baking entertaining mini recipes sweets

I Am... Chocolate and Vanilla Slider Cakes

  The weather has been sunny and gorgeous and it's giving me all the fall feels. Mike and I bought some decorative gourds (because it's motherfucking decorative gourd season! Click the link, it's hilarious >_<)  and a fall themed bouquet to fall-ifize the house and it's really adding to the ambience around here. You know, you gotta have fall things, even if you're just sitting around, binge watching Netflix while eating cold pizza.

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travel

I Am... Banff National Park

It's funny, but I'm not very well traveled in terms of Canada. I've never been to Montreal, Toronto or Prince Edward Island. And until a couple of weeks ago, I had only been to Banff once, when I was very young. Mike was pretty surprised because apparently Banff is a quintessential "I'm in my early 20s" road trip for Canadians. It's far enough from Vancouver away to be a destination and close enough to be a weekend trip, making it ideal for a quick getaway.

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baking recipes sweets

I Am... Vegan Gluten Free Hazelnut Donuts

I'm a daydreamer. Sometimes I'll just sit and stare into space thinking about everything and nothing at all. Mike always asks me what I'm thinking about – usually it's nothing. There's a lot of empty sky space in my head filled with fluffy clouds. It's nice to have no thoughts at all but I try not to do it too often because really, it's just like binge watching Netflix without the bonus of having talking points with people. My headspace is calm and neutral with pops of color and thoughtful thoughts; it's kind of how Lindsey's blog, Dolly and Oatmeal is. If you haven't been over to Lindsey's space, do it! She posts dairy, gluten-free recipes that look delicious, even to my meat-eating, gluten-hoarding self. She's a sweetie, that Lindsey. And, her and her man are welcoming a baby boy! I am so, so happy for the two of them. So happy that I did something that I don't normally do: I baked something vegan and gluten-free! I cheated a bit because I used Cake in a Crate (created by the one and only My Name is Yeh!). These doughnuts are nutty, a touch sweet, and have a delightful shower of pastel sprinkles. I think they're perfect for a baby shower. Congrats Lindsey! And a big thanks to Sonja and Sara for hosting!

Vegan Gluten Free Hazelnut Donuts makes 6-8 donuts

Donuts

  • 2/3 cups raw hazelnuts
  • 1 1/4 cup gluten free flour
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2/3 cups maple syrup
  • 1/3 cup melted, but not hot coconut oil
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 2/3 cup full fat coconut milk

Chocolate Ganache Glaze

  • 3/4 cup chocolate chips
  • 2 tablespoons coconut oil
  • 1 tablespoon coconut milk
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup
  • sprinkles, if desired
via My Name is Yeh and Cake in a Crate Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease a donut pan and set aside. In a skillet, toast the hazelnuts over medium high heat, moving around every so often, until toasty, 5-8 minutes. Remove from the pan, let cool and grind in a food processor or blender until fine. In a large bowl, whisk together the hazelnuts, flour, salt, baking powder, and baking soda. In another bowl, whisk togehter the maple syrup, coconut oil, vanilla and coconut milk. Add the wet ingredients to the dry, whisking well. Pipe or spoon the batter into the donut wells and bake until a toothpick inserted into a donut comes out clean. Start checking at 15 minutes. Let cool slightly and then tip out of the pan. Repeat if you have batter left over. Let the donuts cool completely while you make the ganache glaze. Place the chocolate chips and coconut oil into a microwave safe bowl and microwave in 30 second increments, stirring each time. When chocolate is fully melted, stir in the coconut milk and maple syrup. Let cool slightly, then dip the donuts into the ganache and top with sprinkles. Enjoy!

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link love words

I Am... Friday Finds: 9.23.16

Whelp, it's officially fall. I can't complain because I love the sound of crunching leaves and crisp autumn air. The past few nights Mike and I have been getting cozy and eating spicy hot pot while binge watching Gotham. We also snuck in a few last bit of summer ice cream cones, so really, best of both worlds! Never mind the fact that I was freezing after the cone – just means I wasn't dressed properly right?

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dinner mini recipes

I Am... Mini Pizza Cookies

Do you ever have those days where you just want to lie in bed and do nothing? When you finally get out of bed everything seems grey and gloomy and you ask yourself, why did I even bother? Yeah, currently having one of those days and trying to get myself out of a funk. I've even had two coffees, which usually perks me right up. One was a hot chocolate with an espresso shot in it and not even that helped.

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10 ingredients or less 30 minutes or less dinner noodles recipe recipes Vegetarian Recipes

I Am... Burrata and Tomato Zoodles

I'm hanging on the the last vestiges of summer with tomatoes, basil and burrata. I think what I love so much about fall is the changing of the seasons. I like that last gasp of summer, with the sun gloriously warm in the afternoons, quickly cooling down to jacket wearing chilliness in the evening.

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baking brunch recipes sweets

I Am... Crunfetti: Cruffins à la Funfetti! (it’s French!)

I'm big on hype. I've talked about it before, how I get really excited about hyped-up things, only to be disappointed. Case in point: I was really looking forward to the buddy update for Pokemon Go because I thought you'd get to see your buddy next to you in the game. But no, you don't get to see Pikachu walking next to you in the game – you only get to see him when you look at your avatar. Sigh. Wouldn't Pikachu literally walking next to you have been the cutest? My world is so much more fluffy and filled with sprinkles.

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baking recipes sweets words

I Am... Birthday Wishes & Pierre Herme’s Montebello Recipe

Today is Steph's birthday and I thought I'd come out of the woodwork to say happy birthday to my beautiful wife. Every year on her birthday, I'm always super happy and hopeful that she is now old enough to visit liquor stores and not immediately asked for the ID she usually doesn't have with her. Every year though, she'll inevitably be asked to wait outside while I buy. Steph harbors a deep dark secret about birthday cakes: she desperately wants everyone she knows to buy or make her a cake on her birthday so she can eat all the cakes all at once, except that she really doesn't because it would make her fat. Each year, she's disappointed that somehow, everyone seems to coordinate and only one cake ever shows up. It's very sad in her world and I'm the one who is stuck telling her that no one can know to buy her multiple cakes unless she tells the world her dark secret, which she won't. On the other hand, my dark secret is that I'm a terrible husband and I've never gotten her a proper birthday cake. My history with Steph's birthday cakes is pretty hit or miss. The first year we hung out, she didn't have a car so she asked me to take her to this famous old Italian bakery on the most hipster street in town, where she picked up a birthday cake for her own birthday party (remember, no one knew her dark secret, until now). At that point, I wasn't cool enough to be invited to her party, so I dropped her off and went on with my business. It was cool though, I acted chill and invited her, after the party, to probably the worst birthday dinner picnic ever conceived. I bought rotisserie chicken and potato salad from a nearby grocery store, she brought a candelabra and tablecloth, and I knew of this amazing picnic spot up on a mountain overlooking the city with only one picnic table. The plan was perfect, until I realized that we both got off work after dark and Steph is incredibly, massively paranoid when its dark. As we were setting up she heard a rustling noise and was unshakeably certain that there was a serial killer hiding in the woods. At first I thought it was a joke, then realizing she was serious, I tried to tell her it was probably just the wind or a deer, but she was unconvinced. That night, we ended up eating rotisserie chicken in the car, and we haven't been back to that spot since. Year one, no cake. The next year we were officially together, and being the only person who knew her dark secret, I planned on a cake. We had flown to New York for a birthday trip. For work and cheapness reasons, we were supposed to fly home on the day of her birthday. I thought I'd have plenty of time to buy a cake on the way home from the airport. We were young, poor, and to be completely honest, not that bright, so we were scheduled to fly home out of Newark (huge mistake) and our flight ended up cancelled due to weather (Newark, I later found out, lead the nation in cancellations that year). Being stuck in NYC isn't the worst thing in the world though, and we made the best of it. I bought her a birthday Pinkberry back when Pinkberry was a new and novel thing and we ended up having dinner that night at Momofuku, where a star was born (and I don't mean David Chang), but, year two, no cake. Year after year, it goes on like that. A couple of years ago I tried to throw her a surprise party. The cover story was to spend her birthday just the two of us at a nice restaurant in town. I had help from a couple of friends but found myself again in charge of the cake. I wracked my brain thinking of the many ways to hide a cake in the fridge of a full time blogger.  Quickly realizing how misguided that idea was, I gave up and just depended on the fact that Steph thinks I'm an incredibly impulsive person. I told her I randomly bought a cake from her favorite bakery on a whim, but that we had to wait til after we got home from dinner to eat it. What I didn't count on was her begging all day to have "just a bite". I couldn't keep saying no without a good reason though, and in the end totally gave in. We cut a slice and ate it for lunch, and wound up serving a half eaten cake at the party that night. I think the only year I succeeded was the year we went to Paris for her birthday. I bought her a tiny, personal sized montebello and asked her to marry me. She finished her bite of cake first, then said yes. It was in my eyes a total cake success, but sadly, probably my only cake success in all the years we've been married. I'm pretty sure that little raspberry-topped pistachio dacquoise is forever enshrined in our memory as "our cake". This year, I told myself, was going to be different, this year was the year that she got a real cake. We had some close friends invited over for  an after dinner all night birthday cake and drinking party. Inspired by my only cake-victory, I planned to bake her the montebello we had so many years ago. I spent most of the day on the cake, chopping pistachios and making more meringue than I had ever made in my life. Once I was done, success was declared and Steph and I treated ourselves to hot pot, which is our guilty pleasure. For those who haven't experienced the joy of an asian hot pot at home dinner - write in the comments and help me convince Steph to write a blog post about hot pot, because she thinks it's too simple, but my mind was personally blown when she first made it for me. The hot pot was so good, Steph ate herself into a food coma and we ended up calling the party off. Sigh, another year, no cake. Anyway, happy birthday to the love of my life. Mike

Pierre Herme's Montebello Recipe serves 2-4

Pistachio Paste

  • 35g Pistachios
  • 30g Icing sugar
  • 20g Simple syrup (1:1 ratio of boiling water and sugar)

Pistachio Dacquoise

  • 135g Icing sugar
  • 115g Almond powder
  • 150g Egg whites
  • 50g Granulated sugar
  • 20g Pistachio paste

Italian Meringue

  • 15g Water
  • 60g Granulated sugar
  • 30g Egg whites

Buttercream

  • 35g Whole milk
  • 30g Egg yolks
  • 15g Granulated sugar
  • 150g Unsalted butter, softened
  • 70g Italian meringue (above)

Pastry Cream

  • 125g Whole milk
  • 1 tsp Vanilla extract
  • 30g Granulated sugar
  • 5g All purpose flour
  • 5g Corn starch
  • 30g Egg yolks
  • 10g Unsalted butter

Crème mousseline

  • 300g Buttercream (above)
  • 40g Pistachio paste (above)
  • 70g Pastry Cream (above)
  • Green Food Coloring
slightly adapted from daily delicious Pistachio paste: Preheat your oven to 300° F. Shell the pistachios and blanch them in boiling water for a minute or so, then drain. Peel the pistachios and place on a baking sheet. Bake for 10 minutes. Remove the nuts from the oven and combine with the icing sugar and simple syrup in a blender or food processor. Pulse until fine. Pistachio dacquoise: Preheat your oven to 340° F. Line four 4" springform pans with parchment paper and butter.  Sift almond powder and icing sugar together and set aside. Whip the egg whites and granulated sugar until a meringue forms with stiff peaks. Remove 1/2 cup of meringue and fold the pistachio paste until evenly mixed, then add it back into the main meringue mixture. Fold the almond flour and icing sugar mixture into the meringue. Pour this mixture into a piping bag with about a 1/2" tip. Pipe your mixture into the springforms and bake for 10 minutes. Once baked, let cool on wire racks and set aside. Italian meringue: Combine water and sugar and bring to a boil. When the syrup starts boiling, start whisking the egg whites, preferably in a metal bowl. Once the syrup reaches 243° F slowly add it to the egg whites. Continue whisking until the bowl feels cool to the touch. Buttercream: Microwave your milk until boiling (about 30 seconds in a 1000w microwave). Combine egg yolks and sugar in a saucepan. While stirring, pour the hot milk into your egg mixture. Over very low heat, bring your egg mixture to 180° F, stirring all the time. Be careful not to scramble the egg yolks. Once the mixture has reached 180° F, remove from heat and let cool. Beat in the butter. Fold the italian meringue in, and set aside. Pastry cream: Microwave your milk until boiling (see above). Mix egg yolks, flour, corn starch, sugar, and vanilla in a large saucepan. While stirring, pour the milk into the egg mixture. Over very low heat, bring your egg mixture to 180° F, stirring all the time. Be careful not to scramble the egg yolks. Once the mixture has reached 180° F, remove from heat beat in the butter. Let cool and set aside. Crème mousseline and final assembly: Combine buttercream, pastry cream, pistachio paste, and food coloring until smooth. Pour the mixture into a large piping bag. Pipe the crème mousseline over top of the pistachio dacquoise, then top with raspberries (if in season) or strawberry and chopped pistachios.

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baking brunch mini recipes sweets

I Am... Mini Dorayaki with Azuki Bean

Growing up, sweet red bean paste was one of my favorite treats. I especially loved the flower shaped buns, hot and fluffy from the Chinese bakery, glistening with egg wash, dotted with a couple of cursory sesame seeds, filled to the brim with creamy, sweet red bean paste. For some reason, I don't remember red bean paste being very popular back then. It probably had something to do with the color: deep, dark burnished amber, almost flirting with black.

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link love words

I Am... Friday Finds: 9.2.16

I've got that summertime, summertime sadness, but not really. I kinda feel like I should be feeling the end of summer something hard over here, but, really, how can I complain? Autumn happens to be my all time favorite season. Bring on the crisp and chilly mornings, afternoon sun, and scarves! To be honest, I really love the tail end of summer into early fall.

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cookie recipes how to

I Am... How to Make Galaxy Glaze

I have a very obsessive personality. I can fixate on one thing for hours and hours, days, even weeks. Lately it's been galaxy donuts. I could spend hours looking at their delicious, glossy glaze. That mix of blues and purples with sparkly silver...swoon. I've been going down an internet/instagram hole of galaxy things, so much so that every time Mike looks over at what I'm doing, it's inevitably galaxy related. I wanted to give galaxy glaze a try but didn't want to make donuts, so I came up with the brilliant idea of glazing some oreo thins. I thought it would be relatively simple, especially because I googled the heck out of it. But it turns out, even if a website boasts that they know the key to galaxy glaze, they most probably don't. Most of the sites I ended up on had a picture of the donuts that I wanted to make, but then, at the end of the page, they'd show their pathetic, unattractive and very un-galaxy like donut glazing attempts. Lesson learned friends: don't just drop food coloring into a bowl of icing thinking it'll end up as a gorgeous galaxy. I had quite a few sad oreos before Mike took pity on me and told me he'd figure it out. Mike's exceptionally good at color theory (he is a designer, after all) and after a quick experiment, we were churning out galaxy oreos like there was no tomorrow. This galaxy glaze is seriously out of this world fun. Chat soon, I'm going out to buy a bunch of things I can randomly galaxy glaze! xoxo steph galaxy cookies to go with galaxy hair >_<  

How to Make Galaxy Glaze makes about 1 cup glaze
  • 1 cup icing sugar
  • 1.5-2 tablespoons milk
  • gel food coloring of choice*
  • edible glitter, if desired
  • foods to glaze
Inspired by @h.rebel This is a standard donut glaze that will glaze just about anything: donuts, cookies, cakes. Like most icing sugar based glazes, it will harden over time. I used Americolor gel colors in navy blue, red red, and maroon. I also used a bit of silver pearl dust for that extra bit of shimmer. Mix the icing sugar and milk together until smooth. Spoon a bit of icing out into a separate bowl and keep it white. Tint your base with just a bit of food coloring – you want it to be very pale, with just a hint of hue. Mix well. Drop on 2 drops of blue and one drop of red and using a chopstick or skewer, drag the color back and forth in one direction, not quite mixing it together, but creating streaks of color. Dribble some of the white icing back on top. With a smooth swooshing motion, dip your cookie or donut into the surface of the glaze, pulling it along the surface to achieve streaks. Let the excess drip off and place on a plate to let dry. Dust with glitter, if desired. From time to time, add more white icing to the bowl to ensure the galaxy effect.
 

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breakfast brunch camp food dinner easy

I Am... Camp Cooking: Hot Dog Jalapeno Hash

Hot dogs are a must when camping. I love roasting them over the fire – they get smoky, snappy and are the epitome of outdoor cooking. And to be honest, I love hot dogs period, no matter how they're prepared. I love them so much that I don't have a problem having them for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

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