Rustic Sweet Onion Tart

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I was a childhood cooking-show junkie. On sick days at home, while other children would spend their days watching music videos on MTV and “You Can’t Do That on Television” on Nickelodeon, I watched PBS. Hours spent watching Jeff Smith, Martin Yan, Justin Wilson and “The Great Chefs” series. “The Great Chefs” series made me want to become a chef; Martin Yan made me want to be an entertainer, and Justin Wilson just reminded me of my family (not at all cajun but they were a bit of a wacky southern group).

I hated most vegetables though, so I would watch the cooks make recipe after recipe looking for something wonderful that was free of onions, tomatoes, celery and peppers. There was a show I cannot remember the name of with a cook whose name and face are a distant memory; I distinctly remember watching him make a chicken fricassee. It looked so good, and I remember thinking that I would eat it, regardless of onions or no onions. Watching him make this dish made me realize that if I wanted to be a professional cook, that I was going to have to eat the things I did not like.

I’ve written before about teaching myself to like vegetables, one vegetable at a time, by learning how to properly prepare each one. To like onions, I started by teaching myself to make good caramelized onions; not just browned onions, but good and properly melty, gooey, sweet and sticky caramelized onions. Once I had that down, I was in love. Onions show up in just about everything of mine. I think my childhood self would H-A-T-E having me as their parent; and I think I would get really annoyed with my childhood self because the little brat wouldn’t eat anything I made for her. While not little kid-friendly, this tart will agree with older kids and pretty much everyone else. Sweet Vidalia onions, which are in season right now, are the onion of choice, but other sweet onions will work as well.

This recipe is all about balancing flavors. The sweet onions are balanced by briny feta, tangy balsamic vinegar, spicy black pepper and herby thyme. The crust is part of the flavor, not just a shell to hold it. It becomes part of the whole picture, so don’t cut corners and use a pre-made crust. The crust can be a little crumbly, but a rustic look works here, so just work with it until you have a roundish shape and it’s okay if it isn’t perfect; because that is perfect. Enjoy!

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Caramelized Onion Tart with Feta and Balsamic
Serves 6

This tart is a fantastic snack, but also makes a wonderful meal when paired with a salad. I love the sheen of the egg wash on the crust, but you could easily leave that out to make this egg free.

1 Recipe Savory Pastry Dough
2 pounds Vidalia Onion (or other sweet onion)
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon fresh thyme, plus another 1/2 teaspoon to garnish
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
2 ounces feta cheese, crumbled
1 egg yolk

Peel the onions and slice very thin; I used a food processor. Heat olive oil in a large skillet with a lid over medium-high heat. When the oil starts to shimmer add the onions and salt. Cover the onions and let cook until they release their liquid, about five minutes, stirring occasionally.

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Uncover and reduce heat to medium-low. Cook slowly, stirring frequently until evenly brown and greatly reduced; about another 25 minutes.

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Add the thyme and balsamic vinegar and cook another two minutes to let the thyme release its flavor. Remove from heat and allow to cool.

Preheat oven to 375. Roll out the dough to form a roughly 15 inch circle.

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Transfer the dough to a piece of parchment paper and spread the onion in a 12 inch circle in the middle of the dough. Sprinkle the feta on to the exposed onion filling.

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Turn the edges of the dough over, tucking under any uneven edges to form a 1 1/2 inch edge over the top of the onion filling.

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Brush the edges with a light coating of egg wash. Move the tart to a baking pan and bake for 30 minutes or until the crust is a nice even brown. Remove from oven and allow to cool for five minutes. Serve warm or room temperature.

Banana Bread Pancakes

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Before I even begin to tell you about this week’s post, I have exciting news to share with you.

It’s Not Easy Eating Green is now part of the Cooking Light Bloggers’ Connection. Joining this community of talented bloggers is a huge honor, and I am delighted that It’s Not Easy Eating Green was chosen to be part of this group.

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Two years ago, when I first quit my job to stay at home with Little Guy I went through a phase where I did not know quite what to do. After two years of working long hours and then coming home to take care of my family, I found myself lost in a sea of free time. Eventually I started this blog that was not only satisfying, but it also filled my time nicely and kept me thinking.

I had tried rigorous house cleaning (which is really funny if you know just how much I cannot stand cleaning house), and then I settled in to cooking – a lot! Those first few months I found myself making banana bread all the time. I cooked loaf after loaf (and yes, I gained a few pounds those months). Slowly a recipe emerged which I deemed healthy yet tasty enough to eat without loads of butter. I published that recipe on Food.com and it still can be found there. More importantly, it was the beginning of my journey to take my family from too many convenience foods to homemade and wholesome, earth-friendly foods.

Fast forward two years. I don’t bake banana bread anymore. It’s not that I have anything against banana bread, but I have a personal goal to be the healthiest I’ve ever been when I turn 40 this year. While I certainly don’t deprive myself of anything, I do try to control my access to foods I know I’ll overeat, like baked goods. These days I avoid making a whole loaf of banana bread, which is likely to become nothing more than a prolonged, gluttonous, banana-bread-eating frenzy. Instead, I opt for making smaller portions of things, or different versions.

Maybe its a dream of slathering on gobs of butter, or addictive sweet flavor, but banana bread is on my mind a lot lately. Not wanting to give in to my evil carb-loving sugar cravings, I decided to turn my banana-bread fixation into something more useful; a new recipe. Starting with my banana bread recipe and tweaking it, I came up with banana nut bread pancakes. They taste just like a super moist banana bread, but with less sugar and they are gone in one meal with nothing to gorge on later. I’m safe!

Beside these pancakes there are two other pancake recipes I make frequently. One is the Whole Wheat Blueberry Pancakes which I posted ages ago (my fifth post of all time so if you click the link ignore the terrible photography). The other is the spelt pancakes from The King Arthur Flour Whole Grain Baking cookbook.

I highly recommend both. My banana bread pancakes borrows ideas from both recipes. As in the yogurt pancakes, I use yogurt to add acid and flavor to the cakes. This replaces the buttermilk in my original banana bread recipe. From the King Arthur pancakes recipe I take the spelt flour. Spelt flour makes the best pancakes I have ever had. You can get it anywhere they sell Bob’s Red Mill products, and I buy it by the case! You do need to let spelt flour sit for awhile before cooking so that it has time to absorb the liquid.

One of the biggest advantages to making banana bread as pancakes is that if part of your family likes nuts, and the other part does not, you can add nuts only to the pancakes of the nut lovers. That means I get my nuts, and Hubby doesn’t have to suffer the nutty pancakes that he hates!

My life is full of things to do, and there is certainly no excess time to schedule cleaning my house, but I’m happy knowing I can still enjoy banana bread, one meal at a time. Enjoy!

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Banana Bread Pancakes
makes 12-5 inch pancakes

These super moist pancakes need to cook longer and at a lower temperature than normal pancakes. Keep your pan on medium-low and let them stay on the griddle as long as possible without letting them get too dark. Use only two bananas if you prefer a drier texture.

1 1/2 cups spelt flour
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 cup non-fat Greek yogurt
1 cup milk (I use low fat)
2 eggs
2 tablespoons butter, melted and cooled slightly
3 ripe bananas
2 teaspoons vanilla
3/4 cup chopped pecans or walnuts (optional)

In one bowl combine flour, salt, baking soda and baking powder. Set aside.

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In a large mixing bowl, mash the bananas.

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Add the yogurt, brown sugar,  milk, vanilla, eggs and butter.

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Stir in the flour mixture.

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Let the pancake batter rest for 15 minutes to allow the spelt flour to expand and soften.

While the batter is resting, toast the chopped nuts (if using) in a 400 degree oven for four minutes (I use a toaster oven set to the light toast setting, stirring the nuts twice during the time. After 15 minutes of resting, the batter will be thick. Heat a large skillet or griddle on medium-low heat. Brush with oil or spray with non-stick cooking spray. Pour the pancake batter onto the hot griddle in about 1/3 cup circles.

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Allow to cook until the bubbles break and do not re-fill and the edges start to dry slightly.

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If you are using nuts, sprinkle a tablespoon of nuts on the pancake before flipping.

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Use a large spatula to flip the pancakes over. Cook for about an additional three minutes or until the bottom is deep brown but not burned. Keep warm in an oven until ready to serve. Serve with syrup and additional toasted nuts.

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Foxboro Cheese and Sundried Tomato and Spinach Turnovers

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Places like Lawton Family Farm are hard to find these days.

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Sorry for the image quality; I took this on my first trip with my cell phone.

They are even harder to find in the shadow of an NFL stadium. (This is not the best picture. The brown building behind the first row of trees is the farm, and behind that you can see the top deck of Gillette Stadium. It is a lot closer than this picture makes it look, the cows can probably make out the play-by-play).

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It seems impossible that this farm is churning out hormone and antibiotic free raw milk and cheese in a barn that was built in 1832.

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This is the type of place you see driving through the tiny towns of Vermont, not suburban Boston. Their small store sells their own raw milk (by order only), cheese, meats and other Massachusetts products.

I discovered this little gem at local farmers markets. They always bring samples of their Asaigo and Fromage Blanc cheeses for all to taste, and they are good. If you are unfamiliar with Fromage Blanc, like I was, it’s a fresh cheese similar to cream cheese, but with less fat and cholesterol. It’s much more common in Europe and is frequently eaten sweetened for breakfast much in the way we eat yogurt. You can cook with Fromage Blanc too. I think it cooks up a little nicer than cream cheese. These turnovers are the perfect example of how good it is cooked; the cheese flavor is subtle compared to the other flavors, but still distinct.

I’m always annoyed when a food trend fades from style. Usually it’s a food trend because it tastes good (not always). Sun-dried tomatoes were the gem of every foodie’s eye forever it seemed. Now days they are usually only found stuffing bad banquet chicken at your cousin Selma’s wedding. It’s a shame too because they taste good and are a nice way to get your tomato kick in the dead of winter. That’s how I use them here. Mixed with just a touch of basil and a bunch of cheese and spinach, they are almost like an Italian take on spanokopita. The finished product is a turnover that is perfect for any occasion. They freeze very well. I made up several batches when developing this recipe and froze them after I formed the turnover but before baking them. I then bake them frozen and they turn out wonderful. Enjoy!

Oh, and if you are in the Foxboro, MA area and want to stop by Lawtons Family Farm, bring cash and don’t expect much in the way of interaction. You come, you buy, you leave.

Lawtons Family Farm
70 North St., Foxboro, Mass.
Tel. 508-543-6460

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Spinach and Sun-dried Tomato Turnovers
makes about 36 turnovers
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 shallot, minced, about 1/4 cup
4 packed cups baby spinach (about 4 ounces)
1/2 cup basil leaves, finely chopped
1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes, finely chopped (about 2 1/2 ounces)
1/2 cup Fromage Blanc (or cream cheese) about 4 ounces
1 1/2 oz Asiago (or Parmesan), grated
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon finely ground black pepper
1 recipe Savory Whole Wheat Pastry Dough (below)

1 egg for egg wash to brush over the top of the turnovers

Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add shallot and cook until translucent, about five minutes.

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Add spinach and basil, and cook until the spinach is thoroughly wilted.

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In a medium bowl combine spinach mixture, sun-dried tomatoes, Fromage Blanc, Asiago, salt and pepper. Taste the filling and adjust seasonings to taste. Let completely cool before filling turnovers.

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Heat oven to 350 degrees. Roll pastry dough out to 1/4″ thickness. To form the turnovers, you can cut circles out of the dough with a 3″ biscuit cutter or you can roll half of the dough into a long rectangle and use a ravioli mold. Spoon 1/2 tablespoon (about 1 1/2 teaspoons) of filling into the center or each turnover.

If you are using the ravioli form, roll out the second half of the dough and place over the top using your fingers or a rolling pin (depending on how to use your ravioli form). If you are using the biscuit cutter, fold the dough over the top of the filling to form a half-moon. Use a fork to crimp the edges.

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Using a biscuit cutter to make the turnovers

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Using a ravioli form to make turnovers
Place the turnovers on a baking sheet. Beat the egg with two tablespoons of water and brush over the top of the turnovers.

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Bake for 15-20 minutes or until the edges of the turnovers are starting to brown. Serve warm.

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Savory Whole Wheat Pastry Dough
1 crust
This tasty crust is easy and does not need to chill before using. Olive oil and lots of pepper is the secret to a nicely flavored dough.

1 cup whole what pastry flour
1 cup all purpose flour
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon finely ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
4 tablespoon olive oil
4-6 tablespoons ice water
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar

In the bowl of a food processor combine flour, sugar, salt, pepper and baking powder.

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Pulse several times to combine. Add olive oil, ice water and vinegar and pulse again until small clumps form, about the size of peas.

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Scrape the dough onto a piece of waxed paper or plastic wrap and form into a solid disc and let sit for at least 15 minutes. Do not refrigerate or the dough will be too hard to work with. If you do make the dough ahead of time, refrigerate it but you will need to let it come up to room temp before working with it.

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Fruitcake for a New Generation

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When did the poor fruitcake loose it’s popularity? Of what crime against humanity is it guilty? How did it become the most maligned dessert in the world? Surely the fruitcake must have been good once, right? How did it win it’s starring role in the Christmas dessert canon if it never tasted good? Is it just because we tend not to like what our grandmothers liked? No, because my grand-mother liked peanut-butter pie, smother-fried steak and sage cornbread dressing and I don’t think those dishes would end up as the bad gag-gift at the Yankee swap.

More probably like all trends, it just is the victim of over-production. That’s my guess. After all, once it’s been trivialized so that the corner store sells it in the dollar bin, you know it’s fallen on hard times.

I know personally that all fruitcakes are not created equal. I know this because, even though as a child I never liked them, I have tasted many, many morsels because my father and his mother, who lived with us, were fruitcake fans.

In fact, my grandmother, Mama Gene, supplied the small Alabama town she lived in with it’s yearly supply of premium fruitcake for over twenty years from about 1945 to 1965. Around Thanksgiving every year she turned into a fruitcake machine, churning out over 500 pounds of the sticky cake every year. All by herself with no assembly lines, no assistants, no professional ovens, no food processors. All by herself, one twenty-pound batch at a time. By the time she came to live with us, the yearly output had dwindled down to one or two a year for just us and maybe a family friend. However, you don’t succeed at making fruitcake in the small-town American South for very long unless you make a really good fruitcake.

Not all the fruitcake to be had at our house was a Mama Gene work of fruitcake art. When word gets out that you live in the home of a fruitcake fan, fruitcakes start showing up on your doorstep from every mail-order Christmas catalog around. You can’t stop them. They are like the lost puppies of the dessert world. They just keep coming back. So, I learned what to look for before deciding how big of a nibble I could bear without looking rude. The amount of the sort-of translucent greenish-white, jello-looking candied fruit, citron, was my clue. After a few, I learned that the more citron in the cake, the less likely I could get it down. Really it didn’t matter; I didn’t like any of them. Although the really good fruitcakes tasted good to me if you picked out all the candied fruit (except the pineapple) and all the raisins (ick). So basically I liked the cake and the pecans and probably the booze.

I was thinking about all this the other day when I was talking with my father, who often helps me think through the logistics of recipes I’m developing. I was working on a prune and fig cake, but couldn’t quite get to a game plan I really liked. My father mentioned that he had run across his mother’s go-to cookbook: The Rumford Complete Cookbook published 1908. Inside the front cover were three of her fruitcake recipes from the 1940s. One for light fruitcake, one for dark fruitcake and one for half light, half dark fruitcake. I mentioned that I liked her fruitcake if I picked out all the candied fruit (hers fell in the middle of the citron scale). Of course! Why couldn’t I make her fruitcake but with more natural dried fruit in place of the candied fruit I hated so much. After all, dried fruit seems much more popular these days than it did a decade ago thanks to marketing campaigns that have changed what we eat from prunes to dried plums. (A million dollar marketing idea based on the idea that renaming foods from icky sounding words to more palatable ones would make people want to eat it; not a new idea to for moms of picky kids who have been using that trick for generations. “That’s not grits honey, it’s mini rice!”).


Gene Wiggins’ (Mama Gene) light and dark fruitcake recipes from the 1940′s

I’m not sure where Mama Gene got her recipe. Perhaps she used the Rumford “Wedding Fruitcake” (page 140) to help her. However, I think the better bet is that my grandmother used a version of her father’s fruitcake recipe. He was a pastry chef trained in Germany before immigrating to America and opening a bakery in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. As a young girl, she worked in his bakery and must have made fruitcakes on a large scale every holiday season. So, when she found herself as a stay-at-home mom who wanted to make a few extra bucks for the Christmas fund, making fruitcakes came naturally to her.

However she came to this recipe, it works. I was able to scale it down with few problems. According to my father she made her own pear preserves with lemon peel on a yearly basis just to use as an ingredient in her fruitcakes (can you say dedication?). First on my list of recipe renovations was cutting the odious citron from my recipe. I did want a mild citrus flavor, so since I was fresh out of homemade pear/lemon preserves, I opted for orange marmalade and then also added fresh lemon and orange zest. Gone from her recipe are the pounds and pounds of heavily sugared (and dyed) candied fruit. In their place are simple chopped, dried fruit. Green and red cherries are replaced with dried apricots and dried cherries. Candied pineapple and raisins are replaced with figs and “dried plums”. Chunks of citron are now studs of crystallized ginger. All in all her recipe called for over 12 pounds of fruit for three “good sized cakes.” Because the fruit she used was so heavily sugared, I had to adjust accordingly. Yet, my recipe still packs a pretty dense ratio of fruit to cake. It turns out that a “good sized cake” is actually a tube pan and makes about a five pound cake. I guess “good sized” means enough to feed a small family of 25. However, since fruitcake has been known to last several years when wrapped in liquor soaked linen, I went with it.

The result is impressive. I’ll be honest – I was giddy when it came out of the oven looking and smelling like fruitcake. The taste was a surprise; it tasted good; fruit and all. So good, in fact that I ate the two slices you see in the picture (they were cut after all). The flavor was akin to an extreme fig newton. Full of sweet figgy goodness, but with so much more. You taste the dates and figs first, but then the spices, the ginger, the apricots and cherries start to come through too. It’s a Christmas party in your mouth. Hubby, who doesn’t really like dried fruit or nuts, admitted that it was good too. Hubby saying any fruitcake is good is like getting a three year old to say brussel sprouts are super yummy. Of course Little Guy, who eagerly helped me make the cake, declared it yucky. Glad that know fruitcake is still a grownup flavor.

If you do make this fruitcake, you won’t be sorry. It’s not hard to make but is time consuming. Chopping all the dried fruit probably takes the longest of the hands-on work. Whatever you do, don’t rush the baking process. This cake is dense and needs to cook very low and slow. You will be impressed with the results. You’ll impress family and guests too. You’ll be that rare person who is able to make a fruitcake that people like. Help this poor dessert regain some of its former glory! Won’t you please help the fruitcake cause? Make one this holiday season. Enjoy (and Happy Holidays)!

Modern Fruitcake (made with dried not candied fruit)
Makes 1 large tube pan cake, about five pounds finished

You can store this cake in the back of the refrigerator to keep it longer. To prevent drying out, pour a small amount of additional bourbon or whiskey over it to moisten it every time you cut a piece, or keep it wrapped in a piece of muslin soaked in liquor. This not only adds moisture but also an additional decadent richness.

3/4 pound butter (3 sticks)
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 eggs
3 tablespoon cane syrup or molasses
1/4 cup Bourbon or other whiskey
1/3 cup sweet orange marmalade or other light colored preserves
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon allspice
3 cups flour (divided with 1/3 cup of it for fruit)
1/2 pound pitted dates (sweet medjool), about 1 1/2 cups
6 ounces figs, stems removed, about 1 1/4 cup
6 ounces prunes, about 1 cup
1/4 pound apricots, about 3/4 cup
1/4 pound dried cherries, about 3/4 cup
2 ounces crystallized ginger, about 1/4 cup
4 ounces pecans, about 3/4 cup
Zest of 1 orange
Zest of 1 lemon

Chop the dates, figs, prunes, apricots and pecans into 1/4” pieces. Chop the ginger into very small pieces about 1/8” in size.

Mix all the fruit, pecans, ginger and zests in a large bowl. Add 1/3 cup of the flour and toss thoroughly.

Use your fingers to separate all the pieces of fruit so that none are stuck together. Set aside.

Set an oven rack to the middle position and preheat oven to 275 degrees. Grease and flour a tube pan and set aside. In a medium bowl combine the remaining 2 2/3 cup flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, clove, nutmeg and allspice and set aside.

In the bowl of a heavy mixer combine the butter and sugar and beat until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, scraping down the sides of the bowl between each addition.

Add the vanilla, syrup, marmalade (or preserves) and bourbon and mix until combined.

The batter will look slightly broken.

Add the flour mixture and mix until combined. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and mix once again to make sure the batter is well combined, but do not over beat. Add the fruit and nut mixture and mix or fold in until just combined.

Scoop the mixture into the baking pan.

If you are using a tube pan you can decorate the top of the cake with pecan halves and additional dried fruit.

Place the cake in the middle of the oven. Bake the cake for about 3 hours, or until a toothpick comes out clean and dry.

Remove the cake from the oven and let it cool for fifteen minutes. Run a thin knife or spatula around the edges of the pan and around the inner tube before turning the cake out. Let cool completely on a wire rack before covering. The cake will keep for several weeks.

 

Brown Sugar Walnut Pennies

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Perhaps I should tell you about “gasoline cookies.” That short story might save you the trouble of foraging for black walnuts sometime. My father, who forages his plot for anything edible, most of which turns into wine, hoarded bag after bag of black walnuts a few years ago on a year that produced more nuts than the squirrels could stow away. He had grand plans for these nuts, so he sat eagerly picking the tidbits of meat out of the impossible nuts. The phrase, “a tough nut to crack,” must have referred to black walnuts. After long hours of cracking he discovered a few things about black walnuts. First of all, black walnuts leave a black tar on your hands that is pretty difficult to remove with any earthly substance. It wears off in about two weeks. Secondly, black walnuts have a very distinct and strong flavor. One for which many people do not have a hankering. His childlike visions of a Thanksgiving full of black-walnut treats dissolved into a single simple question “Now what do I do with all these nuts?”

In the end, he made cookies which guests either loved or hated. Most of us felt they had a distinct petroleum flavor that earned them the name “gasoline cookies.” One guest—only one though—loved them for the savory, oily, umami flavor that others just did not understand.

Now, you may think it’s strange that I start out my post on brown-sugar walnut cookies with a story about black walnuts; an ingredient not present in the finished recipe. Here’s why: I spent a lot of November thinking about past Thanksgivings and the crowd that gathers every year for the feast. My parents love to entertain, and through the years they have collected a diverse yet truly lovely extended family that gather for a long weekend of eating and celebrating each other. Some years the crowd is larger than others, and I only get there every other year. On the years I spend with the other half of my family, I mull over all the memories of all the Thanksgivings I have spent with my parents’ Thanksgiving family. The people that grace their Thanksgiving table are so important to my family’s memories that the foods each person introduces bear his/her name from that time forward. Imelda Berries and Pam’s Potatoes are normal side dishes (thankfully Erin’s sauerkraut never took off – sorry Erin!).

Every year is a different Thanksgiving, and each year a different story is told. One year the stuffing exploded; one year my mom invited the florist (or was it the pharmacist?) When I asked my parents about how Thanksgiving went this year my first question was, “Was it a good stuffing year?” My father’s famous stuffing recipe evolves every year and some mutations are more successful than others (this year was a hit). And the second question was, “What was the food star this year?” Every year there is one food item that gets all the talk. This year it was a pecan-pie cookie so good that one taste was enough for a family member to lay claim on the entire batch. So while I thought about those food stars, I kept coming back to the year of the gasoline cookies.

Considering the ingredients, those gasoline cookies should have been wonderful. But, it turns out that you can have too much of a good thing. Black walnuts, prized for their strong flavor and unique nuttiness should be used sparingly and cautiously–especially in baking. Many love black walnuts in savory dishes such as salads or for snacking with strong cheeses, but not usually as the main ingredient in cookies. When you want a walnut cookie packed with nut flavor black walnuts might not be the right choice for you. By the way, after a few years in the freezer, the black walnuts mellowed and made some delightful desserts. Do you have a few years to wait on your walnuts?

For a cookie that is crunchy and sweet with a mouth full of brown sugar and nutty goodness, then you want to use English walnuts. That’s what this cookie uses. To heighten the nutty flavor of the cookies, I brown a portion of the butter and re-cool it before adding it to the mix. There isn’t anything in these cookies that doesn’t add to the flavor; there’s no eggs and no leaveners. The finished cookie is something between a sweet sugar cookie and a shortbread. They are sweet and very nutty (with my normal dose of whole grains). I made them small and coin-like (hence the name), but don’t expect to stop at one or two cookies. They are so good that you’ll need to make sure you have all four dozen ready to go when you serve them, and as a bonus, they are guaranteed to be free from all fossil fuels. Perhaps I should nick-name them alternate energy cookies…Enjoy!

Brown Sugar Walnut Pennies
Makes 48 small cookies
Spelt flour adds a wonderful crunch to these cookies, but no one will guess that there is any whole wheat flour in them.

12 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 1/2 sticks) divided
1 cup dark brown sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 1/2 cups spelt flour
1 cup English walnuts

Melt 4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) butter in a small saucepan set over medium heat. Watch the butter carefully and remove from the heat when the butter reaches a light nutty brown color.

Let the butter cool back down completely to room temperature even if it starts to harden slightly.

While the butter cools, finely chop the walnuts until they are about the size of a piece of rice (I pulse them in a food processor). Set aside.

Mix the cooled browned butter with the rest of the butter and brown sugar in the bowl of a heavy-duty mixer. Beat on medium speed until the mixture is light and fluffy. Add the salt and vanilla and beat again, scraping down the sides. Add the flour, mixing until just combined, and then fold in the nuts.

Place half the mixture on a long piece of plastic wrap and form into a long rope about 1” wide and about 12” long. Repeat with the second half of the dough forming two long thin rolls of dough. Refrigerate the dough for at least two hours, or until it is hard and cold.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Slice each roll of dough in half and then each half into twelve even “coins” forming 48 small cookies. Place the cookies on baking sheets lined with parchment or a non-stick baking mat – 24 to a baking sheet. Bake the cookies for 10-12 minutes or until the edges are slightly browner than the middle and the middles look set. Let the cookies cool before removing from the baking sheets and store tightly covered until serving.

Cinnamon-Date Graham Bagels

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On the day that much of the Northeast was suffering the record-setting wrath of Sandy, we had only a very blustery day. There were a few downed trees and a few power outages in town, but we escaped mostly unscathed. Since everything was canceled, however, we were stuck inside without much to do. So, we followed the advice of the old saying, “when life gives you hurricanes, make bagels.” That is how it goes, right?

I’d been thinking about making my own bagels for awhile now. Little Guy and I split one almost every morning from the bagel place down the street. But the bagels we get there are full of white flour and not really the best breakfast for our brains. I wanted a bagel that had all the flavor and chewy goodness of a good NYC bagel, but full of whole grains. A little research had prepared me, and I knew that I would need a starter, some bread flour and a lot of patience.

So by the time Sandy blew in, I had a starter ready and waiting for us and my new favorite, graham flour, was lined up and ready for a little workout. Since I still wanted that classic chewy crust, I knew that I would need to cut the graham flour with bread flour to up the gluten content.

Cooking during a hurricane requires the ability to adapt, and we had no raisins in the house. Ladies and Gentlemen! Tonight the roll of raisins will be played by dates! Guess what? Dates stole the show. I think I’m starting something here. Dates are the new raisins; that’s all I’m saying…

That first round of hurricane bagels were good. Super chewy, but a little flat on flavor, even with the starter. After reading about bagels in Baking Illustrated I decided to try round two not only using a starter, but also letting them retard overnight to help develop flavor. Doing this also meant that I could get hot fresh bagels straight from the oven for breakfast. The result was something surprising. A bagel full of flavor and as chewy as any I’d ever had. Do you have to add the cinnamon and dates? Of course not, but it’s your loss if you don’t.

Keep in mind that if you are aiming for hot bagels fresh out of the oven, it requires just a little planning. Start your starter first thing in the morning the day BEFORE you want the fresh bagels. Then make your dough in the evening after dinner and get them into the fridge before bed. Then the next morning all you have to do is boil and bake the bagels. They are well worth the effort. Enjoy!

Cinnamon-Date Graham Bagels
adapted from a King Arthur Flour recipe
Makes 12 bagels
I always use a bread machine to make my dough. I find that it makes dough very well and takes the mess and fuss out of bread making. Of course you can make the dough the old-fashioned way or in a mixer, just be sure to knead the dough very well before allowing it to rise.

Starter:
1/2 cup bread flour
1/4 cup water
pinch yeast
pinch sugar

Dough:
Starter
1 1/4 cups water
2 cups bread flour
2 cups graham flour
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 tablespoon brown sugar
2 tablespoons molasses
2 teaspoons cinnamon
2 teaspoons instant yeast
1 cup chopped dates, loosely packed

For Boiling:
water
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon brown sugar

To make the starter, mix the flour, water, yeast and sugar in a small bowl.

Cover lightly with plastic wrap and set in a warm corner of your kitchen for about 12 hours.

When you are ready to make the dough, combine the starter, water, bread flour, graham flour, salt, brown sugar, molasses, cinnamon and yeast in the bowl of a heavy-duty mixer or bread machine. Mix until the ingredients all come together. It should be firm but not dry. You may need to add an additional tablespoon or two of water. If you are not using a bread machine, knead the dough until it is smooth and elastic. Fold in the dates (or add when your bread machine recommends), then allow the dough to double in size, about one hour.

Punch the dough down, then turn out onto an unfloured surface. Cut the dough into twelve equal pieces. I use a scale for this step. Then cupping the palm of your hand around each piece of dough, roll it between your hand and the work surface to form a round dough ball. Allow the dough balls to rest for five minutes.

Using your finger, punch a hole in the center of each dough ball and twirl it around your finger to form the classic bagel shape.

Place the bagels on a lightly greased pan lined with parchment or a baking mat. Cover with a piece of plastic wrap that has been lightly sprayed with non-stick cooking spray and place in the refrigerator overnight, or for at least eight hours.

When you are ready to bake your bagels, remove them from the refrigerator and let them sit in a warm (not hot) place for 10-15 minutes. Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees and bring a large pan of water to a boil with one tablespoon of salt and one tablespoon of brown sugar. When the water comes to a rapid boil, place four of the bagels in the water. Cook for two minutes on one side, turn over and cook for an additional minute.

Move the bagels back to the lined baking pan and repeat until all the bagels have been boiled. Bake the bagels for fifteen minutes then remove and lightly brush or spray the bagels with water. Return them to the oven and cook for an additional 10 to 15 minutes or until the bagels are dark brown. Remove them from the oven and allow them to cool for a few minutes before serving. Enjoy!

Caramel Nut Apple Crisp

apple crisp1
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This past week I packed the kids in the mini-van and drove out to my parents’ house in the Pocono mountains of Pennsylvania. Fall is the perfect time to be in the rural mountains. The colors are bright, the air crisp, and the breeze invigorating. While there we had many lovely sunny days and lots and lots of fun. My son hauled logs for the wood stove, “helped” Granddaddy with his tractor, and got to throw a lot of rocks in the creek. The babies touched the leaves and did a lot of rolling around on the floor. Our main purpose for this trip, however, was my mother’s birthday.

In our family you get to choose any dinner you want for your birthday. Birthday meal requests are sacred, and the cooks honor any request made. When we were children my sister and I would challenge my parents to find and make things that we thought were impossible. Lobster dinner in Texas in the ’80s was not easy to come by. Neither were artichokes in December. Eventually as we aged we fell into habits. These days we tend to just go for our tried and true meals. This is how it came about that I now have a three course fondue dinner for my birthday almost every year and how my mother, “Mimi,” had apple crisp for her birthday cake this year. Her birthday meal request: hamburgers, baked beans and a caramel apple crisp made with walnuts (not pecans).

There are a lot of recipes for caramel apple crisp on the Internet, but I discovered that almost all of them use store-bought caramel ice cream topping or melted caramel candy. Homemade caramel is so superior to store bought, that it just seemed necessary to make it from scratch. As long as you are diligent while cooking it, it is also pretty easy. Using real caramel sauce in the apple crisp is so obvious, so natural, so fantastic. The result is nothing short of spectacular; it is the best apple crisp I have ever tasted. Of course if you’re all into the salted caramel fad, you can toss a 1/2 teaspoon of salt into the caramel at the end, but you don’t need it; it’s just that good. Happy birthday Mommy! Enjoy!

Caramel Sauce
For my play-by-play on how to make caramel, read my recipe For Caramel Peach Hand Pies

I’m a big fan of the wet method of making caramel (adding a few tablespoons of water to the sugar to help it get started). It’s just a tiny bit easier and I like anything that’s easier. This stuff is up there with molten lava on the temperature scale so make sure you are prepared and using all your safety sense when making this recipe.

1 cup white sugar
1/4 cup water
4 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup heavy cream

Pour sugar in the middle of a medium sauce pan or skillet set over medium-high heat. Slowly pour water around edge of sugar. Bring to a boil, but do not stir. Using a pastry brush, brush the edges of the pan with additional water to insure that all sugar crystals have dissolved from the edge.

Let the mixture boil slowly until the sugar turns light tan, watching very carefully so that it does not burn. When the caramel is almost the color of tea turn off the heat and swirl the pan. The sugar will get darker.

Add the butter and stir until the butter is completely melted and mixed in with the sugar. Add the cream and let the caramel come to a rapid boil.

Remove from heat and allow to cool.

Caramel Walnut Apple Crisp
serves 6
You can use pecans or almonds instead of walnuts in this recipe.

5 Apples, peeled, cored and sliced into 1/2 inch slices
1 recipe caramel sauce (recipe above)
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 cup rolled old-fashioned oats
6 tablespoons butter
3/4 cup chopped walnuts
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 375. Lightly grease a large baking dish and place apples in pan. Pour the caramel sauce over the apples and gently stir to make sure the caramel sauce is evenly spread over the apples.



Set aside. In a medium bowl combine the brown sugar, flour, oats, cinnamon and nutmeg.

Using your fingers or a pastry cutter mix the butter into the flour mixture until crumbly.

Stir in walnuts and sprinkle evenly over apples.

Bake for about 20-25 minutes or until the edges are bubbly.

Let cool slightly before serving.

Happy New Year (Apple Oatmeal Scones with Honey)

apple scones
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As someone who loves holidays and special occasions, I’ve figured out the secret to happiness. Marry someone of another faith so that you have twice as many holidays to celebrate. That’s what I did.

One of the things that I love so much about most holidays is that each has its own specific food theme. Thanksgiving has turkey, Fourth of July has barbecue, Christmas has cookies, Easter and Passover share eggs, and Rosh Hashanah has apples and honey. Sunset tonight marks the beginning of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.

At Rosh Hashanah apples and honey are supposed to bring sweetness to the new year. Regardless of your faith or which holidays you choose to support, apples and honey together is a flavor combination anyone can get behind. While certainly not a traditional Rosh Hashanah food, these scones embrace the flavors of the holiday. The sweetness of the apples and honey make this a treat that everyone will enjoy. Even with lots of calories, they are healthier than an average scone thanks to a generous dose of hearty oats, whole wheat, and apples. This recipe is loosely based on a recipe from Martha Stewart which can be found here. Enjoy!

Apple Oatmeal Scones with HoneyClick here for a printable version of this recipe
makes 12 scones
Because of the honey, the dough feels sticky and a little tricky to work with. Heavily dusting the work surface and your hands with flour helps.

1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup old-fashioned rolled oats
1 teaspoon cinnamon
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 sticks cold butter, cut into 1/2” pieces
2 tart firm apples, peeled, cored, and cut into 1/4” pieces (such as Granny Smith)
1/2 cup honey
1/2 cup buttermilk

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Mix honey and buttermilk together and set aside. Mix flour, cinnamon, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a mixing bowl.

Cut butter into mixture using a pastry cutter or food processor until the pieces of butter are the size of peas.

If using a food processor, transfer to a mixing bowl. Toss apples and oats into mixture making sure to coat all the apple pieces with the flour mixture.

Pour buttermilk and honey mixture into dry mix and fold in until just combined.

Dump dough out onto a floured surface. The dough will be very sticky. Flour your hands and form the dough into a long rectangle about 15 inches long and 4 inches wide. Cut into 3 5-inch sections then cut each of those in half. Cut each half in half again on the diagonal to form 12 triangles.

Using a spatula, move the triangles to a baking pan lined with a baking mat or parchment paper. Bake for 20 minutes until the scones are golden brown and fragrant. Let them cool on the pan before removing. You may need to cut between any scones that touch each other.

 

Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cream Pies

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I mentioned in my last post that I found national food holidays interesting. I don’t know if interesting is really the correct word. I think they are bizarre, funny, weird and fascinating. When looking at the holidays listed here, I noticed that January is not only National Soup Month, but also National Oatmeal Month. So, less I offend my morning breakfast, I think it only fair to give oatmeal its moment in the sun as well. That actually works well since I’d been craving a Little Debbie Oatmeal Cream Pie lately.

I bought a box of the cream pies to do a little research – just for research purposes, I assure you. One bite and it was pretty obvious that although they were certainly edible (at least my first four have been), it would be very easy to make an at-home version that was better, and one that didn’t list corn syrup, white flour and partially hydrogenated fat as the first three ingredients.

Which would you rather have?

As in most of my recipes, the first thing I wanted to do was substitute out the white flour for whole wheat flour. With a textured cookie like an oatmeal cookie, it’s a no-brainer to make the change. I also found a few other tips for these little round bundles of happiness while reading through other people’s recipes. Cook’s Country Magazine suggests grinding some of the oatmeal to increase the oatmeal-y flavor in oatmeal cookies. That also worked well since I noticed that there were no large flakes of oatmeal in the store-bought cookies. Then I noticed the ingredients on the store-bought cookies listed raisins as an ingredient, but they were not advertised as “raisin” cookies, and it seemed doubtful that they would put in fruit unless it served a purpose. An internet search revealed that ground raisins are essential to keep the cookies soft and chewy. This sounded good to me since I love the chance to hide anything of real nutritional value in my recipes. Several other sites suggested that the cookies would not bake correctly when baked on a Silpat baking mat, and that parchment paper was a necessity to get the consistency right. This theory I tested, and they were right, the cookies baked on the baking mat did not spread enough and stayed smaller and puffier than those baked on parchment paper. Although the difference for my recipe was minimal.

But there was still one thing missing. Oatmeal cream pies are nice, but oatmeal chocolate chip cream pies are even nicer. The addition of chocolate chips and cocoa elevated these cookies to another level. Chocolate tends to have that effect on sweet foods. So, here is my recipe for oatmeal chocolate chip cream pies. Now, get in the kitchen and make them – now. Enjoy!

Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cream PiesClick here for a printer-friendly version of this recipe
makes about 16 individual pies (32 cookies)

These hearty cookies are sweet without being too overpowering. The cocoa helps balance the flavors nicely. The filling is also sweet without being cloying. If you want the traditional ultra white filling, use the shortening. If you don’t care about the color, go with butter.

1/2 cup raisins
1/4 cup water
3/4 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
3/4 cup butter (1 1/2 sticks)
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 cups old-fashioned rolled oats, divided
1 cup whole wheat flour (I use white whole wheat)
2 tablespoons cocoa powder
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 cup mini chocolate chips

Filling: (based on this recipe from King Arthur Flour)

1/2 cup butter or vegetable shortening
1/2 cup powdered sugar
3/4 cup Marshmallow Fluff
pinch salt dissolved in 1 teaspoon water
1 teaspoons vanilla extract

Heat oven to 375°F. Place raisins in a microwave safe bowl. Pour water over raisins, cover and microwave for 30 seconds. Let sit until cool. While raisins are cooling, place 1 1/2 cups of oats in the bowl of a food processor and pulse until oats are ground fine; there will be a few larger pieces and that is okay.

Transfer oats to a medium mixing bowl and combine with flour, cocoa powder, salt and baking soda. Set aside. When the raisins are cool, transfer along with any liquid to the bowl of a food processor. Pulse until a paste forms and set aside.

In the bowl of a stand mixer combine butter and both sugars. Mix on medium speed until light and creamy. Add raisin mixture and egg and beat until fluffy.

Add dry ingredients except for unground oats and chocolate chips and mix until well combined. Fold in unground oats and chocolate chips.

Spoon two tablespoons at a time on to a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, putting no more than eight cookies per baking tray. Use a wet finger to lightly flatten each ball of cookie dough. Bake for 10-12 minutes or until the edges are set and the middles are still slightly soft. Remove from oven and allow to cool before filling.

While cookies are baking combine shortening (or butter), powdered sugar and Fluff with a mixer until well mixed. Mix in salted water and vanilla extract and beat until light and fluffy.

When cookies are cool, spread a heaping tablespoon of filling onto half the cookies. Top with the other half of the cookies. Cover tightly to store for several days.

A Cupcake By Any Other Name….Would Be a Muffin (Carrot “Cupcake” Muffins)

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Last week saw a big day in our house. Little Guy started pre-school. He now spends three mornings at school playing, learning and creating the cutest art you’ve ever seen; and I can no longer give him the late breakfast he likes. On the days he goes to school, my newest challenge is finding a quick easy to eat breakfast packed full of protein and grains that will give him enough energy to not break down into the three year old screamy-weemies before he gets home. He doesn’t really like breakfast so this is a real challenge. The first day I made the fantastic spelt pancakes found in The King Arthur Whole Grains Cookbook. If you haven’t discovered this book, you should. It’s just the bees knees! However, I can’t give him pancakes every single morning (can I?). So day two saw oatmeal which was slightly less enthusiastically received. By day three I was down to eggs and whole grain toast which he took one look at, grabbed the toast and pushed the eggs away. Now I have a new strategy. I’m disguising breakfasts as food he loves; namely cupcakes. What toddler can resist a cupcake with frosting.

This brings up an interesting topic though. What is the difference between a muffin and a cupcake? I decided to ask my friends and posted the question on Facebook. The answers varied. It’s no surprise to me that my marvelously talented food stylist and baking expert friend came up with the culinary difference, “A muffin is made by the quick bread method most of the time while a cupcake is made with the cake method.” While this may be the actual difference, most of my friends agreed only that muffins are for breakfast and supposed to be healthy. Pretty much everyone agreed that this is not usually the case, as one friend put it, “One is for breakfast. The other is a muffin.”

Of course, not all cakes, er um, I mean muffins are created equal. It would be very easy to just make a sweet, oil drenched, white flour ridden muffin and get Little Guy to eat it, but the sugar low that would ensue about an hour after I left him at school would make me very unpopular with his teachers. Instead my goal was to make him a healthy, whole grain muffin that provided a balanced breakfast that would keep him fueled for the morning. Morning glory muffins were tempting because they are full of fruits and veggies but there is no way I could get him to eat them. Then we were at the grocery store one day and Little Guy solved my problem. Next to the checkout was a display of carrot cupcakes ; “Those look good he said.” So, carrot cake muffins it was.

I knew I wanted a muffin that was not laden with sugar and one full of whole grains, carrots and one high in protein to keep my little guy moving in school. I sifted through a dozen or so recipes and decided to base my muffin on carrot cake recipes instead of a muffin because I wanted the finished product to taste more like a cupcake than a muffin. I immediately slashed the sugar from an average of 1 ½ to 2 cups down to a combination of 1/3 cup of brown sugar plus 3 tablespoons of molasses – for a total just under ½ cup (not including the cream cheese topping). I also switched out the white flour for whole wheat flour and slashed the fat down to a mere ¼ cup of oil. In place of cream cheese icing I used a small amount of lightly sweetened reduced fat cream cheese and a sprinkle of pecans. Enjoy!

Carrot Cupcake Muffins with Cream Cheese and PecansClick here for a printer friendly version of this recipe
makes 12 muffins

The cream cheese topping is not necessary for the enjoyment of these muffins, but does make them oh-so-good. If you do use the topping be sure to keep the muffins in the refrigerator.

2 eggs
1/4 cup vegetable oil
2 teaspoons vanilla
1/3 cup brown sugar
3 tablespoons molasses
1/2 cup applesauce
1 1/2 cups whole wheat flour
1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1 1/2 cup grated or ground carrot (see note), about 5 carrots

Cream Cheese Topping

4 oz light cream cheese
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 cup powdered sugar
1/2 cup chopped pecans

Preheat oven to 350. Grease 12 muffin tins with non-stick spray or use muffin liners.

Beat eggs in the bowl of a standing mixer, slowly add vegetable oil then vanilla, brown sugar, molasses, and applesauce. Beat until slightly foamy.

In a separate bowl combine flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger.

Add dry ingredients to the wet mixture. Beat until just combined, scraping down the sides of the mixing bowl at least once. Fold in carrots.

Divide mixture evenly between the muffin tins.

Bake for 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the middle of a muffin comes out clean. Remove from oven to cool.

For topping:

Mix cream cheese, vanilla and powdered sugar until smooth. Spread about 1/2 tablespoon of the cream cheese mixture onto the top of each cooled muffin. Sprinkle the chopped pecans on the top of the muffins. The muffins will keep in refrigerator for several days and can be frozen, although the cream cheese topping may crack.

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