Tag Archives: dessert

What is a Brown Betty?

I certainly didn’t know until I set out in search of crisp and found a betty instead.

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        Breadcrumbs instead of flour and oats? Is it a dessert or a breakfast? I still haven’t figured that one out. This is what Wikipedia told me about Brown Bettys. The article says it’s a dessert, usually made with apples, that originated in colonial times. Other recipes I came across said the Brown Betty is a breakfast dish with Southern roots. I love history, especially when it relates to food!
        What drew me to this recipe was the inclusion of cinnamon raisin bread. I’ve been on kind of a cinnamon raisin bread kick recently. I love PB&J on cinnamon raisin and it’s even good for egg sandwiches! Now I know it’s also a delicious addition to baked fruit.
        I made my Brown Betty for dessert but it would make a fantastic breakfast. It’s not sickeningly sweet and all the fruit is a great way to start or end the day. I added some spices and oats to the original recipe. We enjoyed ours with vanilla ice cream, although I thought about toasting a marshmallow in the fireplace and smooshing that on top!

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Gingered Pear-Apple Betty (makes 6 servings)
Adapted from Cooking Light

4 (1 oz) slices cinnamon raisin bread (I used Barowsky’s All Natural)
1/2 cup oats
2.5 cups sliced, pealed pear
2 cups sliced, peeled apple
1/3 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons crystalized ginger, chopped
1/8 teaspoon allspice
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 – 1 teaspoon cinnamon, depending on taste
1/4 cup water
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons melted butter

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Tear bread into small pieces and process in food processor until finely ground.
Mix oats and bread in a large bowl.
Combine 1 cup bread/oats, pear, apple, sugar, allspice, cinnamon, and both kinds of ginger in a bowl, stirring well.
Spoon this mixture into an oiled 11 x 7 in. baking dish.
Combine remaining bread and butter. Sprinkle over the fruit mix in the dish.
Optional: sprinkled a 1/4 cup or so of sliced almonds on top.

Bake, uncovered, at 350 for 40 minutes or until bubbly.
It ends up quite crispy with little to no liquid. (If you want it juicier cover it for half the baking time, then remove cover to brown the top.)

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Rocky road cookies

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        Everyone has a favorite ice cream flavor. As a kid, mine was rocky road. I have very vivid childhood memories of standing in front of the counter at Buster’s in South Pasadena, reaching for a rocky road-topped sugar cone. What’s not to love about chocolate ice cream studded with walnuts and tender little marshmallows? The marshmallows were my favorite part. Something about coming across one mid-lick and slurping it out of the melting ice cream made savoring a rocky road cone blissful. Nothing was better than ice cream at Buster’s followed by a romp on the railroad tracks next door. My brother and I left countless pennies to be squished by the trains and retrieved on our next family trip for ice cream.
        Sorry, I guess I’m feeling sentimental. The point is, I came across a recipe for rocky road cookies online and felt a hankering to recreate my favorite flavor combo in a cookie! The recipe I found didn’t quite translate to the rocky road I remembered. The cookies weren’t chocolate and the nuts were peanuts. I fixed the recipe up easily, though, and made a little dent in the half bag of mini marshmallows leftover from Lee’s birthday cake. I ended up with a cake-like chocolate cookie generously filled with carob chips, walnuts, and marshmallows. The marshmallows melt and toast in the oven making for some very sticky, gooey cookies. Oh, and if you use vegan marshmallows like these, my rocky road cookies are vegan!

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Rocky Road Cookies
Adapted from this recipe on VegWeb.com

1 cup all-purpose flour
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup natural turbinado sugar
2 tablespoons coconut oil (or your preferred oil/butter)
3 tablespoons applesauce
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon ground flax mixed with 3 tbsp water
1/4 cup chopped walnuts
1/4 cup chocolate or carob chips
mini marshmallows

Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.

Sift together flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt.
Combine flax mixture, applesauce, coconut oil, vanilla, and sugar. Mix until smooth.
Add dry ingredients to wet, mixing as you do until a dough forms.
Fold in walnuts and chocolate chips.
Place a couple marshmallows in a tablespoon, scoop up a spoonful of cookie dough, and place the ball on an oiled cookie sheet. This way the marshmallows end up on top of the cookie, don’t stick to the cookie sheet, and get all toasty! You could, of course, just mix a couple handfuls of marshmallows right into the dough.
I got all the cookies on one sheet. They don’t spread out so it you want them to be flatter, press down on the top of each cookie a bit with the back of a spoon.
Bake at 375 for 8-10 minutes.

If these cookies weren’t gone, I’d try crumbling a few into some chocolate ice cream for a real rocky road experience!

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Crustless sweet potato goat’s milk pies

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I thought long and hard about what to call these. They combine so many good things into one little package: sweet potato pie, goat’s milk, single servings, crustless-ness… In the end, I went with the briefest title that would do justice to such a flavor-packed little dessert.
My inspiration for these began with a snippet in the latest issue of Cooking Light magazine. The article suggests baking pumpkin pie in ramekins rather than a traditional crust. I love the idea of a crustless pumpkin pie! I’ve always liked the custard filling better than the crust anyway. I filed that recipe idea away in my brain as something I’d have to try this fall. Then I saw these Impossible Pumpkin Pie Cupcakes on Baking Bites and almost decided to make them instead (I’m sure I will, soon enough). Instead, I combined the crustless pumpkin pie concept with the cupcake idea and added my own, unique twist.
I pulled out the 6 pack of Texas-sized silicon muffin cups I got a Reny’s earlier this summer (apparently muffins are bigger in Texas). Rather than stick with pumpkin filling, I looked up the sweet potato pie recipe I made for Thanksgiving last year. It was a hit on Thanksgiving and a bit more substantial than pumpkin. When I realized I’d need evaporated milk another twist on the traditional came to mind: evaporated goats milk! I know, it’s weird, but I really love the taste of anything made with goat’s milk (cheese, yogurt, you name it). I have always wanted to try baking with the canned Meyenberg evaporated goat’s milk I see in the store. This was my chance!
So how did my little experiments turn out? They’re delicious! The sweet potato filling is velvety, nicely spiced, and satisfyingly dense. I love the smooth texture and melt-in-your-mouth quality of custard pie fillings. The goat’s milk flavor is definitely there but it’s not so strong that it distracts from everything else.
These mini-pies are really easy to make. They only require one bowl. I divided the batter into 6 large muffin cups but it would fit in 4, for more generous servings, or in ramekins of a similar size. You can eat them right out of the muffin cups or pop them out onto a plate with some ice cream or whipped cream. This takes the drama out of decided how big a piece of pie you want after dinner. Spoon or fork, enjoy dessert one bite at a time!

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Featured on Baking is Hot!

Crustless Sweet Potato Goat’s Milk Pies
Adapted from Real Simple

2 tablespoons butter, at room temperature
1/3 cup light brown sugar
1 egg
1 tablespoon agave nectar or honey
1 tbsp orange juice, optional (part of the original recipe. I left it out but it might add a little something)
1 large sweet potato, cooked and mashed
1/2 a 12oz can evaporated goat’s milk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Cook sweet potato in the oven or microwave. Peel it and mash it in a bowl.
In a separate bowl or a mixer, beat butter and sugar together till smooth.
Beat in egg, agave, and orange juice, if using.
Add sweet potato, milk, vanilla, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Stir well to combine.
Spoon into large silicon muffin cups arranged on a cookie sheet or oven-safe ramekins.
Bake 30-40 minutes at 350 degrees.

Cool for a few hours before serving. Heat them up or devour them eagerly at room temperature.

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