23 posts tagged “dessert”
Really, what is the difference between an apple pie and an apple crisp? Is it really just that an apple pie has a crust and an apple crisp has a crumble?
Curious.
In ANY case– I finally got around to making apple pie late last month (okay, it was an apple crisp, but it’s almost the same thing). You can find the recipe here at PineappleBread.
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You may have noticed that I've been writing and posting more on PineappleBread as of late. I was planning to migrate completely over to wordpress, but I'm awfully fond of Vox, and so I've been simultaneously posting on both. But I'm not sure what to do. Any suggestions?
Ah, Disney. It's already been three weeks since then, and I still haven't posted! My sincerest apologies-- but here I go!
To tell the truth, there aren't that many pictures of food from Disneyworld. As most tourists are wont to do, we ended up spending most of our time trying to enjoy as much of the parks as possible, which meant that we ate at buffets and fast food restaurants for most of the week-- nothing really worth talking about. I do wish we had spent a bit more time food-wise, but... eh, next time, perhaps? (Assuming, of course, that we will go to Disneyworld again)
But among fast food, I must note one of my favorite:
I adore funnel cake. I also know it clogs my arteries full of unhealthful fats, but when I'm at amusement parks or at the beach, I don't really care. I want my fatty, and I want it now! Haha. My brother saw a funnel cake with chocolate ice cream or syrup on it, but didn't get a chance to try it. I found a recipe for funnel cake online once... one day when I am brave enough to handle a vat of boiling oil, I am going to try it.
Another deliciously sinful delight we indulged in our first day at Disney was ice cream. My mother and I shared a dulce de leche ice cream sundae (sans chocolate sauce), and everyone else (namely, my brothers) dug into a large chocolate sundae with the works. Heh.
The above images were from our first day in Disney-- in Magic Kingdom, actually. Our three day trip began in Magic Kingdom, and then went on to Hollywood Studios our second day, and finally we ended in Epcot on our last day, taking some of the time on our last day to play in Typhoon Lagoon.
We didn't eat anything spectacularly interesting at Hollywood Studios-- I wanted to get a turkey leg, but somehow we never contrived to be in the right place at the right time.
As for Epcot (the one amusement park I never seem to be able to finish because we either (1) get there too late to enjoy it all, or (2) we leave early to finish anything more than one or two rides. In our rush, however, we did manage to make it to Germany for lunch and try the food there.
My bratwurst was juicy and much more flavorful than my brothers' frankfurters...
But they were all yummy when the saurkraut was added. I thought it would be a bit more sour than it was though. Hm.
And as "dessert," I got a large pretzel, which was mostly finished by yours truly...
Later that night, after rushing back to Epcot for dinner and fireworks, my brother treated me to dessert:
Wheeheehee! Ah, Disney was fun. As our first real family vacation in a decade, I will have to rate this trip as a complete success... and I'm already planning our next trip! Any suggestions on where to go...?
I made bleuberrie moofins (okay, I’m just poking fun– but blueberry muffins ARE fun, right?) a few days ago. It was my first time making them, and I decided to make them healthier by using applesauce in place of much of the sugar. I also used vegetable oil instead of butter– I don’t know if that made too much of a difference. I’ll try making the fatty version of blueberry muffins sometime to see…
As it is, here they are!
Bleuberrie Moofins
Ingredients
- 1 cup all purpose flour
- 1 cup whole wheat flour
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 1 cup milk
- 2/3 cup applesauce
- 1 large egg
- 1 1/4 cup blueberries, washed and coated with a thin layer of flour to keep the blueberries from sinking** (you may use frozen ones if you like, just add them directly before putting the muffins in the oven, to keep from staining the batter a deep blue-purplely bruised color)
Directions
- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Combine the dry ingredients and
the wet ingredients in separate bowls, leaving the blueberries for
later addition. Then slowly whisk the milk/egg/applesauce
mixture into the dry ingredients. - Gently fold in the blueberries so that they do not break and turn the batter strange colors.
- Spoon the batter into twelve oiled muffin cups.
- Bake for 20 minutes.
Enjoy!
There were several selections of cake that looked delicious, and after much deliberation, my friend and I decided to share a strawberry shortcake.
I was a bit disappointed. The cake might have just come out of the fridge, so it was hard and stiff. The taste was decent, but nothing spectacular. It wasn't a bad cake, but it probably wasn't worth the nearly $6.00 we paid for it.
As the weather warms and the days grow longer, I find myself feeling lighter and happier. At least, on the weekends anyway.
Extra bananas are a rarity in my household. We buy them green from Costco and then devour them in large quantities as they ripen. My dad always brings one to work for a snack, and I take bunches of them to my volleyball tournaments to keep myself and my teammates from cramping up.
This time, however, the Costco bananas decided to stay green for weeks. Bananas are some of the few fruits that ripen after being picked (most other fruits taste best when picked at their peak growing period-- bananas need no such care), so green ones will yellow and ripen with time. But this time, our bananas took over three weeks of sitting in a basket (and in a cardboard box) to no avail. They finally did turn yellow, but all too late and were already slightly mushy and brown-skinned at that point.
So I made banana muffins!! The recipe was modified from the banana nut muffin recipe at SimplyRecipes, and I added dried "antioxidant fruits" to half the batch just to try it out. You see that one in the picture above. They came out absolutely lovely, and I am eager to try for another batch soon! I'm going to modify the recipe a bit more and post the recipe later.
And I had a kiwi as part of my lunch on Friday. I heart kiwis. Yay.
The lemon syrup cake I make is something that almost never fails to please. I've been making it for years, and it has happily obliged me each time. So when I decided to have a nice food-fest this past Sunday, my lemon syrup cakes made their usual appearance. Except this time, I decided to try something a bit different.
The tops weren't as browned as I usually like it, but it kind of reminded me of soft, doughy cookies. It wasn't that they were underbaked though, and the tops of my lemon syrup cakes are almost never very dark (very dark = very burnt), and they were moist inside, so it doesn't really matter. I'm going to have to try this recipe again though, and see how a second, more properly regulated batch will turn out.
Plus, I want to ice the next batch after I glaze it.
Sunday night was BURGER night. My dad had ordered a bunch of stuff from Omaha Steaks a couple of months back, and my mom tends to forget about the stuff in the freezer when she cooks dinner (we go grocery shopping every day, so our freezer is usually only stocked with ice cream, frozen dumplings, and frozen shrimp-- all our meat and vegetables are bought fresh daily), and we still had burgers, baked potatoes, and franks left.
Never one to let food go to waste, I decided to do something about it and announced to my dad in the morning that we were going to have burgers for dinner. And so it was. I went out and bought the things that normally go with burgers (ketchup, relish, lettuce, tomato, onions, and the like) and prepared our dinner that night.
Actually, I lied. My dad made the burgers. I was busy with everything else, and he wanted to try out the new iron skillet my mom bought recently. It worked out pretty well.
And I baked some fries to go with our meal. Hey, on the rare occasion that my family eats an American-styled dinner, we need to have some side dishes that are "American" as well, right? I need to keep these fries from sticking to the pan, however. I'll have to add more oil to the pan next time before I put them in the oven, I guess.
And... voila! My Omaha Steaks cheeseburgur with American cheese, lettuce and tomato, coupled with a large batch of baked fries! Hurrah!
I'm alive! I swear! I've just been... super super busy the past few weeks. Between work stress and volleyball and event after event piling on one after another, I barely get a chance to sleep, much less talk about cooking and baking! So apologies to those of you in my neighborhood-- I haven't been able to look at any of your posts, and you guys must have made some amazing food since the last time I visited Vox! I can't wait to start eating my way through your entries! :D
But after quite some time away, I am (sort of) back! I'll keep this first post short and sweet. Very sweet indeed.
This past Saturday was the celebration of the 10th annual Maryland Day at the University of Maryland. In celebration of the event and the landmark anniversary, the school decided to make 50,000 cupcakes-- enough for one for each student. They didn't take into account, however, that approximately 6000 of those students are Jewish and were observing Passover, meaning that they couldn't eat these cupcakes. Aw boo. But what is their loss is my gain! Yay cupcakes!
The cupcakes themselves weren't all that spectacular. Who in their right mind would attempt making 50,000 gourmet cupcakes? So these cupcakes were simple and straightforward, but they did their job well. And what was most impressive? The design the 50,000 cupcakes made:
Wow.
(I actually saw them assembling the cupcakes late the night before...)
In Washington, DC, we have a festival every springtime to celebrate the coming of spring and to commemorate the friendship between the United States and Japan as symbolized by the many blossoming cherry trees given to us by the Japanese many years ago. The festival is two weeks long, starting with a kite festival (I accidentally stumbled upon it one day when I was out in DC with my family-- it is quite breathtaking to see so many beautiful kites aloft, flying in the breeze) and ending with a Cherry Blossom Festival parade around the Smithsonian Mall and a Taste of Japan festival day which showcases Japanese food, art, and performances. I was able to attend the festival last year (I was in the parade, actually!), but this year, due to scheduling conflicts, I was not able to be there for the last day of celebration.
Not that it mattered too much, in the end. The weather, being milder this year than the trees may have expected, caused the blossoms to bloom early, so my friends and I meandered down the way to see the cherry blossoms last weekend. They were gorgeous.
Feeling like a complete tourist, I snapped pictures of every other flower in my path.
And mind you, there were a lot of flowers.
Pretty, yes?
More cherry blossom pr0n!!
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Alright, and I can't make a post in this food blog without actually posting pictures of edible materials, desho? SO!
We smelled them before we saw them, and for some reason there was NO LINE when we walked up to the stand to buy them. Too irresistible to forgo, we all chipped in to buy a "family-size" bag, which we couldn't finish, but it was still delicious just the same. Yay for roasted almonds!
Honie, my volleyball team captain and surrogate "big sister" on the team (well, they're all my big sisters, since I'm the youngest on the team, hehe) and I made an agreement long ago because we both like cooking and all things food-related that we would cook at her place sometime. I would be able to try new recipes as well as learn new things from her. Two months after our initial decision to do so, we still hadn't gotten around to messing with each other's culinary appetites, so one day last Saturday, after our team did particularly poorly in one tournament (oh sad face!), we decided that I would go over to her place on Sunday night and cook and eat dinner.
Things decided last minute always somehow manage to get accomplished.
But because it was so impromptu, I really had no idea what to cook, and I didn't have time to browse the recipes I have been itching to try, so I just made the simplest thing in the world: roasted vegetables and sauteed broccoli. She prepared the main course of turkey meatloaf.
It was a simple, unassuming dinner, but between me, her, her roommate John, and our friend and her neighbor Will, we had a good meal. For future reference-- I won't roast cucumbers anymore because they don't taste so good when roasted.
And for dessert!
Strawberry crepes and strawberry-banana crepes! No bad for a first time making crepes, although the crepes came out a bit lumpy since my spatula wasn't big enough to spread the batter evenly on the pan before it began to set. I got the recipe at Allrecipes. Not bad, not bad.
All in all, rating for dinner? Success!
I'm always ready to try easy recipes to have a more fun breakfast, and this past week was no exception. My brioche-lets from my trial last week turned out beautifully and looked like, as May said, popovers, so I decided to take it to the next step and make actual popovers.
They came out quite well. Here's the recipe, adapted slightly from the Williams Sonoma recipe for puff popovers:
Puffy Poofy Popovers
makes 12
Ingredients:
- 4 large eggs ** room temperature
- 1 1/4 cup milk ** room temperature
- 3 tbsp oil
- 1 cup flour
- 1/4 tsp salt
- Preheat an oven to 425 degrees F.
- Butter every other well of a muffin tin (the leftover wells allow for better circulation of heat and more room for the pastry to puff). Be sure to butter every nook and cranny of the well, otherwise the popover will stick in the pan and refuse to come out after baking!
- Whisk the four eggs together until well mixed, then add in the milk and oil.
- Sift the flour and salt into a separate bowl, and then add slowly into the egg mixture.
- Mix well until no lumps are left, then ladle batter into the muffin pan wells until each well is approximately 3/4 full.
- Bake for 25 minutes or until golden brown. Do not open the oven during this time otherwise the popovers may fall.
- Take the popovers out of the oven. Be careful of the steam that may come out of the oven and quickly prick the top with a sharp toothpick or skewer to let out hot air from the top of the popovers. Remove immediately and place on cooling rack.
- Serve immediately while warm with jam or other condiments.
In light of the fact that my last blueberry pie was so enthusiastically devoured by my coworkers, I decided to bake a new pie. This time, the crust took only about half an hour to make, which was nice. The dough came together pretty well, and I had less trouble rolling it out. However, I had a lot of dough leftover, so next time I plan to make a thicker dough for both the base and for the top crust. Perhaps I'll try baking it slightly beforehand as well.
The time I made my first blueberry pie, I bought the blueberries from Trader Joe's. They were wild and organic. This time, I found bags of blueberries on sale at my local supermarket. This time, they were non-wild and non-organic (I do like to stick with organic foods, but unfortunately with my current salary, it is probably most wise for me to be frugal where possible). The surprising thing to me was the size of the berries. Call me ignorant, perhaps, but I was a bit startled at the difference between organic and conventional berry size.
Nevertheless, I continued making my pie. And this pie is dedicated to my cousin, Ruby, because today is her birthday! To my oldest friend (she is one of the few people of whom I can truly say I have known my entire life) Happy birthday dear girl, and I hope all your wishes come true. Haha, is that too sappy?
The muffins were made from a mix I had picked up on sale from the supermarket a long time ago, and while there was nothing wrong with the muffins, I did realize while making them the difference between making desserts from scratch and from a box mix; there is a distinct aroma from the muffin mix that was so surprisingly ...commercial. I could not pinpoint it directly, but I have decided that all of my future endeavors in the baking realm shall be from scratch. At least, all the ones that I can help, anyway.
In other news, I recently cut my hair.
My hair hasn't been this short since I was five, and it's a welcome change. Now the only problem is to figure out how I'm going to tie it up for when I need it out of my face...
But I like it anyway.
