Showing posts with label sweet tooth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sweet tooth. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Oh, Heaven!

Hello, friends! It's time for another episode of Gerb Uses A Million Pictures To Show Us How She Cooks Something Tasty.

Today's recipe?

Warm Chocolate Cakes from Communal Restaurant. Except that I prefer to call them Warm Molten Lava Chocolate Cakes From Heaven. And can I add: how awesome is a restaurant that shares their recipes? I haven't had the chance to eat here yet, mostly because every time I've tried to go (the gap between lunch and dinner and Monday evening) they're closed.

But, hey, Communal! I love you forever for letting me make these cakes at home. You seriously rock!

Here we go...

First off it says to melt the butter and chocolate together until smooth. I don't know about you, but I'm a specifics kind of gal. When I went to buy a pound (yeah, baby!) of chocolate I was worried I'd pick the wrong kind. Like, should I get Dove chocolates or Lindt chocolates? Or just go with the stuff in the baking aisle? I decided to just go with what I was used to and purchased two boxes of semi-sweet baking chocolate.

Since the directions didn't specify doing the double-boiler method (and I'm a short-cut kind of gal) I just threw all of the butter and chocolate into a large bowl and microwaved them for 2 minutes. It wasn't all melted, but I let it sit on the counter and continue melting as I stirred the mixture together.

Here it is almost melted...
And all done:
Next it calls for 6 eggs and 6 egg yolks. In case you've never seen 6 eggs in a bowl before, here you go:
I don't have any fancy kitchen tools (you'll learn more about this later) so I just separated my eggs with the back-and-forth into each half of the shell method until all that remained was a yolk, like so:
Save the whites for scrambled egg whites or whatever. Then add the yolks to the other 6 eggs and dump in the sugar.
Then beat...
I wasn't sure if these were beaten enough:
So I read the recipe again. It said to 'beat into a ribbon like consistency'. Honestly? I had no idea what in the world that meant. So I googled it and found this helpful little video: CLICK HERE. I beat them on a high speed for almost 5 minutes before they started to look right:
It sort of ends up looking like cake batter. And then I added the chocolate/butter mixture...
...and beat some more:
Here's what it looked like when it was done:
(In case you're wondering, those are air bubbles in that picture up there, not chunks of whoknowswhat.)

Next comes the flour and cocoa. I hadn't read the recipe closely enough to realize that I needed to actually weigh these two ingredients. What's a girl to do?! I asked for help with equivalents on Facebook and got all sorts of various answers. What I ultimately figured out was that I would have to actually weigh them or it might not turn out right. Lucky for me, a friend saw the whole discussion on Facebook and brought over her kitchen scale for my borrowing pleasure. (Thanks, Rachel!)

May I present for your viewing pleasure... five ounces of flour!
And one and a half ounces of cocoa!

The recipe said to stir these in, so here goes the flour:

And here comes the cocoa...

Once that's all mixed in you scoop the goodness into buttered ramekins. If you're like me, you're saying to yourself, I love the sound of that funky word, but what the heck are ramekins? I'll tell you all about how I came to own some of these sweet little bowlies RIGHT HERE in my post at 4Perspectives today. (Click on over! I'd love to have you!)

Anyhow... butter those ramekins up nice and slick so the cakes will fall out in a perfect little circle when they're done. I let a stick of butter get a little soft and then swished that butter stick around each one until they were good and coated...
Chocolate batter from heaven, meet your new BFFs, my ramekins:
The recipe says it makes 24 and I only used 12 ramekins so I tried to estimate how much to put into each one. I decided that 1/2 cup would be as good a guess as any. Hello, ramekins! I'm chocolatey goodness. Nice to meet you!
Once they were all filled I had to let the batter 'cool at least 2 hours'. I wasn't sure if that meant sit on the counter or put it in the refrigerator for 2 hours so I played it safe and stuck these babies in the fridge.

I took them out about 20 minutes before baking so the batter wouldn't be TOO cool, but I'm not sure if that was necessary. While these morsels were cooking I whipped up some cream. Vanilla ice cream would be the perfect complement, too - but I love me some freshly whipped cream.
Here they are! All done.
I'm pretty sure that my ramekins must be larger than the suggested 4 to 6 ounce ramekins because I could have used all of the batter in my 12 ramekins (I love saying that word!) and the cakes would have filled each one. But I'm not complaining. I have enough batter in my fridge to make about 5 more of these decadent treats and you better believe I'll be baking up a little smackerel for my man and myself after the kids are in bed later this week. (In the comments on the link for the recipe it states that the batter can be refrigerated for up to 3 weeks.)

These little cakes are seriously amazing. The outside is cakey, the inside is molten chocolate and the whipped cream or ice cream balances out the richness just perfectly.

Coolister loved having them for his seventeenth birthday treat on Monday night...
And there were just enough for everyone. (Meaning: one for everyone else and two for me.)

What are you waiting for? Go make your own little melt-in-your-mouth treats. But keep your windows shut or the neighbors will all want some, too. You'll likely gain weight just by inhaling the rich aroma of these as you pull them out of the oven.



Warm Chocolate Cakes (from Communal Restaurant)

1 lb. butter
1 lb. chocolate
6 egg yolks
6 eggs
1 cup sugar
5 oz. flour
1.5 oz. cocoa

Melt butter and chocolate together and stir until smooth. Beat yolks, eggs and sugar into a ribbon like consistency. Slowly beat chocolate into egg and sugar mixture until smooth. Then slowly stir in flour and cocoa. Do not over mix. Divide into 4 to 6 ounce buttered ramekins and cool at least 2 hours. Bake at 425 degrees for 8 to 10 minutes. Serve immediately with vanilla ice cream and chocolate sauce. Makes 24 cakes.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Duplication Is The Sincerest Form Of Fattery

above photo from thesweettoothfairy.com - all other photos by me

When I discover a treat that I cannot get enough of, I usually try to duplicate it. For example, Double Fudge Cake Bites from The Sweet Tooth Fairy. The first time I ventured into their shop I was offered a sample of these little morsels of heaven and my taste buds screamed with joy! I knew I had to make them on my own to appease my sweet tooth. A wonderful friend sent me a recipe discovered online and within a few days I was working at making my own little sweet treats.

Bake the cake, crumble it up, add some frosting, roll the mixture into cute little cake ballies...


And make sure you have ALL DAY to do it, because it's not as easy as it sounds. Freeze the cake balls for a while, then attempt to chocolate-coat them...


(I couldn't get the chocolate thin enough to look pretty.)


Yet, still... the end result? Delicious!

But not quite the same. (*sigh*)

I think the next time I go in I'll ask if I can borrow the Sweet Tooth Fairy's wand. (Do you think that could be her secret?)

After a few vain attempts, I have realized that my cake bites will never be like the Sweet Tooth Fairy's. And so today...

I am thankful that the bake shop which holds the magical recipe to create these sinful delights is just down the street.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies

I love the fall. The changing colors, the crunch of leaves, the smell of the crisp morning air... and the influx of all things pumpkin at the local grocery stores. In years past I would anxiously await the arrival of the pumpkin chocolate chip cookie and devour as many as possible before they disappeared again. I searched in vain for a recipe for these morsels and ultimately decided to take matters into my own hands.

Over the years the recipe has been tweaked (too dry!) and changed (too bland!) until I finally found perfection. And now, friends, I share it with you. Get ready to enjoy some Perfect Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies.

You will need:

2 cups pumpkin
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup white sugar
1 cup vegetable oil
1 Tablespoon vanilla
1/2 cup sour cream
4 1/4 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon ginger
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 1/2 cups chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Combine all ingredients. Drop spoonfuls of dough onto ungreased cookie sheets. Bake for 10 minutes. Eat half a dozen (at least!) with a tall, cold glass of milk while still warm. Sweet pumpkin perfection.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Who Knew?

One thing I love about Christmas is getting treats from the neighbors. It is no secret that I have quite the sweet tooth and I love eating holiday sweets... except for Peeps. These disgusting lumps of marshmallow coated with sugar crystals are an Easter candy that has been exploited to fit every possible holiday.

Hey, you can like them. I'll still be your friend.

...back to the Peeps.

Last Sunday a well-intentioning neighbor brought over EIGHT! packages of Peeps Christmas trees for our family to enjoy. "They were left over from what I gave to the kids in nursery at church today," she explained. "And you have all those kids, so I knew they'd get eaten."

The thought was very... sweet. But just imagining the sugar-induced high that my kids would be experiencing made my stomach feel sickly.

The kids were already bouncing off walls. Continuous strains of "Can I have a Peep? Can I? Can I? Huh? Huh? Can I, Mom?" were reverberating through my ears as I deliberated a possible solution to the overabundance of Peeps.

"Let's sleep on it," I responded. "I'll have an answer in the morning."

It turns out someone else took care of the Peeps for me.

Cowgirl had lost one of her front teeth that very afternoon and set it in the usual place, on top of the microwave, in anticipation of some cold, hard cash from the tooth fairy. As we headed for bed I placed the Peeps on top of the microwave as well, in 2 stacks of 4 boxes each.

In the morning we found this note:


The speculation among the kids is now that the tooth fairy collects teeth to replace her own.

Tooth fairy, wherever you are, thank you.