Cookies

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(The two cupcake recipes this week came from “Cupcakes!” by Elinor Klivans. The cookie recipe came from “The Magnolia Bakery Cookbook” by Jennifer Appel and Allysa Torey.)

This week I found myself playing bachelor girl while my husband Rob is a-hootin’ and a-hollerin’ in Austin, Texas for South by Southwest. This also explains why all my photos in this post were taken with my iPhone – Rob has my real camera in the Lone Star State.

I always get lonely when he’s gone and I find that having a project to do helps to alleviate some of the loneliness. So this time around, I decided to bake.

It began last night with Orange Chiffon Cupcakes with Orange Butter Icing. This was the only recipe of the three that I wasn’t thrilled with. The recipe basically consisted of two batters – one with egg yolks and the other with egg whites. The egg yolk batter turned out fine, but the egg white batter was lacking. I think the problem stemmed from using my KitchenAid stand mixer to beat the egg whites, when I should have used my hand held mixer. They didn’t quite get as fluffy as they were supposed to:
Egg whites

The egg white batter was folded into the egg yolk batter and baked for 35 minutes. They seemed to bake up okay:
Baked!

When they were finished, I rigged up a soup can/wire rack cooling device, onto which the cupcake pan was flipped upside down:
Hanging upside down
(Yeah, that one cupcake fell out when I flipped the pan upside down.)

The cupcakes hung upside down for 45 minutes to cool, at which point they were frosted. There was no picture of these cupcakes in the cookbook, so I’m not sure exactly what the icing was supposed to look like. It turned out to be more of a glaze than an icing, but it still tasted pretty good:
Glazed

Aside from not being quite fluffy enough, my problem with this recipe was that the author said it would make 12 big cupcakes. I was supposed to pour the batter into muffin pans to get a big ‘ol cupcake. I thought I was using a muffin pan, but when I compared it with my cupcake pan, they were the same size…and the recipe still only made seven cupcakes. I’m guessing the egg white batter should have been a lot fluffier and that would have increased the volume of batter. Oh well, lessons learned.

This morning I got up early to take our dog Scout in for her vet appointment, so I used the morning to get started on my second recipe – Chocolate Covered Hi Hat cupcakes. This was a fairly ambitious recipe, as the finished product was supposed to look like this:

The recipe started with a fairly simple sour cream chocolate cupcake recipe (and man are these cupcakes good), which was easy enough until I tried to remove the cupcakes from the pans:
Chocolate cupcake base done!
(Yup, that’s my thumbprint in the upper right hand cupcake. Whoopsie!)

While the cupcakes cooled (during which time I had to make a grocery store run for more sugar), I started making the topping. The topping consisted of sugar, water, egg whites and cream of tartar. This was combined in a bowl and placed over a pot of simmering water and mixed with a hand held mixer for 12 minutes. Twelve minutes doesn’t sound like such a long time, until you get to about minute six. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome sets in pretty quickly:
Mixing the marshmallow-y filling

After the 12 minutes were up, vanilla and almond extracts were mixed in, the topping was spooned into a pastry bag/freezer bag and piped onto the cupcakes:
Marshmallow-y filling

I didn’t pipe quite as much topping onto the cupcakes as the author of the cookbook did, just because I was scared that I would mess something up. I went a little more conservative. The topped cupcakes were then refrigerated while I melted the chocolate for the coating:
Melted Chocolate

Then the messy part began. I turned each cupcake upside down and dunked it in the melted chocolate. I then spooned more chocolate over the cupcakes until all the topping was covered with a layer of chocolate:
Coated

The coated cupcakes were then tucked back in the fridge for two and a half hours to firm up:
Chilled!

I decided to eat the mutated cupcake (like a good baker does) so I could take the pretty ones to work. I cut it in half too see if the cross section looked anything like the photo in the cookbook. Surprisingly, it did!
Chocolate Covered Hi Hat
Cross section

The cake part of this concoction is fantastic. I’m not the biggest fan of the topping. The sugar didn’t completely dissolve, so it’s slightly gritty (although not nasty or anything). I’m not sure what else I could have done to dissolve the sugar, because if mixing it for 12 minutes doesn’t do it, I’m not sure what does. Also, I’m apparently not an almond fan. I really could have done with the almond extract.

I finished up with the recipe that I originally thought was going to be the only thing I made today: Orange White Chocolate Chip Cookies. This was a pretty straightforward chocolate chip cookie dough with orange zest and white chocolate chips added:
Orange White Chocolate Chip Cookie dough

The dough was dropped by rounded teaspoonful on a baking sheet and baked for 11 minutes. It turned out the cutest little bite-sized cookies!
Orange White Chocolate Chip Cookies

Whew! This was a marathon baking experience! I just hope my co-workers enjoy all the goodies coming in tomorrow!

Things learned today: I need a wire rack with the wires going in both directions. My current rack has only horizontal wires and they sometimes leave indentations on the undersides of my baked goods. Also, I need a microplane. My box grater is a nightmare to use to zest fruit.

Depending on my mood, I may bake some Alphabet Cookies for an event at work on Friday for the Week Twelve project. But they won’t be cut in alphabet shapes!

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(This week’s project came from the February 2009 issue of Food & Wine magazine.)

This week I wanted to return to non-vegan baking, and you’ve gotta love a recipe that calls for two and a half sticks of butter. I was very intrigued by the malted cream in the middle of these sandwich cookies, and the recipe didn’t seem too difficult to master. Plus I got to buy a couple of new toys:
Biscuit cutters

The first toys were biscuit cutters. I was supposed to get a 2″ cookie cutter, but when I stopped by Sur La Table the other day, I couldn’t find one. They had a 1.5″ and a 2.5″, but no 2″. Then I noticed these biscuit cutters, which contained a 2″, a 2.5″ and a 3″, and they were only $3. I figure I’m likely to make biscuits somewhere along the line, and everyone can use these circular cutters.

Decorating set

The other toy was a cupcake decorating set. The recipe called for using a pastry bag and tip to put the malted cream on the bottom cookie. I had a pastry bag once, but I managed to apply so much pressure to it that I popped the seam and all the frosting inside exploded out. This set was less than $10 and comes with eight bags.

The first step in this recipe was melting six ounces of milk chocolate:
Hershey's!

Next, I mixed butter with brown sugar, granulated sugar, added the vanilla and melted chocolate, and then dumped in flour, cocoa powder, baking soda and salt. The resulting dough was turned out onto parchment paper:
Ball of dough

The dough was rolled out to 1/4″ thickness and refrigerated for 15 minutes. I then used my 2″ biscuit cutter to cut out rounds. The scraps were gathered up again and more rounds were cut until all the dough was used. The dough was somewhat hard to work with, as it was incredibly crumbly. But I managed to get all the rounds onto my baking sheet (along with My Precious, the Silpat), and they were refrigerated again for ten minutes before being baked for ten:
Wafers

I ruined about four of the cookies in the first batch in my over-eagerness to get them off the baking sheet. These cookies definitely need some resting time before they are transferred to a cooling rack. And even then, they need to be handled with care until they are completely cooled. They are very fragile.
The filling was made of butter, Ovaltine, vanilla and powdered sugar. I found the filling to be quite stiff. I was worried that I had messed it up by adding about a tablespoon too much powdered sugar (I had that much left in the bag and didn’t want to waste it by throwing it out). However, the readers of Food & Wine magazine commented on this recipe’s web page that they also found the filling too stiff, and added milk to make it easier to work with. I thought about adding milk, but decided to just stick with what the recipe said.
I transferred the filling to a pastry bag and attempted to pipe the filling onto the cookies. This was definitely a chore. I also managed to apply so much pressure that I popped the pastry tip right out of the end of the bag. It ended up working better without the tip:
Malted cream

Finally, the cookies were sandwiched together:
Cookies
Cookie close-up

They turned out pretty good in the end. They’re very crumbly and very rich cookies (I could only eat one and a half, Rob had a few more), and I think they’ll be perfect to take in to my co-workers tomorrow.
I won’t be posting a new project until next Wednesday (February 25). I got a little off track by baking on Saturdays, but this time around I will need the extra time. I’m planning to bake croissants, and the instructions in the book I’m using take up three pages. I also have to retrieve my mother’s ‘noodle board’ to actually make the puff pastry. More on this next time.

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(This recipe came from a now out-of-print book called “The Damn Tasty! Vegan Baking Guide” by Kris Holechek.)

This week I decided to try a recipe at which my friend Jennifer Prochilo seems to excel. She continuously posts photos of these chocolate-y cookies called Peanut Butter Bombs that I really wanted to try.

I am not the biggest fan of the chocolate/peanut butter combo. I like Reese’s Pieces but find that Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups are better in moderation (and frozen! They absolutely must be frozen!). But I know most people enjoy that combo, especially my grandmother, so I decided to make a batch and take some to her for her 82nd birthday this week.

They’re mostly vegan because I’m not sure if the chocolate chips I bought were vegan or not. As it wasn’t important for them to be entirely vegan, I didn’t really try that hard to find chips that I was sure were vegan.

The recipe started with a chocolate dough that consisted of flour, baking soda, cocoa powder, soy milk, margarine, white sugar, brown sugar and vanilla:
Chocolate dough

Next was a peanut butter dough made with peanut butter, powdered sugar and the chocolate chips:
Peanut butter dough

The chocolate dough was rolled into a ball and then flattened out into a disc. The peanut butter dough was then rolled into a slightly smaller ball and put in the middle of the chocolate dough, which was then folded over the peanut butter:
Peanut butter innards

This is the point where I started having problems. Jennifer’s Peanut Butter Bombs are always pure chocolate on the outside. The peanut butter is completely hidden and a surprise for the eater. The peanut butter in my cookies kept leaking out the seams. I could not get the peanut butter completely encased in the chocolate:
Peanut Butter Bombs

My cookies were not sophisticated enough to be called “bombs”. So I’m renaming this recipe Peanut Butter IEDs (no disrespect to all you military folks out there, of course).

They tasted all right though:
Peanut Butter Bomb

And I think my grandma enjoyed her gift:
Gift-wrapped Peanut Butter Bombs

Tune in next week for Vegan Vanilla and Chocolate Cupcakes! Week Seven will turn back on the animal-product highway after my little detour down Vegan Boulevard, but I’m sure I’ll be making a few more pit stops in the next year.

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