Showing posts with label crepes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crepes. Show all posts

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Butterscotch Sauce



I am always looking for a way to make dessert easier. The fact is, I am not a fan of baking, so if I can top a scoop of ice cream with something decadent, that suits me just fine. When I spotted this recipe on the Food52 website I was leery. I've made caramel sauce before and it was much more involved than this appeared to be. One treads a slippery slope when making caramel sauce because while waiting for the boiling sugar to turn a caramel color (something that is subjective) the caramel can turn bitter, and both time and ingredients are wasted. So I didn't have very high hopes for this recipe.

Much to my extreme and very pleasant surprise this butterscotch sauce (that tastes more like caramel to me) is both easy and delicious. I was a bit uncomfortable with the rather sketchy directions, far preferring a finite cooking time as well as a goal temperature on a candy thermometer, but threw caution to the wind and just let things be. My butter, sugar, and corn syrup did notfroth and bubble and go bonkers. It simply melted and came to a low boil. When I added the heavy cream it did noterupt and rise up until I turned up the heat to allow for a 30-second vigorous boil. Despite these things, it still turned out beautifully. It did firm up in the fridge, but it did not get at all grainy. It was still smooth and very delicious.


 This recipe is a keeper, folks. Quick, easy, and absolutely decadent. Who could ask for more?
Butterscotch Sauce
From Phyllis Grant at Food52

4 tablespoons unsalted butter (1/2 stick)
1 1/2 cups light or dark brown sugar (I used dark)
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 vanilla bean, halved, seeds scraped out
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

In a large saucepan, melt butter on medium heat. Add brown sugar and corn syrup. Boil until sugar dissolves. This takes a few minutes. It will froth and bubble and go bonkers. Don't panic.
Add heavy cream. Stand back. The mixture will erupt and rise up. Stir in vanilla bean, vanilla bean seeds, and salt. Whisk. Bring back up to a vigorous boil for 30 seconds. Turn off the heat.
Serve right away over ice cream or yogurt. Inside crepes. In between layers of cake. Or store it in the fridge for a few weeks.  Makes a little over 1 1/2 cups.


Author Notes: This recipe is from one of my mother's best friends, via her mother, via the San Francisco restaurant Trader Vic's. You can make it with either dark or light brown sugar or a combination of the two. It's great drizzled over crepes and cakes. One thing to know is that it firms up as it hits ice cream, but it softens back up in your mouth. It gets quite hard and grainy in the fridge, but low heat brings the sauce right back to life. This recipe fits perfectly into a Bonne Maman jar. It keeps for months in the fridge, but it will not last that long. – Phyllis Grant


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Friday, February 13, 2015

Romantic Breakfasts



It's the sweetest of all days, and what better way to spend your morning than with your special someone and a special breakfast. Whether you're making it for yourself and your sweetie, or the whole family, these dishes are always welcome. Click on the links to get the recipes.

People have a lot of different ideas as to the perfect pancake.  I’m a light and fluffy gal myself, but Mr. O-P (from NJ) likes them thinner and with more body, but the cook gets her way and this morning these delicious pancakes graced the breakfast table.
If you've let time slip away and have nothing to serve, these strawberries are delicious, easy, and can turn any occasion into something special.
If you are the cherry fan that I am, then you will love these crepes. They are easy to assemble, particularly when using Melissa's Ready Made Crepes (something I always keep in the freezer just for such an occasion).  The filling recipe is from Magpie’s Café in St. Charles, MO, and can be made the day ahead and stored in the fridge; the Bing Cherry Sauce is my own creation and the recipe can be found here. When it is time to serve, just fill and roll the crepe, and spoon the warmed jewel-toned sauce on top.
If your idea of breakfast does not include something chocolate-y, this may just change your mind. While it is indeed chocolate, it is the rich, dense, deliciousness of chocolate and not something that is cloyingly sweet. Based on an Alton Brown recipe, I lightened up the cocoa, added a pinch of espresso powder, and used mini chocolate chips to better spread the joy. Topped with fresh strawberries it is a decadent breakfast treat.
 
One of my most viewed recipes is this one for New York-Style Crumb Cake, and with good reason, it is delicious.  So when I spotted this recipe for the same type of cake in muffin form, I had to try it.  The same delicious coffee cake in a small, portable form is absolute perfection!
 I found a decadently delicious recipe that is full of complex tastes and will make you feel that you’re breakfasting on a tropical isle.  The beauty of this recipe is that it, like the ginger syrup, can be made ahead, so you won’t have to labor in the morning to put a fantastic meal on the table.


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