So I’m just going to have to use fancy photo editing effects and stuff. Until I get better at editing and taking pictures I’m going to muscle through this dilemma. Yes, I will post more—I will be like a night blogger or something like that. It will be my “thing”—the niche of my food blog—crappy night time photos! Well, not crappy but developing and optimistic and photos that endeavor to be daylight photos.
Anyway, the reason I got to thinking about this (again) is
because I baked and confected a lot during this recent holiday season. I made fudge—which I did blog about—and a
cake, chocolates, toffee (twice), cookies, two apple pies, doughnuts and a whole
Christmas eve dinner for my parents.
That’s a lot of stuff right? Too much to just dismiss and pretend like it never happened. I mean, I was one busy baker. Well luckily I took some
pictures—reluctantly—thinking I might be able to post them and mention
them.
So that’s what this post is—a small amalgam of things I
baked over the past couple of weeks.
Let’s talk about his bundt cake first. It’s a gingerbread bundt cake that I grabbed
from Sprinkle Bakes’ blog with one slight adaptation. I iced it with a quick chocolate glaze
instead of the coffee one cited in the recipe.
Aside from that I followed the recipe to the letter. It’s turned out great, was very tasty and I
didn’t have a complaint about it.
Now let’s move on to these cookies. My goal of these cookies was to replicate the
Italian bakery style turtle cookies that I fell in love with over the past
year. This is a sugar/butter cookie with
caramel, fudge and usually topped with pecans.
I’ve found three bakeries that sell this style cookie and I can’t get
enough of them. So I used an easy spritz
cookie recipe from one of my cookbooks, a fudge frosting recipe from a different
cookbook of mine and then I kinda made up the caramel concoction myself. I omitted the pecans that tend to make up a
turtle (I think..) but only because I didn’t have any and personally the fudge
and caramel are the best parts. As a
whole it was a good cookie but the spritz base wasn’t exactly the right one
that I get from a bakery so I’m gonna have to work on that. I think I’ve found some more authentic
recipes so I will definitely come back to this.
The fudge was on target and the caramel was close but I may have to
continue to sample some of the real things to prefect it…
From The Art of the Cookie by Shelly Kaldunski: The spritz cookie
360g all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp salt
185g plus 2 tbsp of butter at room temp.
125g confectioners sugar
1 large egg at room temp.
1 tsp of vanilla extract
In one bowl whisk the flour and salt together. Set aside
In the bowl of a stand mixer with the paddle attachment beat the butter and sugar together until creamy and light (2-3 minutes)
Add the egg and the vanilla to the sugar-butter mixture and mix until fully incorporated
Slowly add the flour mixture mixing just until the flour is fully incorporated
Drop or pipe the cookie dough onto parchment paper lined baking sheets. Here, I made about 1 inch diameter round balls of dough and then flattened them out with the tines of a fork (like when making peanut butter cookies).
Place the cookies in the fridge while you preheat the oven to 325
Once the oven is preheated bake the cookies for 15-17 minutes
Remove and let cool.
I made the fudge using the chocolate fudge recipe from my previous post. The only difference was that at the end I added 1 tbsp of half and half to get the right consistency so I could pipe it onto the cookies.
For the caramel, I made a simple caramel base using this recipe. Then I just added some powdered sugar until I got the right consistency--not an exact science I know but I need to work on that...
Once I had everything made, I piped on a big dollop of the caramel onto the cookie and on top of that the fudge-- fancy style course.
From The Art of the Cookie by Shelly Kaldunski: The spritz cookie
360g all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp salt
185g plus 2 tbsp of butter at room temp.
125g confectioners sugar
1 large egg at room temp.
1 tsp of vanilla extract
In one bowl whisk the flour and salt together. Set aside
In the bowl of a stand mixer with the paddle attachment beat the butter and sugar together until creamy and light (2-3 minutes)
Add the egg and the vanilla to the sugar-butter mixture and mix until fully incorporated
Slowly add the flour mixture mixing just until the flour is fully incorporated
Drop or pipe the cookie dough onto parchment paper lined baking sheets. Here, I made about 1 inch diameter round balls of dough and then flattened them out with the tines of a fork (like when making peanut butter cookies).
Place the cookies in the fridge while you preheat the oven to 325
Once the oven is preheated bake the cookies for 15-17 minutes
Remove and let cool.
I made the fudge using the chocolate fudge recipe from my previous post. The only difference was that at the end I added 1 tbsp of half and half to get the right consistency so I could pipe it onto the cookies.
For the caramel, I made a simple caramel base using this recipe. Then I just added some powdered sugar until I got the right consistency--not an exact science I know but I need to work on that...
Once I had everything made, I piped on a big dollop of the caramel onto the cookie and on top of that the fudge-- fancy style course.
Lastly were the donuts.
I just used some of the leftover brioche dough that I made weeks ago and
froze because the recipe made so much.
The recipe came from Hummingbird High and this time I used the honey
glaze that she cites in her post. The
dough froze great and the donuts tasted amazing—especially coming straight out
of the fryer. I think this is a
fantastic donut recipe. Try it.
Those are my mom's santa salt and pepper shakers--they made for some good props! |
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