Flashback Friday – Easy As Pie?

Flashback Friday

The following originally appeared on 10/29/07 at Exit 51

Easy As Pie?

Making pies intimidates me. Rather, I should say making pie dough intimidates me. Seems like it should be the easiest thing to do. Take some butter and some flour and some water and end up with flaky goodness cradling a luscious filling. Not for me. I must not have been given the magic words one must recite during this ritual because the pastry arts and I are not on the same page. Continue reading “Flashback Friday – Easy As Pie?”

Trendy

Cookies

One of my nicknames in high school was Trendy Wendi…thanks Tiffany Wilson, sorry I didn’t see you at the reunion last summer.  The funny thing about that is that I am, and have always been, so far behind the times that it’s not funny.  I’ve never been a gauge of what the “cool kids” are doing.  I was still inching along with dial up when most of the world was running at lightning fast dsl speeds.  Seven years ago I tried to convince The Mistah that Tivo was nothing more than a glorified VCR, a passing fad, when he said he wanted one.  And sometime in the 90’s when an ex was gushing over something called an MP3 player, I couldn’t understand the hype.  It is safe to assume that I have come to see the light on all these things.  I’m just not what you would call an “early adopter” of technology.  I’m same way with food too. Continue reading “Trendy”

Food Memories – Gramma Rhetta’s Lemon Bars

Gramma Rhetta's Lemon Bars

Today’s food memory comes from Dana of The Kitchen Witch.  If it weren’t for the fact that I live in Bawlmer and she lives somewhere in Colorado, I would swear that we’re twins.  Because not only do we manage to somehow share a brain across a continent, we both luv lemon and have a special place in our hearts for our Grandmother.

This post originally appeared on The Kitchen Witch on 20 July 2009.  My thanks to Dana for sharing her story, and her memory of Sassybritches.  She sounds like one feisty lady I would have liked to have known. Continue reading “Food Memories – Gramma Rhetta’s Lemon Bars”

Retro Recipes – Cinnamon Cake

Retro Recipe - Cinnamon Cake

When the weather predictions call for snow measured in feet, instead of inches, my first instinct is to fire up the oven and get baking.  There’s something hard wired in my brain that says copious amounts of time locked inside should be celebrated with sugar, butter, and flour.  Luckily, all the ingredients for Cinnamon Cake were safely tucked away in my pantry as SNOMG (thanks Pigtown for this catchy phrase) came barreling into town.  I say luckily because if you’ve ever been inside a grocery store the night before a big winter storm around these parts, you know that it’s that last place you want to be.  So to kick off the first really big storm of the decade, I rocked it old school with one of the recipes in a random collection of cookbook pages that I got from my grandmother.  I have no idea what cookbooks these may have been or exactly how old they are.  But trust me, Cinnamon Cake stands up to the test of time.  And it makes a great snack when you’ve just freed your car from 2 feet of snow.

Cinnamon Cake

BAH Note: I get all confused when a recipe says sifted flour vs. flour sifted.  To me, flour sifted means you measure then sift where sifted flour means you sift then measure.  Since I have no great way to sift directly into a measuring cup, I say fluff your flour a bit then measure.  Don’t be alarmed when you put the melted butter and cinnamon sugar on top of the batter.  The edges of the cake will bake up around it and then it will sink through the batter in places.  This end result is similar to a coffee cake without a crumb topping.

  • 3 eggs
  • 1 1/2 cup sugar plus 1/2 cup sugar, divided
  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 2 cups sifted flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 4 tablespoons melted butter plus 5 tablespoons melted butter, divided
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon

Heat oven to 400 degrees.  Butter and flour a 9 x 13 pan.

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the eggs.  Slowly add the 1 1/2 cups sugar and continue to beat until very light.

Add the dry ingredients and milk in several additions, alternating between wet and dry, beginning and ending with the dry.

Add the 4 tablespoons of melted butter and mix until thoroughly blended.

Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth it out evenly.  Drizzle 5 tablespoons of melted butter over the top of the batter.

Combine 1/2 cup sugar with the cinnamon in a small bowl.  Sprinkle the cinnamon sugar over the top of the cake.

Bake for 25 to 30 minutes until a tester comes out with only a crumb or two.

{printable recipe}

Book Club

Bon Bons

I’ve had a library card for about as long as I can remember.  Growing up, there were two public libraries within walking distance of my house.  But I can’t say that I recall being in them much.  A lot of my books were checked out of the school library, not to be opened until I was slung across the wing back chair in the living room.  That chair was my favorite place to read.  My head rested comfortably up against one of the wings and my legs dangled over the arm. Continue reading “Book Club”

Food Memories – THE Hot Milk Cake

THE Hot Milk Cake

Back in September, I put out a call for folks to send me their food memories and recipes.  I said:

“I’m starting a project for the blog that I’m calling Food Memories and I hope you can help.  I’m looking for recipes that have special meaning to you.  Maybe it’s something your family always had at Christmas or what your mom or dad made as a special treat, just because.  What is the dish that always takes you back to a happy memory? Continue reading “Food Memories – THE Hot Milk Cake”

On Hold

Mario Batali TM

Most people leave out cookies for Santa.  I thought that maybe he’d enjoy something different when he visited the BAH house.  So I decided to make a quick chocolate cake for Santa to pick at on Christmas Eve and The Mistah and I to finish off Christmas Day. A few days before Christmas Eve, I pulled out a cake recipe I’d seen on Not Without Salt and got working.  The plan was to bake the cake, wrap the layers in plastic, and hold them in the freezer for two days until I was ready to frost on Christmas Eve.

And then the postman delivered not one, but two cakes to our front door. Continue reading “On Hold”

Let Them Eat Cake

Best. Cake. Ever.

I like cooking for my friends.  They’re a good bunch of folks who know that at any given time, they may be subject to testing a new recipe that I’m trying.  It’s kind of an understanding that we have – I gladly cook but new recipes may or may not work as planned.  Convict me for the sin of Pride but I don’t want people to think I’m a bad cook when the reality may be a bad recipe so I try and stick to a rule of not making untested recipes for people who have never had my cooking. Yet, I unknowingly walked into that very situation during this cake quest. Continue reading “Let Them Eat Cake”

Caramel 3.0

Grainy

After my recent failed attempts to make caramel sauce, I thought it was wise to take a time out before giving it another go.  That lasted all of four days.  And then, armed with a five pound bag of Domino’s finest granulated, I was back at it.

BAH Fun Fact – I used to work at the redeveloped Proctor and Gamble site (Tide Point, good times), right next to Baltimore’s iconic Domino’s plant.  From my building, I could watch tankers pull in and unload the sugar for processing.  And you know what, the smell is dreadful.  For real.  You’d imagine that it would be the best smell in the world, light and wispy like cotton candy.  Instead, it smells heavy and dark, like molasses.  Getting away from that was one thing I did not mind about changing jobs.

Like I said, I had a score to settle with caramel sauce.  So once again, I mixed water and sugar, added heat, and let chemistry do its thing.  And would you believe that before too long we were headed down the same path that ended up in crystallized sugar fused to my Calphalon?  I noticed that the bottom of the pot felt grainy all of the sudden.  And sugar crystals were clearly forming in the bubbling syrup.  There’s something about 240 degrees that is a breaking point for me.  If I can get past it, I’m ok.  But so far, that’s been easier said than done.

What’s a home cook to do when she sees that her not yet caramel sauce is about to go past the point of no return?  If you’re me, you throw caution to the wind, say to hell with ratios, and add enough water to the pot to get everything back to a lovely liquid state.  And you start boiling all over again.

I think this was more a save than an actual win because double boiling the syrup couldn’t have really helped matters and the final sauce was grainy.  But I already received confirmation from The Mistah that he’s up to the challenge of using up Caramel 3.0 so that I can get working on Caramel 4.0.  What can I say, he’s willing to take one for the team when he has to.

Alice’s Caramel Sauce

Savory Sweet Life

  • 2 cups sugar
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 3/4 cup heavy cream, heated to luke warm in microwave (30 seconds)
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 tablespoon dark rum (optional)

BAH Note: Alice at Sweet Savory Life says to stir straight away and continue until the syrup begins to change color.  I feel like that may have contributed to my troubles, but then again, I had the same problem when I didn’t stir.  So I can neither confirm nor deny that you should stir throughout the cooking process.  This recipe has you add butter to the sauce.  I don’t remember doing that the last time I successfully made caramel sauce.  But who am I to say no to a pat or two of butter?

Combine sugar and water in a medium sauce pan.  Cook over medium-high until the sugar melts and the syrup begins to turn an amber-brownish color.  This will be approximately 350 degrees on a candy thermometer.

Remove from heat, stir immediately, and pour in 1/2 cup of the warmed heavy cream and add the butter.  The mixture will bubble violently at first.  Keep stirring, carefully, until the sauce relaxes.  Add the remaining cream and rum, if using, and stir until the sauce is smooth.

Transfer the sauce to a heatproof container and allow it to cool for about an hour before refrigerating.  SSL recommends slightly covering the container with plastic wrap as the sauce cools.

Once cool, use immediately or refrigerate.  Refrigerated sauce can be rewarmed in the microwave.

{Printable Recipe}