Tag Archives: Brown Sugar

Aunt Dixie’s Chocolate Saltines

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Ut ohh and ohh no! More nasty winter weather on the rise! I wanted to make something quick and tasty to take mama today if I can’t get out tomorrow and my Aunt Dixie’s Chocolate Saltines were just the ticket I needed to pass GO! These sweet and salty treats have no prep, are ready in just 30 minutes, and give up an awesome moist nibble for a snow day! They were a big hit with mama and her friends at Woodland Hills and I absolutely cannot wait to enjoy several (or more) along with my book tonight.

I used both saltine crackers and a row of graham crackers today and added chopped pecans over all and dried cherries also over the graham crackers. The pecans gave an added nutty crunch and the cherries a sweet, but tart, chewy texture. The cracker crust flavored with the rich toffee mixture, made from melted butter and brown sugar. If you don’t like nuts or have no dried fruit, these are also delicious as the recipe lists in my “Missouri to Maui” cookbook. In that recipe use only saltines with the toffee middle, and plain chocolate chips over the top. I sprayed the foil lightly with cooking oil and there was no sticking at all. You freeze this after the chips melt and today mother nature supplied my front porch freezer space with a temperature out there of entirely 16 whole degrees.

If you have little helpers, they will get a kick out of placing the 40 saltines in the pan and spreading those chocolate chips as they melt, earning themselves first bite privileges maybe. A pizza cutter slices them into cracker-sized squares or just break them into pieces. Ten minutes to put them together and 20 to freeze and it’s another happy  snow day! A little sweet, a little salty. Altogether perfect!

Aunt Dixie’s Chocolate Saltines

Ingredients

40 saltine crackers
2 sticks unsalted butter
1 cup light brown sugar
8 oz. semi-sweet chocolate chips (about 1-1/3 cups)
1/2 cup chopped pecans, optional
Dried cherries or cranberries, minced, optional

Directions Preheat oven to 425. Line a large jelly roll pan with foil and place the saltines on top. In medium saucepan, melt butter and add brown sugar, bring to a boil. Gently boil for five minutes, remove from heat, and pour over crackers, spreading evenly. Place into oven and watch closely for five minutes, until the top mixture becomes bubbly. Remove from oven and sprinkle chocolate chips over crackers. When chips begin to melt, spread them over crackers with a knife. Transfer pan to freezer for 15-20 minutes or until completely chilled. Mixture will form a solid layer over crackers; take from freezer and break into pieces. Store in an airtight container. Makes approximately 20 servings or, around here, 5 really large servings, shared liberally.  =)

Fried Apples & Raisins

Fried Apples & Raisins

When asked last week what she’d enjoy for a snack this week, mama just didn’t know, she just didn’t know, but when I suggested fried apples, she quickly said, “Oh, yes, that would be good!” True to form she clearly knows what hits the spot on a winter day.

This recipe from my cookbook collection is simple to prepare. Use a cast iron skillet and cook the apples until just tender. You want them to hold their form and be fork-tender, not mushy. Today I used Jonagold apples and dark raisins because I didn’t have the golden raisins I prefer and dark raisins work just as well really.  Don’t take too long sautéing the apples, 7-8 minutes is fine, in melted butter, over medium-high heat. I did add a teaspoon of bacon grease to my skillet today knowing it would add contrast to the sweet butter I used.  Flavor with brown sugar, thicken with cornstarch and water, and add just a splash of lemon juice before serving.   All pau!   Ready!

 

Fried Apples & Raisins

Ingredients

4 lg. tart apples, peeled, cored, and sliced 1/4” thick
1/4 cup butter
2 tsp. cornstarch
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup brown sugar, packed
1/4 cup golden raisins
1 tsp. lemon juice, to taste

Directions Prepare apples. Melt butter in large skillet; add apples. Cook and stir over medium heat 6-7 minutes or until almost tender. Dissolve cornstarch in water, add to skillet. Add brown sugar and raisins and bring to a low boil. Boil 2 minutes, stirring often. Remove from heat and season with the lemon juice to taste.

Bacon Bundled Green Beans

Prep
Prep

Bacon Bundled Beans

Thanks to friend, Micki Welsh, for sharing this recipe with me last week. You tell me: what’s NOT to like about combining bacon and fresh green beans baked with a mixture of brown sugar and butter? Reading this recipe you know already exactly how this will taste. Admit it, you DO! And, it sounds wonderful, no?

Once I had the beans, I was SO excited about making this that I sashayed straight into the kitchen and fell to putting the dish together. Beans trimmed, bacon cut, bundles rolled and secured with a toothpick, and then OH, NO! I belatedly realized the recipe instructed blanching the beans before rolling them up in the bacon!

Yep, you got it: I had to unroll, blanch, and re-roll. Time wasted and a slippery mess! Take away Lesson #1: DO read a recipe thoroughly before beginning. In the end, however, these baked up perfectly and they are definitely a new “go-to” recipe for fresh green beans. The bacon crisps and the brown sugar-butter mixture caramelizes as the bundles broil the last five minutes of cooking time resulting in tender veggies AND tangy flavor that will leave you reaching for more.

This recipe is excellent for enticing the kiddos into eating their veggies and the prep time is minimal (IF you read the directions carefully!). The presentation is more appetizing and tidier than a simple bowl of green beans and all you need do is just sit back and accept the compliments.

Concerned that the beans might become overdone, I adjusted my oven to 325 and baked them for 37 minutes on my timer, broiling them the last five minutes. The beans were tender and the bacon crisp and I will be honest and admit that my supper turned into a little chowder and a whole lot of beans. I halved the recipe today and it yielded 9 bundles. I ate half of the halved recipe; they are THAT good!

Bacon Bundled Green Beans

Ingredients

2# fresh French green beans, ends trimmed
8-10 bacon strips, cut in half
1 stick butter
1 cup brown sugar
1/2 tsp. garlic powder, optional

Directions Blanch the beans for five minutes in a large sauce pot in boiling water to cover (or microwave them). Drain and cool. Bundle 10-12 beans and wrap each bundle with a strip of bacon, securing each bundle with a toothpick. Prepare the sauce by melting the butter in a small sauce pot on the stove, add the sugar and the garlic powder if using. Cook over medium heat until bubbly, whisking continually, then remove from heat and pour the mixture evenly over the bean bundles. Bake 350 for 35-40 minutes. Before removing from oven, place the baking dish under your oven’s broiler element and broil five minutes. Remove from oven and serve in a flat dish with shallow sides, providing tongs for picking up each bundle.

The bundles can be refrigerated, covered, overnight, once you have them wrapped and secured with the toothpicks. Remove from fridge the next day and allow them to warm slightly before baking. The bacon and sugar can produce a bit of a mess so I took Micki’s advice and prepared this using a throw-away aluminum pan for easy clean up.

Sticky Toffee Pudding

Sticky Toffee Pudding 4

Sticky Toffee Cake 2

Yay! Don’t you love chancing across a new recipe that you know you are going to use again and again? I can think of no good reason this cake has never crossed my radar before, but am completely happy about meeting this charmer at a recent Christmas dinner party. Away from the table when dessert arrived, I returned to a table grown silent, my dinner companions quietly chewing and making that promising “mmmhmm” sound. You know that sound. Someone spoke at last saying, “Just try it,” and when I did, I began making the “mmmhmm” sound too.

Despite the pudding tag in its title, this is definitely a cake. A dessert tradition from the British Isles, this dish is as hard to describe as it is identifying the ingredients while eating it. It is sweet, but not overly so. The texture is best described as toothsome and chewable in the very best sense. Without a speck of chocolate in it, the flavor eludes it, along with winter and warmth, each essence sourced to the coffee-soaked dates pureed then added to the batter. The dates are responsible for the dense texture and at first bite, gingerbread comes to mind, but this cake isn’t at all spiced so the gingerbread association is all about the texture of this dish.

If this concoction isn’t already the signature dessert of a famous eatery somewhere in the civilized world, it definitely deserves the honor. The recipe below I adapted after reading the history of the cake followed by looking through a dozen recipes for it online. I used hot coffee for soaking the dates, and used light brown sugar though next time I will try dark. Having all but two ingredients in my pantry meant only a quick trip to the market for dates and heavy cream, then preparing and enjoying it with mama at our traditional New Year’s Eve supper. Mama insisted she could only eat a very small piece so I served her a nice medium piece and she ate every bite of it without one word of further protest.

I checked the cake after 30 minutes as I used a different sized baking dish than in the recipe; I wanted something smaller than a 9×13 pan so the cake would be taller, so used an 8×11″ dish. If baked in a 9×13″ dish, the baking time will be much shorter so just watch it and don’t let the edges begin to brown. I took it out of the oven when a toothpick inserted came out streaked but not gooey, about 36 minutes on my timer. The sauce is delightful; serve it sparingly, drizzled over each serving. And do go whip the cream for this and sprinkle it with just a pinch of sea salt before serving as the salt is a great contrast to the whipped cream. You’ve already figured this out surely, but the cake keeps well, covered tightly, sitting on the counter. Hello, added bonus! The bottom photo here is of the cake on Day 2, with lunch, in better light.

Sticky Toffee Pudding

Cake Ingredients

2-1/4 cups dried dates, coarsely chopped
2-1/4 cups scalding hot coffee
1-1/2 tsp. baking soda
1 stick unsalted butter, melted
3/4 cup granulated sugar
2 T. dark brown sugar
2 large eggs
1/4 tsp. sea salt
1-2/3 cups all-purpose flour

Toffee Sauce Ingredients

1 stick unsalted butter, melted
1 cup heavy whipping cream
1 cup plus 2 T. dark brown sugar
2 tsp. vanilla extract

Directions Pit and roughly chop dates and place them in a heavy bowl; pour hot coffee over them and stir in the baking soda. Cover the bowl and set it aside for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, heat oven to 350, and butter a 9×13-inch baking pan. Line the pan with parchment paper, if desired. I didn’t, and the cake turned out of the pan with no sticking at all.

Blend the date-coffee mixture in a blender or food processor until smooth. In a large bowl, combine the melted butter and sugars. Whisk in eggs, then salt. Stir in the flour, fold well, then add the prepared date puree and fold well again. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 25-30. Cool on wire rack. If you used parchment paper, invert the cake onto a serving platter and remove parchment paper from bottom of cake; finish cooling on wire rack.

When your cake is ready for serving, make the sauce: you need a large sauce pot with a heavy bottom, at least 2-1/2 quart size because the mixture increases in volume as it cooks. Melt the butter in the pan, add cream, sugar and vanilla and bring mixture to a good simmer over medium heat. Whisk continually for 10 minutes until mixture thickens slightly. Remove from heat and allow to begin cooling. To serve, cut cake into squares and drizzle with toffee sauce, top with 2 tablespoons of unsweetened whipped cream with a pinch of sea salt added to the top of the cream. Serve when the cake is still slightly warm.