Bready or Not

Bready or Not recipe blog

Bready or Not: Maple Ginger Fudge

Posted by on Aug 27, 2014 in Blog, Bready or Not, clockwork dagger, fudge, maple, no-bake dessert | Comments Off on Bready or Not: Maple Ginger Fudge

I would like to present to you the best fudge in the history of the world.

Maple Ginger Fudge

Maple ginger fudge. Sweetness with just the slightest zing.

The origin of the recipe brings sweet connotations for me, too. One of my very favorite authors, C. E. Murphy, posted about this recipe last Christmas. We started a conversation about it.

Maple ginger fudge.

This somehow resulted in her reading The Clockwork Dagger, loving it, and providing a blurb.

BEST. FUDGE. EVER.

That blurb:

“The Clockwork Dagger had me at hello and kept me with unexpected twists, intriguing magic and splendid betrayals. At the satisfying conclusion, my immediate impulse was to inquire in tones of gentle inquiry, when do I get to read the sequel!?!?” ~C. E. Murphy

C. E. Murphy’s Walker Papers series is my very favorite set of urban fantasy books. They were the first series I got into, and most importantly, they taught me how to write. I found them during that time when I realized my writing was wretched. I read through Urban Shaman on a technical level so I could figure out how to write first person and just plain why the books worked.

Maple ginger fudge.

To have her love my book… it makes me get teary-eyed.

Make some of this fudge. Maybe some wonderful things will happen in your life, too.

Maple ginger fudge.

Recipe modified from a modified version by C.E. Murphy, who originally found the recipe on Candy.About.Com. In case you didn’t notice, there was some modifying going on.

Bready or Not: Maple Ginger Fudge

A classic stove-top fudge recipe.
Course: Dessert
Keyword: fudge, maple
Author: Beth Cato

Ingredients

  • 3 cups white sugar
  • 3/4 cup butter
  • 2/3 cup evaporated milk small can
  • 10 oz white chocolate chips
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons maple flavor
  • 7 oz marshmallow cream
  • 4 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/4 cup candied ginger finely chopped
  • 1/2 cup toasted pecans coarsely chopped

Instructions

  • Prepare a pan: 9x9 if you want it thick, or 13x9 if you want it thin. Line pan with aluminum foil and apply nonstick cooking spray. Measure out of the other ingredients so they are staged and ready to go.
  • In a larger saucepan, combine the butter, sugar, and evaporated milk. Cook at medium-high heat and stir until the butter and sugar melt. Continue to cook, stirring occasionally, until the mixture boils.
  • Keep the candy at a rolling boil, stirring constantly, for five minutes. (If you have a candy thermometer and want to use it, you will be cooking the candy to soft-ball stage, 240 degrees.)
  • After five minutes, take the pot off the burner and immediately add the white chocolate chips. Stir until they are melted and smooth. Work fast so that everything stays hot.
  • Quickly add the marshmallow cream, maple flavor, vanilla, ground ginger, salt, pecans, and chopped candied ginger, and stir. Once the marshmallow cream has melted and all of the ingredients are incorporated, pour the fudge into the prepared pan. Smooth out the top; an offset spatula works well.
  • Allow the fudge to set at room temperature for several hours. Once set, lift it out of the pan using the foil as handles. Use a large, sharp knife to cut the fudge into small one-inch pieces.

OM NOM NOM.

    Maple ginger fudge.

    ClockworkDagger_PB_cover500x332

    Trade Paperback & eBook

    Paperback ISBN: 978-0-06-231384-3

    ebook ASIN (Amazon): B00HLIYZ5U

    ebook ISBN (Nook): 978-0-06-231385-0

    Release: September 16, 2014

    Amazon Barnes & Noble Powell’s Books-A-Million Poisoned Pen Changing Hands

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    Bready or Not: Chewy Oatmeal White Chocolate Cranberry Cookies

    Posted by on Aug 20, 2014 in Blog, Bready or Not, cookies | Comments Off on Bready or Not: Chewy Oatmeal White Chocolate Cranberry Cookies

    A year ago, I shared my favorite Chewy Oatmeal Raisin Cookies. Aren’t they pretty?

    I decided to do a remix of this same recipe but with white chocolate chips and cranberries. See, I had major writing deadlines coming up and I wanted to have reliable dough stashed away in the freezer so I had emergency cookie dough.

    White Choc Cranberry Cookies

    Yes, emergency cookie dough. This is totally a thing.

    I prepped the dough by scooping it and freezing it on a cookie sheet and wax paper. Then I bagged it all and stashed it in the deep freeze.

    White Choc Cranberry Cookies

    Three months later, I baked it.

    White Choc Cranberry Cookies

    I took the dough straight from the freezer. I watched it bake because I really wasn’t sure how long it would need. The dough didn’t expand at all, so halfway through I used the bottom of a glass to smush them flatter. The batches ended up taking thirteen to sixteen minutes.

    My reliable cookie dough was indeed reliable. The white chocolate cranberry cookies ended up chewy and amazing, just like the original version.

    White Choc Cranberry Cookies

    Bready or Not: Chewy Oatmeal White Chocolate Cranberry Cookies

    Chewy oatmeal cookies that don't include raisins.
    Course: Dessert
    Keyword: cookies
    Author: Beth Cato

    Ingredients

    • 2 cups all-purpose flour
    • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
    • 1/2 teaspoon salt
    • 3/4 cup butter melted
    • 1 cup packed brown sugar packed
    • 1/2 cup white sugar
    • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
    • 1 Tablespoon pure vanilla extract
    • 1 egg
    • 1 egg yolk
    • 1 1/2 cups old-fashioned oats
    • 1 cup white chocolate chips
    • 1/2 cup dried cranberries

    Instructions

    • Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Line cookie sheets with parchment paper or silpat, or use seasoned stoneware.
    • Melt butter and let cool slightly.
    • Mix flour, baking soda and salt; set aside.
    • In a medium bowl, cream together the melted butter, brown sugar and white sugar until well blended. Beat in the cinnamon, vanilla, egg, and egg yolk for 2-3 minutes until light and creamy. Mix in the flour mixture. Add the oats, white chocolate, and cranberries. Mix until just blended.
    • Using a tablespoon scoop, place dough balls on pan. Bake for 10-13 minutes, until the edges are slightly brown and the middle is still soft. Let the cookies rest on the cookie sheet for 5-10 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack.

    Note: Scoop and freeze the dough for months. Bake it straight out of the freezer for 13-16 minutes; dough may need to be flattened halfway through if the cookies don't expand.

      OM NOM NOM.

        White Choc Cranberry Cookies

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        Bready or Not: Healthy Breakfast Cookies

        Posted by on Aug 13, 2014 in Blog, Bready or Not, breakfast, cookies, healthier | 2 comments

        Cookies for breakfast. Healthy cookies. No refined sugars. Vegan. Also gluten-free, if you use GF oats.

        Healthy Breakfast Cookies3_sm

        Even better: they taste delicious.

        This is one of my favorite breakfast recipes. I customize it based on my mood and what I have on hand. I’ve made this with macadamia nut butter, cashew butter, and almond butter–and combinations thereof. I’ve used apple butter, pumpkin butter, and date butter. Equally awesome with all varieties. I love to use golden raisins, but you could throw anything in. If you don’t have pepitas? Do sunflower seeds or other chopped nuts, or omit.

        Healthy Breakfast Cookies1_sm

        These cookies are cushions of goodness… like old-fashioned peanut butter cookies, but denser and better. I whip up a batch and freeze 2/3 of it right away. It takes care of my breakfast for weeks.

        I often have two cookies first thing in the morning before I exercise, and I might have one more if I’m hungry afterward. They give me the perfect amount of energy to start the day.

        Did I mention they are also delicious?

        Healthy Breakfast Cookies4_sm

        Modified from a recipe on Sally’s Baking Addiction.

         

        Bready or Not: Healthy Breakfast Cookies

        Delicious breakfast cookies that are easy to make gluten-free.
        Course: Breakfast, Snack
        Keyword: cookies, gluten free
        Author: Beth Cato

        Ingredients

        • 2 cups quick oats not whole or old-fashioned oats
        • 3/4 teaspoon salt
        • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon heaping
        • 1 cup nut butter
        • 1/4 cup pure maple syrup or honey
        • 3/4 cup fruit butter apple butter, date butter, etc
        • 1 cup dried fruit raisins, cranberries, etc
        • 1/2 cup pepitas shelled pumpkin seeds
        • 1/4 cup ground flaxseed optional

        Instructions

        • Preheat oven to 325-degrees. Prepare cookie sheets with parchment or silpat baking mats, or use seasoned stoneware.
        • Combine all of the ingredients into a large bowl.
        • Using a tablespoon or tablespoon scoop, drop dollops of dough onto cookie sheet. Note that it won't spread. Use fingers to gently tamp down top and press in stray oats on the sides; it will be a little sticky.
        • Bake for 12-15 minutes, until firm. Cool for several minutes before transitioning them to a rack to finish cooling.

        Makes about 28 cookies at tablespoon size. In a sealed container at room temperature, cookies will keep for at least a week. They can also be frozen without any change in taste or texture.

          OM NOM NOM!

            Healthy Breakfast Cookies2_sm

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            Bready or Not: Healthier Mint Chocolate Pie

            Posted by on Aug 6, 2014 in Blog, Bready or Not, chocolate, healthier, no-bake dessert, pie | Comments Off on Bready or Not: Healthier Mint Chocolate Pie

            Do not be afraid of this pie. Do not look at the main ingredient and go, “NOT GONNA GO IN MY MOUTH, NOPE NOPE.” I say that, because I was leery about this recipe, too, because I generally do not like tofu.

            Healthier Chocolate Pie 10_sm

            Yes, tofu. Stay with me.

            The thing with tofu is, it takes on whatever flavors it is with. So if you dump a whole bag of chocolate in with the tofu, you don’t taste the soy byproduct. (This is why the adjective in the title is “Healthier” not “Healthy.”) Think of the tofu as scaffolding. It’s there to hold up the tastier stuff.

            Healthier Chocolate Pie3_sm

            The original recipe comes from Chocolate Covered Katie, who is a great resource for healthier recipes. I’ve made this pie three times now and have adapted it a great deal from the original:

            – tofu blocks around here come in 14 ounce, not 12.3.
            – my first try, a chalky taste from the tofu was still evident, though it wasn’t bad. I upped the cocoa to mask that.
            – increased the peppermint extract, as I couldn’t taste it at all in the original. I also tried this by using mint Hershey’s Kisses as part of the chocolate chip measurement, which was great.

            Healthier Chocolate Pie 12_sm

            This all mixed up in my Vitamix in a matter of minutes. Then you dump everything into a premade graham cracker or Oreo crust, top with more chips if you want, then let it set for a few hours.

            Healthier Chocolate Pie5_sm

            There’s just something awesome about a smooth, cool pie in the summertime, and if it’s a bit healthier than the average pie… even better!

            Healthier Chocolate Pie9_sm

            Bready or Not: Healthier Mint Chocolate Pie

            A surprisingly good no-bake pie based on tofu. But yes, it's actually GOOD.
            Course: Dessert, Snack
            Keyword: chocolate, no bake, oreo, pie, tofu
            Author: Beth Cato

            Ingredients

            • 1 ready graham cracker crust or Oreo crust
            • 14 ounce firm tofu
            • 4 tsp cocoa powder sifted
            • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
            • 2 Tablespoons milk almond milk works
            • 1/8 tsp salt
            • 2 teaspoons peppermint extract
            • 8-10 ounces chocolate chips optional; also can mix in Hershey's Mint Kisses or other mint chips; reserve some chips for the top
            • 2-3 Tablespoons maple syrup or agave or other sweetener

            Instructions

            • Set aside some of the chocolate if you want it for the top or mixed in. Melt the bulk of the chocolate.
            • Add all of the other ingredients into a food processor or blender and pulse until very smooth.
            • Scoop it into a prepared pie crust; it will be very thick. Place in fridge for several hours to set.
            • Pie will keep perfectly well in fridge, covered, for up to a week.

            OM NOM NOM!

              Healthier Chocolate Pie 11_sm

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              Bready or Not: Biscoff Fluffernutter Bars

              Posted by on Jul 30, 2014 in biscoff spread, Blog, blondies, Bready or Not, chocolate | Comments Off on Bready or Not: Biscoff Fluffernutter Bars

              Air conditioning is what makes Phoenix habitable, but even that has limits. We keep our air set at 82-degrees. This keeps us comfortable but is still not quite cool enough for some stuff in our kitchen.

              Biscoff Fluffernutter Bars

              The chocolate chips in my pantry go soft. Miniature candy bars, stockpiled from holiday clearance sales, goes outright melty. Marshmallows and caramels begin to fossilize. I keep some things in the fridge but I can’t get all of it in there.

              This means I obviously need to start baking and use up the stuff while it’s still good.

              BiscoffFluffernutterBars4_sm

              Traditional fluffernutter bars use peanut butter. You can certainly do that here–or use any nut butter–but I used my good ol’ Biscoff spread because, as you all know, I’m obsessed with the stuff. It makes everything taste like cookie dough. What’s not to love? I also used half a bag of mini marshmallows (you’ll find out what I did with the other half in another recipe) and a bag of chocolate chips.

              You know what’s cool about using marshmallows in a recipe like this? CAVERNS. It creates pockets of invisible sweetness. Look! See?

              Biscoff Fluffernutter Bars

              My husband took this to work and it was, um, popular. The whole 9×13 pan’s worth of bars just kinda vanished and he had recipe requests.

              Biscoff Fluffernutter Bars

              I don’t believe in secret recipes. Share the love. If that love happens to involve chocolate, Biscoff spread, and marshmallows, all the better.

              Recipe greatly adapted from Back for Seconds.

              Bready or Not: Biscoff Fluffernutter Bars

              Sweet, scrumptious bars.
              Course: Dessert
              Keyword: bars, chocolate, cookie butter
              Author: Beth Cato

              Ingredients

              • 1 cup unsalted butter softened
              • 3/4 cups creamy Biscoff spread or nut butter
              • 1 cup brown sugar packed
              • 1/2 cup white sugar
              • 2 eggs room temperature
              • 1/2 teaspoon salt
              • 1 teaspoon baking soda
              • 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
              • 2 cups chocolate chips
              • 5 ounces mini marshmallows half bag

              Instructions

              • Preheat oven to 350-degrees. Prepare a 9x13 pan with aluminum foil or parchment and apply nonstick spray.
              • In a mixing bowl, cream together the butter, Biscoff spread (or nut butter), and sugars. Add the eggs and blend in, followed by all of the dry ingredients. Gently fold in marshmallows and chocolate chips. It'll be thick.
              • Spread the dough into the pan and even out. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until lightly browned on the edges. The center will jiggle slightly from the marshmallows but it will set after it cools.
              • Cool completely and cut into squares. Store in a tightly sealed container.

              OM NOM NOM.

                Biscoff Fluffernutter Bars

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                Bready or Not: Mini French Breakfast Puffs

                Posted by on Jul 23, 2014 in Blog, Bready or Not, breakfast, quick bread | Comments Off on Bready or Not: Mini French Breakfast Puffs

                Every so often, I like to mention how much I love the Pioneer Woman. I own all three of her cookbooks. I’ve followed her online for years and printed out many of her recipes. I’m also an enthusiastic watcher of her television show.

                Mini French Puff

                The original of this recipe was featured on her show a while back. The breakfast puffs reminded me greatly of a “mini muffin pan donut” recipe I tried a few years ago. It was one of those recipes that’s really good fresh, but goes stale by the next day. Since Ree Drummond emphasized that her version stayed good and was excellent to freeze as well, I figured I needed to give her variation a try.

                Mini French Puff

                This being me, though, I still had that old recipe on my mind. I modified her recipe to amp up the spice, cut down the coating (it made way too much!), and adjusted everything for a mini muffin pan.

                This created puffs that were much more friendly for my husband to take to work and share with a lot of co-workers… and for me to try one without having to eat an entire big honkin’ muffin.

                Mini French Puff

                In mini size, this makes about 40. They rose beautifully, with the texture light and cakey. Unlike the old recipe, they were just as tasty the next day, and as promised, they froze and thawed wonderfully!

                The perfect bite-sized breakfast muffin. Betcha can’t eat just one.

                Mini French Puff

                Modified from the original French Breakfast Puffs by Ree Drummond.

                Bready or Not: Mini French Breakfast Puffs

                Use a mini muffin pan to make fluffy, delicious breakfast treats or snacks!
                Course: Breakfast, Dessert, Snack
                Keyword: mini muffin, quick bread
                Author: Beth Cato

                Ingredients

                Ingredients

                • 3 cups all-purpose flour
                • 3 teaspoons baking powder
                • 1 teaspoon salt
                • 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
                • 1 cup white sugar
                • 2/3 cup shortening
                • 2 eggs room temperature
                • 1 cup whole milk almond milk works

                Coating

                • 1/2 cup unsalted butter
                • 1/2 cup white sugar
                • 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon

                Instructions

                • Preheat the oven to 350-degrees F. Prepare the mini muffin pan by using liners (highly recommend the liners) or spray thoroughly with non-stick coating.
                • Stir together the flour, baking powder, salt and nutmeg. Set aside.
                • In a different large bowl, cream together the sugar and shortening. Add the eggs and mix again. Measure the milk. Alternate adding the dry ingredients and milk into the sugar mix until everything is just combined.
                • Use a tablespoon scoop or spoon to dollop batter into each cup. It should be about 2/3 full. Bake until golden, 14-18 minutes. Remove the muffins from the pan and set aside as you ready the next batch.
                • While that's baking, start the coating. Melt the butter in a microwave-safe bowl. Combine the sugar and cinnamon in another bowl.
                • Dip the warm muffin tops in the butter and then in the cinnamon-sugar mixture.

                Keep in a sealed container at room temperature. They can also be frozen for later enjoyment.

                  OM NOM NOM!

                    Mini French Puff

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