Saturday, June 29, 2013

Egg McMuffins TO GO!


Last night we got to have 6 boys from our stake stay at the night as part of their weekend youth conference. They were so much fun and very well behaved! When they got to our house last night, I had Rolo cookies waiting for them which they all loved and they ate a ton.


Earlier this week, a few of us friends went to lunch and were talking about our youth conference groups staying at our homes. My darling friend (and neighbor!) told us she was making egg mcmuffins for breakfast, since the kids had to be at the church at 6:30 a.m. I had been thinking about how to do breakfast since they were going to have to run so quickly, so I was excited for the idea. Rochelle said that she used to make them to take to her early morning seminary class. I loved the idea and whipped them up last night and this morning the boys loved them and were so happy that they could just grab a sandwich and jump in the car and go!

Egg McMuffins TO GO

12 English muffins
12 round pieces of ham or Canadian bacon
12 slices American cheese
20 eggs
1/4 c. milk
1/2 t. salt
1/4 t. pepper

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a cookie sheet (with sides) with parchment paper and spray with cooking spray. In a bowl, beat the eggs, milk, salt & pepper. Pour the egg mixture into the pan and bake for about 20-30 minutes until it is done. Remove from the oven and cut into 12 squares. 

Assemble the egg mcmuffins with the ham on one side of the muffin and the cheese on the other side, with the egg square in the middle. If making the night before, put them all on a cookie sheet, cover with saran wrap and refrigerate. When you are ready to heat them, cook uncovered for 30 minutes in a 350 degree oven. Individually wrap in tin foil and they are ready to be transported anywhere!

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Salted Caramel Sauce

This is the most amazing caramel sauce and takes minutes to make. The trick is you have to make it well in advance so it will cool and thicken a bit in your fridge before serving. My new favorite thing is to do is make yummy brownies, then set out ice cream, homemade hot fudge sauce and this caramel sauce, along with some great toppings for guests to make whatever they like. It's always a hit!



Salted Caramel Sauce

1 1/2 c. sugar
1/3 c. water
1 c. heavy cream
1/2 t. vanilla
1/2 t. salt

Heat the water and sugar in a larger heavy bottomed saucepan. Cook over  low heat for 5 minutes, until the sugar dissolves. Do not stir! Increase heat to medium-high and boil, uncovered, until the sugar starts to turn a light brown/warm chestnut color (about 350 degrees on a candy thermometer). This will take about 5 minutes, but once it turns the light brown, it will burn very quickly, so don't let it get too dark. Do not stir at all, but you can swirl the pan a few times to get it mixed together. As soon as you feel it is a warm chestnut color, pull off heat immediately and add cream, vanilla and salt. Stand back and be very careful, as it will bubble violently. Quickly add back to the burner and stir, while on medium-high heat for 1-2 minutes until it is all combined and solidified. Take off heat and pour caramel into a glass jar. Refrigerate (freeze if you are in a hurry) and wait until it is a bit thicker. Usually about an hour or two is sufficient. To heat up, microwave for 30 seconds at a time until hot.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Salted Caramel Macarons

A couple of weeks ago, I was teaching a macaron class to some ladies in my ward. I had really been wanting to come up with a great salted caramel macaron, so I played around until I got the perfect combination. The caramel buttercream is amazing and really makes these macarons dreamy!


Thanks to my awesome friend, Heather Palmer, who took a photo of her macarons
the next day because I totally forgot to photograph them before they disappeared!


Salted Caramel Macarons


2 T. cocoa powder
2/3 c. almond flour
1 1/2 c. powdered sugar

3 egg whites (room temperature)

5 T. granulated sugar

1 t. vanilla extract

gel food coloring


flaked salt (purchased at World Market)

Heat oven to 280 degrees and place the racks on the two lowest positions. Cut pieces of parchment paper to fit two cookie sheets perfectly and then make 1-inch circles all over the papers, leaving at least 1/2-inch of space in between circles. With practice, you will be able to skip this step and pipe your macarons without the circles, while maintaining a fairly consistent size of circles. Also, silpat baking sheets are so much easier than parchment, if you want to make the investment.



Whisk cocoa powder, almond flower and powdered sugar together in a bowl. 

Place egg whites in the bowl of a mixer and start to mix on med-high. When they start to get frothy, add sugar, 1 tablespoon at a time. Continue to beat until glossy, stiff peaks appear. To test it, pick up the whisk and if the egg whites peak and the top doesn't fall, they are ready. If it falls down, keep mixing. Make sure you don't over mix (it will become clumpy). Add vanilla and mix very quickly.

Transfer egg whites to a large bowl. Add half of the dry mixture and fold it about a dozen times until just mixed. Fold with a spatula, going up the sides, pushing down the center. Finish mixing the rest of the dry ingredients, being careful to fold and not stir. When you lift your spatula, the mixture should pour off like thick molten lava. If it's not flowing when you lift the spatula, it is too thick and needs more mixing.

Use a piping bag with a large round tip. Place it in a large cup and fold over the sides. Pour in half of the mixture and twist the top. Start piping the batter into the circles. The best way to do it is hold just over the pan (not touching) and let the batter come out until the circle is perfectly filled. Then quickly turn your wrist as you lift the tip to try and not leave a tail. Once the first pan is filled, hold the pan with both hands and tap hard on the counter 3 times. Turn the pan so your hands are on the opposite ends and tap again 3 times (helps get any air pockets out and flattens the cookies). Continue until both pans are filled and the rest of the batter is used up. If you'd like, you can sprinkle a couple flakes of salt onto the tops of the cookie. Let them sit on the counter for at least 15 minutes, or until the tops are no longer wet when you touch them.

Place the cookie sheets on the two bottom oven racks. You will have to experiment with the cooking times, but this is what worked for me. Set the timer for 2 minutes and when it rings, open the door to let any humidity escape. Then set the timer for 7 minutes. Once the time is up, change the pans so that the top one is now on the bottom, as well as turn around so the back of the pan is now in the front. Bake for 7 more minutes. To test the doneness, carefully lift the cookie off the sheet. If it comes off the parchment easily, they are done. If the cookie separates in half, bake one more minute, and so on. Cool the macaroons completely before filling.

To assemble the macarons, fill cooled shells with salted caramel buttercream (below). Try to match up sizes and shapes (easier when your cookies are all symmetrical) as you go.Before you sandwich the cookie with the top shell, sprinkle a VERY small amount of flaked salt on top of buttercream. 

Once they are filled, cover and refrigerate for up to 2 days and freeze for up to a month. They are best after aging in the fridge for at least a couple of hours so the filling chills and they meld together a bit. Let them come back to room temperature before serving. If they are frozen, let them thaw completely in their original covered containers to avoid condensation from forming.

Salted Caramel Buttercream
(Start 2 hours before filling shells)


1 1/2 c. sugar
1/3 c. water
1 c. heavy cream
1/2 t. vanilla
1/2 t. salt
1 cube salted butter
1/2 c. powdered sugar

Heat the water and sugar in a larger heavy bottomed saucepan. Cook over  low heat for 5 minutes, until the sugar dissolves. Do not stir! Increase heat to medium-high and boil, uncovered, until the sugar starts to turn a light brown/warm chestnut color (about 350 degrees on a candy thermometer). This will take about 5 minutes, but once it turns the light brown, it will burn very quickly, so don't let it get too dark. Do not stir at all, but you can swirl the pan a few times to get it mixed together. As soon as you feel it is a warm chestnut color, pull off heat immediately and add cream, vanilla and salt. Stand back and be very careful, as it will bubble violently. Quickly add back to the burner and stir, while on medium-high heat for 1-2 minutes until it is all combined and solidified. Take off heat and pour caramel into a glass jar. Refrigerate (freeze if you are in a hurry) and wait until it is thick. Usually about an hour or two is sufficient.

Pour half of the caramel sauce into a mixer with the whip attachment (save the other half for another batch or use as a caramel topping). Start beating caramel sauce on high speed until it is smooth and whipped. Add a cube of salted, room temperature butter and continue to beat. Add a 1/2 cup of powdered sugar and whip until creamy. The powdered sugar amount can be adjusted as needed to obtain the perfect consistency. 

Monday, April 29, 2013

Lemon Granita

When I was in Italy visiting my sister Karen, we stopped along the Amalfi Coast and had lemon granitas for 1 euro each. They were perhaps the most delicious lemon thing I had ever eaten. I just loved seeing all the little stands that you could purchase them from, where they make them fresh every day. I especially loved the man at this particular stand, and the picture of Sister Acerson, who couldn't see the same view as we could, visiting with he and his son.

When dessert club announced that this month's theme was lemon, I decided lemon bars were too obvious and decided to be more unique and make lemon granitas. Funny enough, we had 5 frozen lemon desserts and no lemon bars! 

I used meyer lemons, which are a cross between a lemon and an orange, and make this recipe delicious and unique. Sadly, they still aren't as good as Amalfi lemons, but this was a delicious little treat with the exact amount of sweet and sour and would be so refreshing in the summertime! 

Amanda & Josh helped me scrape the granitas all day!
Meyer Lemon Granita

1 1/4 c. strained meyer lemon juice
2 T. lemon zest
1 c. water
1 c. sugar

Place the lemon juice in a non-reactive mixing bowl and set aside. Combine the water and sugar in a small saucepan and bring to a boil. When the sugar has dissolved, remove from the heat and allow to cool to room temperature. Stir the sugar syrup into the lemon juice and transfer to a stainless steel loaf pan, or cake pan. Place in the freezer, uncovered. When the top of the liquid forms of an icy layer, scrape through entire pan with a fork. Return to freezer and let another frozen layer form; scrape again with fork. Repeat freezing and scraping steps until all liquid is frozen. Fluff with a fork to create soft, snowy granita. If desired, clean out the lemon shells, freeze and fill with granita and top with a mint leaf. 

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Strawberry Macarons



My friend's daughter had a wedding reception and they were wanting the food to be part of a French market. I offered to make some macarons and wanted to try a few new flavors. I created a strawberry one, using the same method I used for my blackberry ones. I also created a passionfruit macaron (see previous recipe) and added my all-time favorite, a plain almond macaron (use the original recipe with almond extract instead of vanilla and almond extract in the buttercream). I made two batches of almond and strawberry and ran out of time, so I only made one batch of the passionfruit. Because a few were either ugly, or stuck to the silpat (I've realized they aren't cooked enough when they stick, or need to cool.), I ended up making about 160 in all. It made for a fun Saturday, but my kitchen is now a wreck!


Strawberry Macarons


1 c. freeze dried strawberries

2/3 c. almond flour (minus 2 T.)

1 1/2 c. powdered sugar

3 egg whites (room temperature)

5 T. granulated sugar

1 t. vanilla extract

gel food coloring



Heat oven to 280 degrees and place the racks on the two lowest positions. Cut pieces of parchment paper to fit two cookie sheets perfectly and then make 1-inch circles all over the papers, leaving at least 1/2-inch of space in between circles. With practice, you will be able to skip this step and pipe your macarons without the circles, while maintaining a fairly consistent size of circles. Also, silpat baking sheets are so much easier than parchment, if you want to make the investment.



Using a blender or food processor, blend the freeze dried strawberries until they are a fine powder. Sift the powder, or strain, to remove the large chunks and seeds. Whisk 2 T. of strained powder into the almond flower and powdered sugar. (If you'd like to use the dried strawberry buttercream, reserve the chunky pieces, the seeds, and any extra powder.

Place egg whites in the bowl of a mixer and start to mix on med-high. When they start to get frothy, add sugar, 1 T. at a time. Continue to beat until glossy, stiff peaks appear. To test it, pick up the whisk and if the egg whites peak and the top doesn't fall, they are ready. If it falls down, keep mixing. Make sure you don't over mix (it will become clumpy). Add vanilla and pink gel coloring (small amount to make pink).

Transfer egg whites to a large bowl. Add half of the dry mixture and fold it about a dozen times until just mixed. Fold with a spatula, going up the sides, pushing down the center. Finish mixing the rest of the dry ingredients, being careful to fold and not stir. When you lift your spatula, the mixture should pour off like thick molten lava. If it's not flowing when you lift the spatula, it is too thick and needs more mixing.

Use a piping bag with a large round tip. Place it in a large cup and fold over the sides. Pour in half of the mixture and twist the top. Start piping the batter into the circles. The best way to do it is hold just over the pan (not touching) and let the batter come out until the circle is perfectly filled. Then quickly turn your wrist as you lift the tip to try and not leave a tail. Once the first pan is filled, hold the pan with both hands and tap hard on the counter 3 times. Turn the pan so your hands are on the opposite ends and tap again 3 times (helps get any air pockets out and flattens the cookies). Continue until both pans are filled and the rest of the batter is used up. Let them sit on the counter for at least 15 minutes, or until the tops are no longer wet when you touch them.

Place the cookie sheets on the two bottom oven racks. You will have to experiment with the cooking times, but this is what worked for me. Set the timer for 2 minutes and when it rings, open the door to let any humidity escape. Then set the timer for 7 minutes. Once the time is up, change the pans so that the top one is now on the bottom, as well as turn around so the back of the pan is now in the front. Bake for 7 more minutes. To test the doneness, carefully lift the cookie off the sheet. If it comes off the parchment easily, they are done. If the cookie separates in half, bake one more minute, and so on. Cool the macaroons completely before filling.
Fill with strawberry buttercream (below). Try to match up sizes and shapes (easier when your cookies are all symmetrical) as you go. Once they are filled, cover and refrigerate for up to 2 days and freeze for up to a month. They are best after aging in the fridge for at least a couple of hours so the filling chills and they meld together a bit. Let them come back to room temperature before serving. If they are frozen, let them thaw completely in their original covered containers to avoid condensation from forming.


Fresh Strawberry Buttercream Filling
1 egg
1/4 cup granulated sugar
pinch of salt
1/2 c. salted butter, at room temperature, cut in to pieces
1/4 t. vanilla extract 
1/4 c. seedless strawberry puree (I just blended fresh strawberries and strained out the seeds)
pink gel coloring

Add the egg, sugar and salt to the metal bowl of a standing mixer and whisk constantly over a pan of simmering water.  When the sugar has dissolved and the mixture is hot to the touch remove from the heat, about 3-4 minutes. 

Beat mixture in the stand mixer using the wire whisk attachment until it's a meringue.  It should look like marshmallow fluff and the bottom of the bowl should be cool.  

With the mixer still running add the butter, one piece at a time.  Once all the butter has been added continue beating until the buttercream is light and fluffy.  If at any time the buttercream looks curdled continue beating and it will come together.  Add the strawberry puree and mix until blended. Add red food coloring, to reach the same shade of pink as the cookies.

Freeze-Dried Strawberry Buttercream Filling


6 T. salted butter
2 T. whipping cream
2 1/2 c. powdered sugar
1/2 c. freeze dried strawberries, blended to a powder
1 t. vanilla
milk to thin


Whip butter, then add cream and whip until blended. Add powdered sugar and strawberries and whip. Thin with vanilla and milk until the perfect consistency. 


This recipe is inspired by Cami Goold, a 15 year old young woman that I teach in church. She has a great cupcake blog and sells cupcakes to make money during the summer and holidays. She uses dried strawberries in her buttercream frosting so that it doesn't curdle, which sometimes happens with the fresh strawberries. Check out her blog here.

Passionfruit Macarons


Recently, in my dessert club, a fabulous lady made passionfruit creme brulee and I fell in love. The only problem was that she used a frozen passionfruit concentrated puree, The Perfect Puree from Napa Valley. You can purchase it from Amazon, but since it has to be shipped overnight with dry ice, the shipping rates are insane. So, two other ladies went in on an order with me and now I own my very own jar of passionfruit puree, which should last me a lifetime.

Besides using it for creme brulee, I've been trying to be creative and try new things that call for passionfruit. I thought it would be fun to make some macarons with passionfruit puree and they turned out wonderful!

Macarons

2/3 c. almond flour
1 1/2 c. powdered sugar
3 egg whites
5 T. granulated sugar
1 t. vanilla extract
yellow food coloring

Heat oven to 280 degrees and place the racks on the two lowest positions. Cut pieces of parchment paper to fit two cookie sheets perfectly and then make 1-inch circles all over the papers, leaving at least 1/2-inch of space in between circles. With practice, you will be able to skip this step and pipe your macarons without the circles, while maintaining a fairly consistent size of circles. Also, silpat baking sheets are so much easier than parchment, if you want to make the investment.

Whisk the almond flour and powdered sugar together and set aside.

Place egg whites in the bowl of a mixer and start to mix on med-high. When they start to get frothy, add sugar, 1 T. at a time. Continue to beat until glossy, stiff peaks appear. To test it, pick up the whisk and if the egg whites peak and the top doesn't fall, they are ready. If it falls down, keep mixing. Make sure you don't over mix (it will become clumpy). Add a good amount of yellow food coloring and vanilla and beat only until combined.

Add half of the dry mixture to the egg whites and fold it about a dozen times until just mixed. Fold with a spatula, going up the sides, pushing down the center. Finish mixing the rest of the dry ingredients, being careful to fold and not stir. When you lift your spatula, the mixture should pour off like thick molten lava. If it's not flowing when you lift the spatula, it is too thick and needs more mixing.

Use a piping bag (ziplock bag with the tip cut does not work) with a large round tip. Place it in a large cup and fold over the sides. Pour in half of the mixture and twist the top. Start piping the batter into the circles. The best way to do it is hold just over the pan (not touching) and let the batter come out until the circle is perfectly filled. Then quickly turn your wrist as you lift the tip to try and not leave a tail. Once the first pan is filled, hold the pan with both hands and tap hard on the counter 3 times. Turn the pan so your hands are on the opposite ends and tap again 3 times (helps get any air pockets out and flattens the cookies). Continue until both pans are filled and the rest of the batter is used up. Let them sit on the counter for at least 15 minutes, or until the tops are no longer wet when you touch them.

Place the cookie sheets on the two bottom oven racks. You will have to experiment with the cooking times, but this is what worked for me. Set the timer for 2 minutes and when it rings, open the door to let any humidity escape. Then set the timer for 7 minutes. Once the time is up, change the pans so that the top one is now on the bottom, as well as turn around so the back of the pan is now in the front. Bake for 7 more minutes. To test the doneness, carefully lift the cookie off the sheet. If it comes off the parchment easily, they are done. If the cookie separates in half, bake one more minute, and so on. Cool the macaroons completely before filling with the passionfruit curd.



Passionfruit Curd

8 egg yolks
1/2 c. passionfruit juice, or 1/4 c. concentrated puree plus 1/4 c. water
1 c. sugar
10 T. butter, cold and cut into chunks

On medium heat, cook egg yolks, passionfruit and sugar, stirring constantly. Continue to cook until the mixture is thick enough to coat a wooden spoon, or until it reaches 160 degrees on an instant-read thermometer. Remove saucepan from the heat and whisk in the butter, one piece at a time until all the butter is combined. Strain the mixture through a fine sieve (I skipped this part because I used passionfruit concentrate and didn't think there would be lumps. However, there were some chunks of cooked egg throughout my curd and I wished I would have strained it.) and put it into a medium bowl. Cover the curt with plastic wrap, pressing it directly onto the surface to avoid causing a skin to form. Refrigerate for at least an hour or up to a day. 

Friday, March 29, 2013

Pineapple Upside-Down Cake


It was Nathan's birthday this week. When he realized that the 100th episode of Psych (he and his brother's favorite show), he decided he wanted pineapple upside-down cake. Apparently there is something to do with pineapple on the show and the main character once made a pineapple upside-down cake in an easy bake oven!

I haven't had pineapple upside-down cake for years, and I'm not really sure I've ever made it. I did a quick internet search and Paula Dean's recipe came up. I figured you couldn't go wrong with a Paula Dean recipe. And I was right--the cake was heavenly. It was moist and delicious, and everyone devoured it. It made me wonder why we don't make it more often.

Pineapple Upside-Down Cake
(Recipe from Paula Dean)

3 c. flour
1 c. butter, softened, plus 1/2 c. melted
2 1/4 c. sugar
5 eggs
1 t. vanilla
2 t. baking powder
1/4 t. salt
1 1/4 c. buttermilk
1 1/2 c. brown sugar
2 cans pineapple slices
1 jar maraschino cherries

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray 2 (10-inch) round cake pans with nonstick cooking spray and coat with flour. (I think mine were 9-inch, which is what the recipe calls for, but they overflowed a bit in the oven and 10-inch would be so much better.)

In a large bowl, beat 1 cup butter at medium speed until creamy. Gradually add the sugar, beating until fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Stir in the vanilla and set aside.

In a small bowl, add the flour, baking powder, and salt. Stir to combine. Add the flour mixture into the egg mixture alternately with the buttermilk, beginning and ending with the flour mixture.

Divide the brown sugar evenly into each pan. Pour the melted butter equally over the brown sugar. Arrange the pineapple slices and cherries over the brown sugar. Pour equal amounts of batter over the fruit and bake until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean, about 40-45 minutes (mine took close to 50). (Also, I would put a baking sheet in the bottom of the oven to catch any drips from the brown sugar.) Let the cakes cool in the pans for 10 minutes. Invert one onto a cake plate, then invert the second one on top to create a 2-layer cake.