Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Cookies and ice cream


Spring is here and plants are coming alive.  I love seeing all the new growth as winter gives way to the new season.  And that means warmer days, longer days, and lots of things to do outside.

But I'm working inside, too.  This week two new items have been added to the full menu of Bruce Bakery and Bistro.


First we have oatmeal candy cookies.  Oatmeal cookies are always great.  In fact, I like say since they have all those oats in them, they are healthier and that means it's OK to eat more.  I know, that's not exactly true.  But it's nice to convince myself of that after I've already eaten several.  These cookies have oats, dark brown sugar, cinnamon, and lots of butterscotch chips, chocolate chips and peanut butter M&Ms.  They are exceedingly sweet as you can imagine from the addition of all those mix-ins.  


The other item added to the menu is French vanilla ice cream.  In my mind, you can never go wrong with ice cream.  It's good anytime of the year, anytime of the day, and I'd be happy if I could just eat is as a meal all by itself.

This is the second ice cream making its appearance on the menu.  The other is mint chocolate chip ice cream.  And more new flavors will be coming as well.

And other new items will also be added soon.  So keep your eyes open and check them out.

Have a great week and enjoy the pleasant spring weather!

Sunday, March 28, 2021

Deviled eggs


 

I love deviled eggs.  I remember as a kid I would eat them again and again.  Every time I was at a picnic, I hoped that someone brought deviled eggs.  Every potluck at church, I hoped someone brought deviled eggs.  I can eat a ton of these .... maybe not literally, but it sure seems so.  There are so many different recipes for these, some simple and some complicated.  I prefer a simple list of ingredients which are balanced just right for my taste.

I boil a dozen eggs.  When I do this, I always use a quart-sized saucepan, covering the eggs completely with water.  Then they go on the stovetop on high heat.  I keep an eye on them and when the water starts to boil, I turn it down to something between medium and medium-high heat, keeping the water at a gentle boil.  If the boil is too rough, the eggs get tossed around a lot more and are much more likely to crack while boiling, sending bits of egg white streaming out from the shell into the water.  Once the water is boiling, I set the timer for 8 minutes.  Some like to put the eggs into water that is already boiling.  I like to slowly warm the eggs with the water, and then start timing as soon as the boiling bubbles are ... bubbling.

Once that timer goes off, I immediately remove the pan from the heat, and then remove the eggs with a slotted spoon from the hot water, putting them into another large bowl.  Then I let the bowl sit out for a long time, cooling down the eggs until they are just barely warm.  Only then are they put into the fridge to chill.  (Note:  It always seems to me that the eggs are easier to peel if they are allowed to slowly cool down at room temperature.)  (Another note:  It always seems to me that if older eggs are used, they are easier to peel as well.  The reason for that I will talk about it another post about eggs in the future.)

After they have chilled for a couple hours, I peel them under running hot water.  (Yet another note:  This also seems to make it easier to peel the eggs without damaging the appearance of the boiled eggs.)  Then I slice them in half down the long axis, from narrow end to broad end.  I carefully remove the yolks, tossing them into a bowl, and place the egg white halves in a container with sides that rise higher than the eggs will be once filling has been added.  These higher sides make it easier to cover the finished eggs with plastic wrap as they chill in the fridge without compressing the beautiful fillings.


I grab a fork and start breaking up the egg yolks next.  Then Miracle Whip (not mayonnaise which is often used) is added, honey Dijon mustard is added, and finally sweet relish is added, along with a pinch of salt and course-ground pepper.  The key thing to remember is the balance of flavors.  Find a balance you like and stick with it .... unless, that it, you feel like experimenting every time you make them.


All of that is mixed thoroughly and then adjusted with more Miracle Whip and mustard and relish if necessary.  The balance always needs to be tweaked just a bit because the volume of ground up egg yolks is always a bit different since not every large egg is exactly the same size.  All of this is put into a pastry bag with a tip that I prefer to use, one that is relatively large and makes it easier to fill the egg white bases quickly and easily without clogging up due to the relish which is in the filling mixture.


Then I fill each of the egg white bases with a generous amount of the mixture before sprinkling paprika over the top of every egg.


When everything has been completed, we have these beautiful flavorful deviled eggs.  I like to let them chill in the fridge for a while, even overnight.  If you eat one right away after assembling, it tastes great.  But let them sit a bit to let the flavors meld and intensify as they chill, and they taste even better, in my opinion.

My deviled eggs today have just gone into the fridge for chilling.  I plan on pulling some out to eat in a few hours.  I'll have to exercise a lot of willpower in order not to eat too many.

Have a great week, everone!

Friday, March 19, 2021

New cookie


Welcome to a wonderfully mild and quiet Friday afternoon here in Kansas City.  Today's post is about a new cookie that is being added to the menu.

And for those of you who have been asking (or even those of you who haven't), my plan is to start accepting orders again sometime quite soon.  I've been laying low while Covid-19 has been doing it's thing.  I'm hoping with the latest developments in the vaccination rollouts that it will calm down enough to persuade me to start sending food out to everyone again

Now on to today's new cookie post.

There are cookies, like shortbread, for instance, that are more for the grown-up part of each of us.  And there are some, like those loaded with candy, for instance, that are more for the kid in each of us.  This one is for the kid. 

These are very simple cookies to make.  Butter is creamed for a long time with dark brown sugar and granulated sugar.  Then an egg and lots of vanilla are added.  Oats, flour, cinnamon, baking soda and salt are whisked together and than added to the butter and egg mixture.  The mixer is set to low for the addition of the dry ingredients.  We don't want to work that flour too much once it's combined with the wet ingredients.  Finally comes the "kid" part:  chocolate chips, butterscotch chips and peanut butter M&Ms.  A generous amount of each of these three candies are added to the mixture.  

At this point I will portion the cookie dough before it chills.  Then it sits in the fridge for about 30 minutes to an hour.  I don't like to chill it longer.  But the dough will go straight from the fridge into the oven.  And 10 minutes later they come out still soft so they mustn't be moved from the cookie sheet for about 5 minutes.  Then they finally are placed on the cooling rack.  They are good warm, but I think they are better fully cooled to room temperature.

This new cookie will be added to the full menu of Bruce Bakery and Bistro later this week.  It is ultra sweet, and is quite simply meant for the kid in each of us.

Have a great weekend everyone!

Sunday, March 14, 2021

Cold rains and chocolate


On this cold late-winter March morning, we have chilly rains falling off and on today here in Kansas City.  This is great weather for baking things which fill the house with warm aromas that take us deep into good memories of our past.  

This weekend I have made several things.  First up was warm roasted tomatoes with olive oil and herbs.  Then was egg salad for easy-to-fix sandwiches.  Then I made some tuna salad just because it seemed good to have fixings for two different kinds of sandwiches.  After that I made deviled eggs dusted with lots of paprika.  Then snickerdoodles, and finally chocolate chunk grand cookies.

These are one of my favorite cookies to make.  Yeah, yeah, I say that about a lot of things, but today this is my favorite cookie to make.  Tomorrow it might be something else.

These are big.  Each dough ball is 100 grams of dough.  You can see in the photo above how big the dough balls are compared to a typical dinner spoon.

They are filled with eggs, brown sugar, vanilla, and a few other minor ingredients, and then a combination of cake flour and bread flour -- that's right, no all-purpose flour.  This flour combination gives such a wonderful texture to the cookie.  

Then 20 ounces of chocolate are broken up into shards.  I don't chop them. I simply break the chocolate fĂȘves into shards.  This gives each cookie pockets of liquid chocolate which are are different in size after they are baked up.


In then end, we have 18 cookies that are large and dense and heavy.  The outside of each is just a bit crusty, and then inside there is a wonderful soft chewy texture with those irregularly sized pockets of chocolate.  Each cookies has more than an ounce of chocolate in it.  That may not sound like much, but trust me, it is it a lot. 

I sent some of these foods home with family and friends this weekend.  And I ate quite a lot as well.  A cold spring morning with chilly rains is perfect for baking and eating.

Have a great week everyone!

Sunday, March 7, 2021

Slow


Good morning everyone.  It's a pleasant weekend here in Kansas City.  Mild temperatures are in play here on this beautiful Sunday morning.

Already this morning I've cooked some brownies.  Later I will make a batch of snickerdoodles.  And then some slow-roasted tomatoes. SLOW-roasted tomatoes.  SLOW.

Slow ---- what a great word.  The world moves so quickly, so very very quickly.  It seems we are asked to do more in less time every day, day after day.  Everyone is focused on productivity.  Productivity is nice, certainly, but there's a lot to be said for "slow".

Cooking makes us go slow.  We have to take time for a meat to sit in a marinade.  We have to take time for bread to rise.  We have to take time for biscuits to bake.  There's no speeding these process in most cases.  They take the time they take.  And that's one of the great things about making food.

Would we like to make food faster?  Sure.  But certain processes can't be rushed.  And that's a blessing in some ways.  We are forced to slow down.  We are forced to consider what we are doing, to think while breads are rising and baking, etc.

I love that cooking makes me slow down.  I was thinking as I was wolfing down a huge deli sandwich last night that we often eat so very quickly as well.  And shouldn't we do the opposite?  Shouldn't we eat more slowly?  Taking the time to eat allows us to savor and appreciate, just as taking the time to cook allows us to appreciate the food and the effort that goes into making it.

I love food.  I love cooking.  I love being forced to take my time and slow down just a bit in this fast-paced world.