Challenges


Mustard Tart

Welcome to ‘Week 2’ of French Fridays with Dorie!! Ms. Greenspan’s pick for this week is Gèrard’s Mustard Tart… a tart tart, if you will. 😉 I must admit that when I heard the words ‘mustard’ and ‘tart’ together in the same sentence, I was a bit put off. Now, I love mustard as much as (if not more than) the next guy (especially on my fries), but I didn’t ever think it would be something I put into a tart shell.

Knowing this, I planned to present the tart to the German ‘Iron Stomach’, aka Dad. This man will eat anything… breads and cheeses with the mold cut off and week-old tuna salad to name a few. Best-buy dates mean nothing to this guy. Got leftovers from four days ago? He’ll eat ’em. Seriously, his refrigerator drawer at work looks like a nuclear waste plant. Okay, maybe that’s going a bit far, but he will eat some gross things. But, the thing that’s most odd about it, is that he doesn’t prefer to eat chicken. “It’s too bland,” he says. I know… I said he was weird. 🙂

Mustard Tart 2

But, I digress. Dorie calls for two mustards in this tart: Dijon and another of your choice. So for Dad, I chose a Düsseldorf blend. Similar to Dijon, but with a sweeter bite. And what do you know? I loved it. It was smooth with a sharp tang. Perfect with that buttery tart crust – just amazing. Dad? He loved it, too. Took it to work for lunch one day, then took the leftovers for lunch at an event a few days later (of course).

Want to make one? Then get a copy of Around My French Table today!

#2 – Gèrard’s Mustard Tart
Source: Around My French Table by Dorie Greenspan

Mustard Tart 3

Double Apple Bundt

It’s finally Fall!! Really, truly Fall. However, that could be because I’ve been in Pittsburgh for the past week and it hasn’t reached 70 degrees once! I love it! Before we packed up the Yukon and U-Haul for our business trip up North, I sliced this beautiful bundt into 12 little pieces, wrapped ’em in plastic wrap and loaded ’em up for some sweet little road-trip snacks! Perfect once you’re on your 10th (or 21st) hour on the road and ready for a treat! 🙂

The apples, spices and pecans marry together perfectly… just waiting for the cake to scream Autumn. Many thanks to Lynne of Honey Muffin for such a great choice! The recipe is featured on her blog and if you want more Double Apple Bundts, check out the other TWD bakers here!

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J & Dad

I think they liked it… especially Dad on the right! 😀

Double Apple Bundt Cake (pgs. 184-185)
Source: Baking – From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan

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Gougères

Dorie has a new book!! Dorie has a new book!! What, you haven’t heard?? Then get your hind-end to the bookstore and pick it up stat! Around My French Table is a gorgeous love story between Dorie and Paris. Page, after page, after page of beautiful photos and wonderfully written recipes, with descriptions galore, take you on a trip to France and what seems like a seat at Dorie’s table. And of course, there’s a new group to cook along with all those great recipes… French Fridays with Dorie!

Which brings me to the first recipe, the gougère. Need a quick & easy appetizer? Have unexpected guests at the door? Late arrivals to a dinner party? Then look no further. In the very first few pages, Ms. Dorie serves up one of the easiest (and yummiest) puffs I’ve ever seen. Seriously, they’re like little balls of crack. The dough cooks up quick on the stove and then is cooled in a mixer while the eggs come to room temperature. Mix ’em in (followed by the cheese) and it’s ready for the oven! Really, what’s more easier than that? 🙂

Gougères 2

Gougères 3

#1 – Gougères (pg. 4)
Source: Around My French Table by Dorie Greenspan

Many thanks to Laurie, Joel, Alison, Travis, Rachel and especially, Dorie, for making FFwD such an amazing group (with a fab website!)! Looking forward to all of the delicious recipes!!

Gougères 4

Tarte Fine

Tarte Fine… an apple tart with a pretty French name. However, if we were getting specific, it’d be a Tarte Fine aux Pommes. It leaves the oven looking as beautiful as one you’d find in a Parisian patisserie window, and it tastes as delicious as one, too. I can say that from experience since I’ve been lucky enough to visit The City of Lights. I think the reason I love this one so much is because it’s almost identical to my TWD pick, the Parisian Apple Tartlet. Sweetly brushed with an egg wash, then lovingly sprinkled with cinnamon sugar before popping in the oven, this tarte is incredibly quick & easy… and you know just how much I love those kinds of recipes. 🙂

Thank you to Leslie, of Lethally Delicious, for hosting this week’s choice. Check her blog for the how-to on making this beautiful tarte… and don’t forget the other TWD bakers here!

Tarte Fine (pg. 315)
Source: Baking – From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan

Tarte Fine 2

Jess

“I can’t deny the fact that you like me, right now, you like me!” Sally Field’s famous words were the first to come to mind when I found out that ‘My Baking Heart’ had moved on to Challenge #2 in Foodbuzz’ Project Food Blog 2010. Many, many thanks to those who took the time to vote for little ol’ me. I am incredibly honored! Get ready to vote again on Monday, September 27th – I’ll be reminding you, so keep an eye out! 😉

Project Food Blog

The 16th anniversary of my Uncle Ben’s untimely death is next month, and since I’ve been thinking about him quite a bit lately, I knew it was fitting to cook a few of the dishes that he was famous for. The recipes below are ones I’m definitely comfortable eating; heck, he fixed them almost every single time we visited (which was pretty often). However, before this challenge, I had never made them. Not even once. And since this second task calls for us to cook a regional dish that’s outside of our comfort zone, these were perfect.

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Along with my mom and dad, I sat down to enjoy these yummy dishes. We spent an hour talking about Ben and the first time that he and my parents had met. We laughed at several different memories and discussed the things that made him such a great man. He was an incredible chef (one who rarely followed a recipe), but he was also a brilliant silversmith. Uncle Ben left this world entirely too soon, but I feel that if he were here today, he would be extremely proud of this meal.

Hot & Sour Soup, Fried Rice and Chicken with Plum Sauce

Hot and Sour Soup, Szech’uan Style
Source: The People’s Republic of China Cookbook

3 dried mushrooms
Seasoning mixture:

  • Pinch of MSG
  • 3/4 tsp salt
  • 3/4 tsp thin soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp rice wine
  • 1 tbsp Chinese red vinegar
  • 1/2 tsp white pepper or 3/4 tsp Szech’uan hot bean paste

4 c chicken broth
3/4 c chicken breast, cut into shreds 2 inches long
2 tbsp canned bamboo shoots, cut into shreds 2 inches long
1 tsp water mixed with 1/2 tsp cornstarch
1/2 c cubed bean curd
1 large egg, beaten

Soak the mushrooms in warm water for 15 minutes. Drain, dry well, remove the stems and quarter the caps. Combine the ingredients for the seasoning mixture. Bring the stock to a boil in a large pot. Add the chicken and cook for about 1 minute over medium heat. Add the mushrooms and bamboo shoots. After 2 minutes, add the seasoning mixture and stir a bit. Add the cornstarch mixture and stir until the sauce is thickened. Add the bean curd and the egg. Stir several times and transfer the soup to a serving bowl. Serves 3.

~

Hot and Sour Soup

Fried Rice
Source: Ben S. & Momma G.

2 tbsp vegetable or olive oil
1/2 c onion, chopped
1-1/2 tbsp garlic powder
2 eggs
4-5 tbsp soy sauce, or more to taste
1 c peas & carrots mix, frozen
3 c steamed rice, cooled completely

Heat oil in a large skillet on medium to medium-high heat. Cook onion and garlic powder until onions are pale, about 2 minutes. Transfer cooked onions to a bowl and set aside. Add eggs to skillet and scramble. Add onions back to skillet and cook with eggs for another minute. Add rice to skillet. Mix thoroughly with onions and eggs, then add the peas & carrots mix. Pour soy sauce over rice and stir. Add a bit more oil, if needed, and continue cooking for another 3-5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Serve warm.

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Hot and Sour Soup 2

Plum Sauce
Source: Family friend, Sharon M.

1 small jar of plum jelly
1 (5 oz.) can of crushed pineapple
1-2 splashes of white vinegar
1/2 c pineapple juice
1 tbsp cornstarch

Heat all but the pineapple juice and cornstarch over low-medium heat. Stir the cornstarch into the pineapple juice, then after about 4 minutes, add to the pot to thicken. Boil until thick and clear. Serve warm on chicken.

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Here’s to you, Uncle Ben… we miss you!!

Coffee-Break Muffins

I had it all planned out. When I found out that this week’s recipe was a coffee-based muffin, I knew I’d be adding chocolate to this muffin batter. Coffee + chocolate? Of course! But guess what, I totally left it out. Completely forgot to put it in. Must of been because of the lack of caffeine I’d had that day.

Coffee-Break Muffins 2

The batter came together quickly and easily, leaving the kitchen smelling fabulous. With all that caffeine floating in the air from the brewing coffee and espresso powder, I was definitely getting my fix! And within 15 minutes, the muffins were ready to devour. So quick and easy!

Coffee-Break Muffins 3

Thank you to Rhiani of Chocoholic Anonymous for this wonderful pick! She’s featuring the recipe on her blog, so click the link above to get it! And don’t forget about those other TWD bakers listed here!

Coffee-Break Muffins (pg. 15)
Source: Baking – From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan

Coffee-Break Muffins 4

Picture this. Little ol’ me, going up against 1,900 other food bloggers from around the world for the chance at becoming the next Food Blog Star. Intimidating much? Yeah, quite a bit.

Seeing as how only 400 of us will move on to Challenge #2, I’ll need all the help I can get! 🙂 Voting starts now and runs until this Thursday, September 23rd. Pretty, pretty please spread the word, click on this link to my profile and makes those votes count!! Thank you kindly!!

Project Food Blog

My Baking Heart… a spin on what would become my new-found passion of creating yummy treats and the reason I began this blog back in January of 2008, a broken heart. The inspirations? My mom, G, and my grandmother, Mango. I wasn’t a hands-on sous chef when I was younger, but I spent quite a bit of time just watching them in their element. Chopping veggies or measuring flour, it didn’t matter. So when I forced myself to get off the couch and dry those (many) tears, the kitchen is where I headed first.

Mango & Me

Mango & Me – 1984

That kitchen pictured above? It’s the one I bake in now. And I keep that image framed & sitting on the windowsill to remind me of the wonderful times I’ve had with those two beautiful women. I’m nowhere near as amazing as they are, but hopefully, someday I will be. This blog and the recipes contained within are a labor of love – giving me a way to relieve stress, find my happy place, share the greatness that is food, and to discuss all of the above with the thousands of new friends I’ve made in the past 2-1/2 years.

Self

Same kitchen, 26 years later – Me in a fab IceMilk Apron 🙂

Even though the dining table is different and I’ve added my own touches here and there (like that gorgeous Le Creuset Dutch Oven that C gave me for our 1-year anniversary last weekend!), it still feels like those ladies are in the kitchen with me every time I bake. I continue to be amazed at the things I’ve accomplished, the opportunities I’ve been presented with and the many sweet friends I’ve made in this short amount of time. Blogging my baking adventures is more than just a hobby now… it’s second nature.

Project Food Blog

Project Food Blog is the first-ever interactive competition where thousands of Foodbuzz Featured Publishers are competing in a series of culinary blogging challenges for the chance to advance and a shot at the ultimate prize: $10,000 and a special feature on Foodbuzz.com for one year. Voting for entries on the first challenge will kick off September 20th, and contestants will be whittled down over the next 12 weeks via exciting challenges related to food blogging.

Want to help me move on to Challenge #2? Don’t forget to vote on September 20th!! 😀

Cherry Pecan Upside-Downer

My 300th post… a yummy little sponge-like cake, featuring rich and warm spices. It’s also a little color-shy. I’m sure if I had used cranberries, the cake would’ve been much brighter and cheerful looking, but when I’ve got a can of Oregon red tart cherries staring at me, what am I to do? Next time, I’ll listen to you, Dorie… I promise. Guess I can always use the excuse that “as long as it tastes great, who cares what it looks like”?

Sabrina of Superfluous is this week’s lovely host – you can find the recipe featured on her blog, but don’t forget to check out the other TWD bakers and they’re Upside-Downers, too! 🙂

Cherry Pecan Upside-Downer 2

Cherry Pecan Upside-Downer (pg. 206)
Adapted from: Baking – From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan

Peanut butter, yes. But, crisscrosses? Not so much.

Peanut Butter Crisscrosses

I’ve never been able to get a nice crisscross on my PB cookies… ever. I try and I try. I stick the dough in the fridge to firm up. I use room temperature dough. I mix the dough thoroughly and then at times, just until the flour is incorporated. Not sure exactly why they won’t come out for me. But I guess it doesn’t matter, as long as each batch keeps disappearing from the cookie jar. Right? 🙂

Big ‘ol thanks to Jasmine of Jasmine Cuisine for this week’s TWD recipe – check her site for the blog and find the other bakers here!

Peanut Butter Crisscrosses 2

Peanut Butter Crisscrosses (pg. 78)
Source: Baking – From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan

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