No sooner did the kitchen get cleaned up than I had to go make it dirty again.
I chose to pitch pie number two, which is exactly the kind of thing that happens during futzing with a recipe, but still it never feels good to actually do it. (Pie number one is significantly depleted and won't last much longer.)
So I am assuaging my poor sad little feelings with a recipe I know never disappoints (and which needs absolutely no futzing whatsoever): Alice Medrich's "Bittersweet Brownies". MAN THOSE ARE GOOD.
Oh @#$!. The version of the recipe I just found online is noticeably different from the one in the book. FUTZING ALERT! DANGER, WILL ROBINSON! ...I think I can avoid it though. Looking at the ratios, the one in the book -- the one I've done so many times the book has a crease -- looks to me like it'd come out better.
Danger averted.
Brownies imminent.
I chose to pitch pie number two, which is exactly the kind of thing that happens during futzing with a recipe, but still it never feels good to actually do it. (Pie number one is significantly depleted and won't last much longer.)
So I am assuaging my poor sad little feelings with a recipe I know never disappoints (and which needs absolutely no futzing whatsoever): Alice Medrich's "Bittersweet Brownies". MAN THOSE ARE GOOD.
Oh @#$!. The version of the recipe I just found online is noticeably different from the one in the book. FUTZING ALERT! DANGER, WILL ROBINSON! ...I think I can avoid it though. Looking at the ratios, the one in the book -- the one I've done so many times the book has a crease -- looks to me like it'd come out better.
Danger averted.
Brownies imminent.
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what is it about this time of year that inspires folks like us to head into the kitchen to try and cook (though i will say we have both been doing remarkably well this year with that).
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Plus, of course, there's the cultural brainwashing. Nobody can be a Good Person who doesn't cook. Holidays just wouldn't be holidays without an insane amount of kitchen mess, scads of dishes to do, many days of preparation and stress, and piles of reminders to non-cooks that we are second class citizens. It's no wonder we get into the kitchen.
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The brownie recipe in the link looks like the one from "Bitter Sweet". It's meant for bittersweet chocolate that is 66-72% cacao. That means something like Scharffen-Berger or some other premium chocolate. Definitely not Hershey's (and it looks like Ghiradelli is only 60%). She's got different variants of the recipe for different cacao percentages.
I've been making the one from King Arthur Flour, but my favorite is from Nick Malgieri (very fudgy). Let me know if you want any of those recipes.
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I made my chocolate chip cookies this evening. Yum. Been fussing with this recipe for about 20 years. Well, OK, I haven't changed it in about 5. But, you know? None of the batches has been BAD :-) Just some not as perfect as others.
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i'll swap you some of my fresh-from-the-oven chocolate chip pan cookies for some of your brownies! *bats eyes innocently*
Brownies won!
If you went with the one in the book, I surely would appreciate it if you could send me a copy... (I've got a soldier girl I need to bake for! It's your patriotic duty to assist!)
Regardless, they were superlatively nummy!
Re: Brownies won!
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Does the one in "Bitter Sweet" have that much flour? The one I used yesterday, called "Bittersweet Brownies" in her book Cookies and Brownies, has only a quarter cup.
I would love the very fudgy one. :-) :-)
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Re: Brownies won!
Re: Brownies won!
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(If there is a way to cheat, especially in the kitchen, I will find it!)
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The proportions from the one in Bittersweet also match pretty closely with Nick Malgieri's Pecan Brownie recipe.