Category Archives: Dessertalicious

Cowboy Cookies

Looking very healthy.....

Looking very healthy…..

When you ask someone to bring dessert to a party, aren’t you sometimes secretly happy when they bring cookies so there are no extra plates or utensils to wash? I often think, thank god, cookies – less work for me. I decided to provide that type of BRING IT dessert to a party I went to last Saturday night. These cookies were such a hit. I’m not sure if it was because they appear to be healthy, or if they were just plain old good, or a combination of the two. Regardless, they got lapped up in no time and I was asked for the recipe several times. Someone actually said to me, “these cookies are perfect, don’t change a thing”.  So, next time you are asked to bring a dessert, this is a great option. And they make great trail food if they last until the next day. 

This recipe comes direct from the Moosewood Restaurant Favorites cookbook which is their 40th year celebration cookbook. It is loaded with great recipes. I am like ‘deer in the headlights’ when I open that cookbook. I don’t even know where to start. I’m glad I found these cookies. And if you want a healthier version, go to our famous yoga cookies.  They are a vegan, healthy, and zen-like alternative.

A couple footnotes:

** No worries if you bring a dessert that requires plates and utensils… you can never go wrong with a blueberry pie or chocolate cake.
** I know it is the height of summer and blistering hot most days, so if you don’t have a cool day or an early morning start on making these cookies, then opt for a dessert of fresh berries and some whipped cream.

Ingredients

2 cups unbleached white all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup salted butter, at room temperature (2 sticks)
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
2 large eggs
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
2 cups rolled oats
2 cups semisweet chocolate chunks (12 oz)
1 1/2 cups raisins, dried cranberries, or chopped dried cherries
1 cup coarsely chopped toasted walnuts

Method

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

In a mixing bowl, sift together flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Set aside. In a large mixing bowl, using an electric mixer, cream together butter and sugars. Add the eggs and vanilla and beat well. Stir in oats. Fold in chocolate chunks, dried fruit, and nuts. The dough will be fairly stiff. It will be a little arm workout to mix thoroughly.

Drop spoonfuls of dough onto parchment lined baking sheets. Bake for 12-15 minutes until golden brown. Transfer cookies to wire rack to cool. Cool completely before storing in sealed container.

No Bake Almond Protein Bars

Eliteamers digging deep at their camp in Park City, Utah

Eliteamers digging deep at their camp in Park City, Utah

It’s Eliteam time of year. Time for kids to gather in Utah and Vermont where Doug and Kelley Lewis and their crew of amazing coaches will put them through their paces and teach them about becoming “complete athletes.” 

That means it’s also time to crank our some Positive Snacks for hungry active kids. Well, to be more clear. It’s time for hungry active kids, as complete athletes, to learn how to crank out their own seriously good Positive Snacks. (Check last year’s Eliteams Banana Yogurt Bread  Go-Go donuts from last year.)

No bake, all good! The kids even do the dishes afterwards. Boom!

No bake, all good! The kids even do the dishes afterwards. Boom!

This is what the Eliteam kids are mixing up this week to keep them going strong.
It’s the perfect snack to store in the freezer for a quick burst of energy. If you want to make them nut free use sunflower seed butter.

No Bake Almond Protein Bars, à la Eliteam

Ingredients

1 ½  cups Oat Flour
1⁄2 cup unsweetened protein powder
1 cup Rice Krispies cereal
1⁄4 cup Coconut milk
1⁄4 tsp salt
1⁄2 cup Almond Butter
1⁄4 Cup Maple Syrup
2 Tbsp Mini chocolate chips
1 Tbsp Ground Flaxseed
1 tsp vanilla extract

Method

Use an 8 inch square pan.

Mix oat flour, protein powder, rice krispies, coconut milk, flax seed and salt
together in large bowl.

Add in nut butter, maple syrup, chocolate chips and vanilla. Stir well to combine If mixture is too dry add in splash of coconut milk.

Press into pan and flatten. Pop into the fridge or freezer. Enjoy them after a good sweaty workout!

Just the Rhubarb Scones

Fresh rhubarb scones

Fresh rhubarb scones holding court, with nary a strawberry in sight.

Here it is strawberry season, so you’re probably thinking strawberry rhubarb scones would be appropriate. After all, sweet strawberries and tart rhubarb show up in the garden around the same time and perfectly complement each other. But just because the two ingredients hang out a lot, doesn’t mean they’re married. Today I’m giving some props to straight rhubarb, hoping it steals the show for breakfast this weekend.

The deal with scones is that you want the butter to remain in little bits, rather than creaming it into the mixture. Those butter bits are what gives scones their flaky excellence, and why scone recipes call for chilled butter. Trust the bakers on this. If you make scones with softened butter, or over mix the butter into the batter you’ll end up with a bunch of big muffins. It’s not a tragedy, but not what you envisioned. And once you get hooked on good scones you won’t be truly satisfied with anything but the real, flaky, crumbly thing.

These babies, known elsewhere in the cyber food world as Naughty Rhubarb Scones, are delish as is, with whipped or clotted cream (for Brits) or, of course, with strawberry jam.

Makes 12-16 scones

Ingredients

3 stalks rhubarb (roughly 1½ cups when sliced)
2 1/2 cups flour
1 Tbsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
8 Tbsp unsalted butter
1/2 cup vanilla sugar (if using regular sugar add up to 1 tsp vanilla with the cream)
2/3—3/4 cups heavy cream

Method

Preheat oven to 425.

Slice rhubarb stalks 1/4 ” thick. Toss with 3 tablespoons of the sugar.

Sift flour, baking powder and salt together in large bowl or bowl of food processor.

Cut butter into flour mixture by hand (or pulse in food processor) until butter is the size of small peas.

Blend in 1/4 cup of the sugar.

Blend in sliced rhubarb. (If using the food processor, just pulse — you want the slices left mostly intact.)

Blend in cream until a soft dough forms. (note: you may need to add more than 2/3 cup depending on the weather,etc.)

Transfer dough to floured surface and divide in half. To make triangular scones, flatten into 6-inch disks and deeply score or cut each circle into 6-8 scones. Sprinkle with remaining sugar.

Arrange scones on ungreased or parchment-lined cookie sheet and bake about 20 minutes or until reddish-brown on top.

Enjoy and cheerio!

 

Strawberry Mania

Summer's strawberry bounty

Summer’s strawberry bounty in its many forms.

Strawberry season is getting off to a slow start in our corner of the world, but now the big grocery stores are full of them and with a little sunshine the farmers markets will soon be exploding with the good stuff. Of course, you’re not going to go wrong by simply washing them and letting everyone inhale them by the pint, but let’s go over just a few easy, yummy ways to use them.

Ready? Here we go…

First, a word on hulling strawberries. The frugal among us get torqued at wasting half a strawberry because SOME PEOPLE grab the stem, take one big bite and leave the rest for the compost bin. So we the frugal rush to hull all the strawberries and thereby enable maximum use of the fruit. The best way to do this of course is with a strawberry huller, and if you have one you are my culinary niche tool hero. If you don’t, here are two solutions to maximize each berry:

First, the most basic and humble vegetable peeler has a built in “potato-eye remover” at the end, which can just as well take on strawberry stems. You will quickly discover that you can’t manhandle a strawberry like a potato, but get as close as you can to the stem, plunge the tip of the peeler right in and dig out the stem. It takes about three strawberries to master this.

If that still sounds too much labor go ahead and chop off the tops, then use them to make your own shmancy strawberry water that will make you the envy of any yoga class:

Strawberry Water

After rinsing your strawberries, slice off their tops and dump them into a large jar. Fill it with water, let it sit for an hour or so and… Voila! Strawberry infused water. Drink deeply. Feel beautiful. Namaste

Worlds Easiest Strawberry Dessert

Ingredients:

  • Strawberries
  • Sour cream
  • Brown sugar

Method:

Grab a strawberry. Dip it first in sour cream, then in brown sugar. Eat. Repeat.

Strawberry-Rhubarb Compote:

This comes from the Bitten Word with inspiration from farmer Carrie at their CSA It is certified easy, very quick, kid pleasing, totally portable AND a great way to use up the rhubarb that might be taking over your garden. The guys at BW advise us not to get hung up on the amounts listed in this recipe. Depending on the amount of rhubarb and strawberries you have, the method is easily adapted. 

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 cups rhubarb, sliced into half-inch pieces
  • 1 cup strawberries, capped and halved (if using larger strawberries, you can quarter them)
  • 1/4 cup sugar

Method:

Place rhubarb in a saucepan. Sprinkle with sugar. Cook over medium heat until rhubarb begins to soften and fall apart (20 minutes). In the last 5 minutes of cooking, toss in the strawberries. Add a little lemon zest at this point for extra credit.

Remove from heat and let cool. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator. Serve over good vanilla ice cream or yogurt, top with whipped cream or just put it on a spoon.

 Some Savory and Sweet Goodness

Balsamic vinegar and strawberries are a classic Italian-inspired combination. They can be served as a dessert, like in Ina Garten’s recipe below, in a salad with goat cheese and peppery greens (pepper is key to the strawberry/balsamic alchemy) like arugula or as an appetizer like on the bruschetta further down. I’ve even seen them on a pizza with bacon, but we’re not going there today.

 Balsamic Strawberries à la Ina Garten

 As with the compote, no need to be too particular on quantities. Just aim to get the proportions close:

Ingredients:

  • 4 pints (8 cups) fresh strawberries, sliced thick
  • 5 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
  • 2 tablespoon sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 pints vanilla ice cream, for serving
  • Freshly grated lemon zest, for serving

Method:

Thirty minutes to an hour before serving, combine the strawberries, balsamic vinegar, sugar, and pepper in a bowl. Set aside at room temperature.

Place a serving of the strawberries in a bowl with a scoop of ice cream or dollop of whipped cream on top and dust lightly with lemon zest.

Strawberry Goat Cheese Bruschetta

These are gooooood, kid approved and somewhat impressive to guests. Substitute whipped cream cheese if you’re not a goat cheese fan, but do try the goat cheese on your picky eaters. You might be surprised. This recipe makes 12 big slices which can easily be cut in half for easier eating. Remember the napkins!

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar
  • 12 slices Italian bread
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 pound strawberries, washed and diced
  • 2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves, plus more for serving
  • 1 cup goat cheese, room temperature
  • salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

 Method:

  1. Heat vinegar in a small skillet over medium-low heat. Simmer until reduced by about half, 8 to 10 minutes. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature.
  2. Prepare a grill for high heat. Place bread slices on a foil-lined baking sheet and drizzle with olive oil. (alternatively, assemble bread in a baking sheet, brush slices with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and bake at 350 until toasted to your liking.)
  3. Combine strawberries and thyme in a small bowl and set aside. (If your strawberries aren’t farm fresh and super sweet sprinkle them with a little sugar when nobody is looking.)
  4. Grill bread on the preheated grill until browned, about 3 minutes per side.
  5. Spread goat cheese on toasted bread. Add black pepper, salt, and reduced vinegar to the strawberry mixture. Spoon over the goat cheese topped bruschetta. Garnish with additional thyme.

These are easy to bring if you pre-bake/toast the bread. Simply bring goat cheese, strawberry/balsamic mixture and bread in separate containers and assemble on site.

Now let’s hope the sun shines on those strawberry fields so the berry fest can begin!

 

 

 

Canning Strawberries

Canning prep

Canning prep

To continue with our theme of Ingredient of the Month – June is Strawberry month!  Soon it will be time to ‘Pick Your Own’ strawberries, but if you don’t have the time or the energy to pick your own, which happens to me a lot, just go to your local farmers market and buy a boatload.  Here is a great site to go to before getting your first batch of strawberries. It comes to us from Food 52 and it’s called 5 Links to Read Before Buying Strawberries at the Market.

How many of you pick a ton of strawberries to can and they get eaten before you can get the canning jars prepped? In my house, it becomes sport to see who can eat more strawberries without getting sick. I never would have imagined my son or husband could eat that many strawberries, but every year, I pick more and they eat more. I try hiding them, but they always sniff them out. Alas, it is always fun to eat fistfuls of strawberries with reckless abandon so I let them have at it. We’ll see what happens this year as ‘Pick Your Own’ season draws near.

When you pull out a jar of these next winter to put on your ice cream, other dessert, pancakes, or whatever you fancy, everyone will be happy they didn’t eat them all in June!

Ingredients

Fresh strawberries 
Sugar

*see quantities below under method

Method

1) Wash strawberries, remove green stems and core. Then cut into quarters.
2) Mix 1/2 cup sugar to 1 quart of strawberries.
3) Let strawberries and sugar sit until syrup forms and sugar dissolves.
4) Follow standard canning procedures which is to fill canning jars with strawberries to 1/4 inch of top, boil for 10 minutes and store for up to one year.

NOTE: More to come on canning processes, but beware that if not canned properly, the food will not be shelf stable.  Stay tuned for canning instructions or click here to get proper canning instructions.

 

Peanut Butter Krispy Fudge Bars

Sugar high about to ensue!

Sugar high about to ensue!

This dessert is insanely good.  I am not kidding! It is a three-tiered bar starting with a Rice Krispy treat on the bottom.  Then a peanut butter fudge layer in the middle.  Lastly a chocolate fudge layer on top.  You will be addicted in no time.

I haven’t eaten or made Rice Krispy treats in ages, so it was fun to get my hands sticky with that part of the recipe.  I took few bites as I worked and yum, it was good.  Then I moved onto the peanut butter fudge layer which was dangerous for me give my love of peanut butter.  And last but not least, the chocolate topping was a great way to finish off the recipe and finish my sampling as I worked.

Despite the 3 layers, it is really easy.  You just stack it up, let it sit, and in no time, you are on a sugar high to beat the band.  Bring these to a friend’s house, a school event, or anywhere you need to bring a dessert.  I got this recipe from Joy the Baker.  As she says in her blog, “Give to your friends, they will thank you, sort of”.

Rice Krispy Treat

Ingredients

3 Tbsp butter
1 10 oz package marshmallows (approximately 40)
6 cups Rice Krispy cereal (or any puffy rice cereal)

Method

1) Melt butter in large saucepan over medium heat.  Add marshmallows and stir constantly until marshmallows are melted.  Remove from heat.
2) Add Rice Krispy cereal and stir to mix completely.
3) Use spatula coated with cooking spray or butter to press into 9” x 13” baking pan.
4) Let cool while making peanut butter fudge.

Peanut Butter Fudge

Ingredients

1 cup butter
1 cup peanut butter (I used Teddies Natural Smooth but any kind of peanut butter will work)
1 tsp vanilla
1 pound powdered sugar 

Method

1) Microwave butter and peanut butter for 2 minutes on high.  Remove from microwave, stir, and microwave for 1 more minute on high (you might need to microwave for longer depending on the strength of your microwave – you want the butter to be melted and for it to stir into a smooth sauce when done).
2) Add vanilla and powdered sugar and stir to mix completely. Pour over Rice Krispy treats and spread evenly.  Put in refrigerator to cool while you make the chocolate fudge. 

Easy Chocolate Fudge

Ingredients

2 Tbsp butter
2/3 cup evaporated milk
1 2/3 cup sugar
1/2 tsp salt
2 cups mini marshmallows
1 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
1 tsp vanilla

Method

1) Combine butter, milk, sugar, and salt in small saucepan over medium heat.  Bring to a boil and cook 4-5 minutes, stirring constantly.  Remove from heat. 
2) Stir in marshmallows, chocolate, and vanilla.  Beat by hand for about 1 minute until marshmallows and chocolate are melted and mixture is thoroughly combined.
3) Pour over peanut butter mixture and spread evenly.
4) Place in refrigerator to cool completely and set.
5) When ready to serve, remove from refrigerator and bring to room temperature.  Cut into small pieces and enjoy!   

  

Melted Mellows

Melted Mellows

Smooth and creamy!

Smooth and creamy!

Chocolate fudge

Rich blobs of chocolate fudge as a topper

Winter Fruit Salad

Enjoy this refreshing winter fruit salad après ski?

Enjoy this refreshing winter fruit salad après ski?

Yes, technically it is winter. Yes, our kids are finishing up with winter break.  Yes, I’m still trying to ski.  However, the almost 50 degree weather this past weekend and the sun-baked snow made it feel like spring. And so I bring you what I call winter fruit salad in what I call “winter”.  Alas, it is New England, and so I take whatever weather comes my way – which this week means back to single digit temperatures and more snow.   It also means, I bring to you this yummy fruit salad to brighten your days as you plug along through the remainder of this wonderful season. Besides anyone can make a fruit salad in the summer.  Try making one in February – not exactly high fruit season!  This fruit salad is tropical, spicy, and light.  It is great for breakfast, lunch, dinner, dessert, snacks, and of course, to you can BRING IT anywhere.  Enjoy!

I got this recipe from a great magazine – Cook’s Illustrated. I’ve gotten this magazine for years and I love it. It has really taught me how to cook.  Each recipe goes through the trials and tribulations faced by the person creating the recipe.  By reading the techniques of what to do and what not to do, I have learned a lot (like do not add herbs to this fruit salad unless you want to move into the salsa territory). I wish I went to some famous culinary institute to learn to cook, but for now, this type of learning will have to do.

Ingredients

3 Tbsp sugar
1/4 tsp grated lime zest plus 3 Tbsp juice (approx. 2 limes)
1/4 tsp red pepper flakes
Pinch salt
12 oz. jicama, peeled and cut into 1/4 inch dice (approx. 1 1/2 cups)
2 oranges
2 mangos, peeled, pitted, and cut into 1/2 inch dice

Method

1) Bring sugar, lime zest, lime juice, red pepper flakes, and salt to simmer in small saucepan over medium heat, stirring constantly until sugar is dissolved.  Remove pan from heat, stir in jicama, and let syrup cool for 20 minutes

2) Meanwhile, cut away peel and pith from oranges. Slice into 1/2 inch rounds, then cut rounds into 1/2 inch pieces. Place oranges and mangos in a large bowl.

3) When syrup with jicama is cool, pour over oranges and mangos and toss to combine.  Refrigerate for 15 minutes before serving.

A Real Belgian’s Waffle

Waffle love

Ooh La La! A plate full of waffle happiness.

Full disclosure. My grandfather was full-on Belgian. In fact my maiden name, Thys, is like Smith or Jones in the Antwerp phone book. Nonetheless, it’s fair to say the Belgians deserve huge thanks from all of us on this side of the pond for their addictive culinary contributions. No, not eels in green sauce (they still haunt me)—I’m talking about chocolate, beer, fries and of course, the almighty Belgian waffle.

This recipe comes from Sophie, a fellow ski racer parent (and genuine Belgian) who kindly shared her cherished family recipe for “Gauffres Quatre-Quart” AKA Belgian waffles. “My aunt used to make them by the dozens, to be shared with everyone,” Sophie recalls. “We loved when she would stop by!” Sophie humbly claims her waffles aren’t quite the same as her aunt’s, but her family eats them for breakfast, snack and basically anytime. “They are favorites at bake sales, and perfect for thank you gifts! We keep them in a box for a few days—they might dry out a bit, but are still delicious.”

All of the above makes them Bring It all-stars. Sophie thinks any kind of waffle maker would work except, ironically, the very large Brussels waffle makers.

Edie’s note: The original recipe is by weight. Approximate cup measurements are my addition, which worked perfectly when I halved the recipe and used four eggs. 

Sophie’s Gauffres Quatre-Quart

Makes about 20-24 mid-sized waffles, or 12-15 large ones

Ingredients

1 pound salted butter. If using unsalted, I would add some salt
1 pound sugar, or a little less (2 cups)
1 tsp vanilla extract (optional)
1 pound flour (4 cups)
2 tsp baking powder
7 or 8 eggs, depending on their size

Method

Melt the butter.
Beat the eggs until blended (or foamy if you are ambitious)
Add the sugar and vanilla. Blend in.
Add the melted butter. Blend in.
Add the flour and baking powder, about 1/4 pound at a time.
Let it rest for a few minutes while you warm up your waffle maker. The consistency should be thick on a spoon.

I scoop the mixture with a wooden spoon and place the equivalent of a large egg on the grid. Of course you can put more or less to make different size waffles. I cook each waffle for about 3 minutes until golden. The longer they stay, the crunchier/harder they get. Let it cool down on a rack— that is if you have the patience. We always eat the first one warm.

Et voila!

Belgian waffle with sugar

Sugar? Syrup? Ice cream? Bacon? It’s all good!

More note from a quasi Belgian: These waffles are substantial and structurally sound. They can stand up to strawberries and whipped cream, Nutellla, peanut butter and bacon or whatever you care to put on them. The best part is that they turned out great on my first try with no tweaking, babysitting or special handling.

Touché, Waffle Huts!

Love and Lagunitas

Love and Lagunitas

How do we feel about Lagunitas? Here’s a clue!

In honor of Valentine’s Day and the Olympics, we want to give a gold medal shout out to a really cool sport and the really cool company that helps keep them flying. The sport is ski jumping. This year ski jumping is especially exciting because for the first time ever (a mere 90 years after the men started), women ski jumpers are allowed to compete in the Olympics.

In Europe top ski jumpers have rock star status. In this country ski jumpers are rarely featured between Olympics. The sport struggles to find funding for the training needed to fly, oh, a football field plus, nearly straight downhill. That’s where Lagunitas, a groovy craft beer company from Northern California, comes in. As sponsor of the US Ski Jumping Team Lagunitas has become more like family than funder. Since they are in Sochi, cheering on the team, we figure we can do our part by cheering from home, while drinking Lagunitas of course. Today happens to be a snow day here, and a Friday, and Valentine’s Day, and the day the men take to the “large” (read crazy) hill, so it seems like a good time to start.

Let’s be real. Valentine’s Day can be amateur night, sort of like New Years Eve, with a lot of undeliverable hype and expectation. What we need are options that maximize togetherness and minimize contrived, awkward and complicated situations.

Here’s a low investment/high return plan. Grab a six pack of the good stuff (might we suggest Lagunitas, which happens to be extra strength) and anything that looks good for dipping. This can be pretzels, apples, dried fruit, veggies, nuts, crackers, bread, cookies—really anything that you like at the store or have on hand. At home, open one of the beers. Make a super easy beer and cheese sauce. While that is warming up make an even easier chocolate dipping sauce.

At your final destination, or when your guest arrives, assemble the remaining five beers into Olympic ring formation. Get psyched. Arrange dips and dippers in easy reach. Turn on TV. Get cozy on the couch and let the Games—whatever they may be—begin.

Lagunitas IPA Olympic Rings

Take a cold one for the team!

I Love You More Than Beer (and cheese) Sauce

From the “The Beeroness” (Don’t you just love her sight unseen?)

Ingredients

2 Tbsp butter, softened (or melted
2 Tbsp flour
1 Tbsp cornstarch
1 cup beer (use Lagunitas IPA for highest score from judges)
2 cup shredded Cheddar and/or Gouda, do not use pre shredded
1 cup whole milk
Salt and pepper, paprika optional (and tasty).

Method

Add all ingredients to a blender or food processor. Process on high until very well blended, about 5-8 minutes. Transfer contents to a saucepan over medium high heat. Whisk rapidly and continuously until thickened, about 5 minutes. Salt and pepper to taste. Serve warm.

Lagunitas cheese dip

Go ahead and get cheesy. It’s all good.

Dip it Good Chocolate Sauce

From Joy the Baker

Ingredients

1/2 cup dark chocolate chunks (ore more)
scant 1 cup heavy cream
pinch of salt
1/2 tsp espresso powder (optional)

Method

Place chocolate chunks, pinch of salt, and espresso powder (if using) in a medium bowl.  In a small saucepan, bring the heavy cream to a boil.  Pour the heavy cream over the chocolate pieces.  Let rest for 1 minute before whisking.  Whisk until chocolate is completely melted.  They say to serve it warm but it’s good at any temp. This sauce is pretty thin, so it also pours easily over fruit and ice cream.

Chocolate dip

Chocolate dip fantasia. Of course, cookies and ice cream work too.

Note: The potential for extra points abounds here. You can make your own Easiest French Bread Ever to bring to the party, add a round of Snowchis to the mix, or whip up some Cholliesauce for more dipping pleasure. And of course, nobody’s going to object to that box of chocolates that was Plan A!

Mini Cheesecakes

Just a bite!

Just a bite!

I try to be all healthy with my vegetarianism, and eating the right kind of fats, and checking out the latest health trends, and so on and so on. Then I get to dessert and fall off the beam hard.  Yes, it’s true…I have a raging sweet tooth.  My solution to this is to eat tiny desserts.  I cut desserts in half, share desserts, or have “just a bite”.  My husband and son hate this because they think I make a mess.  Well, I do, but so be it.  That’s the way I eat dessert and I’m sticking to it. They can either share with me or let me make a mess all on my own.

With that preface, I bring to you one of my favorite desserts – cheesecake. I made cheesecakes for my mom’s dinner parties as a kid. I tried to have the tops of the cheesecakes not crack, but they always cracked and they still tasted unbelievably good.  I generally topped them with a can of bright red cherries packed in that thick gooey syrup so it didn’t really matter that the top cracked anyway.  Now as an adult, with my fondness for small portion desserts, I use the mini cupcake pan to make bite sized cheesecakes. Once done, the whole eating experience becomes very low commitment. I don’t have to cut the mini cheesecake in half. I don’t have to make a mess. I just pop the whole thing in my mouth and see what other desserts are available!

Make these cheesecakes – big or small and top with whatever makes you happy that day!

Ingredients

1 ½ cups finely ground graham cracker crumbs (about 12 sheets)
3 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
1 ½ cups plus 3 Tbsp sugar
2 pounds cream cheese, room temperature
Pinch of salt
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
4 large eggs, room temperature

TAKE THE CREAM CHEESE AND EGGS OUT OF THE REFRIGERATOR NOW!
(Just a subtle reminder for people like me who never remember to do this…)

Method

1) Preheat the oven to 325.  Line muffin tins with paper liners.  This recipe will make 48 mini cheesecakes so divide the recipe in half if you want less.  Stir together graham cracker crumbs, butter, and 3 Tbsp of sugar.  Press a small amount of the mixture into bottom of the muffin liners.   What is a small amount you ask? Well enough to fill the bottom of the liner and make a little base for your cheesecakes.  Bake until set and beginning to color at the edges, which is about 10 minutes.  Transfer tins to wire rack and cool.

2) With an electric mixer on medium-high speed, beat cream cheese until fluffy. Reduce speed to low; add remaining 1 ½ cups sugar in a slow stream.  Mix in salt and vanilla until combined.  Add eggs, one at a time, beating until just combined after each (do not overmix). Scrape down sides of bowl as needed.

3) Spoon cream cheese filling over cooled crust in each muffin cup. It is somewhat tricky to get the cream cheese filling into mini muffin liners.  Do your best and don’t stress over it.  Fill them until they are almost full and then tap down on counter to set.

4) Bake 30-35 minutes rotating half way through.  Transfer to wire rack to cool completely.  Refrigerate cheesecakes in tins (uncovered) at least 4 hours.  Remove cheesecakes from muffin pan using a butter knife to lift them out.

I topped my mini cheesecakes in this post with a thick mocha spread but you could top with a raspberry or blueberry or drizzle a little syrup over them too. Look for something in your fridge or cabinet as an add on – that’s part of the fun.  Once topped, pop one or two or a few in your mouth!