Monkey Bread

http://smittenkitchen.com/2010/02/monkey-bread-with-cream-cheese-glaze/

http://smittenkitchen.com/2010/02/monkey-bread-with-cream-cheese-glaze/

I had never heard of Monkey Bread before reading Smitten Kitchen’s recipe, and now I’m OBSESSED. Think about making it all the time. Maybe because of the cream cheese frosting? Entirely because of the cream cheese frosting? Maybe because of the cinnamon roll-esque balls of bready goodness dipped in brown sugar and cinnamon? Entirely because of the cinnamon roll-esque balls of bready goodness dipped in brown sugar and cinnamon?

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http://smittenkitchen.com/2010/02/monkey-bread-with-cream-cheese-glaze/

It’s hard to say.

Unfortunately, I haven’t had a few hours to make Monkey Bread yet, so in lieu of tasting it myself I thought I’d let you all know about it. You know, in case you’re looking for a dessert that takes a lot of rising time and hands-on time. I think I might make it for my happiness group this weekend.

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Dad’s Rhubarb Pie

Rhubarb pie is my dad’s favorite dessert, and I made it for his birthday this year.  It has to be ONLY rhubarb – none of this hyphenated craziness with strawberries or raspberries – and it has to be only very lightly sweetened, and most importantly, it has to be eaten cold.  Not room temp.  Cold.

I don’t know where or how my dad discovered the perfect flavor that the cold lends the tart rhubarb, but I have to agree that it works unbelievably well.  It’s also impossible to find a cold tart rhubarb pie anywhere, so if you want one, you have to make it yourself.

A note on choosing rhubarb: look for ripe red rhubarb that’s firm.  Don’t bother with limp rhubarb.  If you can only find greenish rhubarb, that’s fine; just add about a quarter cup more sugar to the pie.  Wash the rhubarb stalks with cold water to remove any dirt, and cut off and discard the ends.

Chop the rhubarb so all the pieces are of roughly equal size, about half an inch long.

Now you’re ready to make the pie!


Rhubarb Pie

  • One double pie crust (I’m still working on my recipe, so I’m afraid I’m no help in this department yet)
  • 4-5 cups chopped rhubarb, cut in roughly half-inch pieces
  • a little less than 1 cup granulated sugar (just estimate roughly 1/8 cup less)
  • 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • zest of a small lemon
  • 1 tablespoon butter, cut up into small pats

Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.  Roll out pie crust and place in pie plate.

Combine sugar, flour and cinnamon.  Sprinkle 1/4 of it over pastry in the bottom of the pie plate.  Heap rhubarb over this mixture.  Zest the lemon evenly over the rhubarb.  Sprinkle with the remaining sugar and flour mixture.  Dot with small pieces of butter.  Cover with top crust and affix any extra decorations with either an egg wash (one beaten egg mixed with a tablespoon of water) or if you’re lazy like me, just a little water.

Place pie on lowest rack in over.  Bake for 15 minutes.  Reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees F, and continue baking for 40 to 45 minutes.  Let cool at room temperature for at least half an hour (preferably longer), then refrigerate until cold.

Eat standing over the pie plate at the counter because it’s SO good that a fork just seems superfluous.

S’mores in the City

I’m so lucky that I have a wonderful friend with an apartment in the middle of New York City – with a working fireplace.

photo-5That’s right, kids. Real logs and everything. And she used it to throw an intimate s’mores party! If you have a fire source of some kind, I highly recommend it.

photo-6Instead of graham crackers, she used thin ginger cookies and they were purrrrrfect. I can never go back to normal grahams again.

photo-7For extra yumminess, pair the s’mores with White Russians (or as The Dude calls them, Caucasians). I make them with skim milk instead of half-and-half, and just a touch of vodka.

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All we could talk about was how the fire made the party. Something about staring into it makes you feel like there’s a purpose to you being there.

Oscars Party

What are the Oscars without friends to shout at the screen with you when someone wears rosettes that look like they’re copping a feel? No fun at all, obviously. Lucky for me some friends got decked out in jeans and jewels (it was a casual gathering, yet with a nod to Oscar) and came to yell at Charlize Theron with me. I mean really? (with Seth and Amy). REALLY?

By Jason Merritt, Getty Images

By Jason Merritt, Getty Images

So it was a fun time.

By the way, I love love love the Fug Girls for the red carpet rundown. Check them out, if you haven’t already.

Anyway, back to the shindig: I made two kinds of tea sandwiches, lemon cookiesmy skinny margaritas and a grapefruit champagne cocktail that knocked me on the floor because it was SO tasty that I couldn’t stop myself. So tasty that I forgot to take a photo of it, even as I announced to everyone in earshot how good it was and how it was definitely going on BB&B in the morning. So tasty that I didn’t wake up in time to write this post before morning class and am now posting it well into the afternoon and frankly Ithinkwe’veallbeentheresothere. OKAY?

Raspberries on lemon cookies

Raspberries on lemon cookies

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The spread

Please continue for the recipes . . .

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Valentine’s Day Cookies

I swear I didn’t forget V-Day. Actually, I had a menu for two that I tested several times but never fell in love with enough to post for you guys. I refuse to recommend anything I don’t love, and this menu is still coming together. It also just kind of turned into Valentine’s Week for me because I was at home with my mama and we did lots of Valentiney things, and the actual Day got away from me.

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I’ve never totally understood why people dislike Valentine’s Day. I do understand feeling alone and sad – of course – but when I was growing up Valentine’s was a more generalized holiday on which you celebrate loving everyone in your life. Looking back now, that was a gift. My mom would always make a special Valentine’s lunch or dinner for our family and we gave gifts to each other, and everyone in my class at school gave cards to each other. I always felt incredibly loved and loving on Valentine’s Day, and it wasn’t until I got to college that I learned that if you didn’t have a significant other on the day, you were supposed to feel forlorn and unlovable.

Well, NO. Quite frankly.

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It’s beautiful that there’s an entire day dedicated to love! What a transcendent thing to focus on in our culture. I get to tell my dear friends how much I appreciate them for their undying support, get to tell my parents how much I love them, get to tell my sister how special she is to me. Yes, we should do that all the time. But we don’t.

I really appreciate having a day when we are all reminded to remember the love that surrounds us, romantic or not. And yes, if you have a sweetheart, it makes for a wonderful holiday. But without one is just as good.

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I was lucky enough to happen across this beautiful, gorgeous, delicately thoughtful post on the same theme of love taking all forms on Tea & Cookies. It’s worth a read.

And after reading, I absolutely had to make Tea & Cookies’ Valentiney cookies on Valentine’s Day to celebrate it and love.

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I gave them to people I care about and to some people I barely know. Just because.

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Please continue for the recipe.

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Cinnamon, Ginger and Honey Spiced Popcorn

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This cinnamon, ginger and honey popcorn is so nice because it’s a little bit sweet from the honey and cinnamon, but it’s also a little bit savory from the ginger and salt. I made it intending it to be an appetizer for pasta with brown butter, but I think it would also be really yummy as a post-meal sweet snack.

Adapted from Cooks.com

  • one bag plain microwave popcorn, no butter added
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ginger
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon cloves
  • 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

Melt the butter, add the honey into the butter and mix. Pour over the popcorn and toss until evenly coated. Mix spices together in a bowl and sprinkle over the butter-coated popcorn evenly, tossing until coated.

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Spread popcorn on a cookie sheet in one layer and bake at 275 degrees for ten minutes.

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Munch away and enjoy!

Truffle Box Placecards

Easiest of the easy – just buy a pretty box of truffles and some labels, put the label on the box, and write your guest’s name in a pretty way. DONE with placecards, DONE with dessert!

www.marthastewart.com

www.marthastewart.com

Now, if you want to spend a little more time, you could make the truffles yourself. Like this so yummy and easy sounding recipe for Balsamic Truffles from Giada, which I’ve been wanting to try for quite a while. If you find pretty boxes – I love pretty boxes – this would be a great way to use them.

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