Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2016

Recipe: Gluten Free Chocolate and Peanut Butter Cupcakes


My mom was diagnosed with Gluten Intolerance (thankfully NOT Celiac, but it's still pretty bad) a few years ago, so it's been an experience to figure out gluten free baked goods that she can handle. Having been able to eat things with flour for most of her life, the change has been challenging. So I am always on the look out for recipes that will work to help her not feel left out or having to eat something inferior tasting while we munch on good foods.

So in gearing up for our next movie theme (which is in two weeks, but I will announce another day) I went in search for the perfect GF cupcake recipe. I couldn't find anything that I liked, so I decided to modify existing recipes I've tried for other things and come up with my own. I have to say mom is a very happy camper with these, so I think this will be a success for anyone else wanting to bake them, too.

**This recipe makes a dozen regular sized cupcakes or 6 jumbo cupcakes**

Ingredients:

Cake:
½ cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
½ cup butter
⅔ cup packed brown sugar
3 eggs, beaten
¾ cup plus ½ tsp unsweetened cocoa powder
cupcake liners


Filling:
½ stick of butter, softened
1 cup of powdered sugar
¼ tsp of vanilla extract
½ cup of creamy peanut butter
½ tsp of milk
couple handfuls of heath toffee bits


Frosting:
¼ cup butter, softened
¼ cup creamy peanut butter
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup powdered sugar
⅓ cup cocoa powder
1/8 cup heavy cream


Directions:

Cake:
Preheat oven to 375 F.
In a microwave-safe bowl, combine butter and chocolate and melt in 30 second increments until the butter is melted; whisk until the chocolate butter mixture is smooth.
Whisk in the brown sugar, then eggs - one at a time - and mix until smooth.
Sift the cocoa powder into the mixture mix until combined.
Fill each cupcake liner ⅔ full.
Bake for 20-25 minutes, until toothpick test comes out clean (15-20 minutes for smaller cupcakes).
Let fully cool before coring out the center of the cupcakes for filling.
**When cooling, the cupcakes may "deflate".**




Filling:
With a mixer mixer, on medium high, cream butter and peanut butter together for 2-5 minutes until mixture is creamy and smooth (it will be a lighter in color peanut butter look).
Add your powdered sugar and mix until fully incorporated (slowly).
Continue mixing on medium high for 1 minute
Add vanilla and milk, mix for another minute. Filling should be thick and creamy. If it is not the consistency you want, continue mixing until desired consistency.
Do NOT begin filling cupcakes until they are fully cooled.
Take pastry tip and bag to fill (ziplock bags can be cheaper than disposable pastry bags) cupcake. If you do not have pastry tip or bag, use small spoon. Fill to the level of the top of cupcake.



Frosting:
In large bowl, beat softened butter, peanut butter and vanilla extract until smooth.
Slowly mix in powdered sugar and cocoa until combined.
Add heavy cream and whip at least two minutes until light and fluffy.
You can either use a pastry bag and tip to frost, or just use a knife. Whatever you prefer. Top with more toffee bits.
**If frosting is too thick, add more cream one tablespoon at a time until desired consistency. If frosting is too thin, add more sugar one tablespoon at a time until desired consistency.**

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Walt Disney's Pinocchio [Themed Dinner]

I originally posted this on my personal blog (Reitter's Block) on November 17, 2012 as part of my "Tasteful Countdown" project counting down to the family trip to Walt Disney World in October of 2013. This is the project that gave me the idea to create this blog. And then life got in the way... so I am starting it up again in the New Year.
We are back on track with the Tasteful Countdown for our 2013 Disney trip. This week's movie was Pinocchio. It's not one of my favorites, but it has the song that became Disney's "theme", so it is a must watch. I found out that dad's favorite Disney character growing up with Jiminy Cricket, so that also made it special! We're learning more about each other as a family as we go through this.

The menu was themed around Northern Italy as that is the area that Pinocchio is supposed to take place (who knew?! I always thought he was German! LOL). It was difficult to find something that was Northern Italian that wasn't really *out there* or expensive, or that anyone would eat. I finally found a website that linked recipes by region and away we went.

Dad helped with the menu, I'm trying to keep him excited about this adventure, and so we settled on a main dish of Chicken with a Fire roasted red pepper red sauce over fettucine, and the dessert was a Peach tart with a Cocoa-Almond crust (the best part of that being it was gluten free so mom could have it). I couldn't figure out a good side dish, but my friends at Golden Skate Forums helped me out and suggested Polenta. DorisPulaski gave me a good recipe for a creamy polenta so my menu was all set.

Thursday rolled around and I felt all set - until we realized we never went and got the ingredients. So mom made a quick trip to the store in between her Bible Study and PCC duties, and called me to let me know I'd have to get the stuff out of her car on my way home from the office. No problem, a quick drive over and I had the stuff and was on my way home. That's when I noticed that I was missing some key ingredients - mainly the roasted red peppers!


The peach tart's directions were scary,
but it was successful!
So I sat around hoping I'd just missed a bag in mom's car. No such luck, instead of roasted red peppers she'd bought roasted tomatos! Whoops! So as I started on the dessert mom hurried over to the store and got the missing peppers. The tart had me very nervous because I had to make a syrup with the peaches and I was so scared that I would burn the sugar (I didn't!). When I chose this dish, I just read the ingredients and not the instructions. There's a lot to this little tart! I didn't have all of the tools I needed, but I made do.

With the tart baking in the oven, I started on the main dish. It was easy peasy and I realized the sauce was going to be finished before the rest of the meal! Oh no! I took it off the heat and made the polenta. I was worried I would do it wrong, and so I think I cooked it a bit longer than what I should have, but how was I to know?! While I finished up the polenta I boiled the pasta, and finished the sauce. Unfortunately this meant the polenta was cold by the time it was ready to dish up. I guess I still need to work on my timing!

Main dish was awesome!
The chicken also had me worried, as I didn't want to cook it wrong. Mom "taught" me by doing it herself. She said I watched so I would be able to do it next time... okay, mom, whatever you say! Once everything was done I dished up the plates, sliced up the chicken breasts and served my family. Duane was at youth group, so he was dining on Pizza while we had our own Italian meal. He was fine with missing out - except that he wanted dessert! Mom and Dad loved everything on the menu, but I found I am not a fan of polenta, so mom was happy because that means she's gotten to have left over polenta for days!

We also decided that the next time we make the main dish that we'd make a double batch - we needed more sauce! The sauce was super yummy - and I'm not normally a fan of peppers, but this was really good! I definitely ate all of that on my plate, but I was full from lunch (I ate late, my bad!) so I didn't eat all the chicken and I skipped the polenta.

The tart was so good dad ate half of it!
Dessert was served about half way through the movie, and Duane was back from youth group, so he had nothing to worry about. I am not a fan of peaches at all, so I didn't try a piece, but judging by the reactions of my family they all loved it. I served it with ice cream and the extra peach syrup and they gobbled it up!

Because it was an almond crust, I used almond flour instead of the all purpose the recipe called for - so mom could have it. From what I could tell it didn't do anything to negatively affect the dish - though the dough was a little wetter than it called for. We also had to use frozen peaches, so the syrup was runny and we had more of it, which made the middle of the tart to be very soft, but everything was cooked through. Dad ate the last piece of it the same night, so obviously it was a win!

If you have any vegetarian ideas please share them with me by commenting on this post! I need all the help I can get!

Links to recipes from this week meal:
Chicken Fettuccine with roasted red pepper sauce
DorisPulaski's Creamy Polenta
Peach Tart with Almond-Cocoa Crust