Dessert Making Blog

September 3, 2010

Know any good websites with dessert recipes that have PICTURES?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 7:27 pm
Future Cat Lady asked:


I want to make my dad a special dessert for his birthday tomorrow but I **** cooking a recipe without a picture.

Do you know any good sites? Or recipes?

He loves Butterscotch, banana, chocolate, and peanut butter.

Thanks!

Dessert Recipes

August 31, 2010

Chilled No Bake Dessert Recipes

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 9:03 pm
Jill Borash asked:




Raspberry Revel

8 ounces of vanilla wafers

3/4 cup butter

2 1/2 cups powdered sugar

2 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 pint frozen raspberries, thawed and drained

8 ounce container of whipped topping

Grease a 9 x 11-inch pan. Crush the vanilla wafers. (The easiest way to do this is to put the wafers in a plastic bag and crush them with a rolling pin.) Reserve 1/4 cup of the crushed vanilla wafers and put the rest in the bottom of the greased pan. Beat the butter, powdered sugar, eggs, and vanilla together. Put this mixture on top of the crumbs. Spread the mixture from the edges of the pan inward to help keep the wafer crumbs in place. Spread the drained raspberries on top of that mixture. Add the whipped cream and sprinkle the 1/4 cup cookie crumbs over the top. Refrigerate overnight. Serves 12.

Chocolate Mint Dazzle

18 graham crackers

1/2 cup melted butter

1/3 cup sugar

1/2 cup softened butter

1 1/2 cup powdered sugar

3 eggs, slightly beaten

2 (1 ounce) squares chocolate, melted

1 1/2 cup cream

1 package miniature marshmallows

1/4 cup crushed peppermint candy

Grease a 9 x 13-inch pan. Crush the graham crackers and mix them with the 1/2 cup of melted butter and the sugar. Press the mixture into the prepared pan. Cream the 1/2 cup softened butter and powdered sugar together in a medium bowl. Add in the eggs and melted chocolate. Beat well and spread the mixture over the top of the graham cracker crust. Beat the cream and marshmallows together and put that over the chocolate layer. Sprinkle the top with the crushed peppermint candy. Refrigerate overnight.

A quick note about raw eggs: According to the American Egg Board, the chance of salmonella is only 1 in 20,000 eggs. You can find out more at http://www.aeb.org/LearnMore/EggSafety.htm

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August 27, 2010

Halloween Dessert Recipes Are High in Sugar Content – Good Or Bad?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 7:08 pm
Daryl Plaza asked:




Halloween dessert recipes are an essential component to fall festivities. While many are gathering up all of the essential ingredients to create their spookynite snacks, many will be purchasing sugar in order to mix in to give the desserts a sweet taste. Unfortunately, many people who will be purchasing this ingredient simply do not know or understand that there are dangers associated with this substance.

Here, I will be exploring the dangers of sugar in Halloween dessert recipes. If you have a sweet tooth, or you are concerned about your health and the health of those that will be consuming these Halloween treats, it is important that you pay special attention to the contents of this article.

When an individual consumes the sugar in Halloween dessert recipes, and other sweets, it throws off the natural homeostasis process. If you are wondering what this is, it is really simple to understand. Homeostasis is simply the equilibrium, or “balance” in the body that is considered to be “ideal”.

It basically means that all of components of the body are working in harmony together for proper maintenance. As sugar enters the body, it throws off this natural and required balance in the body. One of the first areas that are affected in a negative fashion is the immune system of the body.

Sugar will actually have a negative impact on the defenses that the immune system sets up in order to fight against potentially threatening diseases and sicknesses. When the immunity of the body is suppressed, many health complications may arise.

Now, when creating those Halloween treats this year, there is a large possibility that children will be consuming them. If you will be using sugar as an ingredient, you may want to consider the effects that it can have on these kids. It has been discovered that adrenaline increases quite rapidly in the body of a child when they consume foods and beverages that contain sugar.

Furthermore, these children have been observed in experiencing high levels of anxiety and even signs of hyperactivity. Many medical professionals and parents who have observed the effects of sugar on children have noticed that many of these kids are not able to concentrate effectively.

Irritability and depression are also common side effects. Before creating a menu of all the Halloween dessert recipes that you will be creating this fall, be sure to consider not using as much sugar and finding another source of sweetener to add other than straight sugar. This is only a small list of the dangers associated with this substance.

Kansieo.com

August 18, 2010

Just Desserts, Pudding Recipes Galore

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 6:28 am
Kit Heathcock asked:




We are a pudding family. There is something satisfying about the word pudding. It brings connotations of comfort, of tastebud-tantalising things, rich and luscious. Dessert suggests something elegant, delicate, restrained – a sweet mouthful to finish off a meal. Dessert just doesn’t do it for me.

Our family goes in for puddings for special occasions and Sunday lunches. We don’t have them every day, so when we do, we want it all: comforting over-indulgence at its best – no refined twiddles of patisserie here, though we don’t do the steamed, stodgy stuff either. We have a number of recipes that are firm family favourites and have to be considered and a waiting list of recipes from cookbooks to try – so puddings oust the main course as the focus of debate and decision-making.

The occasion dictates the main course – roast lamb for Easter, turkey and gammon for Christmas, no dilemmas there. Selecting just a few puddings from the family repertoire, though, is an agonising process. Christmas and New Year close together eases the dilemma…what we don’t have for Christmas, we can do for New Year’s Eve, but on other occasions leaving out a particular favourite recipe is too hard. We often end up with a selection of four puddings (though, before you are too horrified, we are usually feeding twelve or more people) and as a result feel stuffed to the gills afterwards, as greed inevitably overcomes caution and all four have to be sampled.

Two of our family staple recipes come from my mother-in-law, who as a mother of six on a limited budget had to use a lot of invention to feed her family. Guava fool (pureed guava mixed with condensed milk and cream) is one of her recipes that rates high on the must-have list through winter when guavas are in season. Choccie pudding is a year round imperative, a chocolate custard poured over boudoir biscuits which soak it up and soften delectably into a velvety gloop.

I have proudly managed to add one of my family pudding recipes to the indispensable list – Summer Pudding. My mother still makes it, often with blackberries culled from the hedgerows, as well as the more traditional redcurrants and raspberries. Here in South Africa we have a different palette of berries to work with and most often use youngberries, mulberries with a few strawberries (strawberries on their own don’t work, you need the tartness of some of the darker berries). Here is the recipe:

Summer Pudding

1 loaf of slightly stale white bread
About 1kg of mixed berries: blackberries, raspberries, youngberries, mulberries,
redcurrants the choice is yours. Apple can be added if you are short of berries.
Sugar

Put the fruit with a liberal sprinkling of sugar into a pan and gradually bring to boiling point. (You can cook them straight from frozen over a low heat). Softer fruits are done at this point, so check, apples would need longer to soften. The amount of sugar depends on how sweet the fruit is – you are after a slightly tart fruit with sweet juice but not too sickly. Cut the bread into thick slices, take off the crusts and line a pudding basin with it. It needs to fit tightly but don’t squash it. You can do a patchwork of funny shaped bits, the important thing is that no holes are left. Keep three slices for the lid. When the fruit has stewed, use a slotted spoon to transfer the fruit into the bread-lined bowl. Most of the juice gets left behind but keep it to pour over the pudding later. Fill the bowl with the fruit and top with a tight layer of bread. Place a plate or saucer on top and weight it, so the fruit compresses and the juice soaks into the bread. Leave in the fridge for at least a few hours, better overnight. Turn it onto a plate to serve, with the extra juice poured over any white bits of bread still showing. Eat with plenty of cream.

Now our main preoccupation on our smallholding is establishing enough fruit trees and berry plants to ensure a year round supply of pudding potential in our freezers, but maybe that would make them less special. The seasonal aspect of guavas and berries mean excitement when they come back into season, gluttony for a few weeks until common sense sets in. Then we put a supply away in the freezer for a few special treats later in the year, the season ends and is followed by the next thing. A pudding for each season, a season for each pudding.

Copyright 2006 Kit Heathcock

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August 16, 2010

Recipes With Bacon – Bacon Candy And Desserts

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 3:17 am
Emma Martin asked:




Bacon isn’t just the perfect food to accompany your eggs or wrap around a scallop to make it twice as delicious. No, bacon is far more useful and delicious than that. There’s plenty of intrepid folks out there who think bacon and sweets go together great in everything from chocolate cookies to muffins. So if you’re looking to try some bacon candy or want to have bacon for dessert, feel free to experiment.

Making candied bacon is probably one of the best known ways to get your crunchy sweet pork flavor and there’s a ton of bacon candy recipes out there, but it’s actually so simple you barely even need a recipe.

To make bacon candy, all you need to do is:

Heat your oven to 350 degrees Coat your bacon (use the basic supermarket kind) in a half-cup of brown sugar. Bake it in the oven for about 10 minutes, or until the bacon is cooked through and crispy.

Once the bacon is crispy, take it out of the oven and let it cool so it hardens nicely. You want to be able to experience that candied crunch.

Once you’ve tried bacon candy, then it’s time to expand your bacon repertoire. You can try the excellent Mo’s Bacon Bar from Vosges Chocolatiers. Whole Foods tends to stock Vosges chocolate as do other specialty food retailers, but you can also order it online if you can’t find it locally. You’ll be surprised how good bacon and chocolate taste together. In addition to the full size chocolate bars, Vosges also makes these sweet flying chocolate pigs filled with Applewood bacon. Yum!

And of course, bacon tastes great with virtually anything flavored with maple syrup. After all, it tastes great with pancakes, doesn’t it? So you can crumble up some bacon to add to maple scones, muffins or cakes and it will taste delicious too.

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August 15, 2010

Quick Napoleon Dessert Recipes

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 6:41 pm
Shelley Pogue asked:




A traditional Napoleon is a French dessert made from layers of puff pastry spread with a vanilla pastry cream. The top of the rectangle or triangular shaped sweet is drizzled with chocolate and or dusted with powdered sugar. Historians say that the Napoleon was created by a Danish royal chef in honor of a visit by a French emperor. And that Emperor Bonaparte’s defeat at Waterloo was the result of an overindulgence of his now famous namesake pastry.

You may have a hard time distinguishing after eating a Napoleon what part is the best part. Is it the puff pastry or the pastry cream? I think all of the flavor combinations work very well together, so, I say all of it! This is a very quick and easy dessert recipe, and you will not spend all day in the kitchen. We are going to take the shortcut method and make it work for our recipe.

Making puff pastry from scratch is not an easy task to undertake. It is a labor and time intensive endeavor. Perfectly chilled ingredients, repeated rolling to the correct thickness, and precision folding are the keys to faultless puff pastry. Not to mention working in a kitchen that is not humid. The meticulous rolling and folding, along with the moisture in the butter, creates steam which causes the dough to puff and separate into the flaky layers that the pastry is known for. Some chef’s recommend anywhere from thirty minutes to two hours chilling time between rolling and folding. Consider that the roll, fold and chill process is done four times, you need to block off two to eight hours to make puff pastry. Or, take a trip to the frozen food section of the grocery store and buy it.

Ready made puff pastry is available in sheets or shells. To thaw it at room temperature takes about thirty minutes, in the refrigerator about four hours. It will keep in the refrigerator up to two days. When shaping the dough, work with one sheet at a time, refrigerating remaining sheets until ready to use. As with all dough handle as little as possible. A pastry wheel, pizza cutter or sharp knife are the best utensils for cutting the dough. Cut edges should be crisp to keep the layers separate so that they puff during baking. Always bake puff pastry in a conventional oven and keep in mind that darker baking sheets cook faster.

Vanilla pastry cream is the standard filling for a Napoleon. This is a very short recipe for making quick Napoleons.

1 Package of frozen puff pastry dough

2 Packages of Vanilla instant pudding

1 Bottle of a good chocolate fudge or chocolate drizzle

3 Ounces of confectioners sugar

Prepare instant pudding according to package directions. While pudding is chilling follow directions for thawing, unfolding and baking puff pastry sheets. Cut into desired shape at bake at 400

August 12, 2010

Recipes For Fruit-Based Desserts

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 12:29 pm
Dyfed Lloyd Evans asked:




It was the Romans who first formalized meals into courses, starting with Gustatio (starters or appetizers), followed by Primae Mensae (main courses) and then Secundae (Desserts).

Of course, the following of a main savoury dish with something sweet (even if it’s only a fruit) is as old as humanity itself. This hearkens back to human origins, when we were mostly fruit-eaters and sweetness was linked to the ripeness of fruit. The sweetness of ripe fruit being something we crave, still. Indeed, many of our desserts are an attempt to capture the taste, texture and sweetness of fruit; whether that be through the incorporation of fruit flavours or the addition of sweeteners such as honey or sugar.

Even the textures of many desserts, especially if they are custard or egg sponge based are could be described as fruit-like in consistency. Just imagine biting into a floury apple or a peach then think of a sponge or a set custard.

Admittedly, one of the favourite dessert ingredients today is chocolate, buy you have to remember that chocolate is a fat extracted from a fruit seed that’s then sweetened with sugar. So chocolate isn’t a million miles away from the fruit from which it’s produced.

Below are recipes for two classic desserts, one made with fruit the other incorporating fruit.

Baked Apples

Ingredients:
4 firm baking apples (I like small Bramleys or Cox’s for their tartness)
4 tbsp brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
45g chopped walnuts
45g currants
45g chopped figs
1 tbsp butter
180ml boiling water

Method:
Wash the apples then dry them and using a sharp knife and a spoon cut and scoop out the cores to form a well about 3cm in diameter that drops down to within 1cm of the base of the fruit (leave the base whole).

Meanwhile, sir together the fruit and nuts in a bowl and add the sugar and cinnamon. Spoon this mixture into the wells you formed in the apples then transfer the fruit to a baking dish. Dot the top of each well with butter then pour the boiling water into the base of the baking dish. Transfer to an oven pre-heated to 190

August 5, 2010

Great Thanksgiving Dessert Recipe Websites

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 4:24 am
Jeffrey Meier asked:




Is your mouth beginning to water for a great Thanksgiving dinner? Are you anxious for a succulent turkey, seasoned dressing, cranberry sauce, and all of the extras? Well you’re not alone, that’s for sure! But when I think of Thanksgiving, I also think of all of the great desserts that my grandmother, mother and aunts made holiday after holiday, from the lemon meringue and pumpkin pies, to the great cakes and cookies. If this is your year to prepare dinner for your family and you don’t know what to make for dessert then you’re in luck because I have provided you with some great Thanksgiving dessert recipe websites to make sure your family will BE quiet enough to hear a pin drop after falling asleep from full stomachs.

Familyfun.go.com

This website is dedicated to families who love to have fun while they cook! You can make great pies and cakes with the kids and enjoy eating them too! Though I don’t have children I got excited about this site because I love any project that resembles arts and crafts. And some of their recipes were right up my alley. For example, their handprint pumpkin pie looks fun and easy to make. According to their recipe, you take one of your pie crusts and cut a hand out of the dough, then bake it and place it on top of your pumpkin pie. It looks fun and the kids will probably enjoy seeing their little hand on their dessert. Of course, they still have what you would call the “ordinary” Thanksgiving dessert, including classic apple pie, chocolate cream pie, pecan pie, and classic banana cream pie, but it seems the fun you get to have by preparing these treats with your family will make them extraordinary.

DianasDesserts.com

DianasDesserts.com brings you recipes hailing directly from the recipe book of Diana Woodall. Though the name may not sound familiar to you, her recipes should go down in the history books for originality and quality. For the category of Thanksgiving dessert alone she offers over 50 unique recipes to take home to your family! Some of her mouth-watering recipes include chocolate-pumpkin marble cake, old fashioned festive jelly rolls, autumn pumpkin cheesecake pie, cranberry cheese bars, persimmon latte cotta, and maple cr

August 4, 2010

good pashionfruit dessert recipes for a fussy eater?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 10:30 pm
Yum C asked:


yeah i have to make a dessert of my choice for school cooking class and im a very fussy eater the requirements are
-must have fruit(i would like to have pashionfruit)
-must have a dairy product
-must be able to cook, prepare and cleanup in less than an hour
so does anyone know any good recipes for me?

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July 24, 2010

Japanese Dessert Recipe – Dorayaki Cake

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Stephanie @ 5:30 pm
Katie Appleby asked:




Dorayaki cake is a traditional Japanese dessert recipe that is a sweet cake with an anko filling. Anko filling consists of sweet azuki bean paste. It is a delicious addition to any traditional Japanese meal and you will love the texture, taste and flavor.

Ingredients for Japanese dessert recipe – Dorayaki Cake:
o 3 eggs
o 2/3 cup of white sugar
o

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