breakfast

sticky buns (easy like sunday morning)

by Patricia on November 28, 2009 · 7 comments

Sticky Buns

I know I’ve written about puff pastry before (see: chocolate croissants, and easy apple tart), but I wanted to give it props one more time. Some mornings, maybe you have the wherewithal to make pancakes or biscuits or pinwheels. Other mornings, you want something warm, flaky, and delicious but easy. That’s where puff pastry comes in. It’s so easy it’s theme song should be Easy by the Commodores… [now everybody sing it with me: that's why I'm eeeeasy, easy like Sunday morning].
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pumpkin pinwheels

by Patricia on October 19, 2009 · 19 comments

pumkin-pinwheels2

Seventy days. Ten weeks. Two months… no matter how I express how long I have been away from work, it does not match how long it feels. I left work about that long ago. I voluntarily, without coercion or drugs, bid adieu to my job as a software engineer and left my colleagues with dulce de leche brownies. Seventy days. That sounds like a lot of time, but to me it barely feels like two weeks.
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The name, though a bit long, sounds kind of exciting doesn’t it? Yep. The name is pretty exciting. The muffins aren’t bad either… although they are not as exciting as I had hoped. Oh, they are tasty good. But I didn’t put enough cherry OR white chocolate into them. And somehow there is never enough streusel topping. Maybe I like my muffins overstreuseled. Maybe I’m especially picky today. Maybe I should move on…
cherry-muffin

At any rate, these are good muffins. No, they are. They are not overly sweet. And they are not dry. The crowns rose nicely on all twelve muffins. And they were easy to throw together. [Continue reading...]

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My new addiction: granola

by Patricia on May 3, 2009 · 3 comments

I have been making a concerted effort to reduce my overall sugar (and butter) intake lately. But I still want to bake and I still want to have treats.  In other words, I want to fit into skinny jeans again without giving up everything.  But the volume of cupcakes, cookies and doughnuts coming out of my kitchen this winter has worked against me as I work toward my goal for the spring which is to fit back into some of my skinnier jeans (not necessarily the skinniest jean in my drawer and definitely not skinny jeans as in the style that is popular lately… they just aren’t made for girls with hips).  Anyway.  So what’s a girl to do?

Aside from upping my weekly miles running, I’ve also been cutting back on the daily desserts (daily dessert!).  And have been making slightly healthier choices when I do reach for treats (mostly).  Among those slightly healthier choices is homemade yogurt topped with granola.  

This was my first foray into making granola and now I wonder why I waited so long.  Homemade granola kicks the butt of store bought any day.  I guess that’s true of most things.  But granola?
granola-closeup

Yes, granola.  Once again, I started with an Alton Brown recipe.  I looked at several other granola recipes including one that is a chocolate granola from Nigella Lawson, but Alton’s was the most straightforward and I didn’t need to go to the store to make it.  Well… let me clarify.  I did not have the specific nuts he called for in his recipe.  But what I did have was a big ole bag of fruit and nut trail mix from Costco. Who needs 3 pounds 8 ounces of trail mix?  Apparently I thought I did.

fruit-n-nut-bag

I was feeling guilty about this yellow bag sitting there holding food that I no longer wanted to eat.  I don’t like to waste food.  I had to find a way to use it somehow.  So I used it in my granola.  Well, at least, I used some of it.  There was a lot of the mango, kiwi, pineapple and other fruits left.  Maybe my next batch of granola will be a little tropical.

I started by sorting the fruits from the nuts.

nuts-n-fruit

This process requires a little OCD.  (If you’re a normal person who does not purchase 3.5 pounds of dried fruits and nuts “medley”, then your granola experience should be a little more straightforward than mine). 

granola-nuts

I chopped the nuts (I think I wound up with a mix of almonds, walnuts and peanuts.  Possibly cashews too.  All I know is I had a bunch of nuts.)  

I mixed the oats, coconut, and nuts.  To the dry mix, I added the maple syrup and oil mixture.

granola-maple

When it was good and mixed, I spread it out on a half sheet pan that was lined with a silpat.  Then it was baked at 250 degrees for an hour and fifteen minutes (stirring every fifteen minutes).

Between stirs, I sorted through the fruits to find raisins.  I didn’t distinguish between the raisins and cranberries because I decided cranberries would add a little zing and my OCD was wearing thin by this time. 

granola

When it is golden and toasted, remove it from the oven and dump it into a big bowl.  Stir in the raisins.  Let it cool completely and store it in an airtight container.

Now I’m not about to say that granola is low fat or something you should eat large quantities of on a regular basis.  But a little granola on top of low fat yogurt is a great treat and leaves me feeling lighter than most of my favorite buttery/sugary treats. Besides the fats in granola are mostly from nuts which are supposed to be good for you, right?  Anyway. The key is moderation.  So don’t be like me.  I ate about 1.5 cups before it had cooled off completely.

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A couple of weeks ago, I went on a run with a friend of mine.  We had a good time talking the whole 5+ miles and I barely noticed we ran that far (until the next day when my legs were really sore).  We’ve been trying to plan a time to run together again since then, but it seems there is always something.  So we decided to have breakfast together instead.  Being someone who doesn’t like to show up empty handed, I started thinking about what I should bring: biscuits, muffins, … scones!

blueberry scones

I have never liked scones from coffee shops.  They are just too dry.  But I am game to try making things on my own before saying I don’t like something across the board (another good example of this would be biscotti).  I was intimidated by scones at first.  Oh, the dough seemed easy enough.  I mean, I’ve been making biscuits since before I could drive, and its really just a modified biscuit dough (or are biscuits a modified scone dough?  hmm… ).  But I (wrongly) believed you needed a special pan to make scones.  After a little reading, I found out that you don’t need a special pan at all.  The Barefoot Contessa uses a fluted cookie cutter and then a knife to divide it into triangles, but really just a knife will do it as long as (like me) you’re not too fussy about their shape.

The first time I made these blueberry scones was Thanksgiving morning.  We ate them warm with tea.  And then room temperature in the afternoon as a snack.  Dan was in Starbucks later that same day comparing notes with some random guy about all the good food their girlfriends had cooked recently.  The scones pushed Dan’s list over the top so he won the “I’m more spoiled than you” contest.  Haha.  (he has been requesting that I make these again ever since).

blueberry scones

I made a dozen flaky and tender scones and took half of them with me for breakfast with my girl friend.  They were the perfect accompaniment to the frittata and tea.  The other half dozen made their way to Dan’s house… there was much rejoicing.

blueberry scones

Blueberry Hill Scones (adapted from The Good Housekeeping Baking)

2 cups all-purpose flour

1/4 cup packed brown sugar

1 tablespoon baking powder

1/4 teaspoon salt

4 tablespoons cold butter, cut up

1 cup blueberries (fresh or frozen. if frozen, thawed)

1 cup heavy whipping cream

1 large egg

1/2 teaspoon fresh lemon zest

1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.  Line a baking sheet with parchment paper (or not).

2. In a large bowl, stir together flour, brown sugar, baking powder and salt. Cut in the butter (using a pastry blender) until mixture resembles coarse crumbs.  Add blueberries and toss to mix.

3. In a small bowl, mix cream, eggs and lemon zest until blended.

4. Add the liquid to the flour mixture.  Stir just until a soft dough forms (I had some flour left in the bottom of the bowl.  I decided that was ok since most of it was in a soft dough ball).

5. With lightly floured hands, knead the dough in bowl 3 to 4 times, just until it holds together.  Do not overmix!

6. Divide dough in half.  On a lightly floured surface, shape each half into a 6-inch round.  Cut each round into 6 wedges.  With a large spatula, place each wedge on your baking sheet, 1 inch apart (I did not do this and I got a giant, slightly perforated mass of scones — see photo above — that I had to recut after removing from the oven.  don’t be like me… follow the directions, put them at least 1 inch apart.)

7. Bake 22 to 25 minutes, until golden brown.  Serve warm. (If kept tightly wrapped, these will keep for a couple of days.  But they are best warm from the oven).  Enjoy!

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