Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts

Saturday

Beautifully basic cheesecake ... and almost beyond easy

 

It doesn’t have to be a holiday to whip up this award-winning baked-style cheesecake. The filling is sturdier and denser than the mousse-like no-bake variety, and the graham cracker crust is a family favorite. (We almost never have leftovers, but this cook has been known to squirrel away a single slice for day-after breakfast.)

 The preparation is easy, even if the actual baking time is rather lengthy. It’s a super recipe to make, if you’re planning to be home for a couple hours.

 


Basic Cheesecake Ingredients:

Base/Crust:

  • 2 cups graham cracker crumbs (1+ sleeve of crushed crackers)
  • 1/4 cup powdered/confectioners’ sugar
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 6 Tablespoons melted butter

Filling:

  • 2 blocks (8 ounces each) cream cheese (softened – not melted)
  • 2/3 cup granulated sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

 

Basic Cheesecake Instructions:

 Preheat oven to 350 (F) degrees. Line the bottom and sides of a 9” spring-form pan with parchment paper. (I trace the removable bottom of the pan, cutting a circle to fit. Then I cut strips to ring the side, all the way around.) Place the prepared pan atop a baking sheet larger on all sides than the spring-form pan.

 Combine all base/crust ingredients completely. Pour the mixture carefully into the lined spring-form pan, piling the crumbly mix to hold up the side paper circumference. Spread the crust mix evenly across the bottom, banking it somewhat around the edges.

 In a large mixing bowl (I use my standing mixer), cream together the cream cheese and sugar. When smooth, add the eggs and vanilla. Continue beating (at medium speed) until well-blended.

 Transfer the whipped filling into the crust.

 Cover the entire cheesecake with aluminum foil.

 Bake for 30 minutes. Remove foil.

 Bake another 20 minutes until center of pie reads 165 (F) degrees. The center will still be a little wiggly. The cheesecake should be golden brown (but not over-crisped or burnt) around the rim.

 Turn off oven, and leave cheesecake in it to cool for at least 30 minutes.

 Cover cooled cheesecake and store in refrigerator until serving.

 

Helpful Hint:

If using intact graham crackers, toss them into a zippered plastic bag. Push all the air out, and seal it tightly. Then use a baker’s rolling pin to crush the crackers into crumbs.

 

Variations:

This cheesecake recipe is easily adaptable. Try these add-ins for variety:

  • Almond pieces
  • Berries (any kind)
  • Butterscotch bits
  • Candy canes (crushed)
  • Chocolate chips
  • Gumdrops
  • Heath Bar chips (or crushed pieces)
  • Jelly Beans
  • Kiwi slices
  • Lemon wedges
  • Macadamian nuts
  • Mandarin oranges
  • M&M candies
  • Oreo cookie pieces
  • Peanuts
  • Pecans
  • Pretzel bits
  • Reese’s Pieces
  • Walnuts (chopped or chunks)

        Also: Fresh fruit or jam – for topping (optional)

 You can also alter the flavor of the basic cheesecake filling itself. Popular choices include apple, banana, chocolate, coconut, coffee or mocha, key lime, lemon/lime, peppermint, pineapple, praline, pumpkin, raspberry, red velvet, rhubarb, strawberry, white chocolate, and more. 

Related Items:

 

Image/s: Adapted from public domain photo

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Monday

Recipe: Super-Quick Whipped Cream Cookies

 

This delicious cookie recipe is almost too easy, with just four ingredients, and the results are delightful!

 I’ve made this recipe with spice cake mix, lemon cake mix, chocolate cake mix, carrot cake mix, and strawberry cake mix. But the red velvet cake mix version is our family favorite. And it’s a perennial sell-out at a bake sale I help to supply.

 


Ingredients:

  • 1 cake mix (13.5-15 oz.)
  • 1 tub frozen whipped topping (thawed)
  • 1 egg
  • 1 cup powdered / confectioners’ sugar

 

Instructions:

Preheat oven to 350 (F) degrees.

 Combine cake mix, whipped topping, and egg in a large bowl. Beat well.

 Pour powdered / confectioners’ sugar into a large flat bowl or dish. (A sturdy standard-sized paper plate works well.)

 Scoop gooey cookie dough into hands (about golf-ball-sized portions). Roll the glob gently in the powdered / confectioners’ sugar to coat it fully. (This will be a messy job, but it’s worth it.)

 Drop powdered cookies on chilled baking sheets.  (Hint: For holiday/cold-weather baking, I like to place empty cookie sheets in the garage or on the porch to cool between batches.)

 Bake for 12-14 minutes (as ovens vary). They will be crackled on top and somewhat puffy.

 Remove cookies from oven, and allow them to sit on their baking sheets for a couple of minutes before removing them with a spatula and placing them on cookie racks.

 Makes approximately two dozen cookies. Store cookies in an airtight tub or container, if there are any leftovers.

 

Related Items:

 

Image/s: LAN/PAH photo – all rights reserved.

 

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Wednesday

Halloween cookie decorating: 4 easy ways

 Halloween cookies offer a super culinary and craft project for children and adults alike. Try these four basic, but boo-tiful Halloween cookie decorating tricks, and your trick-or-treaters will beg for more. These Halloween cookie crafts are simple enough for very young children to do, as long as adults supervise.




Decorated Halloween cookies are super for classroom parties, Halloween get-togethers, costume parties or even your own Halloween party menu. Try these easy Halloween cookie tips for making cookie bats, cats, spiders, pumpkins, and other favorites for your trick-or-treaters.

 

How to decorate cookies simply for Halloween fun

Need cookie recipes? Try Fine Fare with Flair: Riverport Recipes!

Super-Basic Trick or Treat Cookies

Before you can begin decorating your Halloween cookies, of course, you must bake them. You might choose to make fancy Halloween cut-out cookies in holiday shapes (such as bats, cats, pumpkins or other Halloween objects) or simple round ones.

Before you begin decorating, be sure to bake your Halloween cookies thoroughly, and allow them to cool completely.

Basic Bats

The simplest round sugar cookies can become batty in a flash. The easiest way to decorate Halloween bat cookies is to create a basic bat stencil. Grab a sheet of plain clean paper. Fold it in half, and cut out a basic bat outline. Be sure to make arcs at the top.

Unsure how to create a bat shape? Look at free online clip-art bats online. Download your choice of clip-art, resize it to fit your cookies, and cut it out to make your stencil. (Halloween clip-art sites offer plenty of other designs, besides bat, so you can take your pick for stencil-making and Halloween cookie decorating.)

Begin decorating your baked and cooled Halloween cookies by glazing them with a clear or white icing. Let cookies stand until glaze has nearly hardened.

Place your cut-out bat or other Halloween stencil on top of one trick or treat cookie. Add chocolate sprinkles to fill the cut-out pattern. Carefully remove the stencil.

Repeat this step (with the chocolate sprinkles) until all Halloween cookies have been decorated. Let cookies stand individually on a counter or flat surface until the decorating designs have set.

Kooky Kitty Cats

Black cat cookies are a certain treat for Halloween gatherings, and these are easy to decorate.

Frost your baked and cooled Halloween cookies with dark chocolate frosting. Use white chocolate chips to add kitty facial features, making the cat's pointy ears, eyes, nose and mouth. Place a few coconut flakes on both cheeks to make the Halloween cat's whiskers.

If you are extra crafty, you might roll the edges of your Halloween cookies in white coconut flakes, while the frosting is still sticky, to add a kitty fur edge.

Spider Surprises

Creepy crawly spiders are a perennial Halloween favorite for cookie decorators, and they are incredibly easy to make.

Frost your baked and cooled Halloween cookies with chocolate frosting. While the frosting is still sticky, affix eight short strands of black licorice to each cookie to form the spindly spider legs.

Stick a few tiny licorice snips onto the spider's body, if you wish, to make eyes. Watch your trick-or-treaters snatch up those creepy spider cookies.

Pretty Perky Pumpkins

Halloween jack-o-lantern cookies may be the easiest decorating project of all, but these are also the most popular.

Frost your baked and cooled Halloween cookies with orange frosting. You can purchase orange flavored frosting, or create your own with food coloring. (Remember, red and yellow may be mixed to create orange.)

Use chocolate chips or bits to form facial features, as you decorate your Halloween cookie pumpkins.

Make your own Halloween cookie decorating fun!

Trick-or-treaters will cheer, not "Boo," at these creative creepy Halloween cookies. The process is as fun as the product, of course, as children of all ages will enjoy decorating Halloween cookies and then eating them together.

NOTE: Written by this author, this copyrighted material originally appeared on another publisher’s site. That site no longer exists. This author holds all rights to this content. No republication is allowed without permission.

 Related Items:

 

Image/s: public domain photo, plus book cover promo photo (fair use)

Pumpkin Cravings: 12 pleasing pumpkin recipes for autumn or anytime

 

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