butter

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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

If you’ve read my blog for any amount of time, you will know that Kerrygold butter is a big part of my cooking and baking (And spreading on crackers for a snack!). Farm fresh butter, sourced from Irish farms, and other Irish dairy products such as Kerrygold’s delicious cheeses taste the best to me. When we visit Ireland, we go through gallons of milk, dozens of cups of yogurt, and multiple bars of Kerrygold butter and cheese. For my husband, it tastes like home. For me, it tastes like some of the best dairy products I have ever had.

Luckily, Kerrygold products have become fairly plentiful on this side of the Atlantic, and I was delighted to receive samples of their new naturally softer and reduced fat butters to use in a special recipe contest they are hosting.

Kerrygold butter

These new butters are for spreading and cooking, rather than baking, and before I could come up with spreadable ideas, I had to give both butters a try.

Kerrygold butter

The naturally softer butter tastes just like the regular Kerrygold gold bar of butter, only softer and creamier, perfect for spreading on multi-grain bread or crackers. And I was absolutely amazed to discover how delicious the reduced fat butter is. I normally do not do reduced fat anything, and especially reduced fat butter, but this tasted and felt like the real deal. I would not have been able to tell the difference in a taste test, and I like to think I know my butter. Winking smile 

And one thing I love to do with butter is to eat slivers of it, along with a sprinkle of salt, atop giant farmers market radishes. I have been known to make a dinner or lunch out of this, and I decided for my first use of the butter, I would make a radish butter with Kerrygold’s naturally softer version.

For this spread (which serves 2-3 as a spread for hearty bread) you will need:

2 large radishes, washed and cut into matchsticks

1/4 teaspoon salt

4 teaspoons of Kerrygold naturally softer butter (I left it out for a bit to make it even softer for mixing purposes)

 

radish

The spread is simple. Cut the radishes into “squares” by trimming off the rounded edges, then cut into even matchsticks.

radish

Set the cut up radish in a small bowl and sprinkle with salt, tossing thoroughly. Leave the radish in the salt for about 20 minutes. This gets some of the moisture out so you are not mixing butter with a ton of water.

salt

There’s no need to rinse the radish; simply drain it or use a slotted spoon to pull out the pieces, leaving the liquid to be thrown away.

radishes

In a clean bowl, use a fork to thoroughly blend salted radish and butter until a uniform consistency has been reached.

radish butter

Spread on delicious bread like this sunflower oatmeal loaf or a crusty, hot baguette (or little crostini, for a party appetizer) and prepare to enjoy a salty, sweet, crunchy, and creamy spread.

My second use of the new Kerrygold butter was inspired by one of my all time favorite dishes to make, Whiskey and Brown Sugar Salmon. This spread could be used to top hot salmon filets, but it’s sweet and tangy flavors would also be perfect on a pound cake, bread pudding, or even on a slice of bread for a treat on a cold winter night. And it can be prepared a couple of ways, either by whipping up a buttery spread, as I do below, or melted together on low in a saucepan, making more of a glaze or sauce than a spread.

For a serving for four, I used the following:

4 tablespoons Kerrygold reduced fat butter

2 tablespoons dark brown sugar

2 teaspoons Jameson Irish Whiskey

(Chopped walnuts would make a fabulous optional addition!)

brown sugar

Jameson Irish Whiskey

Again I let the butter sit out for a few minutes. It is, right off the bat, softer than bar butter, but I wanted to be able to really incorporate my ingredients.

Kerrygold butter

By hand or using a small food processor, whip the butter, brown sugar, and whiskey until soft, creamy, and a consistent light brown color throughout. Transfer into a glass or other mold, chill, and cut into desired shapes before serving.

whiskey brown sugar butter

You might be wondering if the alcohol curdled the butter at all. It did not, but it did change the consistency a little. That’s why I recommend really chilling it again or heating it all up together in a pan to make more of a buttery whiskey caramel sauce. Either way, the flavors are out of this world, and it is one of the easiest ways to add something spectacular to the everyday.

Thanks to Kerrygold for inviting me to participate in this contest and for providing the butter for me to play with. I did receive the butter free of charge, but if you know my blog, you know it’s been full of Kerrygold long before I was ever in contact with the brand!

What are your favorite ways to use butter?

Tags: butter, cooking, Food, Kerrygold, recipe, spreads, whiskey

When I was little, I HATED cabbage. That didn’t stop my mother from putting it in quite a few meals. We often ate kielbasa, cabbage, and potatoes on the grill in the summer. And then there was sauerkraut and pork (BLEH), and stuffed cabbage, or halupki as it was known in our house. I can remember the very smell of some of these dishes making me want to run for the hills. Sorry, mom!

I really can’t remember when I started to like it, but now I can’t get enough cabbage, pickled, in salads, coleslaws, braised, and all other forms. One of my favorite things about visiting Prague last winter was that there was cabbage with every meal.

The other night, still feeling awful and unable to cook or eat much, I returned to my childhood for a simple, comforting meal, cabbage and bows. I have included a real recipe at the end of the post, but I just winged it, remembering flavors over measurements.

I started with about half of a sweet Vidalia onion, chopping it into thin pieces. The onion should cook down quite a bit, so you can feel free to make it as small as you like.

Vidalia onion

My childhood cabbage and bows was made with green cabbage, but I had a purple cabbage on hand, so that is what I used.

purple cabbage

I roughly chopped up about a cup of cabbage for the pasta and ate about half a cup while chopping. Raw purple cabbage is so good!

purple cabbage

The chopped onion and cabbage get added to a generous amount of butter, Kerrygold for me, enough to coat the bottom of a frying pan. You could use something lower in fat like a butter substitute, but I wouldn’t. Butter gives this dish flavor, and it is comfort food after all!

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Back in the day, cabbage and bows was made with bowtie pasta. I also didn’t have that stocked in the cabinet, but I did have some whole wheat rotini which worked just fine.

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While the pasta cooked, I cooked the cabbage and onions down in the butter until they were nice and soft. I mixed the cabbage, onions, and butter with the finished pasta, added salt and pepper, and climbed under a pile of blankets to get some much-needed comfort.

cabbage and noodles

Do not, I repeat, do not get sick. I take pretty good care of myself, but I think I let some of the stress of all of the changes and wondering in my life right now get to me big time. 

The last time I left my house, other than to go to the doctor on Thursday, was last Tuesday. Help!

Do you have a food or foods from your childhood that you hated then and love now?

Tags: butter, cabbage, childhood recipes, comfort food, cooking, Food, onions, pasta, recipes, vegetables, Vegetarian

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