June 2009

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Yes, I do have some baking from this week to post. I baked breakfast goodies for the set up crew at the Comfest Band Merch Booth on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. I’m uploading my photos to Flickr right now, but because the food ones are mixed in with the regular Comfest ones, it’s going to take a while to get everything uploaded. And I’m so tired from this weekend, that I may go to bed before they’re finished which means I’ll post them here tomorrow.

But in the meantime, I’ve stolen another quiz from a baking blog. Danae over at The Busty Baker posted this one and I couldn’t resist. Here they are: Six unimportant things I love.

1. Laura Ingalls Wilder
laura
I have a somewhat unhealthy obsession with all things LIW. I’ve cleaned out the bookstore where I work of LIW-related books and have ordered the ones we don’t stock. I own all but one season of “Little House on the Prairie” on DVD. I’ve read all of LIW’s books at least twice (my favorites are “Little Town on the Prairie” and “These Happy Golden Years”), and I’m bound and determined to visit Mansfield, Missouri to see Rocky Ridge Farm where Laura and Almanzo Wilder lived.

2. Giant Eagle Market District Unsweetened Black Iced Tea
iced tea
I have a problem when it comes to this iced tea. I buy four or five of them at a time and they never last beyond two days. Once when we driving to New Jersey for a visit, we stopped at a GetGo in Pennsylvania and they had my iced tea in the little convenience store. I did a happy dance.
This is probably a good time to mention that I’m going to be moving to New York in about a month!!! This is happy news, aside from the fact that there are no Giant Eagles or GetGos in New York, so I’m going to be without my delicious iced tea. I’m seriously considering buying about twenty of them and packing them for the trip. They’re only $1 apiece.

3. My iPhone
iphone
Rob and I got matching iPhones about a week before our wedding so we would have them for the honeymoon. I don’t know what we would have done without them. This thing is seriously magical and I’m eternally grateful to be embarking to NYC with it.

4. Comic Strips
pogo
Once upon a time I wrote and drew a comic strip. I thought I had a chance at maybe becoming a syndicated cartoonist. Alas, those days are over, but I still love comics. “Pogo” is one of my favorites, even if you have to study 1950′s history to get it. My contemporary favorites include “Get Fuzzy”, “Zits” and, of course, “Retail”. I’ve been known to spend hundreds of dollars on classic comic strip collections. I dropped about $60 on two first-edition Sunday “Pogo” books at Powell’s in Portland, Oregon. Worth it.

5. Cerulean
blue
I love the color, I love the word. I love that in an episode of “The X-Files” called “The Pusher”, a guy convinced a policeman to drive into a cerulean-colored van by repeating, “Cerulean is a gentle breeze.”

6. Hounddog’s Pizza
pizza
My husband will kill me for saying this, but man, I’m going to miss Hounddog’s Pizza when we go to New York. I know I’ll be living in the land of awesome pizza, but I’ve really come to love and depend on Hounddog’s meatball and green pepper pizza. I just had it for dinner tonight. Sniff.

Things other people wouldn’t find important that I totally do that I also love:
Jeni’s Ice Cream
My Pink KitchenAid Stand Mixer
Corgis
Cupcakes
Baking books
Miranda Sound
Ted Leo & the Pharmacists

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(The Strawberry Pie recipe came from the current issue of Cook’s Illustrated and the sugar cookie recipe came from “Martha Stewart’s Baking Handbook”.)

I absolutely cannot believe I’ve made it to the halfway point of this project. Twenty-six weeks have passed and I haven’t given up yet. This is some kind of a record for me.

This week, I decided I would bake some cookies for my dad for Father’s Day (seeing as how I’m not exactly rolling in cash right now). And I thought, “Hey, if I’m driving down to Zanesville to give my dad some cookies, maybe I should make my grandmother’s favorite pie too!” (My grandmother lives right next door to my parents.)

My grandmother absolutely loves Strawberry Pie. My aunt used to waitress at a Frisch’s Big Boy and would occasionally bring home Strawberry Pie for my grandma, who would flip out over it. As luck would have it, the current issue of Cook’s Illustrated features a ‘Diner-Style Strawberry Pie’ recipe and I couldn’t wait to try it.

The recipe started with a single pie crust. This was your pretty standard flour/sugar/salt/shortening/butter/ice water pie crust, which came together pretty easily. No vodka this time! Once the dough was gathered into a ball, it was wrapped in plastic wrap and refrigerated for an hour:
Pie crust

Once it had chilled, it was rolled out to fit into a 9-inch pie pan:
Rolling out pie crust

I had some trouble getting the dough into the pan. On my first try, I ripped the dough and had to roll it out again. I was more careful the second time and managed to get the dough situated, but I’m sure re-rolling it made it tougher than it should have been:
Pie crust

I got to buy a few new toys at Sur La Table for these projects, including some ceramic pie weights. I know I could have just used beans or rice, but these were under $7 and I love the jar:
Pie weights!

The weighted pie dough went into the oven. It came out a little too brown for my taste, but, having never baked a single pie crust before, this may be perfect. I never see the top of the bottom parts of my pie crusts, because they’re covered with filling!
Blind baked single pie crust

While the pie crust baked, I went to work cooking down some frozen strawberries. Cook’s Illustrated stated that it would take about 25 to 30 minutes for the strawberries to cook down to two cups of a jam-like goo. It took more like an hour. I’m not sure what I did wrong with that…maybe I didn’t have the heat up high enough, or maybe using the Dole frozen strawberries that the magazine strongly suggested I not use affected the time (the Cascadian Farms frozen strawberries the magazine wanted me to use were going to cost me around $12. No thank you!):
Cooking down frozen strawberries

Once the strawberries cooked down, I added sugar, lemon juice, water and gelatin and the mixture was left to cool to room temperature. While it cooled, I hulled and sliced a pound of fresh strawberries, which were then folded into the cooled strawberry/gelatin mixture. This was poured into the cooled pie crust:
Filled strawberry pie

The whole thing went into the fridge overnight. The following morning, we loaded a cooler up with ice and packed up the pie. I was afraid that if I just held it on my lap for the drive, that it would turn into strawberry soup. The cooler worked really well! I highly recommend it as a means to transport icebox pies. Look at how pretty it turned out:
Strawberry Pie

My parents, Rob and I trekked up to my grandmother’s house and cut into the pie. To my relief, it did not fall apart on me! I whipped up some cream cheese/heavy cream topping to dollop on the slices:
Strawberry Pie

It seemed to go over very well. My grandmother kept the remaining three slices or so. I’m sure she ate all of them by herself!

While I was working on the pie, I was also trying to deal with the cookies I was baking for my dad. Two of the toys I picked up at Sur La Table were cookie cutters that fit my dad to a T:
Hammer and saw cookie cutters

Yup, that’s a hammer and saw. My dad’s a construction worker.

The cookie dough was a pretty simple combination of butter and sugar, a little salt, a couple of eggs, vanilla and flour. That’s it. No chemical leavener. It was rolled up into two discs and refrigerated. I was planning to cut cookies out of both discs, but it turned out that one would be quite enough. The dough was refrigerated overnight (it can keep up to a week in the fridge – I still have another disc in there that I need to bake!)

Cutting out the cookies went just fine, as did the baking. They came out golden brown and have just the slightest crunchiness to the edges. The centers have a great toothiness to them:
Hammer, saw and corgi cookies
(I sneaked a corgi in there too! Some friends gave us a corgi cookie cutter, and I had just enough dough left to make one little corgi cookie!)

Once the cookies had cooled, I went to work making Royal Icing. I was super excited, as I have always wanted to make and work with Royal Icing. Since I was only making half my cookies, I decided to half the icing recipe as well. So I doled out half the confectioner’s sugar, half the meringue and half the vanilla. And then I dumped in the full amount of water. Yup. And didn’t even realize it! I was mixing and mixing and the icing was not fluffing up at all. I stared at the recipe for a good five minutes before I realized my mistake. So I added the other half of the sugar, meringue powder and vanilla, but my icing never did reach a good consistency. I divided what I ended up with and colored one batch gray and the other red. My plan was to make the handles of the ‘tools’ red and the rest gray. I spooned the gray icing into a piping bag and started in on a cookie.

It was a disaster. The icing immediately started running off the cookie, leaving a lovely blue/gray stain. I got so frustrated that I threw out all the icing and cracked open a can of (gasp) Pillsbury white icing:
Iced hammer and saw cookies

My dad didn’t seem to care. The point of the cookies was the shape, not the icing, so I’m trying to not beat myself up too badly about screwing up the icing. I will try it again someday, but maybe not for a while. I need to wrap my head around it.

This weekend is ComFest!, the greatest three-day outdoor free local music/art festival ever! It’s a big gathering in Columbus’ Goodale Park that features local music on about six different stages from noon to ten Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Rob and I help run the Band Merch Booth where we sell the performing bands’ CDs and t-shirts. Set-up is always a fun but trying time, so I thought that some homemade muffins might make the day a little better. So I’m going to bake some blueberry muffins and maybe some cranberry ones as well. Might as well start the weekend off right, and get some food in people’s stomachs before they start drinking!

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(Both recipes this week came from “Martha Stewart’s Baking Handbook”.)

This week I decided it was time to do some savory baking. Pizza crust it was!

This pizza crust started with flour, sugar, salt and yeast. Water was added and this dough was allowed to rise until doubled in size. Once it had risen, it was punched down and then allowed to rise one more time.

Meanwhile, I worked on the tomato sauce for the pizza. I used my hands to squish two cans of whole peeled tomatoes in a bowl and added in some dried oregano. This went into a pot on the stove and was supposed to simmer for fifty minutes to thicken.

After the second rise, the dough was cut in half and one half was wrapped in plastic wrap and left at room temperature:
Homemade pizza crust

The oven was preheated and a baking stone was placed in the bottom of the oven.

The other half of my dough was allowed to sit for five minutes, and then it was shaped into a round. My dough was being cranky with me; parts of it would stretch beautifully and part of it would rip almost immediately. I finally got a good shape formed and placed it on a cookie sheet that was sprinkled with cornmeal.

My tomato sauce never thickened up. The recipe indicated that I should have cooked the tomatoes in a skillet, but I don’t have a skillet large enough to accommodate 56 ounces of tomatoes. I cooked mine in a large stockpot with the lid on. Maybe I should have left the lid off. I dunno. I ended up with more of a tomato juice than tomato sauce. It would have to do:
Adding homemade sauce

Once the sauce was down, I placed some sliced fresh mozzarella on the pizza:
Mozzarella

On top of the mozzarella, I added pepperoni, chopped red peppers, chopped onions and Parmesan cheese:
Adding cheese

The pizza was supposed to be slid off the cookie sheet (or pizza peel, if you’re lucky enough to have one of those) directly onto the baking stone. I couldn’t for the life of me get my pizza to slid off the cookie sheet, so I just put the cookie sheet on top of the baking stone. I probably would have ended up with a crunchier dough if I’d put the pizza right on the stone, but I was pretty happy with my results:
Homemade pizza

While the first pizza baked, the process was repeated with the second round of dough.

On Thursday, I decided to attack something a little different and make almond macaroons. I’ve been obsessed with macaroons since eating a Framboise-flavored one from Pistacia Vera a few months ago. There’s a recipe for French Almond Macaroons in Martha Stewart’s Baking Handbook and it didn’t look too scary, so I went for it.

The recipe started with two ounces of almonds being ground into a fine powder. This was mixed with confectioner’s sugar. In the bowl of my KitchenAid stand mixer, I whisked egg whites until they were foamy, then added a pinch of salt and granulated sugar and whisked until the mixture reached soft peaks. Half of the sugar/almond mixture was sprinkled over the eggs and folded until just combined. I then added a little vanilla and the remaining sugar/almond mixture and folded again until just combined:
French Almond Macaroon batter

This mixture was transferred to a pastry bag. Martha suggests that one should dip a one and a half inch round cookie cutter in flour and then mark circles on parchment paper-lined cookie sheets to use as a stencil. I tried this, but apparently used a cookie cutter that was quite a bit larger than one and a half inches. My first round of macaroons went on My Precious looking a little like this:
French Almond Macaroons

And of course, once they’d baked for twenty minutes, they came out looking like this:
Whoopsie!

Epic fail. Luckily, I realized as I was piping those macaroons that they were going to be way too big. So I free-handed the rest of my macaroons and the second batch looked much better:
French Almond Macaroons

So I ruined most of my vanilla macaroons. Luckily, I’d planned to make chocolate ones as well, so at least I had some more ingredients to work with. I whipped up a chocolate batter that was almost identical to the vanilla, except that two tablespoons of cocoa powder were mixed in with the sugar/almond mixture:
Chocolate French Almond Macaroon batter

These ones came out much better:
Chocolate French Almond Macaroons

Chocolate French Almond Macaroons

Chocolate French Almond Macaroons

The chocolate ones came out much better than the vanilla ones. I ground the almonds a little finer for the chocolate which I think made a big difference as far as texture is concerned. And the vanilla ones had an almost popcorn-y flavor, which was strange. I definitely want to make these again. I’m planning to experiment with different flavors. I think a mint macaroon might just be incredible.

Next week I’m planning to bake a Strawberry Pie especially for my grandmother and some sugar cookies for my dad for Father’s Day. I need to make a trip to Sur La Table to pick up some cookie cutters that are right up his alley…

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(The strawberry shortcake recipe this week came from “Martha Stewart’s Baking Handbook”. The cupcake recipes were cobbled together from a couple of online recipes.)

Once again, I got sidetracked from posting by an illness.

Just as I was getting over my allergic reaction from last week, I woke up Thursday with a raging earache. I ended up going to Urgent Care (again) and finding out that it was Swimmer’s Ear. I got some ear drops and Vicodin (!) and went home. The next morning I woke up to a small fire burning in the other ear as well. Yup. Swimmer’s Ears. I’m doing much better now. Between the drops and the Vicodin, I’m feeling much happier.

My plan last week was to bake two cupcakes for a friend’s birthday that were inspired by flavors of ice cream available at Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams. I wasn’t planning to bake the cupcakes until Thursday morning and then I was going to frost them Friday night before the party.

On Sunday, I got a real urge to do some baking. I started flipping through the “Martha Stewart Baking Handbook” at work and stumbled on the strawberry shortcake-variation baking powder biscuits. They looked amazing and pretty easy. So I decided I would make those for dessert that night.

The biscuits were super simple and consisted of sugar, flour, baking powder, salt and butter. Once the dough came together, it was rolled out and I cut out my biscuits. While they baked, the strawberries were mascerated in lemon juice and sugar:
Mascerating strawberries

I also whipped up some Vanilla Whipped Cream:
Vanilla whipped cream

In just a few minutes, the biscuits were ready:
Shortcake variation baking powder biscuits

The biscuits were cut in half and the shortcakes were assembled:
Strawberry shortcakes

Delicious. Oh man, I could eat this every night! The strawberries were very sweet, which was good because the biscuits and the whipped cream were not overly so. Mmmm mmm.

On to the cupcakes!

A few years ago at Comfest, Jeni’s unveiled their Root Beer Float. It is quite possibly the most amazing thing ever. It’s a deceptively simple combination of Frostop Root Beer and Honey Vanilla Bean ice cream. So good. When I thought about what cupcakes I wanted to make that would capture the essence of Jeni’s, I knew I wanted to make a root beer cupcake. Jeni’s most popular flavor is the Salty Caramel, which I actually don’t like. For some reason, I can only taste the salt and not the caramel. But who am I to question the tastes of the masses? I had to make a Salty Caramel cupcake as well.

I didn’t take many photos of this process, as my ear was killing me while I was baking them. But I do have some photos of the completed cupcakes:
Salty Caramel and Root Beer Float Cupcakes

Salty Caramel and Root Beer Float Cupcakes

The Root Beer Float Cupcakes were frosted with a Honey Vanilla Bean Buttercream frosting (delicious!). The Salty Caramel Cupcakes were topped with a caramel frosting that never quite thickened up the way I wanted it to. It turned out tasting pretty good, but I wish it had had a little more height to it. To make up for the lackluster presentation, I drizzled some caramel over the tops, put a caramel candy on each one and then added just a pinch of fleur de sal. That salt was amazing. It provided just the right amount of salt to a really sweet cupcake.

They were a big hit at the party. The guests seemed to be evenly split between which was their favorite:
Salty Caramel Cupcakes

Root Beer Float Cupcakes with Honey Vanilla Bean Buttercream Frosting

I definitely want to make the Root Beer Float Cupcakes again. The Salty Caramel Cupcakes were awesome, but they were a lot of work. The Root Beer cupcakes were much easier. Yum!

This week I’m working on two different things. Tonight I made my first pizza from scratch. On Wednesday, I plan to make French Almond Macaroons. More on both of these later this week.

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