconut.

For the time being, though, my mind was set on chocolate. Somewhat pained that I’d lose the gorgeous avocado-green color (much better suited to dessert than kitchen cabinets!), I spooned in some unsweetened cocoa powder and cinnamon for a Mexican chocolate flavor. After a few more seconds in the food processor, I sampled the satiny mixture. Rich and delicious, with subtle coconut undertones, it revealed no hint of the avocado. I sliced up a quart of strawberries, and then layered them in six small parfait glasses with the mousse, garnishing the elegant desserts with sprigs of fresh mint.

In just 10 minutes, I had a company-worthy dessert that was nourishing enough for my children (who, along with their friends, competed with the adults for spoonfuls!).

It’s up to you whether to divulge the secret that these vegan and pareve (if you’re kosher) treats are actually good for you. If you do, you might want to quiz your guests, asking them to guess the mousse’s secret ingredient. I bet they’ll have no idea that an ingredient primarily used in guacamole could make for the ultimate last course.

Strawberry and Mexican Chocolate Mousse Parfaits (with Avocado!)

Makes 6 small portions

This vegan, dairy-free, nourishing recipe is heavily adapted from “Chocolate of the Gods Mousse with Raspberries and Mint” from The Balanced Plate. For a less intense maple flavor, feel free to substitute a mild honey (such as wildflower) for the maple syrup or to use half maple syrup and half honey.

2 Hass avocados (about one heaping packed cup)

3/4 cup maple syrup

2 Tablespoons coconut oil

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder

1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1 quart strawberries, hulled and sliced

6 fresh mint leaves for garnish

1. Puree the first five ingredients in the food processor until smooth. (Marvel at the color and taste – at this stage, it’s an absolutely delicious avocado coconut mousse.) Add the next two ingredients, and puree until smooth. Layer with the strawberries in six small parfait glasses, and garnish with mint. Serve.

Never-Fail Chocolate Banana Bread

Never-Fail Chocolate Banana Bread

I’ve always believed that skillful, successful baking meant following recipes to the letter — after all, that’s what I was taught in cooking school. Pastry chefs are more precise, the general logic goes. Their minds and personalities are completely different from those of cooks.

That’s why I was so surprised when — flush with over-ripe bananas — I tried this banana bread recipe fr0m Epicurious.  Although it didn’t adhere to any baking “best practices” — you just threw all of the ingredients into a bowl, gave the mixture a stir, and stuck it in the oven — it turned out dangerously delicious. (Note that you might need to cook the bread for longer than the recipe recommends – I sometimes go with 1 hour 10 minutes.) Unlike many banana breads, this one was moist, rich with banana flavor, and speckled with melting dark chocolate chips.

After yielding such enticing results after just 10 minutes of active time, it’s no wonder I made the recipe again…and again… I soon found myself buying extra bananas just so I’d need to bake another loaf.

Even better, the results impressed no matter how much I tinkered with or, in a distracted state, completely disregarded the recipe: three bananas or four (I like four even though the center can sometimes seem almost undercooked), 1/2 cup of dark chocolate chips or more, toasted hazelnuts on top (see the picture below), whisking the egg after it’s been added to the other ingredients.

The miniscule effort I make is always well worth it. Regardless of where everyone is on the cranky meter, there are smiles all around once this chocolate-studded loaf comes out of the oven. That’s why I often double the recipe and freeze a loaf for later.

Hazelnut-Chocolate Banana Bread

Chocolate Babka

Chocolate Babka

Although half of my ancestors are of Eastern European Jewish origin, my memories of babka (a sweet yeast bread associated with Jewish cuisine) don’t begin until college. It was then — while I was attending Columbia College and living in NYC — that I ventured into Zabar’s for the first time. The famed food emporium, located at 80th St. and Broadway, continues to be full of bustle, the aromas of roasting coffee beans and spices, and traditional Jewish baked goods, including babka in both chocolate and cinnamon flavors.

Back in the ’90′s, during my college days, Zabar’s offered loaves from two different companies: Green’s and the Delancey Dessert Company. While the former boasted a wealth of filling as well as a sweet crumb topping, they were a tad dry and slightly industrial in their perfect rectangular shapes. Meanwhile, the latter approximated perfection. Not only were they chock full of chocolate clumps, like lodes of ore in the ground; they were also supremely moist and topped with a wealth of crumb topping, like gold dust. Plus, their irregular, undisciplined shapes evoked an archetypcal grandma, her apron dusted with flour and her hands shaking a bit from arthritis as she lovingly shaped the dough into double figure 8′s before gingerly placing it in greased loaf pans.

I would walk briskly from New York’s Morningside Heights neighborhood down to Zabar’s, anticipating smoked whitefish salad, warm bagels, and babka. Then, I’d ferry my booty back to my dorm, warming it up in the microwave first, so that the filling would melt into a sauce. Sometimes, I’d even top my slice with some vanilla ice cream.

These memories informed my and my sister Jackie’s choice to prepare the chocolate babka in the new “Gourmet Today” cookbook. We set off on our mission, slightly intimidated. And sure, the process took several hours total (though much of that time was inactive, just waiting for the dough to rise – twice). Yet, it wasn’t difficult. And it was mouthwatering. The most enjoyable parts: rolling out and shaping the supple dough and placing the shingles of butter and shards of chocolate over its surface.

The result was delicious (naturally, we added more chocolate than the recipe dictated), with the glossy tops shiny and festive. However, next time we make it (and there will be a next time), we’re going to try using Nutella for the filling and adding a crumb topping (perhaps with finely-chopped toasted hazelnuts). That way, intense flavor will permeate the entire loaf, rather than just its interior.

Butter and Chocolate

Egg Wash, Butter, and Chocolate

Shards of Chocolate

Vanilla Bean’s Midas Touch

My Lone Vanilla Bean Awaits its Use

I dreamt of vanilla beans the other night – I was scraping the seeds, like dessert caviar, into a buttery cookie dough. When I awoke, I craved the vanilla bean sable cookies from New York’s City Bakery. They literally melt in your mouth, leaving clouds of sweet vanilla perfume in their wake. Yet, my day soon filled up with other activities, and so my lone vanilla bean continued to remain unused in the pantry.

That’s a shame. First of all, the beans do shrivel up, and should be used relatively promptly. Secondly, there’s nothing like the pressure of having a vanilla bean in the pantry – it’s a cross between luxurious and uncomfortable, a bit like having a bottle of fancy Champagne in your cellar. You save it for the perfect festive occasion, but nothing seems good enough. And so the bottle sits and collects dust.

Yet, instead of waiting for the ultimate sable cookie recipe, I should just let the seeds anoint some everyday indulgence, like hot chocolate or a crème anglaise sauce. After all, vanilla bean takes so many desserts, even rustic rice pudding, from good to other-worldly (once, I even stirred the seeds into a carrot dish). Those tiny brown specks you see in panna cottas, flans, and ice creams, resembling nothing more than humble splinters, are good signposts of deliciousness.

Unlike vanilla extract, the beans lend complexity, intensity, aroma, and a bit of pure, sweet, floral magic to whatever they touch (after all, they come from orchids). Yet, the beans don’t hit you over the head with their presence. Instead, like the most elegant handmaidens, they’re happy to play second fiddle to more dominant ingredients, such as chocolate.

Yet, vanilla shouldn’t be relegated to the background – that’s why I’m delighted by the increasing number of “vanilla bean” desserts out there. Like those cookies at The City Bakery. Maybe I will stir up a pot of hot chocolate today, but I would still love that cookie recipe…

What's the common denominator in these chocolates (other than cacao)? Vanilla.