Monday, August 13, 2018

Frosted Sugar Cookie Bars #BakingBloggers

When you are craving sugar cookies but can’t be bothered with rolling out dough and using cookie cutters, make frosted sugar cookie bars instead! They are super simple and are as pretty as they are tasty.

Food Lust People Love: When you are craving sugar cookies but can’t be bothered with rolling out dough and using cookie cutters, make frosted sugar cookie bars instead! They are super simple and are as pretty as they are tasty.


There’s a certain pace and skill to baking sugar cookies that can’t be rushed. Once you’ve mixed the dough, it needs to chill well before rolling. And you can’t roll it all out at once or it softens and won’t peel off the work surface. And you can’t roll it too thin or it breaks when you try to peel it off. It’s a practice makes perfect operation.

That’s where frosted sugar cookie bars pull out ahead in the tasty but easy race. One bowl dough, no chilling, no rolling, no cutting until after they are baked! Are they pretty shapes? Well, they aren’t Christmas trees, but they are neat squares. Who doesn’t love a good square?

Frosted Sugar Cookie Bars

This recipe was adapted from A Little Bit Crunchy A Little Bit Rock and Roll, which makes a huge 13x18 in or 33x46cm pan. If you are feeding a crowd, you will want to head over to the original recipe and maybe just add in some lemon.

Ingredients
For the cookie dough:
Zest 1/2 lemon
2/3 cup or 132g sugar
1/3 cup or 75g unsalted butter, room temperature
1 egg
1 egg yolk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1 2/3 cups or 208g flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda

For the frosting:
3 tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature
3 tablespoons shortening
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
pinch of salt
1 1/2 cups or 187g powdered sugar
3-4 teaspoons milk

To decorate: sprinkles

Method
Prepare your 8x8 in or 20x20cm pan (You can use a 9x9 in or 23x23cm pan for slightly thinner bars.) by greasing it or lining it with baking parchment. Preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°F.

Beat the sugar and lemon zest together. Add in the butter and cream until fluffy.


Add the egg and egg yolk and beat until well combined.

Add the vanilla and lemon juice to the creamed mixture.



In another bowl, whisk the dry ingredients together. Then with the beaters on slow, add the dry ingredients into the batter bowl.

Tip the dough into your prepared pan and spread it out evenly, all the way into the corners.



Bake in the preheated oven for 14-16 minutes, or until it is just starting to brown.



Cool the cookie bars on a wire rack until completely cool before frosting.

While the cookie bars are baking, you can make the frosting.

In a mixing bowl, beat the shortening and butter together. Add the powdered sugar and vanilla and beat well until the shortening and butter are fully incorporated into the sugar.



Gradually add the milk, one teaspoon at a time, beating well with each addition until you get a spreadable frosting. You may not need all of the milk.



Once the sugar cookie bars are completely cooled, get your sprinkles ready. Pile the frosting on the cookie and smooth it out. I like to leave some dips and ridges to catch the sprinkles.

Immediately shake on your sprinkles so they’ll stick. I used two different sizes of sprinkles because I have a huge collection and it seemed like the right thing to do.

Food Lust People Love: When you are craving sugar cookies but can’t be bothered with rolling out dough and using cookie cutters, make frosted sugar cookie bars instead! They are super simple and are as pretty as they are tasty.
Chill for about 10-15 minutes, uncovered, then use a sharp knife to cut them into squares.

Food Lust People Love: When you are craving sugar cookies but can’t be bothered with rolling out dough and using cookie cutters, make frosted sugar cookie bars instead! They are super simple and are as pretty as they are tasty.


The frosting will firm up as it dries out. Once this happens, cover with cling film or store in an airtight container.

Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: When you are craving sugar cookies but can’t be bothered with rolling out dough and using cookie cutters, make frosted sugar cookie bars instead! They are super simple and are as pretty as they are tasty.


Do you love the ease of baking brownies or cookie bars too? You are going to love this month's list of recipes from my fellow Baking Bloggers. Many thanks to our host Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm for her behind the scenes work. 

Baking Bloggers is a friendly group of food bloggers who vote on a shared theme and then post recipes to fit that theme one the second Monday of each month. If you are a food blogger interesting in joining in, inquire at our Baking Bloggers Facebook group. We'd be honored if you would join us in our baking adventures.


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When you are craving sugar cookies but can’t be bothered with rolling out dough and using cookie cutters, make frosted sugar cookie bars instead! They are super simple and are as pretty as they are tasty.

.

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Grilled Zucchini Summer Salad #FoodieExtravaganza

Grilled zucchini summer salad is beautiful and tasty, the perfect plate of cheap and abundant zucchini and ripe grape tomatoes. Throw a few edamame on there for color and protein! It’s a great side dish or even main course for hot summer nights.

Food Lust People Love: Grilled zucchini summer salad is beautiful and tasty, the perfect plate of cheap and abundant zucchini and ripe grape tomatoes. Throw a few edamame on there for color and protein! It’s a great side dish or even main course for hot summer nights.


I’ve heard tales of zucchini patches so prolific that neighbors leave bags of produce on porches in the middle of the night, just to get rid of them. I’ve never been so lucky. It would just about make my day to come out one morning to find a free pile of zucchini on my porch! Along with their Cucurbita Pepo sibling, yellow crookneck squash, zucchini is probably my favorite summer vegetable.

If you’ve been reading this space for a while – I completely missed celebrating/mentioning my seven year anniversary in June! – you might already know that. I have so many zucchini recipes! At least a baker’s dozen, including Parmesan and Brie Topped Zucchini in a semolina crust, Zucchini-Wrapped Cheesy Pea Burgers, Baked Zucchini with Spicy Tomatoes and the not very beautiful but oh-so-tasty savory Zucchini Clafoutis.

If you are as big a fan of zucchini as I am, make sure you scroll down to the bottom of this post and check out the link list to many more delicious zucchini recipes from my Foodie Extravaganza friends.

Grilled Zucchini Summer Salad

This recipe builds on one I found originally in Jamie Oliver’s Happy Days with the Naked Chef.* I first made it in 2002 and have been adding ingredients to the zucchini, as the whim and what’s fresh take me, ever since. This recipe is easily doubled or trebled for a crowd.

Ingredients
1 large zucchini – about 8 oz or 225g
Sea salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 red chili pepper
1/2 clove garlic
Several fresh mint leaves
Extra virgin olive oil
Fresh lemon juice
1/3 cup or 55g shelled edamame (I buy these frozen and thaw.)
Small handful red grape tomatoes
Small handful yellow grape tomatoes

Method
Use a wide potato peeler to cut long strips off of the zucchini from end to end, discarding the first and last strips that are all peel.



Heat your grill pan until very hot and lay the zucchini strips on it single file, a few at a time. Watch them carefully and remove them from the pan with tongs when the grill lines become medium brown and come through to the top of the strips. No need to turn the strips over.



Arrange the grilled strips on your serving plate, making sure not to pile them on top of each other. You want them to be able to cool off. Piled together they’d just keep steaming and cooking.


When you’ve grilled all the zucchini, sprinkle them lightly with some flakey sea salt and a few good grinds of fresh black pepper.

Mince the chili pepper and garlic and mix the two together. Sprinkle them on the zucchini from a height so they don’t clump together.


Cut your grape tomatoes in half and add them to the plate. Scatter the edamame around as well. Give the whole plate a good squeeze of fresh lemon and a generous drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Top with some washed mint leaves and serve.

Food Lust People Love: Grilled zucchini summer salad is beautiful and tasty, the perfect plate of cheap and abundant zucchini and ripe grape tomatoes. Throw a few edamame on there for color and protein! It’s a great side dish or even main course for hot summer nights.


Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: Grilled zucchini summer salad is beautiful and tasty, the perfect plate of cheap and abundant zucchini and ripe grape tomatoes. Throw a few edamame on there for color and protein! It’s a great side dish or even main course for hot summer nights.


Many thanks to this month's wonderful host, Sue of Palatable Pastime. Check out all of the zucchini dishes we are sharing in honor of National Zucchini Day on August 8th. How will you celebrate? 


Foodie Extravaganza celebrates obscure food holidays, and we all post recipes using the same ingredient. Posting day is always the first Wednesday of each month. If you are a blogger and would like to join our group and blog along with us, come join our Facebook page Foodie Extravaganza. We would love to have you!

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Food Lust People Love: Grilled zucchini summer salad is beautiful and tasty, the perfect plate of cheap and abundant zucchini and ripe grape tomatoes. Throw a few edamame on there for color and protein! It’s a great side dish or even main course for hot summer nights.

*Amazon affiliate link
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Monday, July 30, 2018

Apple and Date Muffins #MuffinMonday

Sweet ripe Medjool dates and tart green apple combine in these apple and date muffins to make a deliciously nutritious breakfast or snack.

Food Lust People Love: Sweet ripe Medjool dates and tart green apple combine in these apple and date muffins to make a deliciously nutritious breakfast or snack.


It’s date season in the UAE so palm trees hang heavy with promise everywhere, even in my backyard. I have no idea if mine are any good to eat though, because we neglected the usual practice of bagging the dates with green mesh. The birds always get to them first. And I don’t begrudge them the treat.

Summer time in the UAE is hotter than the hinges of the gates of hell, dry and dusty to boot so I can’t imagine the birds have an easy time getting either water to drink or food to eat. With an irrigation that goes on three times a day and all the dates they could hope to eat, my backyard is pretty popular.

It sounds like I am more generous than I really am. If I’m honest, dates aren’t my favorite fruit to eat - they are sooooo sweet, too sweet for me mostly – but they are lovely to bake with. On those occasions, I leave the birds to their feast and buy a few Medjool dates.

Apple and Date Muffins


I recommend the fully ripened Medjool dates for this recipe as they are the sweetest dates I’ve ever tasted (although my neighbor Sandra’s dates come close!) and they are super sticky with goodness. Perfect for baking.

Ingredients
4 large Mejool dates
1 cup or 240ml milk
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 green apple, peeled and chopped finely
2 cups or 250g all-purpose flour
1/4 cup, firmly packed, or 50g dark brown sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs
1⁄4 cup or 60g butter, melted and cooled

Optional for topping: 1 Medjool date, chopped

Method
Pit and chop your dates, setting one aside for garnish, if desired



Put the rest in a heatproof bowl. Add in the half teaspoon of baking soda. Scald the milk and pour it over the chopped dates. Stir to help separate the bits of sticky date and set aside till cool. It will cool faster if you stir it occasionally.



Make ahead tip: If you want to bake your muffins first thing in the morning, do the scalded milk step the day before and pop the milk in the refrigerator once it has cooled.

Preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C and prepare your 12-cup muffin pan by greasing it with non-stick spray or lining it with muffin paper cups.

In a large bowl, whisk your flour and sugar with the baking powder and salt. In another bowl, add the eggs to the cooled date mixture.

Peel, core and finely chop the green apple, adding the bits to the liquid bowl immediately so they don’t turn brown. Pour in the butter and whisk it all together.



Pour your wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and fold until just combined.

A little flour might still show.



Divide the batter evenly between the 12 cups of your prepared muffin pan and then top each with some of the extra chopped date, if desired.

Sweet ripe Medjool dates and tart green apple combine in these apple and date muffins to make a deliciously nutritious breakfast or snack.


Bake for 20 - 25 minutes in your preheated over or until golden brown.

Sweet ripe Medjool dates and tart green apple combine in these apple and date muffins to make a deliciously nutritious breakfast or snack.


Cool for a few minutes then remove to a wire rack to cool completely.

Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: Sweet ripe Medjool dates and tart green apple combine in these apple and date muffins to make a deliciously nutritious breakfast or snack.


Check out all the lovely muffins we have for you this month. July is a good month for muffins! 


Muffin Monday
#MuffinMonday is a group of muffin loving bakers who get together once a month to bake muffins. You can see all our of lovely muffins by following our Pinterest board. Updated links for all of our past events and more information about Muffin Monday, can be found on our home page.

Pin it! 

Food Lust People Love: Sweet ripe Medjool dates and tart green apple combine in these apple and date muffins to make a deliciously nutritious breakfast or snack.

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Thursday, July 19, 2018

Lime Coconut Bundt #BundtBakers

Sweet flaked coconut, coconut milk and the zest and juice of fresh limes give this lime coconut Bundt cake rich flavor and zip. Like a bite of your favorite tropical vacation in every mouthful.

Food Lust People Love: Sweet flaked coconut, coconut milk and the zest and juice of fresh limes give this lime coconut Bundt cake rich flavor and zip. Like a bite of your favorite tropic vacation in every mouthful.


Tropical Bundts is a popular theme for our Bundt baking group. In the five plus years that I’ve participated, this is the fourth tropical cake we’ve shared. Between my Pineapple Kuih Tat Bundt baked in 2013, to 2014’s Mango Ginger Bundt and the super moist Banana Coconut Pineapple Bundt in 2016, I’d be hard pressed to choose a favorite tropical Bundt because I loved them all. Until today. This lime coconut Bundt wins, hands down.

Lime Coconut Bundt

This recipe is adapted from a coconut cake made by my friend Nancy of gotta get baked. Nancy doesn’t blog any more but her site is still available online, and thank goodness, because she has so many gorgeous recipes. She is funny, irreverent and witty, in addition to her skills in the kitchen. I miss her regular posts.

Ingredients
For the cake batter:
1 cup or 226g unsalted butter, room temp, plus extra for greasing pan
1 1/2 cups or 300g sugar
6 large eggs, room temperature
2 1/2 cups or 312g all-purpose flour, plus extra for flouring greased pan
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
3 tablespoons fresh lime juice
Zest 1/2 lime
1 cup or 240ml canned unsweetened coconut milk
1 cup, lightly packed, or 75g sweetened shredded coconut

For the Lime Coconut Glaze:
1 tablespoon fresh lime juice
1 tablespoon coconut milk
1 cup or 125g powdered sugar

To decorate:
1-2 tablespoons sweetened shredded coconut
Zest 1/2 lime

Method
Preheat the oven to 350°F or 180°C. Butter and flour a 12-cup Bundt pan.

In a small bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, baking powder and baking soda.



In the bowl of your stand mixer or a large bowl with a hand mixer, cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy, approximately 5 minutes. Add in the first egg and beat well.



Beat in the rest of the eggs, one at a time, scraping down the sides of the bowl as necessary.



Add the lime juice and zest into the cup of coconut milk and mix to combine.



Slowly add the dry ingredients and mix until the batter is smooth.

Pour in the coconut milk and beat again until well combined.



Fold in the shredded coconut.



Pour the batter into the prepared Bundt pan and bake for 45-50 minutes, or until a wooden skewer comes out clean.



Cool the cake for about 10 minutes, then turn the cake out onto a wire rack. Cool completely before drizzling on the glaze.



To make the glaze, whisk all of the ingredients together in a small bowl. Drizzle over the cooled cake.

Food Lust People Love: Sweet flaked coconut, coconut milk and the zest and juice of fresh limes give this lime coconut Bundt cake rich flavor and zip. Like a bite of your favorite tropic vacation in every mouthful.
To decorate, sprinkle on the lime zest and extra flaked coconut immediately before the glaze hardens.

Food Lust People Love: Sweet flaked coconut, coconut milk and the zest and juice of fresh limes give this lime coconut Bundt cake rich flavor and zip. Like a bite of your favorite tropic vacation in every mouthful.


Enjoy!

This month my Bundt Bakers group is bringing you tropical cakes just in case you are needing a beach holiday. And, frankly, who isn’t? Many thanks to our host, Sandra from Sweet Sensations for this great theme and her behind-the-scenes work.

BundtBakers

#BundtBakers is a group of Bundt loving bakers who get together once a month to bake Bundts with a common ingredient or theme. Follow our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated each month on the BundtBakers home page.

Pin it! 

Food Lust People Love: Sweet flaked coconut, coconut milk and the zest and juice of fresh limes give this lime coconut Bundt cake rich flavor and zip. Like a bite of your favorite tropic vacation in every mouthful.
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Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Pão de Queijo - Brazilian Cheese Bread #BreadBakers

Chewy and cheesy inside with a slightly crunchy outside, Pão de Queijo is a traditional baked snack served in Brazil. They are terribly more-ish. You cannot eat just one!

Food Lust People Love: Chewy and cheesy inside with a slightly crunchy outside, Pão de Queijo is a traditional baked snack served in Brazil. They are terribly more-ish. You cannot eat just one!


Everywhere I’ve lived over the past 55 years (13 countries and counting!) I’ve learned how to make favorite dishes and added them to our family repertoire, from spicy curries to homemade falafels. Brazil was not only one of our favorite places to live but it also introduced us to many of our favorite recipes including zesty caipirinha cocktails, black beans and sausage, bolinhos de bacalhau, garlicky collards greens, chocolatey brigadeiros and these delicious pão de queijo or Brazilian cheese breads.

Pão de queijo made an appearance at the local churrascarias (grilled meat restaurants) as well as lanchonetes (snack counters) across Brazil. When folks baked them at home, even in Brazil, they typically used Yoki package mixes, as did we. If you look online, there are places in the US you can order Yoki, but it’s just as easy, honestly, to make them from scratch. If you have to order something online anyway, go for the tapioca starch.


Pão de Queijo or Brazilian Cheese Bread

Naturally gluten free! I used the Goya brand tapioca starch for these, readily available in many supermarkets for a reasonable cost. Bob’s Red Mill also makes sells it. This recipe is adapted from one on Sonia Portuguese.

Ingredients - makes about 70
1 cup or 240ml water
1 cup or 240ml milk
1/2 cup or 120ml canola or other light oil, plus more for greasing the pans
1 teaspoon salt
3 1/2 cups or 450g tapioca starch
2  large eggs
7 oz or 200g Parmesan cheese, grated finely

Method
Pour the water, milk, oil and salt into a large pot and bring it to the boil.

Remove the pan from the heat and add the tapioca starch.

Mix well with a wooden spoon until all of the tapioca starch is mixed in then set it aside to cool down till just warm.



Preheat your oven to 375°F or 190°C and grease two large baking pans with oil.

Beat the eggs and add them in to the warm dough.

Knead well until the eggs are fully incorporated. This is going to stick to your hands. Keep kneading and scrape the dough off with a spatula from time to time.



Add the grated cheese and keep kneading until the dough is smooth.



Scoop out 1 tablespoon pieces of dough and drop them on your prepared pan.



Roll the dough pieces into small balls, dampening your hands with water to stop the dough from sticking to you, dropping the balls back onto the baking pan. Wet your hands again as necessary during the rolling.



Bake the pão de queijo in your preheated oven for about 20-22 minutes or until golden brown and speckled in places.

Food Lust People Love: Chewy and cheesy inside with a slightly crunchy outside, Pão de Queijo is a traditional baked snack served in Brazil. They are terribly more-ish. You cannot eat just one!


Ideally, serve them warm. (But we'll also eat them the next day at room temperature.) Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: Chewy and cheesy inside with a slightly crunchy outside, Pão de Queijo is a traditional baked snack served in Brazil. They are terribly more-ish. You cannot eat just one!
Check out that spongy interior! These guys are so chewy and cheesy. 


This month my Bread Bakers are all sharing gluten free recipes and I am taking my turn as host. Check out all of their great recipes!
BreadBakers
#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. Follow our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated each month on this home page.

We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.

Pin it! 


Food Lust People Love: Chewy and cheesy inside with a slightly crunchy outside, Pão de Queijo is a traditional baked snack served in Brazil. They are terribly more-ish. You cannot eat just one!
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