Showing posts with label Victoria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victoria. Show all posts

Monday, December 24, 2012

Lemony Lemon Brownies

Damn you, Pinterest. It's visual crack and I can't stop pinning!

A friend Victoria recently pinned a recipe for "lemony lemon brownies". Sounds gross, right? Brownies to me mean chocolate. Don't worry - this recipe doesn't have any of that. It's more a lemon-bar, really. Anyway, wanted to bake something to take to a Christmas party and this recipe seemed super simple.

The original recipe site:
https://sites.google.com/site/beckycharms/cakies/lemony-lemon-brownies



The "Brownie" Batter
3/4 cup all-purpose flour {King Arthur All-Purpose Flour}
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt {Sea Salt}
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
2 large eggs
2 tablespoons lemon zest
2 tablespoons lemon juice

Tart Lemon Glaze
1 rounded cup powdered sugar
4 tablespoon lemon juice
8 teaspoons lemon zest

Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease/Spray an 8-by-8-inch baking dish with butter/cooking spray and set aside. 

Zest and juice two small/large lemons; set aside. {whatever you have}

In the bowl of an electric mixture fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the flour, sugar, salt, and softened butter until combined. 

In a separate bowl, whisk together the eggs, lemon zest, and lemon juice until combined. Pour into the flour mixture and beat at medium speed until smooth and creamy, about 2 minutes. 

Pour into baking dish and bake for 23-25 minutes, or until just starting to turn golden around the edges and a toothpick inserted into the center of the brownies comes out clean. Allow to cool completely before glazing.  Do not overbake, or the bars will be dry. {even with the yummy glaze}

When brownies are cooled completely, make the glaze...sift the powdered sugar, add lemon zest and juice, and whisk together all three ingredients. Spread 1/2 the glaze over the brownies with a rubber spatula.  Let glaze set.  Spread the remaining glaze over the bars, and let it set.  This glaze does not harden like most.  Cut into bars, and serve!




The batter looked heavenly after it was mixed. I wanted to eat the whole thing! It was like whipped lemon heaven. 






 

Unfortunately, I don't own an 8x8 pan only a 9x9 one and so the end result was kind of thin (like a little over a cm) after about 18 minutes. It didn't rise any. I used a silicone pan which made the brownie/cake tear when I popped it out. The glaze was runny (as warned) and it took about 4 small lemons to make it. Anyway, I used one of those flat scrapers to try and cut it and what a mess that made. I switched to a pizza cutter about 3/4's of the way through and that was a much, much better idea. Less mess and clean cuts!
 
The husband said it was tasty and my 2 year old toddler kept sneaking in and taking them. The people are the party I went to gave it high reviews too. Next time I make it I'd like to try and find a smaller pan.

Update March 3 2013: I've made this three more times since my initial attempt. I use my rectangular baking pan lined with parchment paper which works a lot better. Especially since I can just lift the parchment and put into a re-purposed chocolate tin. 

The first time I took it to a friend's house for her Oscars party. Either the lemons weren't super fresh or I stored them too close to a squash or used a knife that I had used to make squash soup (which I admit I made that same day), because it had a squashy flavour about it. Or maybe it was just the piece I got? One guy couldn't stop eating them. Nica said the last time I made them the bars were better.

The second time I took them into work. Weren't bad. I think I still overcooked them by a minute but the frosting really saved it. I selectively gave them out so had leftovers and when Nica and I ate them a couple of drunken nights later they were AWESOME. 

The third time I made them I used Trader Joe's gluten-free flour which you can use "cup for cup like real flour".  I wasn't sure of the chemistry of everything because after beating the butter, flour, sugar and salt, the resulting mixture was more solid and moist than crumbly like it normally is with regular flour. And after adding the lemon and egg mixture, it wasn't fluffy and creamy and almost looked like the lemon curdled. But I baked it anyway and it turned out super moist!  Thumbs up gluten-free recipe and in fact, I think I almost prefer it to the regular flour kind. Upping the rating from 8.5 to 9 out of 10. 

So my tips with this recipe?
* Use parchment paper to line whatever you're baking it in. Easier to transfer out of the pan (and clean), easier to hold in the glaze and easier to cut.
* Use a pizza cutter to slice the cake.
*  I used a KitchenAid mixer to mix everything. Probably not a tip since I'm sure you can still use an electric beater. I just wanted to point out that you don't HAVE to.
* You will need 6 (small) lemons to make this recipe and you will have leftover juice that you can freeze in ice cube trays for future use. 2 lemons for the cake, 4 lemons for the icing.

This is a super simple recipe that I can even get my toddler involved in. The hardest part is getting the rind off the lemons.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Lemon Blueberry Cake

Going to a girlfriend's house tomorrow and I've been dying to make some moist lemon blueberry cake. Victoria (again), had this recipe to share. Going to try this one and another one I found on Allrecipes.com. We'll see how they compare! I think Victoria's will be quite moist because she has sour cream in it (and I love baking breads and cakes with sour cream because it makes them super moist). I'm not a fan of those crumbly cakes. Anyway, stay tuned for results!




Lemon Blueberry Cake:
2 ¼ cup fresh blueberries
16 tbsp (2 sticks) softened butter
1 ½ cups granulated sugar
Grated zest and juice of 2 lemons
3 eggs
3 cups flour
1 cup sour cream
1 ½ tsp baking soda

Glaze:
2 cups icing sugar
½ cup fresh lemon juice

Preheat oven to 350F. butter/line a 10 inch tube pan
Freeze blueberries, this will keep the berries from sinking to the bottom of the cake

In a mixing bowl, beat together butter, sugar, lemon zest at high speed unti light in colour. Add lemon juice, eggs, and 1 cup of flour. Mix at medium speed until the batter is smooth and well blended.

Add sour cream, another cup of flour, and the baking soda. Mix at low speed until no traces of flour remain.

Combine frozen blueberries with remaining cup of flour. Fold this mixture into the batter, which should feel very thick.

Spoon dough into the prepared tube pan. Bake for 1 hour or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool for 15 minutes in the pan. Let the cake cool completely before removing it from its pan.

Glaze: Mix together confectioners sugar and lemon juice until smooth. Drizzle over the cake.

October 5th update: 
Made the loaf last night - Ariana helped! We did have one egg fatality. 

Baking notes:
Instead of one big loaf, made four mini loaves and some mini cupcakes too. I think my icing sugar was too old or maybe I didn't whip it enough because it had lumps in it and was really runny. I've given one loaf to Ariana's daycare (with the glaze in a separate container) and will take one to my mom's tonight as well as Julie's. Nica and Ariana both ate some this morning for breakfast and Nica originally gave it an 8.5 out of 10 but upped it to 9 out of 10 when he couldn't come up with why. He said he really liked the lemon-y taste. Ariana on her first taste test, picked out all the blueberries so all I saw on the floor were lemon crumbles.

 I forgot to add the baking soda when adding the flour the second time and only folded the baking soda in, instead of mixing it thoroughly. Not sure what affect this has had on the results, but it seems ok so far. I used pastry flour instead of all-purpose which should helped give it a lighter texture (versus heavy loaf). Seemed to work pretty well. 

I have no idea how cake shops do it, but I'm trying to figure out how they get a soft top to their loaves. This one, when finally baked, has a hardened top.  Maybe it's just how my oven works?

Peanut Butter Reeses Pieces Cookies

Stole another recipe for my friend Victoria who bakes the most amazing desserts. Surprisingly, she's never owned a Kitchenaid until recently. Don't know how she survived without one!

Anyway, I've had these cookies before - yum, yum, yum. I tried to make them once but never successfully bought a bag of peanut butter cups that survived to make it into cookies. Ah well. Maybe this time...?

I'll post a photo when I finally attempt this!



Peanut Butter Reeses Pieces Cookies
Combine:
½ cup white sugar
½ cup firmly packed light brown sugar
½ cup softened margarine or butter
And beat until light and fluffy

Add:
½ cup smooth peanut butter (measure PB after using half cup measure for flour and it won’t stick)
1 large egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
Blend for several minutes.

Add dry ingredients:
1 ¼ cup flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
Pinch salt, more if PB is unsalted and fold in

Batter will be fairly loose. Chill some hours of overnight. Put bags of PB cups in the fridge too


Pre-heat oven to 350F. Makes 4-7 dozen depending on how skimpy you scoop the PB cookies. Be sure to get at least two bags of mini PB cups
Bring dough out at the same time you start the oven preheating. Unwrap the PB cups and put back in the fridge.

Roll 1” balls of cookie dough and place in muffin tins – use the paper liners because these are greasy! You don’t need a lot of batter per cookie – they rise a lot. Press finger into the top of the ball to spread the dough a little. Bake for 6-7 minutes, or until it starts to brown on the edges.

Remove pans from the oven. The cookies will have puffed up, firmly place a peanut butter cup in the middle of each cookie “pillow”. Cookie edges should be even with or above the candy, as much as possible. Place back in the oven for a minute or two to melt the chocolate.

Remove and cool on racks for some time until the chocolate has set back up again. This will take at least an hour. Do not rush this part.