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| Hearth bread dough from the King Arthur Flour Cookbook |
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| Hearth bread, sliced and ready for the freezer |
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| An oversized boule from the Artisan Bread master recipe |
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| Hearth bread dough from the King Arthur Flour Cookbook |
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| Hearth bread, sliced and ready for the freezer |
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| An oversized boule from the Artisan Bread master recipe |
A quick Google search will reveal that every other food blog in the universe has already made a version of this granola, most of them based on the recipe given by Melissa Clark in The New York Times. I had a perfectly yummy granola recipe, developed from several sources, so it took me a while to try this one. So many wasted months….
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One of the kids’ favorite non-chocolate cookies is the snickerdoodle. It’s one of my favorites, too. I’ve used several recipes, as long as it’s made with butter. Today I enlisted the help of three kindergarteners. I mixed up the dough while they were at school, which gave it enough time to chill. (The chilling time is especially important when hot little hands are going to roll the dough, otherwise it’s too sticky to work with. But if you’re in a hurry and don’t have “help,” you can skip it.) I scooped the cookies with my mini ice cream scoop (the best tool ever for making cookies-it goes faster and your cookies are beautifully uniform) and the girls rolled them in cinnamon sugar. They ran off to play while I baked the cookies, and then, of course, it was time for a tea party. 🙂That giant Costco box of Quaker mini granola bars in my pantry (nearly empty after a few short weeks) has been mocking me. Look at all the packaging! Couldn’t they have less sugar? Even my son said we ought to be able to make homemade granola bars. So I loosely followed the Smitten Kitchen recipe. (I’m not going to copy the recipe here–just go there yourself, as you should whenever you’re looking for a well-tested recipe for anything.) I stuck to the proportions as written, but freely substituted vegetable oil for butter, maple syrup for corn syrup, whole wheat flour for oat flour, soy nut butter for almond butter–basically, I went with what was in my pantry. For the 2-3 cups of fruits and nuts, I used a mixture of sliced almonds, coconut, wheat germ, flax seeds, crispy rice cereal, dried cranberries and chocolate chips. It would be really easy to make these gluten and dairy free. Next time I may increase the wet ingredients just a little to reduce the crumble factor, increase the proportion of rice cereal, and skip the cranberries. (I like the cranberries, but a certain daughter does not. The boys happily accepted the homemade version as a worthy replacement for the shiny foil packets.) Next time I’ll double the recipe and let the kids help. This is one recipe that won’t suffer if someone is a little too enthusiastic in adding ingredients!
A slightly belated introductory post, and confession of sorts. For months (maybe over a year), I’ve been waffling over whether to start a blog, what it could be about, blah, blah, bitty blah. I’m not sure what pushed me over the edge (maybe it was the new batteries in my digital camera), but I finally decided that my rusty writing skills were only getting rustier, and that journalism diploma (circa 1994) somewhere in the basement was only getting dustier. Look at that, a baking pun and a rhyme all in the first paragraph. Don’t get too excited.
Since my regular job description includes mother of three, weekday chef, lunch packer, homework helper, chauffeur, dishwasher unloader and laundry folder, I need a side job that allows me to work at home with Yo Gabba Gabba! in the background. It would be great if I could sell a cake or two, but at least I can start learning more about this internet thing and put something on my resume more recent than 2003.
So, generally, I intend to focus on baking at home. Maybe I’ll share a recipe once in a while. Maybe I’ll veer off on unknown tangents. But I’m looking forward to the conversation, which is the best part about blogging, I think. Comment away, people! I’m already thrilled to have four followers, even if two of them are family and one is my best friend. Gotta start somewhere.
And now, I need to go to toddler story time at the library. I’ll be back as soon as I’ve baked something yummy. (Suggestions are welcome. Someone mentioned pie, so I’ll definitely get around to that soon. Thanksgiving is just around the corner!)
| Coming soon: Granola, granola bars, crunchy granola… |
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| A fun and fresh option for a large sheet cake. This was for a birthday party, but I’ve also made one for an anniversary celebration. Initials would work as well as numbers. Vanilla cake, whipped cream and fresh fruit. |
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| New Year’s Eve: The Golden Cage cake from Rose Levy Berenbaum’s Cake Bible. |
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| Chocolate cream pie…homemade chocolate pudding & whipped cream |
Mmm…pie. I admit, I don’t make pie often enough, usually waiting until holiday time. It’s a shame, because I’d rather eat pie than almost anything else!
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What’s your favorite kind of pie? Mine might be pumpkin…but I wouldn’t say no to any others! |
| Peach lattice pie |
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| The ducky cake was for my son’s second birthday. He was in a little bit of a duck phase, so we thought he’d enjoy them on his cake. Chocolate cake, lightly sweetened whipped cream. |
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| The chocolate tiered cake was for a good friend’s 40th birthday (obviously!). He’s a chocoholic, so it was dark chocolate cake with whipped ganache frosting |
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| This cake was for a big 3rd birthday party. Vanilla cake with chocolate chips and vanilla buttercream. |