Category Archives: Desserts

Healthy Desserts for Kids

Chocolate, banana, spinach smoothie!

Awhile ago, during the summer (those days seem far away!), I had the opportunity to join Katherine Lee of about.com in her kitchen for a fun afternoon of cooking and filming!

Katherine has a wonderful parenting blog on about.com, and she invited me to contribute some healthy dessert ideas for kids.  We made everything in her kitchen and the lovely Meredith filmed us.  It was a blast and such a different experience from what I am usually doing during the day in my studio!  She treated us to a fabulous sushi lunch, and we munched on the desserts we made throughout the day.  🙂

My favorite Double Chocolate Zucchini, Banana Bread with Secret Ingredient is one of the recipes featured.

Can you guess what the secret ingredient is?

Check out the video on how to make it here.
Other super easy, practically-not-cooking recipes are:
Peanut Butter Truffles!  Remember this post?
Video is here.
Frozen Yogurt Grapes:
I never did a post about it, but the recipe is in the video.
Banana Soft Serve (minus the Magic Shell!):

All natural goodness — just bananas and a splash of milk!

Chocolate version seen here in the video.

And last, but not least:  Chocolate, Banana, Spinach Smoothie  

This the one video I never want Jamie to see, because he drinks this all the time!  It is a great after school snack.  The spinach has absolutely no flavor in the smoothie, and he has no idea I sneak it in. I sometimes use frozen spinach which adds to the creaminess of the smoothie along with the frozen banana!

Video and recipe are here.

Hope you enjoy these recipes — they are all really easy to make and are pretty healthy considering they are desserts!

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Filed under Breakfast, Children, Desserts, Snack, Vegetarian

Chocolate Cake with Raspberry Mascarpone Filling and Chocolate Ganache Frosting


Recently we celebrated our nephew’s 20th birthday.  He’s a chocolate lover so I decided to make him a chocolate cake.  To dress it up, I added a raspberry spin to it.

I used my go to chocolate cake recipe which is in Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything. The chocolate ganache frosting is my favorite because I don’t care so much for buttercream frostings. It’s also the easiest thing in the world to make. Just boil cream and pour over a bowl of chocolate chips or chopped choolate. Let sit, then add corn syrup and vanilla and stir. It is the frosting I used for my lovely Banana Cake with Peanut Butter Filling.

For a raspberry filling between the layers, instead of just jam, I mixed raspberry preserves with a bit of mascarpone to make it creamier but not too heavy.

To finish it, I decorated the top with fresh raspberries and dusted it with confectioner’s sugar right before serving.

It was delicious! The cake is not overly sweet and pairs well with the chocolate ganache.  The creamy hints of raspberry are also a great foil for the rich chocolate.

I will definitely be making this cake again for a special occasion. If you make it, I hope you enjoy it as much as we did!

Chocolate Cake with Raspberry Mascarpone Filling and Chocolate Ganache Frosting

Chocolate Cake adapted from Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything:
Non-stick spray
8 tbsp (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
unsweetened cocoa powder (or flour if you don’t have any cocoa) for dusting
2 cups (9 oz)  all-purpose flour
3 oz unsweetened chocolate, roughly chopped
1 cup sugar
2 eggs, separated
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/4 cups milk
Raspberry Filling:
¾ cup raspberry preserves
¼ cup mascarpone at room temperature
Chocolate Ganache Frosting:

9 oz. chocolate chips

1 cup heavy cream

½ teaspoon vanilla

3 tablespoons corn syrup

About a 1/2 cup of fresh raspberries

Confectioner’s sugar for dusting

1.  Spray two 9 inch layer cake pans with non-stick spray and line bottoms with parchment paper.  Dust with unsweetened cocoa powder to coat sides and tap out excess.  Set aside.
2.  Preheat the oven to 350ºF.
3.  Melt the chocolate in a small saucepan or double boiler. If in a saucepan, cook over very low heat, stirring occasionally. If in a double boiler, cook over hot (not boiling) water, stirring occasionally. When the chocolate is just about melted, remove from the heat and continue to stir until mixture is smooth.
4.  Mix the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt together in a bowl and set aside.
5.  Use an electric mixer to cream the butter until smooth, then gradually add the sugar. Beat until light and fluffy, 3 or 4 minutes. Beat in the egg yolks, one at a time, then the vanilla, and finally the chocolate.  Add flour mixture to the chocolate mixture, a little at a time, alternating with the milk. Stir until smooth.
6. In a clean bowl, beat the egg whites until they hold soft peaks.  Fold them gently but thoroughly into the batter with a rubber spatula. Divide batter into the cake pans and bake for about 30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool on a rack for 5 minutes, then invert onto a rack, peel off parchment, and cool completely.
7.  Make filling.  Mix together preserves and mascarpone and set aside until ready to use.

8. Make frosting.   Place chocolate in a heat proof bowl.  Bring cream just to boiling.  Pour over chocolate and let sit 5 minutes.  Add vanilla and corn syrup and gently stir until completely incorporated and smooth.

9.  Assemble cake.  Cut the cakes in half to make four layers.  Spread 1/3 of the raspberry mixture on one layer – be sure leave a margin around the outside because when you top with the cake layer, the preserves will spread.  Top with the second layer and spread another 1/3 of raspberry mixture.  Repeat with third layer, and top with fourth layer.

10.  Do a light top frost with  ganache while it is still pourable.  Chill cake and bowl of ganache  in fridge for abou 30 minutes.  Stir ganache after 15 minutes.  Frost top of cake. Put ganache in bowl back into fridge and stir every 15 minutes or so for another 30 minutes or so.  Frost sides of cake later when ganache is thicker.  (I waited a whole day to frost the rest of cake sides.)

11.  Decorate with fresh raspberries and dust with confectioner’s sugar.
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Amaretto Cream Crepe Cake

About 20 layers of crepes in here…



 

We visited Jamie’s grandparents again for Labor Day weekend.

On the way to the beach during my daily three mile walk on the island.

The weather was beautiful, and we had such a wonderful time with them!

We love having dinner together on the porch and playing word games while we eat, like I Spy, Pass Around (everyone takes turns making up and continuing a story), and Rhyme Around (we tell part of a story and give the next person a hint of the rhyme — OK, this one is tricky!)

This time I got to make a couple of meals during our visit.  They requested the Roasted Veggie and Brie Frittata again, which is so easy and wonderful to make with fresh local produce.  For dessert, I made an Amaretto Cream Crepe Cake.

Crepe cakes look impressive, but they really aren’t difficult to make — they just take a bit of preparation.  Basically you make a boatload of crepes, layer them with ganache, preserves, whipped cream, or whatever you can dream up, then frost with your choice of toppings.

I’ve made this beautiful one in the past which is covered in ganache, layered with ganache and raspberry jam,  and decorated with truffles from the leftover chocolate.  My husband loved it, but I thought it was too dense and rich.  So I decided to make a whipped cream covered one.  I opted to spike the cream with almond extract and Amaretto because my mother-in-law loves Amaretto, and they happened to have a huge bottle of it in the pantry! 🙂  I decorated the whole thing with roasted, sliced almonds.

The finished cake with toasted almonds.

When I told my father-in-law I might post the recipe on this blog, he said I should call it “What to Make Your In-laws When You Visit”.  🙂

Thank you, Didi and Mimette for another lovely time!

Amaretto Cream Crepe Cake

Crepes:

6 large eggs

1 ½ cups milk

½ teaspoon almond extract

1 cup all purpose flour

1/8 teaspoon salt

¼ cup confectioner’s sugar

Melted butter for skillet

Amaretto Cream:

2 cups heavy whipping cream

3 ½ tablespoons sugar

1 teaspoon almond extract

2 tablespoons amaretto liqueur

½ cup toasted, sliced almonds

  1. Blend crepe ingredients except butter in a blender.  Brush a large skillet with melted butter and place over medium heat.  Pour scant ¼ cup batter into skillet and swirl to evenly coat the bottom.  When the top of the crepe is no longer shiny, after about 1 minute, carefuly flip and cook other side for about 40 seconds.
  2. Make many more crepes in this manner, stacking them on a plate until all the batter is gone.  Cool crepes to room temperature. You can also store them in the refrigerator until ready to assemble.
  3. Make Amaretto Cream.  Whip cream and sugar together until thickened.  Add almond extract and amaretto gradually.  Continue to whip until stiff peaks form.  You can also store the cream in the refrigerator until you are ready to assemble the cake.
  4. Assemble Crepe Cake.  Line a 9-inch cake pan with parchment paper on the bottom.  Reserve about ½ of the amaretto cream, set aside.  With the remaining cream, build cake in the following manner:  Spread a dollop of amaretto cream on a crepe and place into cake pan.  Continue to spread crepe with cream and layer in pan in this manner.  When you get to the last crepe, place on top of layers in pan without spreading cream on top (because you are going to flip it and it will be on the bottom of the cake).   Press gently on top of the layers to smooth out (you will probably have a dome shaped cake).  Chill in the refrigerator for about an hour.  You could probably even make the cake up to here the day before serving.  Note:  I’ve seen other methods where you just stack the crepes on a plate and call it a day, so it’s your choice.  I think you get a better shape with the cake pan though. 
  5. Remove cake from the pan by cutting around perimeter to loosen.  Then place a large plate on top and flip cake out of pan onto plate.  Frost with remaining amaretto cream and decorate with sliced almonds.

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Monster Cookies

Our book was released by Simon and Schuster yesterday!

back of postcard info

It’s written by my husband, Denis, and inspired by our son, Jamie.

Jamie and Denis recreating the cover of the book

We got a starred review in Publishers Weekly. 🙂

To celebrate, Jamie helped me make Monster Cookies, inspired by the Mommy Monster’s snacks in the book.

Copyright Melissa Iwai 2012

Another example of life imitating art…

I definitely wanted “worms” in them so I decided on gummy worms which I cut in half and pressed into the cookies right after they came out of the oven (obviously I wasn’t going to bake them, as they would have turned into a puddle of goo).

Instead of sticks, we used broken up pretzels. We also threw in some chips for the saltiness and crazy monster factor.

For sweet add-ins we used chocolate chips, peanut butter chips, white chocolate chips, and dried coconut.

half-way full

This recipe was based on Everything But the Kitchen Sink Cookies found in The Cookiepedia by Stacy Adimando. It’s pretty straightforward and easy to make with kids. Coming up with the salty and sweet add-ins is part of the fun.  I reduced the amounts by 1/3 because I didn’t want to make a huge amount of cookies.  This version makes a cool one dozen large cookies.

Sweet and savory additions in the mixing bowl

I was surprised at how much they spread and got so huge! But they are monster cookies, after all… so the size is appropriate.

They taste really great. You can’t perceive the potato chips, but the saltiness surely adds to the overall flavor.  The pretzels give it good crunch.

The gummy worm addition actually works with the flavors! But I think next time we make these, we’ll add old fashioned oats for more texture.

If you get a chance, please check out Hush Little Monster! It is a perfect book for a monster loving child– or a little monster of your own. 🙂

Monster Cookies

adapted from Everything But the Kitchen Sink Cookies from The Cookiepedia

1 1/2 sticks butter, softened

3/4 cup sugar

1/3 cup packed brown sugar

1 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 egg

1/2 egg white (I used 3/4 tablespoon liquid whites)

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour (I used a combination of white and whole wheat)

3/4 teaspoon baking soda

3/4 teaspoon baking powder

3/4 teaspoon kosher salt

3/4 cup mixture of peanut butter chips, chocolate chips, white chocolate chips, and dried coconut

1 cup potato chips and pretzels broken into pieces

6 gummy worms cut in half

1.  Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

2.  Cream butter and sugars until fluffy.  Add vanilla and eggs. Mix to incorporate, scraping down sides of bowl.

3.  Whisk flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt together in another bowl.

Slowly add to butter and sugar mixture while mixer is running.

4.  Add sweet and salty mixtures to batter and stir together.

5.  Spoon twelve round dough mounds  2-inches apart onto two baking sheets covered with parchment paper or Silpat mats.

6.  Bake for about 16-18 minutes, rotating pans halfway.

7.  When cookies are golden, remove from oven and press 2 halves of gummy worms onto each cookie.  Transfer cookies to wire rack to cool.

Makes 1 dozen very large cookies.

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Filed under Art Related, Books, Children, Cookies, Desserts

Individual Summer Fruit Crumbles

With vanilla ice cream–a perfect summer treat!

I’m right in the middle of finishing all the illustrations of my latest book project.  It will be published by Viking Press next year and is written by the amazing,  award winning Anne Rockwell.

I can’t show anything to you yet, but I can say that yummy breakfast food is a part of it. 🙂

Pancakes anyone?

Denis and I are also getting ready for the launch of our collaborative effort, Hush Little Monster, out next month.  More on that to come soon!

You would think with my workload I wouldn’t have time to make dessert on a daily basis.  But….

You would be wrong!

Here’s a  super easy and great summertime dessert that you can throw together without thinking.  The secret is to have a stash of topping already prepared.

Mix up a batch of crumble topping.  I use butter, brown sugar, granulated sugar, some flour or oats, spices and chopped nuts.  Sometimes I also add coconut.  I’ve even made a sugar free one for a friend out of just butter (you could use coconut oil also), almonds, cinnamon, and oats.

Store this crumble mixture in the refrigerator and use as needed.

Leftover crumble in container I keep in the fridge

When you want to have some dessert, cut up some fruit — summer is wonderful for stone fruits and berries which work well here.   Mix with a bit of sugar and other flavorings if you like, such as lemon juice, zest, liqueur– have fun.

Blueberries and chopped cherries mixed with a touch of sugar

Then fill ramekins.  We use about 1/2 cup of chopped fruit mixture per ramekin.

My assistant spooning fruit into ramekins

Top with however much crumble you want.

Putting on topping

Bake at 375 F degrees.   Since it’s been so hot, I just use our Cuisinart toaster oven, aka Easy Bake oven, because it preheats so fast and doesn’t heat up the apartment.  It only takes ten minutes to warm the fruit up and brown the crumble.

Unbaked crumble

Baked crumble – after ten minutes in toaster oven

You could also use a larger baking dish and make a big batch at once time, but you’d need to bake it longer– about 40-45 minutes and use a regular oven.

I like the little individual ramekins because they are portion controlled, heat up fast, and are small enough to fit in our above mentioned toaster oven.

Also, they are cute.

This is a sugar free, dairy free version: Just fruit, oats and sliced almonds!

My son loves making these crumbles.  Serve with whipped cream or ice cream and enjoy!

Warm, crunchy, and creamy!

Individual Summer Fruit Crumbles

½ cup chopped summer fruit and/or berries per ramekin

½ – 1 teaspoon sugar, depending on how sweet you like it – or none at all

dash of liqueur (such as Kirsch or Cointreau) or lemon juice or zest if you like

Crumble Topping – use however much you like (see recipe below)

  1. Preheat oven to 375 F degrees.
  2. Stir fruit and sugar (and liqueur, lemon juice, zest, if using) together.  Spoon into ramekins.
  3. Top with crumble.
  4. Bake for about 10-15 minutes until lightly browned on top.
  5. Serve immediately or cool to room temperature.

If you want to make one big crumble for 4-6 people, use about 2 ½ pounds fruit with ¼ cup sugar and stir together in a square baking pan or pie pan.  Top with crumble mixture.  Bake for about 40-45 minutes at 375 F degrees.

Crumble Topping:

6 tablespoons flour or oats or combination

¼ cup packed brown sugar

¼ cup granulated sugar

pinch of salt

cinnamon or nutmeg to taste

5 tablespoons butter, chilled, cut into pieces

¾ cup chopped nuts (I like sliced almonds)

Note:  you can also add in dried coconut, sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds – use whatever strikes your fancy.

  1. Pulse flour, oats if using, with sugars and salt and spices in a food processor a couple times to mix together.  Add butter.  Pulse some more until mixture is sandy.  Then add nuts (and seeds and coconut if using) and pulse a few times more until mixture is clumpy.
  2. Store in a container in the refrigerator until ready to use.

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Abuelita Mexican Chocolate Ice Cream


While travelling in Mexico during my college years,  I always enjoyed having Mexican hot chocolate at breakfast.  It’s tastier than its American counterpart and has subtle notes of cinnamon.  Then, many years later after moving to NYC, I discovered that the little bodega on our corner had the Abuelita chocolate disks, so I happily started making Mexican hot chocolate at home.

Nowadays, you can find these disks (the other common brand is Ibarra) in the international foods section of large grocery stores.

In fact, my sister-in-law in Gurnee, IL who didn’t know we could get it here sent us about 10 boxes after we commented how much we loved it while visiting during Thanksgiving!

So good on a cold day…

Since it’s been so hot these days, we’ve been enjoying lots of yummy home made cold treats like smoothies, soft serve “ice cream”, and rocket pops.  Hot chocolate hasn’t made the cut!  I decided to make ice cream instead because I had some heavy cream I needed to use up (I mixed it with milk to make half and half).

This recipe is based on one in Gourmet magazine (Feb. 2003).  It’s an egg based ice cream, but since it requires whole eggs, instead of just the yolks,  it’s not as heavy as your usual custard based ice creams.  It’s closer to a gelato.  The flavor is wonderful too.

Abuelita Mexican Chocolate Ice Cream

3 3/4 cups half and half

3  1/2 disks Abuelita (or Ibarra) chocolate, coarsely chopped

1/4 teaspoon cinnamon

pinch of salt

3 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

1.  Heat half and half, chocolate, and cinnamon in a large saucepan over moderate heat.  Whisk until chocolate dissolves.  Bring to a boil; remove from heat.

2.  Whisk eggs with a pinch of salt in a large heat proof bowl.  Add a few cups of  the hot chocolate* slowly* to the egg mixture while whisking.  Add the rest of the chocolate and continue to whisk.  Add vanilla. Stir to incorporate.

3.  Transfer to a clean saucepan and heat over low to moderate heat for about 5 minutes, or until mixture is 175 (F) degrees.  It will thicken and coat the spoon.

4.  Immediately strain into a large bowl set over another larger bowl of ice water.  Don’t skip this step!

5.  Chill mixture until cool and then churn  according to ice cream maker instructions. (The original recipe calls for churning right after, but I find that the heat impedes the ice cream making process which results in “soupy” ice cream.)

Makes about 4 cups.

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Asian Chicken Salad with Peanut Sauce and Soba Noodles


Last week, we’ve so enjoyed having my mom visit us from California.  She came to celebrate her 82nd birthday. 🙂

Denis did not photoshop this photo. His comment: What 82 year old woman has that jaw line!??

Other than when we took her to visit Denis’ lovely parents in Shelter Island, she’s been in our garden weeding, picking up leaves, pruning plants–basically working her green thumb magic on it (which I sadly did not inherit)!

I wish I had “before” pictures to contrast this with! There were less flowers all around, and the rocks and back were covered in leaves and weeds!

We call her the Energizer Bunny.

Instead of eating out, she preferred me to cook “things from [my] blog” for her, so all week, I prepared various dishes for her and revisiting some old recipes.

Lots of smoothies:

A ton of sushi, of course (click on each image for recipe):

With Miso Soup:

For her 82nd birthday which was the same day as Father’s Day, I made Reese’s Pieces and M & M waffles for brunch using our trusty Cadbury Egg Waffle recipe:

I bought a small bag each of Reese’s Pieces and plain M & Ms and scattered them on the batter before cooking in waffle iron.

And Crispy Fish Tempura Bites for dinner:

with Miso Green Beans:

And Rich Chocolate Cake with Chocolate Ganache Frosting for dessert:

I used a double amount of  Chocolate Ganache Frosting in place of this frosting

Other meals were quick Chicken Quesadillas using cooked rotisserie chicken (after a long day of shopping–not much time to cook!):

I filled ours with cooked chicken, cheese, onions, and salsa

and Creamy High Protein Avocado Dip:

I discovered I don’t have to spend a lot of time searching for favorite recipes anymore — I can just do a search on my blog!

For her last night here, I decided to make something special and created my version of a chicken salad with peanut sauce, because she had mentioned she had had a great one awhile back during her many travels.  It is a quick and easy when you have leftover cooked chicken! We used more of the rotisserie chicken.  I also used my favorite peanut sauce recipe using roasted peanut flour (if you can’t find this, just peanut butter is fine–use this recipe instead minus sesame seeds) and coated cooked soba noodles and chicken with it (angel hair or vermicelli would work too).  Then I made a salad with shredded Napa cabbage, romaine lettuce, shredded carrot, julienned daikon radish, cilantro, green onions, and snow peas.  I topped the salad with the peanut sauce coated noodles and cooked chicken and garnished with more chopped cilantro and chopped roasted peanuts.

It was really good!  We had leftover sauce which I diluted with a bit of rice vinegar and used as a salad dressing over the course of the week –sans mom.  😦
We miss you obaachan! (Japanese for “grandma”)  Thank you for all your hard work here!!


Asian Chicken Salad with Soba Noodles and Peanut Sauce

Peanut Sauce:

¼ cup peanut butter (or 1 tablespoon peanut butter plus ½ cup peanut flour and 2 tablespoons water)

1 garlic clove, minced

1 tablespoon ginger, minced

3 tablespoons soy sauce

2 tablespoons rice vinegar

1 tablespoon brown sugar

1 teaspoon sesame oil

Salad Greens:

4 cups shredded Napa cabbage

2 cups shredded Romaine lettuce

1 cup sliced cucumber

1 cup julienned carrot

1 cup julienned daikon or other radish

1 cup blanched snow peas

2 scallions, sliced

¼ cup chopped cilantro, divided

Vinaigrette:

2 tablespoons soy sauce

2 tablespoons rice vinegar

1 teaspoon sesame oil

4 oz. soba noodles

2-3 cups cooked chicken, shredded

¼ cup peanuts, chopped

  1. Make peanut sauce.  Process all ingredients (peanut butter to sesame oil) in a food processor until smooth.  Transfer to a bowl and set aside.
  2. Prepare vegetables.  Mix salad greens together in a large bowl, reserving about 2 tablespoons of the chopped cilantro for garnish.  Set aside.
  3. Make vinaigrette.  Whisk soy sauce, rice vinegar, and sesame oil together in a small bowl.  Toss salad greens with vinaigrette to taste.
  4. Cook soba noodles according to package directions.  Drain.
  5. Assemble salad.  Toss cooked soba noodles with shredded chicken and prepared peanut sauce (use as much sauce as you want depending on how dry or wet you prefer the noodles—you will probably have some leftover!).  Divide salad greens into four bowls.  Top with noodles and chicken.  Garnish with reserved cilantro and chopped peanuts.

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Filed under Appetizers, Breakfast, Desserts, Dinner, Fish, Pasta, Sides, Snack, Vegetables

S’mores Mini Cupcakes


Over the weekend at the gym, I caught part of Giada At Home while sweating it out, and was inspired to make these mini cupcakes for an end of the year class party.   But when I looked on the Food Network site later at home, I couldn’t find the recipe. So I made one up. (Later, I realized they were called “Brownie Bites” — here is the original recipe.)

I used a basic chocolate cake recipe from Une Gamine dans la Cuisine, substituting semi-sweet chocolate chips for the bittersweet chips, reducing the sugar, and substituting yogurt for the sour cream.  I also added 1/4 cup of mini chocolate chips to the mix.

The mini cupcakes were topped with three mini marshmallows, three chocolate chips, and a pinch of crushed Digestive Biscuit cookie (we didn’t have graham crackers).

Jamie was a great help with topping the cupcakes

These cupcakes are decadent little bites of yumminess.  They are a perfect size for kids (I cringe when I think of all the wasted Magnolia Bakery cupcakes I’ve seen at birthday parties!), as well as adults who just want a taste without overindulging!

S’mores Mini Cupcakes

Non-stick spray

1 stick of butter

2 oz. semi-sweet chocolate chips

1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa

3/4 cups flour

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

3/4 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

2 eggs

3/4 cup sugar

1/2 teaspoon vanilla

1/4 cup plain yogurt

1/3 cup mini chocolate chips

For the topping:

about 1/3 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips

about 1/3 cup mini marshmallows

3 Digestive biscuits, crushed or 2 rectangles of graham cracker, crushed

1.  Line mini cupcake tin with liners.  Spray pan lightly with non stick spray.  Preheat oven to 350 F.

2. Melt butter, 2 oz. of semi-sweet chocolate, and cocoa in a pot over simmering water until melted. Set aside to cool.

3.  Whisk flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.  Set aside.

4.  In a large bowl, whisk together eggs and sugar and vanilla.  When the chocolate mixture is cooled, add to egg mixture and stir until incorporated.

5.  Sift 1/3 of  flour mixture into chocolate/egg mixture.  Then add 1/2 of the yogurt and stir.  Sift 1/3 more of the flour, add remaining yogurt and Stir.  Then sift last of flour and add to mixture.

6.  Stir in mini chocolate chips.  Spoon batter (it will be thick) into mini cupcake liners. Top each with 3 semi sweet chocolate chips, three mini marshmallows, and a sprinkle of the crushed Digestive Biscuit or graham cracker crumbs.

7.  Bake for 15 minutes; test with a toothpick.  Cupcakes are done when it comes out clean.  Remove cupcakes to a cooling rack and let cool.  Marshmallows will harden slightly.  Store in an air tight container at room temperature.

Makes about 36 mini cupcakes.

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Nut Butter Truffles and Chia Seed Granola

“Energy Balls” coated with Chia Seed Granola


I’ve seen various nut butter “balls” or “truffles” all over the blogsphere.  They are really easy to make and so delicious — great for a portable snack and much cheaper than buying an energy or protein bar.

Basically, you can just mix equal parts nut butter with liquid sweetener and two parts powder, such as non fat milk powder.  I have also made them with protein powder and roasted peanut flour with great results.  For the nut butter, I have used almond and peanut butters, but cashew or walnut or macademia nut butters would be divine.  It is easy to make your own nut butter if you can’t find the kind you like.

This is what the ideal texture of the truffle “paste” looks like after mixing together your ingredients:

This is a combination of almond butter, honey, and milk powder mixed by hand.

You then just shape a portion into a ball, similar to making a meatball, and roll and coat in whatever topping you’d like.   Then refrigerate to firm them up for about 30 minutes.  I store them in an air tight container in the fridge.

Here are a few ideas to help you get started:

Finished truffles


Recently I started experimenting with chia seeds because I keep reading about how great they are for you.  They are full of omega-3s, protein, fiber, and minerals.  They were eaten by the Aztecs and are considered to be a “super food”.  When mixed with water, the seeds become gelatinous.  When eaten, this gelatinous configuration slows down digestion and makes you feel full.

I actually wasn’t crazy about the gelatinous texture (a lot of people eat it in smoothies and oatmeal), so I decided to roast them instead and use them in granola.

I used to make granola all the time and hadn’t for awhile. Granola is great to make with kids too –  it is so easy and is a delicious and healthier snack alternative.

At the store gathering ingredients for granola

When I saw my friend, Anna’s extra chunky granola recipe on her fabulous blog, Cookie Madness, I had to make some.

I had a few “fails” at first.  One was that the pumpkin seeds I used turned out to be stale!  People, always check your ingredients before putting them into whatever you are making whenever possible!  Grrr… This was remedied by me letting my OCD tendencies run wild and I hand picked each one out of the batch.

They look harmless, but I had to throw them out, they tasted so stale.

The other “fail” was that since I used liquid egg whites instead of a fresh egg white, AND I didn’t squish the mixture into a tight slab before baking as Anna’s recipe instructs, my granola did not have the cluster like texture I was hoping for.

Since it was like regular granola (i.e. not chunky), I used some to coat some Almond Butter Truffles and renamed them “Energy Balls” as they are a healthier version of the more decadent ones I had made before.

These were gobbled up at a Memorial Day picnic this past weekend.  I love the crunch the granola adds.  The chia seeds were crunchy, like poppy seeds, so the gummy texture did not happen until in my stomach!

Nut Butter Truffles

Use a 1:1:2 ratio of peanut butter or almond butter or other nut butter, honey or other liquid sweetener, and twice the amount of non-fat instant milk powder.

Mix together, shape into balls, and coat with whatever you like, such as mini chocolate chips, dried coconut, wheat germ, cinnamon sugar, almonds, cereal, granola, etc.

Chill to firm up for about 30 minutes or longer in the refrigerator.  Store in an air tight container in the refrigerator.

Chia Seed Granola, based on Anna’s Extra Chunky Granola

Note: I halved the recipe because I baked it in a Cuisinart toaster oven

I didn’t add the mixed nuts because I didn’t have any — just sliced almonds.  This also worked well with the Energy Balls, because the nuts would have been too big.

Non-stick spray

3/4 tablespoon butter

1/2 tablespoon coconut oil (or other oil)

2 tablespoons brown sugar

1/2 tablespoon honey

1/2 tablespoon maple syrup

pinch of salt

1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 cup old fashioned oats

1/4 cup pumpkin seeds (preferably not stale!)

1/3 cup sliced almonds

2 tablespoons dried coconut

1/4 cup chia seeds

1 tablespoon liquid egg white (this will make the granola a regular granola texture.  If you want extra chunky, use 1/2 tablespoon fresh egg white, as per Anna’s recipe after halving and press together very tightly in to a thin slab before baking)

1/4 cup chopped dried fruit (I used three dried apricots)

1.  Preheat oven to 300 degrees and line baking pan with foil and spray with non-stick spray.

2. Heat butter, oil, brown sugar, honey, maple syrup, and salt in a small sauce pan on stove.  Remove from heat and stir in vanilla. Let cool.

3.  Mix dry ingredients except dried fruit together in a large bowl.  Evenly coat oat mixture with egg white.  Then pour the sweet liquid mixture over and evenly coat.  Spread in one  layer on baking sheet.

4.  Bake for about 20 minutes.  Let cool, and then stir to break up, add dried fruit.

Makes about 10 ounces.

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Filed under Desserts, Snack, Vegetarian

Semi-sweet and White Chocolate Studded Speculoos (Cookie Butter)Pancakes

Oozing is allowed.

I usually don’t have dessert for breakfast, but this coming Mother’s Day, I am requesting this.  And I’m not getting it at a restaurant!

My husband is the waffle and pancake master in our home.  He makes  Cadbury Egg waffles (when in season) and Snuggle Mountain pancakes all the time, as well as black and white pancakes when he is feeling ambitious.

Half regular pancake with chocolate chips, half chocolate pancake with white chocolate chips

So when I finally got my hands on a jar of Trader Joe’s Cookie Butter a.k.a Speculoos, I knew I wanted him to create something using this decadent spread.

Made out of Speculoos, a Danish cookie.

He experimented a few weekends ago, making his usual delicious light and fluffy pancakes studded with chocolate chips and white chocolate chips, and I asked him to try spreading some cookie butter in between layers.  Voila!  A mouth watering, swoon inspiring breakfast dish for special occasions was born!

Couldn’t resist another close up of the Speculoos oozing out!
With a little maple syrup on top, these pancakes are to die for!

Hope all the Moms out there have a wonderful, pampered day on Sunday!

I made this card, inspired by my mom’s love for pandas. 🙂

Semi-sweet and White Chocolate Studded Speculoos Pancakes

Note:   If you can’t get to a Trader Joe’s (or they discontinue this amazing product which they tend to do when I fall in love with something), I’m sure peanut butter, almond butter, or any nut butter would make a wonderful substitution!

4 eggs, separated

1 cup of milk

1 cup of flour (a mixture of whole wheat and all purpose is nice)

1 tablespoon sugar

pinch of kosher salt

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon vanilla

butter or oil for frying

chocolate chips (about 7 per pancake)

white chocolate chips (about 7 per pancake)

Speculoos or other nut butter spread

Maple syrup

1.  Heat griddle or skillet.  A cast iron skillet produces a nice crust.

2.  Separate eggs and whip whites until stiff but not dry.

3.  Whisk egg yolks with milk and vanilla in a bowl.

4.  Whisk dry ingredients together in a large bowl.  Pour egg yolk mixture into dry mixture and combine.

5.  Fold in egg whites gently.

6.  Heat some oil and butter in pan.  Pour pancake batter in pan to whatever size you desire.  My husband usually makes small to medium sized ones.  Stud each pancake with chocolate chips and white chocolate chips.  Cook on low heat until lightly browned on bottom, about 2 minutes.  Flip and cook other side.  You can keep these warm in a 200 degree oven.

7.  To assemble, spread each pancake with Speculoos and stack.  Pour maple syrup over and serve.

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Filed under Breakfast, Desserts, Vegetarian