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Entries in Seeley (121)

Monday
May062013

1-2-3-4 Can I Have a Little More?

All together now!

The first cookie request was shortbread. One of the easiest things to make and one of the most difficult to perfect. They should be tender, but not flakey, sweet, but not cloying, simple, but flavourful.

Sounds nearly impossible, I know. But really, it's as easy as 1, 2, 3... 4.

This recipe came from an old friend of mine. We did a cookie exchange every xmas, and I'd ransom my army of tiny gingerbread men for her shortbread coins. When I finally saw how she made them, I was stunned. So few ingredients and the preparation breaks all kinds of cookie rules. But, rules were made to be broken, right?

I've actually got plans to break more, so I figure this is a good way to work you into the idea of making cookies in a somewhat less than traditional manner.

Shortbread Cookies

  • 1 c brown sugar
  • 2 c unsalted butter
  • 3 c flour
  • 4 tbsp cornstarch

Now you know how I managed to remember the recipe all these years.

The most important thing to notice though: UNsalted butter. Most cookie recipes include salt to help the leaveners work, and so salted butter can be used as long as you decrease the added salt. This recipe, you may notice, requires neither of those. No salt to decrease, so no salt in the butter.

Brown sugar is also not entirely traditional, but with the absence of vanilla or any other flavouring the little bit of molasses goes a long way. It also adds a bit of gold to the "coins."

Now, this is where things get a little weird...

Put all of the ingredients into a bowl. (Butter really needs to be soft and room temperature)

Squish them.

I told you we'd be doing weird non-cookie preparation things.

You have to use your hands for this. Have to.

Don't knead, just squish. Kneading will start gluten forming and lengthen the dough. We want shortbreads, not longbreads.

In only a few minutes you'll end up with a very soft ball of dough. And no spoon to wash.

Much too soft to do anything with right now. 

So, split it into two, make sausages out of them, and chill them like we did to the creamsicle cookie filling.

Give them at least a half hour to chill and stiffen.

I left mine in there for about 2 hours.

And preheated the oven as soon as I took them out of the fridge.

300 degrees.

With a sharp knife, slice them just under a half inch thick. 8mm. or 3/8 of an inch.

They don't spread much so you can pack quite a few onto the parchment covered sheet.

Ideally, shortbread cookies should have no colour on the bottom of them. The low cooking temperature makes that easy. If you use white sugar and temps as low as 200F (you have to cook them for 20-25 minutes in an oven that low) you can get very pale cookies. Me, I like the caramel flavour that comes from the brown sugar and I'm not patient enough to wait 25 minutes for a sheet of cookies.

So, I do these at 300 for 15 minutes. Some came out a little on the golden side, but this is what you're looking for:

Top and bottom are pretty much the same colour.

They're very soft when they come out of the oven. Give them a minute on the sheet, and then slide the parchment onto the cooling rack.

When they're cooled, stack them into the magic cookie tin.

The crumbly, sandy texture of these absolutely melts in your mouth.

A few dozen of these and you can have my entire gingerbread army.

What cookie have you used as currency?

 

Tuesday
Apr302013

Chocoloaf

For the next four months, I will have all kinds of time to cook. And I'll be making this again!

I just got back from Recipe Guy's place and I came home to yet more snow. I knew I shouldn't have gotten on that airplane. But hey, at least I don't have calculus homework to do.

I didn't come up with this recipe myself, I found it on Smitten Kitchen. I love her recipes, and the light in her kitchen. I did have to make a few adjustments to this one though. I decreased the sugar a bit because I know I'm going to cover this quick, easy cake with jam and whipped cream. I also had to make some adjustments to the leavening. Yes, I'm still having leavening issues. I managed to get it up this time though.

Chocoloaf

1/2 cup butter
1 cup brown sugar
2 eggs
1 cup buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups flour
3/4 cup cocoa
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt

As usual, preheat the oven to 325, and get everything warmed up to room temperature.

Beat the butter and sugar together. If you think you can eat this without succumbing to the temptation of covering it with home made cherry jam, add half a cup of plain white sugar.

Beat in the eggs and vanilla.

And then the buttermilk. Beat everything well with an electric mixer. I would add "if you have one" to that sentence, but I think I'm the only person left on the planet who still mixes stuff by hand. When I'm not at Recipe Guy's house.

Speaking of kitchen tools. Sifter. Apparently these things really do exist. I've always just used a sieve over a bowl, but this think is handy. And gives your hand a work out. Yay for popeye arms!

 

Sift all the dry ingredients right into the bowl with the wet stuff.

This is just about the easiest cake ever.

Mix the dry stuff in gently with a spoon until it's all just combined. You'll have a lovely thick and fluffy batter.

Spread it into a buttered and floured loaf pan.

And bake at 325 for about an hour.

Let it cool in the pan for about 10 minutes and then the rest of the way on a rack.

I think the reason the desire to cover every slice with jam and whipped cream is because of the shape. But, it's just perfect for covering with jam and whipped cream.

I'm thinking loaf is really the best shape for a cake.

What's your favourite cake shape?

 

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