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Staying true to my goal to bake something once a week, I decided that I would whip up some brown butter chocolate chips cookies. I poked around the internet for awhile and decided to try this recipe. Excited to sink my teeth into some chocolate-y, buttery cookies, I got started pulling my ingredients together.

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The recipe called for a cup of brown sugar, which I was excited about. I love the flavors brown sugar adds to a cookie. Once I had the sugar measured, I got to work browning some Kerrygold butter.

Mmmmm is there anything better than brown butter? I may have dipped a few crackers in it before I mixed it with the sugar. My great grandfather used to eat a bowl of browned butter and a half loaf of bread for breakfast. He was skinny and lived until 96, so butter must have magical healthy powers, right? Or maybe it’s the fact that he did hard, manual labor instead of sitting in front of a computer all day. I guess it’s all about balance. Winking smile

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The brown butter and brown sugar gave the cookie dough a lovely golden color, and despite the raw eggs, I had to give it a try. Cookie dough is just so good. Did you used to sample it when you were a kid? My favorite thing was licking the cake batter beaters.

When I got to the point where I had to add the chocolate chips, I realized that the dark chocolate chips I had saved for a delicious recipe had been a casualty of the massive mouse sighting cleaning spree. I threw away basically anything that was previously opened. No chocolate chips? Not really a problem. My chocolate chip cookies turned into regular old brown butter cookies.

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The cookie dough needed to be chilled for at least an hour, so I got all of my cleanup done in that time. I used to be pretty good about cleaning up, but that was pre-mouse sighting. Post-mouse, I am a crazy lady, spraying disinfectant everywhere and blasting surfaces with boiling water. I want to send a message loud and clear that he is not welcome. I may end up poisoning us in the process, but something needs to be done.

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Once the dough had chilled, I used a spoon to make uniform size cookies and was, for once, successful. Sometimes by the time the actual baking phase of baking happens, I just want to get it done, and don’t measure servings out very well. These cookies bake really quickly and would have been even faster if I made them smaller and flatter. I tend to make cake cookies, but these would be great flat and crispy. They came out delicious, very buttery, as expected, with a nice flavor from the vanilla. They were soft and cake-like, fairly plain, and kind of perfect for my not-too-sweet palate. I am sure they are amazing with the chocolate chips, and I will plan on adding them to my Christmas cookie baking. I’ll likely bake some with and without chips in case I encounter anyone who doesn’t like chocolate!

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Have you had to unexpectedly change a recipe due to lack of ingredients or time?

 

I used the below recipe for Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies. Too bad the mouse fear ruined the chocolate chip part. Winking smile

Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies from About.com

Ingredients:
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, browned and slightly cooled*
  • 1 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1/3 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 large egg yolk
  • 2 tablespoons light cream, evaporated milk, or milk
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
Preparation:

*To brown butter, , heat in a saucepan over medium heat until the butter begins to simmer. Continue cooking, stirring, just until butter begins to turn golden brown, about 4 to 5 minutes. Pour off into a measuring cup or bowl, leaving darkest sediment behind. Let the butter cool to room temperature.

In a large mixing bowl with electric mixer, beat the browned butter and sugars until light and fluffy. Add egg and egg yolk, milk, and vanilla. Beat on low speed until well blended.

In a separate bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, and salt. Gradually add the dry ingredients to the egg and butter mixture, mixing on low speed, until a soft dough forms. Scrape the bowl a few times. Stir in the chocolate chips. Cover and chill for about an hour.

Heat the oven to 375°. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper or a silicone mat; spray paper with cooking spray. Using a cookie scoop, drop balls of dough onto the silicone mat or greased parchment, allowing about 2 to 3 inches in between the cookies.

Bake for 6 to 10 minutes, until browned around the edges. Cool completely and transfer to an airtight container for storage.

Makes about 4 dozen cookies, depending on size.

Tags: baking, butter, cookies, dessert, Food, recipe

The Wine & Food Affair cookbook, in just a couple of months, has provided me with a ton of cooking inspiration. I love sitting in bed and paging through it’s colorful recipes and wine pairings  (tell me you do this too. . . ). Maybe it’s because so many of the wineries in the book evoke vacation memories of places I would rather be. Maybe it’s that I love a good food and wine pairing, or, even better, love wine IN food and pairing that food with wine. Whatever the attraction, this cookbook keeps coming out, and it was a rustic cassoulet recipe that inspired me this week. As always, I made adjustments based on what we had in the house. We missed our weekly grocery shopping trip this week, and since we are going away soon are trying not to stock up on too much.

white beans

I started my cassoulet by soaking a 16 ounce bag of Great Northern beans overnight. I had them on the stove, with a lid on, which is how I always soak beans. UNTIL this Monday. Toward the end of my work day I walked into the kitchen to make a cup of tea. . . and a mouse ran across the room. Mice and rats are my major, major, major phobia, and I have been afraid to leave any food anywhere since. I actually didn’t even want to cook at all. We had the cleaners come in, set traps, got those ultra-sonic plug in things. You would think the two cats would have done something! Anyway, I had a terrible fear that somehow I would find a mouse in the beans a la Anne of Green Gables and the plum pudding sauce, but these beans were fine. I just won’t be leaving them out to soak ever again.

onions and garlic

When it was time to get cooking, I put on some Harry Connick Jr. Christmas music and got the beans boiling on the back burner while I crushed a couple of cloves of garlic and roughly chopped a yellow onion. I also roughly chopped three slices of regular old breakfast bacon. I would have preferred to use Irish bacon, but again, using up food in the house was a priority.

bacon

I added the bacon and onion to some olive oil and got it all sizzling, then lowered the heat and added the garlic a few minutes later. To that I added about three cups of chopped carrots and a package of chicken apple sausage. I am loving chicken sausage these days; it’s so delicious and such an easy way to add protein to a dish.

cassoulet

I spooned in several cups of beans and then poured in two cups of chicken stock and one cup of Amista Zinfandel. The rest of the Zinfandel? You guessed it, the perfect wine pairing for the cassoulet.

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Before I put the lid to the French oven on, I added a sprinkle of thyme and some ground black pepper, lowered the heat to almost nothing, and let it go for about 45 minutes. Yes, this is one of the huge perks of working from home. I was able to get this started and then go back to work, something I definitely will never take for granted.

thyme

We didn’t end up eating for several hours, so the cassoulet had a ton of time to come together, the flavors of all of the ingredients really all working well. This dish tasted like a cozy winter night; the addition of a slightly jammy, slightly spicy Zinfandel on the side and a dessert of brown butter cookies rounding out the perfect evening. It helped take the edge off of the early darkness!

cassoulet

I love one pot dishes like this cassoulet. They feel so stick-to-your-ribs but also kind of healthy. I’ll be making this one again, that’s for sure.

In the meantime, I am walking around my house with a running dust buster and making as much noise as possible to keep our mouse at bay. And not sleeping at all. Small animals (including squirrels) terrify me. Do you have a major phobia?

Tags: chicken sausage, dinner, Food, recipe, wine, winter cooking

I had a great meal planned for last night. Slow cooked ginger scallion pork was to be turned into pan fried dumplings with crunchy sesame cabbage. That dish will happen, perhaps tonight. But the two of us were so under the weather, that even the thought of the smell of the pork made me want to faint. I didn’t feel like eating anything with meat in it, and my poor husband could not fathom the thought of food at all. So instead of making cute little dumplings, I instead dug into my Wine & Food Affair cook book once again, and came out inspired by a recipe for ratatouille with lemon pepper polenta.

I decided to make it with lemon pepper quinoa and veered off on my own, making a massive pot of food that will be good for us, once our appetites are back. In the interest of full disclosure, I should tell you that while I was cooking, I may have snacked on a Syrah chocolate cupcake and ruined my appetite for dinner. The fudgy goodness was worth it.

ratatouille

My ratatouille was a simple mix of chopped eggplant, zucchini, and red pepper, a bunch of dried herbs and spices, and a can of diced tomatoes, juice and all.

canned tomatoes

Since I abhor eggplant that is not cooked all the way through, I started it sizzling by itself in my Le Creuset French oven, coated by a generous drizzle of olive oil. As you would imagine, the eggplant started soaking up the oil, and after awhile, I just had to add some wine, leftover Syrah from the cupcakes. Wine always comes in handy.

eggplant

I cooked and cooked the eggplant, then poured in the tomatoes and cooked it for about 20 more minutes, slowly adding dried oregano, garlic powder, and this Napa Valley herb mix that includes lavender and dried lemon peel.

dried herbs

I added in the zucchini and peppers, stirred it up, and then let it simmer for 30 more minutes. Somehow, the eggplant still was not cooked enough for my liking!

ratatouille

While the ratatouille simmered, I started on my quinoa. I simply made it according to the package directions, then, at the end of cooking, added the juice of one juicy lemon and about a teaspoon of freshly ground black pepper.

quinoa

I served a ladle of the ratatouille atop the peppery quinoa and garnished it generously, very generously with kalamata olives. I could eat olives with everything. These kalamatas from Mezzetta are incredible.

kalamata olives

There you have it, my Meatless Monday meal. It was nice to get a bunch of veggies and grains in. Fingers crossed I will not follow suit with the rest of my family and many of our friends who have been stricken with the stomach flu. I will stick with a regular old sniffles, cough, aches and pains flu, thankyouverymuch.

Do you actively participate in Meatless Monday? Or just often find yourself eating vegetarian after big weekends meals?

Tags: eggplant, healthy, Meatless Monday, quinoa, recipe, Syrah, vegetables, Vegetarian, wine

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