The Kitchen Witch Chronicles

No Bake Chocolate Oatmeal Cookie Recipe

 

Not Your Mama’s Recipe!

I have reworked the original recipe that called for 2 cups of sugar. Make these with the best quality ingredients. This recipe contains Peanut Butter.

In a heavy bottomed sauce pan combine and stir together:

1 cup sugar
Pinch of salt
3 Tbls. butter
1/2 cup milk

Bring to a boil and cook a minute or so then add:

1 oz. chocolate
1/2 cup Peanut butter

Stir as the chocolate and peanut butter melts.

Bring back to a boil then turn off the heat and add:

1 tsp. Vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups Oatmeal flakes

Stir in quickly until the Oatmeal is fully coated. Drop by spoonfuls onto wax paper and cool. Very hot! Think molten lava! Let them cool and set. Makes 2 dozen.

Posted 1 month ago at 10:39 am. Add a comment

Butter Cream Frosting Recipe

Butter. Sugar. Cream. Vanilla…How can it get any better? By using the freshest, best quality ingredients available. If you are going to all the effort to make a cake, then cover it with the best tasting frosting. Guests will be eyeing a second piece of cake before they have finished the first!

I get ingredients from King Arthur Flour. Glazing Sugar. Vanilla. Check them out!

1/2 pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter

1 pound (1 bag or 4 cups) Glazing sugar

1 Tbl. Vanilla extract

1 Tbl. Cream

Pinch of salt (preferably Fleur de Sel)

 

Beat all the ingredients on low in your mixer, slowly increasing the speed to medium. Beat until light and fluffy, scraping the bowl a couple of times. Do not over beat.

This is great on the Feathery Fudge Cake.

Posted 2 months, 1 week ago at 12:50 pm. Add a comment

Glazing Sugar – powdered sugar without starch

As a home baker I like to use the very best ingredients available. Fresh eggs, fresh butter, King Arthur flour… and when I need to use powdered sugar I only use  Glazing Sugar. Supermarket confectioners’ sugar has starch which leaves a grittiness to frostings and glazes that I will not tolerate. Glazing Sugar is available in one pound bags from King Arthur Flour.

Posted 2 months, 1 week ago at 6:38 pm. Add a comment

Feathery Fudge Cake Recipe

This recipe is from my go-to cookbook from 1981, Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book. I haven’t changed the recipe but I do use a kitchen scale to weigh the batter in the cake pans to make sure they are equal.

Grease and flour two 8″ cake pans. I also use a round of parchment in the bottom of the pan, then grease and flour it again. This greatly reduces the chance of having the cake stick to the pan.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Combine and set aside:

2 cups flour

1  1/4 tsp. baking soda ( sift to remove lumps)

1/2 tsp. salt.

Prepare 3 oz. unsweetened chocolate by melting and cooling (or 9 Tbls. unsweetened Cocoa plus 3 Tbls. water).

In a mixer bowl beat:

2/3 cup butter, softened. Beat for 30 seconds.

Add 1  3/4 cups sugar and

1 tsp. Vanilla.

Beat until well combined.

Add 2 eggs, one at a time, beating one minute after each.

Add the chocolate and beat.

Add the flour mixture alternating with 1  1/4 cups cold water, beating after each addition.

Turn into the prepared pans. To weigh the batter, tare the scale with each prepared cake pan and add the batter in equal amounts to both pans.

Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until a toothpick remains clean when poked in the center. Remove while the cake is still against the side of the pan. (The cake is overdone if it has shrunk from the side of the pan while still in the oven).

Cool for 10 minutes on a wire rack, then turn the cakes out of the pans and cool on the wire racks.

Posted 2 months, 1 week ago at 4:41 pm. Add a comment

Dinner roll recipe

Making fresh rolls for dinner is easy, and they are so much better than any prepackaged type. For ‘brown and serve’ style, partially bake the rolls and freeze for later.

 

In your trusty bread machine bowl combine:

1 cup milk (or light cream)

2 eggs, mix with the milk with a fork to break up the yolks

1/3 cup butter, cut into chunks

Tare your scale and measure in 1 pound 2 oz. of all purpose flour – I recommend King Arthur All Purpose Flour

1/3 cup sugar

1 tsp. salt

2  1/4 tsp.  SAF instant yeast

 

Set into your machine on dough setting.

When ready, slightly knead the dough into a ball and let rest 10 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.

Cut the ball in half and work with one half at a time.

By hand, roll the half into a log and cut into even pieces – I think 8 pieces make nice sized rolls. Roll each piece into a ball without working the dough too much.

With a bench knife or spatula, cut the dough almost in half at top center. (This is an easy way to make a Parker-style roll that splits in half for all the butter you’ll want to slather on each piece!)

Reshape slightly as you place them on an ungreased sheet. Cover with a damp tea towel to rise for 30 minutes.

Bake 12 to 15 minutes until golden. Transfer to a wire rack to cool.

For ‘Brown and Serve’ style rolls make the rolls and bake in a 325 degree F. oven for 10 minutes – do not brown. Cool the rolls thoroughly on a wire rack and wrap and freeze or set aside for later in the day. These rolls are delicate and squish easily. Use a box and only one layer per bag. Just removing air from a freezer bag can crush these rolls.

When ready to serve, bake in a 400 degree F. oven for 10 minutes. If they have been frozen, allow them to thaw for 10 to 15 minutes before baking.

You will love how easy these are to make and the texture and taste is wonderful!

This recipe is my adaption of the dinner roll recipe from Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book 1981…my go-to guide.

Posted 2 months, 3 weeks ago at 1:24 pm. Add a comment

© 2009-2010 Five Element Arts All Rights Reserved -- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright

This site is protected by WP-CopyRightPro