Saturday, December 19, 2015

Swoon Pies

Swoon Pies are our take on the iconic marshmallow-filled pastry. This one has tender graham cookies dipped in chocolate and a few special toppings. The perfect Holiday treat!


1 cup all-purpose flour 
1/2 teaspoon baking powder 
1/2 teaspoon baking soda 
1/2 teaspoon salt 
1 cup graham cracker crumbs 
1/2 cup butter, softened 
1/2 cup granulated sugar 
1/2 cup firmly packed light brown sugar 
1  large egg 
1 teaspoon vanilla extract 
1  (8-oz.) container sour cream 
Parchment paper 
1  (16-oz.) package semisweet chocolate morsels 
3 teaspoons shortening 
Toppings: chopped roasted salted pecans, chopped crystallized ginger, sea salt



1. Preheat oven to 350°. Sift together flour and next 3 ingredients in a medium bowl; stir in graham cracker crumbs.

2. Beat butter and next 2 ingredients at medium speed with a heavy-duty electric stand mixer until fluffy. Add egg and vanilla, beating until blended.


3. Add flour mixture to butter mixture alternately with sour cream, beginning and ending with flour mixture. Beat at low speed until blended after each addition, stopping to scrape bowl as needed.


4. Drop batter by rounded tablespoonfuls 2 inches apart onto 2 parchment paper-lined baking sheets. Bake, in batches, at 350° for 13 to 15 minutes or until set and bottoms are golden brown. Remove cookies (on parchment paper) to wire racks, and cool completely (about 30 minutes).


5. Turn 12 cookies over, bottom sides up. Spread each with 1 heaping tablespoonful Marshmallow Filling. Top with remaining 12 cookies, bottom sides down, and press gently to spread filling to edges. Freeze on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet 30 minutes or until filling is set.

6. Pour water to depth of 1 inch in a medium saucepan over medium heat; bring to a boil. Reduce heat, and simmer; place chocolate and shortening in a medium-size heatproof bowl over simmering water. Cook, stirring occasionally, 5 to 6 minutes or until melted. Remove from heat, and let cool 10 minutes.

7. Meanwhile, remove cookies from freezer, and let stand 10 minutes.

8. Dip each cookie sandwich completely into melted chocolate mixture. (Use a fork to easily remove sandwiches from chocolate.) Place on parchment paper-lined baking sheet. Sprinkle with desired toppings, and freeze 10 minutes or until chocolate is set.
Note: Cookie sandwiches may be covered with plastic wrap and stored in refrigerator up to 24 hours.

Friday, December 4, 2015

Cookie Science; Written by Bravetart

Have you ever made strawberry shortcake and thought to yourself, "Why do I whip the cream, and what happens if I don't?" Probably not. The difference between a dollop and a drizzle of cream is so obvious, no one thinks to question the necessity of it. Yet the value of creaming, a closely related process, is harder to grasp. See, unlike stirring, mixing, or beating, creaming isn't about combining ingredients—it's about aerating them. By bashing butter against the sides of a bowl, whether you're going at it with a spatula or with a stand mixer, you're folding it over and over, creating little pockets of air with every turn. Add sugar, and suddenly that process is way more effective, building up an expansive network of sugar crystals, fat, and air. In pastry-speak, this process is described as "mechanical leavening": physically cramming air into a dough so that it'll puff up in the oven like a hot-air balloon. Google around, and that's what you'll be told, time and again. Creaming adds air. Air is fluffy. Fluffy is good. Good is great. Yay, cookies! While some recipes may only ask you to cream the butter and sugar until well combined, most invoke the phrase "light and fluffy." Both techniques have merit (the former intentionally cultivating a denser dough), but here I'm gonna stick to addressing the mysteries of "light and fluffy" alone. Butter doesn't begin to melt until it reaches about 90°F, but its ability to stretch and expand during the creaming process tops out at a mere 68°F. Anything above that, and you're flirting with disaster. If your butter is creeping above 70°F, you might as well not cream at all—the warm butter won't retain any air, leading to a dense dough and collapsed cookies. The common explanation of that process suggests the benefits of creaming only kick after you pop those cookies into the oven and they puff up. Until then, all that air's just waiting around for some heat to get it going, right? Wrong. Before you even start scooping the dough, something's already happened. Something miraculous. Something no one ever tells you: Creaming just added five to ten extra cookies to the batch. The actual number of bonus cookies will vary with each recipe, but the phenomenon is very real. I start by creaming the butter and sugar together for five minutes, until everything is light and fluffy, then add an egg and beat it for a minute longer. After five minutes of creaming, the mixture will warm to about 67°F. A cold egg added at this point isn't simply convenient; it's strategic, ensuring that the butter never tops 68°F. Given the typical ratio of ingredients and the sheer power of an electric mixer, it's virtually impossible for a single large egg to break a cookie dough, so fear not. Peek into the mixing bowl, and it'll be hard to tell just how drastically I've altered my dough. Air is almost impossible to visualize, even when you're looking at it. Watching butter and sugar as they're creamed together is about as dramatic as sorting through shades of beige at Sherwin-Williams. "Snow White" sugar and "Daffodil" butter lighten to "Antique Ivory," then "Elegant Ecru," shifting colors so subtly that some part of you screams, "It's all the same!" But it's really, really not. When you first mix butter and sugar together, they have the heavy and dense texture of wet sand. After a minute of creaming at medium speed, the paste begins to feel more like clay—damp and compact, but still not very sticky. Another minute, and it begins to soften, clinging to whatever it touches. From there, the network of sugar and air continues to stretch and grow. When properly creamed, my sugar cookie dough can be divided into 26 two-tablespoon portions, weighing one ounce each. When the ingredients are simply mixed together without that creaming step, the number drops to 21, at a heavier 1.25 ounces each. And before you shrug, remember this: They're not bigger cookies, they're denser cookies. Those dense lumps behave very differently on a hot baking sheet in the oven. For starters, they conduct heat better, which means that the butter and sugar melt faster, spreading the cookies flatter and thinner. On top of that, the tightly packed dough traps the carbon dioxide produced by leavenings like baking soda and baking powder. With nowhere to go, those pockets of air don't just gently lift the cookies; they smash their way through them. Cream the butter and sugar properly, though, and the cookie dough will be loaded with micro pockets of air. That air is a poor conductor of heat, which means that it helps insulate the dough from the hot baking sheet in the oven, slowing the rate at which the butter and sugar melt. Meanwhile, those air pockets begin to swell with steam, a gentle upward draft that helps hold the dough aloft. When the cookie finally sets, the air's footprint forms its crumb. The extent to which you experience the effect of those air pockets depends on a comical number of variables. Did you use a hand mixer or a stand mixer? What was the horsepower? Did the butter come to room temperature? What is room temperature? Where do you live? Is the A/C on? How many lights are there? Ultimately, it's a game of averages. That's why so many recipes keep things vague with instructions like "room-temperature" butter or mixing until "light and fluffy" without any indication of time or temperature. By providing flexible parameters, recipes can guide you to your destination with a reasonable amount of success, while leaving you to sort out the details of your journey. Whatever your recipe, remember that creaming is a process, so it can produce a spectrum of results. You may never experience anything so dramatic as a cookie that goes splat and wrinkly or weird, but the more consistent your approach, the more consistent your finished product.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

There is a #season in everyone's life when things may #fall apart in order for even greater things to Fall together.

December has always been that month to reflect, and think back over the course of the year. A time not just to enjoy the Holidays with friends & family but a time to really re-evaluate learned lessons, encounters, and set goals. 2015 was the year to move out of an old apartment I had lived in for six years. That was it. My main goal, and I got out. To say I felt like a new person after shedding the old would be an understatement. I've thoroughly loved living downtown and what the city has had to offer. The job scene has been a bit of a challenge to me, as I've been restless in a few different positions, because I know I'm capable of doing so much more. I truly have more to offer than just the ordinary. The last three weeks have been great because I'm learning to, Be Still. God is ahead of me and knows exactly what I yearn to do, yet I had to go through the process of getting to where I am today. Even with past dead end jobs. I've still learned a lot. Nothing was ever by mistake. A few interviews in the past few weeks have proven successful. A call from a co-worker that I worked with at the first brokerage I was at, has decided to also leave that company recently, and start his own Team. It's good that I built a good relationship, and proved myself to be worthy because he has asked me to be his Office Manager. I currently work part time on the weekends at a really great restaurant in which I hope to continue enjoying. Opportunity awaits for me as I embark on this journey of life. I still have my love for the restaurant industry, since food is really my first love. I'm excited to see what this next year will bring. I figure I'll give it another shot here in the city of Atlanta. I don't believe my time here has come to an end, yet.