Sunday, June 17, 2012
Thursday, June 14, 2012
The Best No-Bake Cookies in the Universe
It’s been a lonely two weeks
from where I stand but I’ve had some good cookies to bake. Thanks to
everyone who sent me recipes and ideas, I will put them to use.
My fiancé, Spyros, moved back
to Greece last week. While living on my own has offered me more time to
read and write (which is a bit like taking your multi vitamins, for a writer),
without another person in the house, I lose track of time and the rhythm of the
day. I also don’t cook as much. As I discovered last week, one
batch of ratatouille provides at least a week’s worth of meals for one person.
But I am still baking.
It’s an activity well-suited to solitude. Cookies, cakes, and bread
require concentration, accurate measurements, and slight adjustments in mixing
speeds...
My good friend, Marla,
sent me her grandmother’s recipe for no bake-cookies last week. To be honest,
I’ve never been one for no-bake cookies. No-bake cookies seems like
another term for candy, something I don’t have a taste for. Too many gummies
and Laffy Taffies landed me under the dentist’s drill as a child. My
fault entirely, I realize, but I'm still suspicious of the stuff. I like
cookies because they are not candy. They are miniature, soft cakes of
butter, flour, sugar, and sometimes spices. But according to Marla these
are “the best no-bake cookies in the Universe” and a favorite recipe of her
late grandmother, Hazel Shorts Work. So I was curious to try them.
Late last Friday I whipped up a batch.
I heated a saucepan over my
electric stove, poured in the milk, sugar, and cocoa powder. Drowsy, I
questioned my sanity for baking in the first place. Besides me, who else
would eat the sweet treats? And nine-thirty at night was hardly a reasonable
hour for baking. But I continued on:
The recipe said, “Stir the
sugar/milk mixture constantly until it reaches a rolling boil.”
I stirred and stirred,
rotating my wrist like a baton twirler. My eyes fixed on the mixture and
nothing else. Small whiffs of sweetened milk travelled up my nostrils. I
felt cozy and not so alone anymore. A pot of milk depended on me.
When the mixture reached its
rolling boil, I set the microwave timer for one minute. When it rang, I
removed my mixture, and stirred in the peanut butter, butter, oatmeal, salt and
vanilla. Like Halloween, my kitchen smelled of peanut butter cups and I
felt that surely the apartment wasn't empty. My thoughts cleared; I knew
what I needed to do to complete the cookies and the rest of the evening.
In her recipe, Mrs. Work
recommends letting the cookies set at room temperature. But since it was
a hot evening, I placed them in the refrigerator. Later that night, when
I had settled on the couch with a glass of red wine and Amanda Hesser’s Cooking for Mr. Latte, I remembered the cookies. I peeked
into the refrigerator, and saw that Hazel’s No-Bakes had set with a beautiful
gloss. I took a bite of one and widened my eyes a little. It had
the consistency of a cookie and a piece fudge all at once. Without planning it,
I took another. I had to leave the room to prevent myself from taking a
third. These are the best no-bake cookies in the
Universe and my parents and younger sister agree. Thank you, Hazel and
Marla.
Hazel’s No-Bake Cookies
In a medium saucepan
combine:
1/4 cup cocoa powder (I
used Hershey’s Special Dark Chocolate Cocoa powder)
2 cups sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup milk (skim and whole milk work in this recipe but Marla says whole milk yields a tastier cookie)
pinch of sea salt
Over medium flame, uncovered, stir the above mixture constantly until it comes to a boil.
Stir ONE MINUTE at a rolling boil then remove from heat.
While still stirring, add:
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 stick butter
3 cups Rolled QUICK oats/minute oats
Drop by heaping teaspoons onto waxed paper
Let harden at room temperature or in the refrigerator.
Marla’s warning - if the first ingredients are cooked too high or boiled too long, it seems to impact the way the cookies set (or don't set).
2 cups sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup milk (skim and whole milk work in this recipe but Marla says whole milk yields a tastier cookie)
pinch of sea salt
Over medium flame, uncovered, stir the above mixture constantly until it comes to a boil.
Stir ONE MINUTE at a rolling boil then remove from heat.
While still stirring, add:
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 stick butter
3 cups Rolled QUICK oats/minute oats
Drop by heaping teaspoons onto waxed paper
Let harden at room temperature or in the refrigerator.
Marla’s warning - if the first ingredients are cooked too high or boiled too long, it seems to impact the way the cookies set (or don't set).
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Grown up Peanut Butter Blossoms
My love for peanut butter
blossoms began early. I remember, as a child, stumbling in on dozens of
them at my great aunt's house. Aluminum trays covered her dinning room
table, each containing neat rows of blossoms, ready to be served the next day
at a friend’s wedding. The Kisses's points poked at their flimsy
cellophane covers and begged to be eaten.
Mrs.
Smith’s original recipe is on file at the Smithsonian institute. I’ve
sent a request for it but the archivist tells me it may take a few weeks to
receive it. In the meantime I’ve created, what I believe is a worthy
substitute.
When I was certain that my
mother and aunt were too busy chatting to notice, I dove my chubby hand
underneath the plastic and plucked two blossoms from their resting place. With
some creative rearrangement of the other cookies, my aunt would never suspect. I
skipped outdoors, blossoms in hand, and ate my pilfered snack undetected.
Freda Smith created the
peanut butter blossom for the 1957 Pillsbury Bake-Off competition. While
Mrs. Smith’s recipe did not win the grand prize, it was a finalist.
Afterwards, the recipe was printed on bags of Hershey’s Kisses, giving peanut
butter blossoms national exposure and a tender spot in the hearts of
millions. Including mine.
Peanut butter blossoms are
the cookies I sample first at weddings, baptisms, and graduation parties if
they are present…and they usually are. It’s for this reason that I’m
devoting my first post to them. Blossoms are the cookies I always start
with, and it’s comforting to begin a new project in a familiar place.
A grown-up peanut butter
blossom.
Adapted
from Pillsbury.com
Makes
about 4 dozen
1 ¾ cup
all-purpose flour
½ cup granulated
sugar
½ cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon
baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup unsalted
butter, softened
½ cup natural
style peanut butter
2 tablespoons
milk
1 egg
additional sugar
for rolling
48 dark
chocolate kisses
It calls for natural peanut
butter, the kind you must stir with a butter knife to incorporate the separated
oil. It’s time consuming, yes, and a bit messy but the result is well worth the
effort; peanut butter cookies with a concentrated flavor and dense, chewy
texture.
While warm, I pressed dark
chocolate Kisses in the center of each. They make a most satisfying
dessert. Or you can eat them the way I do, as an afternoon snack with a
cup of coffee.
So while I’m starting
with a familiar favorite, I’ve matured since my cookie-snatching days. I crave
toothy, meaningful cookies now, not something I sneak for a sweet thrill. I
think this version accomplishes that.
Peanut Butter Blossoms
Preheat
the oven to 375oF. In a large bowl with an electric mixer,
stir together the brown sugar, ½ cup granulated sugar, peanut butter and
butter. The mixture will be crumbly at first, but keep stirring. It
should turn into a thick paste. Stop stirring when you reach this
point, you don’t want to over mix.
Next add the milk, vanilla,
baking soda, and salt and mix until well-incorporated.
Shape dough into ¾ inch
balls. Smaller is better with these guys since they tend to spread a good bit
in the oven. Roll the ball in a small bowl filled with the additional
sugar. Space them about 1 inch apart on ungreased cookie sheets and bake
for 10-12 minutes. This is a good time to start unwrapping those
Hershey’s Kisses.
When the cookies are slightly
golden, remove from the oven and immediately press a chocolate Kiss into the
center of each. Remove them to wire cooling racks. While cooling,
the kisses become soft, almost runny. You can place them in the
refrigerator for about an hour to make them solidify faster.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Food and Pittsburgh
I want to talk to you about
food. And Pittsburgh.
Pittsburgh is a city of food traditions. Come
summertime, it’s an order of Potato Patch Fries or a towering chocolate dip
cone at Kennywood Park. Fall brings Steeler games and crockpots full of
kielbasa and sauerkraut. A cookie table must be present at every wedding
reception. And just about everyone likes a sandwich stuffed with fries
and coleslaw. Food is important in Pittsburgh and many of the people who live
here continue to cook their grand-parents' and great-grandparents' favorite
recipes. While the preparations may not be fancy and the flavors, well,
not quite complex, these traditions are part of what gives Pittsburgh its
character and unique hometown feel. At least I think so.
I am moving away from Pittsburgh soon, to join my fiancé in
Greece. While I look forward to sunnier skies and a never-ending supply
of olive oil, I will miss my city’s quirky food customs, particularly at our
wedding which will be held in Athens next summer. Lucky for me, my fiancé
loves Pittsburgh and its traditions as much, if not more, than I do.
To incorporate a nugget of steel into our Greek reception,
we’ve decided to organize a traditional Pittsburgh cookie table. But, as
I will be far from my family and friends in the months leading up to the big
day, I hope to gather cookie recipes and try baking them before I leave. It
will be a personal project—something to work on every day. I am turning
it into a blog as a way to hold myself accountable. Hopefully, it will be a
place where I can collaborate with others and collect cookie recipes, memories,
and stories online. So dear friends, family members, and readers please
send me your recipes, stories and ideas. What cookies do you think
absolutely must be included on a proper Pittsburgh cookie table? Which recipes
do you think are nice, modern additions? Are there any you dislike? I am
open to any and all suggestions and wait for you with a ready ear and a hungry
stomach.
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