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Showing posts with label brownies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brownies. Show all posts

Sunday, January 8, 2017

Chewy Fudge Brownies sans Chocolate, Butter, and Leavening Agent...



I'm really amazed these brownies work. There's no chocolate, no butter, no melting together of the ingredients in a bain-marie... there's not even any leavening, but they work!

I love a fudgy, chewy, dense brownie. I also love recipes that require very little planning ahead to get the ingredients ready (at least, when I'm working with the limited storage space of my tiny apartment-kitchen rather than the spacious home-kitchen where I can comfortably keep a huge arsenal of rarely-used substances) so this was a very nice recipe for me to find.


I didn't use any chocolate chips and instead doubled up on walnuts, because I love walnuts in almost everything and didn't feel like going out to buy chocolate. I add a bit of Kahlua instead of coffee to the liquid components, which is not necessary but it's really hard to go wrong with a touch of booze in any baked good.


When you have a limited variety of ingredients and/or equipment, this is an amazing way to still get your brownie fix. One important note: since there's no butter contributing flavour, it's extra important to use good cocoa powder.

Chewy Fudge Brownies

Adapted from King Arthur Flour

2/3 C. Cocoa
1 1/4 C. Sugar, or 1 C. sugar and 1/4 C. brown sugar
1/2 C. Powder sugar
1 Tsp. Salt
1 C. All purpose flour
2 TBSP Instant coffee powder or 1 TBSP espresso powder (optional)
1-2 C. Walnut, pecan and/or chocolate pieces
1/2 C. Neutral flavoured oil (I used canola)
3 TBSP Kahlua (or strong coffee)
3 Tsp. Vanilla extract
3 Eggs

Preheat oven to 180℃. Grease and line an 8'' x 8'' pan with baking parchment.

Whisk together the eggs, oil and normal sugar until relatively smooth (sugar will still be grainy). Add Kahlua/coffee, vanilla, and instant coffee/espresso powder (if using).

Separately, sift or whisk together the flour, powder sugar, salt and cocoa. Add the liquid ingredients and mix until homogeneous with a large spoon. Add nuts and/or chocolate.

Pour into pan and spread evenly, and bake for 45-55 minutes. Remove and let cool at least an hour before removing from the pan and cutting.


Saturday, August 6, 2016

White Chocolate Blondies with Matcha Swirls



This recipe was really, really popular at my lab. I was surprised myself with how good they were- you don't even need to do the usual brownie/blondie-making step of dissolving the eggs in the butter over boiling water. Instead, you use a can of sweetened condensed milk to give a nice, chewy texture. I love white chocolate in almost everything, and this a great way to showcase the flavour of a high-quality white chocolate.

I added matcha powder in a pretty swirly-pattern on top so that there'd be a little bitterness to balance out the intense sweetness. You can also use earl grey tea, cocoa or expresso powder to the same effect. You can also just skip the swirl and top with some powdered sugar.


White Chocolate Blondies with Matcha Swirls
From Broma Bakery

115 g. (1/2 C.) Butter
1 C. White chocolate, chopped (or good quality chips or pieces)
1 Egg
1 Can (14 Oz.) Sweetened condensed milk
2-3 Tsp. Vanilla extract
1/2-1 Tsp. Salt
1 1/2 C. All purpose or pastry flour
1 Tsp. Matcha powder

Preheat oven to 180℃. Grease and line an 8"x 8" or 9"x13" pan with buttered baking parchment.

Melt the butter in a microwaveable bowl or in a bain-marie and add the white chocolate. Heat until both are dissolved.

Let cool until just warm when the side of the bowl is touched. Whisk in the egg, sweetened condensed milk, vanilla and salt.

Sift in the flour. Separate 1/4 of the batter and whisk in the matcha powder. Pour the plain batter into the pan first, then spoon 4-5 blobs of the matcha batter over the top and swirl with a fork, knife or chopstick until a nice swirly pattern forms.

Bake for 30-35 minutes, then remove and let cool at least 15 minutes before removing from the pan.

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Fantastic Brownies


This will mark my first baked good in my temporary new home, a nice apartment not far from where I'll be torturing Caenorhabditis elegans with toxic molecules (for science!) for the next 4 months. As excited as I am about doing my first real research, I'm also looking forward to many baking projects.

Now, about the brownies. Holy crow. They're fantastic (as the name suggests). I was looking for a recipe that used a lot of dark chocolate, as I had a 90% Ritter Sport Extrafino Dark chocolate and I collect the wrappers of that brand. I also had some 70% dark chocolate, milk chocolate and white chocolate, all slightly mushy from the heat in my recent move with it. So I added tons of chocolate chunks, some walnuts, and a bit of espresso powder and vanilla to play up the flavours in the chocolate. I added a little baking soda that wasn't in the original recipe to make it puff up nicely, but you can omit it for a flatter, denser brownie.


My favourite parts are the crisp, crusty outer bits, giving you a nice handle with which to dunk them into milk. Make sure you whip the batter real good to develop that shiny crust!

Fantastic Brownies
Adapted from Technicolor Kitchen
100 g Extra dark chocolate (70-90%), in pieces
50 g Semisweet chocolate (50%), in pieces
5 TBSP (70g) Butter
3/4 cup (150g) sugar
2 Eggs, large
1 Tsp. Vanilla extract or paste
1/3 cup (47g) All purpose flour
1/2 Tsp. Espresso powder
1/4 Tsp. Salt
1/2 Tsp. Baking soda, optional
200 g. Mixed chocolate pieces and nuts (I used bittersweet, milk and white chocolate along with walnuts)

Preheat oven to 160ºC. Line a 8" square baking pan with foil and grease.

Set a heatproof bowl over a saucepan of simmering water. Melt the butter and add the dark and semisweet chocolate, mixing until completely melted.

Whisk in the sugar, followed by each egg one by one. Beat well at this stage to develop the trademark crinkly crust.

Remove from heat. Add the vanilla and sift in the flour, salt, baking soda and espresso powder. Mix in the nuts and chocolate pieces and immediately pour into the pan, spreading the top evenly with a spatula.

Bake the brownies for 30-35 minutes or until the top is dull and crackly. When cool, lift up the foil by the sides to remove. Cut into squares.

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Vegan/Gluten-Free Black Bean Brownies


I normally avoid "healthy" adaptions of baked goods like the plague, on the grounds that they're usually only marginally better for you in reality, or not worth eating after the sheer amount of change to the original recipe making them a veritable Frankenstein of the trendy superfoods-du-jour. Or both. I especially abhor "skinny" versions of recipes for many reasons, mostly coming down to my hatred for the prevalent thinness-obsessed culture. But I digress! Healthy recipes are certainly a good thing, provided that a) they're supposed to be that way and not merely butcherings of classic recipes with less fat/sugar/more kale n' quinoa and b) actually taste good!

I was very suspicious of the idea of a healthy brownie from the start, but the thing about these is, I trust the presence of black beans to be a good idea. After all, I love all kinds of bean-filled sweets. Anko paste in mochi, red bean fritters and mooncakes, mung beans and black-eyed peas as well. I've even read some european recipes using white beans as a peasant-friendly, economical filler ingredient, and I hope to try that one day as well. A brownie with black beans didn't seem like such a bad idea, especially if it was promised to be moist and fudgey (my preferred state of brownie).


These are far from one-trick ponies. They don't only have the protein kick of black beans (and the fibre!) but also are both vegan and gluten-free. You can easily make them without nuts, too. The cocoa powder completely replacing flour makes them very chocolatey despite the absence of actual chocolate. The flaxseed binding them in the place of egg adds omega-3s to the mix. They're very accommodating to unrefined sugar, too. You can really use any oil you like to bake with- but a nut oil is the best in my opinion. I used almond. Along with the walnuts, they ensure that these brownies are moistened with only the healthiest of lipids.


And they really are nice and moist! While not really much like a typical brownie, they've got a nice chocolatey taste and go down great with a cup of tea. I won't be stopping my search for the perfect (butter-containing) brownie anytime soon, but these are going to the permanent collection of recipes-to-return-to. Even if you're skeptical, try them out- they're definitely tastier than a protein bar and far cheaper to make. It's good for you and tasty. Fantastic.

Black Bean Brownies
Adapted from Minimalist Baker

1 3/4 C. Cooked black beans, drained and rinsed if from a can
3/4 C. Cocoa powder
2 TBSP Ground flaxseed
5 TBSP Water
3 TBSP Coconut oil, or other favoured vegetable/nut oil (e.g. walnut, almond)
1/4 Tsp. Salt
1 Tsp. Vanilla
1/2 C. Fine raw cane sugar 
1 TBSP Agave syrup
1 1/2 Tsp. Baking powder
1/3 C. Walnut pieces, or chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 180℃.

Line a muffin tray with paper cups, or grease with oil. Combine water and flaxseed in food processor and let sit about 10 minutes.

Add the remaining ingredients (except for the toppings) and blend well. Make sure there's no bean pieces left whole. You might want to add a tablespoon or two of water if it is too sticky.

Distribute between muffin cups with a spoon. Push any nuts or chips into the top with a spoon. Bake for about 25 minutes.

Let cool in pan for half an hour before removing.