Chewy Berry Nut Bar

I made up this recipe in no time flat, inspired by something I saw at a Starbucks.  I know, I’m admitting I was in a Starbucks.  I had a gift card and went to go buy a soy chai.  They had this nice looking blueberry bar that looked tasty, other than the fact it was probably way too sweet, full of dairy, and overpriced.

Anyway, I wanted to make cookies tonight but not the same old thing.  And I was feeling lazy.  So this is also a really easy recipe.

I started with a basic shortbread–1 stick earth balance, 1 cup sugar, 2 cups flour.  I whisked that up (butter and sugar first) until it was like coarse sand.  I reserved about a cup of this mixture and pressed down the rest in a buttered baking dish (9×13).

I had some mixed berries in the freezer and the end of a bag of raspberries (you can use whatever berries you want).  I think I used about 2 cups total.  I added a few tablespoons of sugar (not much) and cooked on the stove until it was bubbly.  I whisked it to break up the berries and spread evenly on the pressed down dough.

I chopped up about 1-2 cups of pecans and walnuts (again, you can use whatever nuts you want) and mixed with the remaining dough.  I sprinkled this over the top and baked at 350 for about 30-40 minutes (until the bottom gets a bit browned).

They ended up super tasty and chewy.  It’s hard to believe that the chewy, solid bottom is made of exaclty the same thing as the crumbly top!

bar.jpg

Published in: on March 5, 2008 at 4:31 am Leave a Comment
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Croissant update

My vegan croissants baked up perfectly out of the freezer.  I just let them thaw on a baking sheet at room temperature for about an hour and baked at 400.  Yum!

Published in: on March 4, 2008 at 10:39 pm Leave a Comment
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Vegan Croissants/Pain au Chocolat

What better to do on a lazy Sunday than spend all day on a baking project?  I was inspired by Ariel’s gift of tubes of almond paste.  I’ve made croissants before, and I like to vary them a bit by rolling some chocolate in the middle to make pain au chocolat.  Adding a little roll of almond paste makes them a delectable vegan pastry that would satisfy anyone.

There’s lots of tricks to making decent croissants.  The first step is to knead 3 sticks of earth balance with about 1/4 cup of flour.  It’s important to get this mixture smooth, because any chunks of butter will later break through the layers of dough.  Form the butter into a 6×6″ square on some foil and put it in the fridge to chill.

The next step is to create a simple yeast dough.  Use 2 cups of warmed soymilk, 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 teaspoons salt, 2 tablespoons (or packets) yeast, and 4 cups flour.  Mix well, knead (adding more flour as needed), put it back in the bowl, and refrigerate.

A few hours later after the butter has firmed up and the dough has risen in the fridge, you’re ready for the next step.  The idea here is that the dough and the butter have about the same consistency.  Knead and roll out the dough into a square about twice the size of the butter, and place the butter on top.

dough with butter

Fold in each corner like you’re wrapping a present.  Keeping everything well floured, turn it upside down and start rolling out into a long rectangle, about three times as long as it is wide.

croissant rolling

If the butter starts squeezing out, everything is too warm and return it to the fridge for a while.  If the butter seems too hard and starts breaking through the dough, it’s too cold–let it warm up a bit.  Fold in thirds, bringing each end in (like a letter).  Again, keeping things well floured roll out again into a rectangle.  This time fold into fourths–fold each end to the middle then close the whole thing like a book.  Things will really be warming up by now, so wrap tightly in plastic wrap and return to the fridge for a good hour.

folding

Unwrap and roll out again into a rectangle.  Fold in thirds.  Wrap and return in to the fridge for 3-5 hours, or longer (overnight would be fine). 

You’re now ready for the final roll.  It’s really important to keep things cold at this point.  I let a bunch of ice cubes melt on my counter for a while–if you have a marble slab by all means use it.  Unwrap, and roll out into a large square/rectangle until things are about 1/4 inch thick.  Cut into triangles with a sharp knife, place them on cookie sheets, and return to the fridge.

At this point you can simply roll them up into croissants.  I took about half and added a roll of almond paste (marzipan works fine too) and some chunks of bittersweet chocolate. 

croissant chocolate

Place them on a cookie sheet, let rise an additional hour, and bake at about 400 for 15-20 minutes.  They’re great right out of the oven, but they actually get more flaky as they cool.

They turned out pretty well this time.  I had a few issues–my triangles were a bit more like right triangles than the isosceles ones that work best. I sort of rolled each one individually to make them more in the right shape.  My first few ended up a bit ugly, but by the end they looked great.  The other problem was my oven heats much more from the bottom than the top–even on a high rack in a well-preheated oven, the bottoms got brown too fast.  I flipped them with about 5 minutes to go and they ended up looking fine.

 croissants

I also have about a third of them in the freezer (unbaked) for a later occasion!  I’ll let you know how they turn out.

Published in: on February 25, 2008 at 12:09 am Comments (10)
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Perfect Homemade Bread

Ok, I know, I’m a little late to the party.  This recipe was published by the New York Times in 2006.  I’ve only started making it recently, though, thanks to the ceramic dish that my mom made especially for this purpose.  You don’t need a mom with a ceramics studio to try the recipe, though.  Any heavy, oven-save dutch oven, soup pot, or casserole with a lid will do.

I’ve made bread many times in the past.  It always tastes fantastic right out of the oven, but the next day it leaves something to be desired.  It never could challenge artesain bread from a bakery–that crusty, chewy, loose crumb with a full wheat and yeast flavor and robust but not tough crust.  I’m happy to say that this bread comes through, whether fresh or a few days old.  And almost more importantly, making it fits really well into my schedule.  Since I work standard business hours, I suspect it will fit with other’s too. 

Combine 3 cups of flour (bread flour is best, feel free to add part whole wheat or to use all purpose flour) with 1/4 teaspoon yeast, 1 and 1/4 teaspoon salt, and 1 and 5/8 cup water.  I find it hard to believe that that extra 1/8 cup of water above 1 1/2 cups makes a difference, but oh well.  I do this after dinner/before bed. 

Leave it in the bowl and cover with plastic wrap.  When I get home from work the next day (20 hours later, more or less), I scrape out this very loose dough onto a well-floured counter.  I sort of scoop in into more or less a ball and let it sit for 10 minutes as I wash the bowl. 

 bread on counter

Cover a towel with cornmeal, bring the dough into a ball and set it on the cornmeal.  Lift the towel and set it in the bowl (using a bowl helps your final loaf rise higher).  Cover with a little more cornmeal and another towel.

bread in bowl

An hour to an hour and a half later, put your cooking vessel in the oven and preheat to 450.  Let it heat for 30 minutes.  Very carefully take off the now hot lid and with one hand under the towel, dump the dough in the pot.  Replace the lid.  Cornmeal might get everywhere, but that’s what brooms are for.  Let bake for 30 min, take off the lid, and bake another 15-30 minutes.  If you time it right, they’ll be fresh bread for dinner, or at least for toast in the morning and sandwiches the next day, because as I mentioned this bread really holds up well for a few days.  I’ve never had it last any longer than 48 hours or so, but I imagine it would freeze well too.

bread baked

I’ve been making about twice a week, and I don’t miss the delicious but expensive bread for Essential Baking Company or Tall Grass Bakery.

Published in: on January 16, 2008 at 1:40 am Leave a Comment
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Chocolate chip bar cookies

I also baked a quick batch of cookies last night.  I’ve got a kitchenaid stand mixer, so the whole process takes about 5 minutes (plus 15 for baking).  They make super delicious bar cookies that satisfy vegans and non-vegans alike.  I mean it.  They’re everything you want in a cookie.  The recipe is really easy, and easy to remember.

1 stick earth balance
1 cup of sugar
1 3/4 cups of flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon vanilla
a few tablespoons soymilk
vegan chocolate chips

Oven at 375.   Cream the earth balance and sugar.  Add the flour (with the salt and baking powder mixed in), and mix until it turns into fine crumbles.  Add just enough soymilk (with the vanilla mixed in) until it comes together into a ball when you squeeze it.  It doesn’t take much, less than a quarter cup.   Add as many chocolate chips as you want, and maybe some pecans or other nuts if you want.  Dump it out into a greased 9×13 pan (I use a standard pyrex one) and press it down evenly with your hands.  Bake until golden brown around the edges, about 15-20 minutes.  Cut them before they get too cold, they have a tendency to stick to the pan.

Perfect with a glass of unsweetened soymilk, or served still warm with some high-quality vanilla vegan ice cream on top.

Published in: on January 8, 2008 at 8:44 pm Leave a Comment
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