Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Sweet Corn Bacon Skillet Cookie #CreativeCookieExchange

This sweet corn bacon skillet cookie is the perfectly sweet and salty combination adored in Momofuku corn cookies, made more delicious with the addition of bacon. And made easier as one big cookie to slice and serve.

Food Lust People Love: This sweet corn bacon skillet cookie is the perfectly sweet and salty combination adored in Momofuku corn cookies, made more delicious with the addition of bacon. And made easier as one big cookie to slice and serve.


A couple of years back, my elder daughter introduced me to what was then her new favorite cookie. Rich, buttery, sweet but a bit salty, those Momofuku corn cookies were chewy and completely more-ish. When this month’s Creative Cookie Exchange theme of “Big Cookies” was announced, I couldn’t wait to recreate them as a cast iron skillet cookie and, of course, add some bacon.

Because bacon makes everything better.

Sweet Corn Bacon Skillet Cookie

This recipe is adapted from my version of the original Momofuku corn cookies. If you like salty and sweet together, make the originals or make my bacon version. This is going to be your new favorite cookie too!

Ingredients - Makes 1 (12 in or 30.5cm) skillet cookie
3 slices or 75g smoked bacon, cut into small pieces
2 tablespoons rendered bacon fat
3/4 cup or 170g room-temperature butter
1 1/2 cups or 300g sugar
1 egg
1 3/4 cups or 220g all-purpose flour
1/2 cup or 65g freeze-dried corn powder (See note below)
1/4 cup or 45g corn flour (corn masa flour, like you’d use for tortillas, not corn starch. You can also use Harina P.A.N.*
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon fine sea salt

Note: I used Karen’s Freeze Dried Corn* in this recipe, measuring out 65g and then blitzing it into powder using a food processor.

Method
Fry bacon bits in your iron skillet until just crispy. Remove from the pan and drain on paper towels. Reserve 2 tablespoons rendered bacon fat to use in the dough. Wipe the skillet with a paper towel so it’s just greased enough to bake the big cookie. Set aside.



Use a stand or handheld electric beaters to cream the butter and sugar together on medium high until they are fluffy and pale yellow, about 2-3 minutes.

Add in the bacon fat and egg and mix them in with the beaters on low. Increase the speed to medium high again and beat for eight minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl occasionally with a rubber spatula.



Whisk the dry ingredients together in another bowl. Set aside 1 tablespoon of the bacon bits and then mix the rest into the flour.



Add all of the dry ingredients into the other mixing bowl and with your mixer or beaters on low, beat just until it all comes together as a dough.



Cover your work surface with cling film and tip the dough out onto it. Press the dough into a circle of about 11 inches or 30cm across. Cover it with another piece of cling film and smooth out the surface. Slide the dough circle onto a cutting board or baking pan and chill thoroughly in the refrigerator for at least one hour.



As you come to the end of the chilling time, preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C.

Remove the cling film and ease the dough circle into your iron skillet greased with bacon fat. Sprinkle on the reserved bacon and pat the pieces in gently so they stick.



Bake for 18-22 minutes, turning the skillet around halfway through to make sure that cookie bakes evenly.

Food Lust People Love: This sweet corn bacon skillet cookie is the perfectly sweet and salty combination adored in Momofuku corn cookies, made more delicious with the addition of bacon. And made easier as one big cookie to slice and serve.


Leave the cookie to cool in the iron skillet. You can serve straight from skillet or turn it out onto a serving plate. Cut it into wedges with a sharp knife.

Food Lust People Love: This sweet corn bacon skillet cookie is the perfectly sweet and salty combination adored in Momofuku corn cookies, made more delicious with the addition of bacon. And made easier as one big cookie to slice and serve.


Enjoy!

* Amazon affiliate links

Many thanks to this month's host, Karen of Karen's Kitchen Stories! Check out the other Big Cookies you'll want to make:




Creative Cookie Exchange is hosted by Laura of The Spiced Life. We get together once a month to bake cookies with a common theme or ingredient so Creative Cookie Exchange is a great resource for cookie recipes. Be sure to check out our Pinterest Board. We post the first Tuesday after the 15th of each month!

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Food Lust People Love: This sweet corn bacon skillet cookie is the perfectly sweet and salty combination adored in Momofuku corn cookies, made more delicious with the addition of bacon. And made easier as one big cookie to slice and serve.
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Thursday, August 16, 2018

Toffee Apple Bread Pudding Bundt #BundtBakers

Tart apple, sticky toffee and vanilla custard filled bread come together in this toffee apple bread pudding Bundt to create a dessert that is way more than the sum of its parts.

Food Lust People Love: Tart apple, sticky toffee and vanilla custard filled bread come together in this toffee apple bread pudding Bundt to create a dessert that is way more than the sum of its parts.


My husband is a huge fan of bread pudding but I must confess that it’s not my favorite dessert. I do love that is uses up leftover stale bread though, so I make it from time to time. The problem is that he eats just two or three servings, and then I have leftover bread pudding! First world problems, I know, I know.

I hate waste so I’ve started working smarter. This recipe is made in a 6-cup Bundt pan (<Amazon affiliate link) so that’s four generous servings or 5-6 skimpy ones. I promise you, no one will want a skimpy serving of toffee apple bread pudding!

Toffee Apple Bread Pudding Bundt

This recipe is adapted from one on the BBC Good Food site. The caramel can be homemade or store-bought. All caramel is good!

Ingredients
3 brioche buns (Mine weighed 6 oz or 170g.)*
2 eggs
3/4 cup or 180ml full-fat milk
1/2 cup or 120ml whipping cream
4 tablespoons golden caster sugar (You can substitute granulated sugar.)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 green apple (I used a Granny Smith)
1 cup or 312g thick caramel
3 tablespoons butter, melted and cooled, for buttering 6-cup Bundt pan.

Optional: extra caramel for serving

*Note: You can substitute another stale bread but buttery brioche makes a richer bread pudding. Also, the crusts are tender so they don’t have to be removed.

Method
Cut the brioche buns into small cubes and set aside.



In a large mixing bowl, whisk the eggs, milk, cream, vanilla extract together with the 4 tablespoons sugar.

Core and peel the apple, then chop it into small chunks. Toss the chunks immediately into the egg mixture so they don’t turn brown.



Stir the bread cubes through the apple/egg mixture. Cover with cling film and refrigerate for 30 minutes.



When the refrigeration time is up, preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C. Using a pastry brush, liberally butter the Bundt pan with the melted butter and pour the rest of it into the bottom of the Bundt pan.



Spoon 1/3 of the pudding mix into the pan. Spoon about 1/4 of the caramel into the pan.

Top with another 1/3 of the pudding mix, followed by another 1/4 of the caramel.

Finish with the rest of the pudding mix followed by another 1/4 of the caramel, reserving the final 1/4 of the caramel for pouring over the finished apple bread pudding.



Put the Bundt pan inside another larger cake pan and put your kettle on to boil.

Put the pans in the preheated oven and carefully pour boiling water into the bottom pan to about halfway up that pan.

Bake for 35-40 minutes until the top is golden and the custard has set. You should see some butter bubbling up around the edges.

Food Lust People Love: Tart apple, sticky toffee and vanilla custard filled bread come together in this toffee apple bread pudding Bundt to create a dessert that is way more than the sum of its parts.

Cool for 10 minutes on a wire rack then invert on a plate. This toffee apple bread pudding Bundt can be served immediately with the reserved caramel on the side. Or continue cooling it completely and drizzle on the additional caramel before serving.

Food Lust People Love: Tart apple, sticky toffee and vanilla custard filled bread come together in this toffee apple bread pudding Bundt to create a dessert that is way more than the sum of its parts.


If you have even more caramel than the recipe calls for (My store-bought jar held more that one cup.) serve those leftovers with the pudding. Because more caramel is always better.

Food Lust People Love: Tart apple, sticky toffee and vanilla custard filled bread come together in this toffee apple bread pudding Bundt to create a dessert that is way more than the sum of its parts.

Enjoy!

Many thanks and happy birthday month to our host Wendy from A Day in the Life on the Farm. Check out all the lovely apple Bundts we are sharing today!
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: Tart apple, sticky toffee and vanilla custard filled bread come together in this toffee apple bread pudding Bundt to create a dessert that is way more than the sum of its parts.
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Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Ponco - Bacon-fried Batter #BreadBakers

Ponco is a traditional Welsh breakfast recipe of batter fried in flavorful bacon fat. Made with flour, milk and eggs (or sometimes just flour and milk) ponco is cheap and filling but, oh so delicious!

Food Lust People Love: Ponco is a traditional Welsh breakfast recipe of batter fried in flavorful bacon fat. Made with flour, milk and eggs (or sometimes just flour and milk) ponco is cheap and filling but, oh so delicious!


A few months ago, I visited Wales for the first time to stay with a dear friend who had recently moved there. Despite still learning her way around, she was an excellent tour guide, enlisting her mother and father in a couple of our expeditions since they have lived in Wales for many, many years.

But one day we struck out on our own to climb the town and castle walls around Conwy which date back to medieval times. High up above the town, we had lovely views of houses and shops and even the sea. We enjoyed a delicious pub lunch in town and headed home by way of the beach road, popping into a few shops on the way.

In one tiny book store, I came across a small book of recipes called Croeso Cymreig - A Welsh Welcome. Recipes for Some Traditional Welsh Dishes. Published in 1957 by the Wales Gas Board, it was full of old-fashioned and traditional recipes, many with vague instructions and random units of measure, when they were included at all. Of course, I had to buy it.

This month for Bread Bakers, our host Felice from All That’s Left Are The Crumbs chose breakfast bread as our theme. I like to try different breads from different cultures so I googled British breakfast breads, among other things.

A Welsh recipe call ponco popped up a number of times. It sounded like a cross between an American pancake and a French crepe but fried in bacon fat, an idea I was totally for. The recipes I found didn’t have very accurate measures but the idea was to make a batter with eggs, milk and flour or sometimes, I guess when times were tough, just flour and milk. Or even, God forbid, water.

It suddenly occurred to check A Welsh Welcome. Sure enough, ponco was there! Its measurements were just as sketchy though. And this was the first time I saw the suggestion to eat it with meat and vegetables. Everywhere else it was a breakfast dish.


Sure two teacups of flour, but how much milk? And no eggs in this case.

Ponco - Bacon-fried Batter 

Without a definitive recipe to go on, I winged it.  This makes one large ponco about 9-10 inches or 23-25cm across. If you have a cast iron pan, use that for the frying. Cast iron won't cool as fast when you pour the batter in, which means the bacon grease stays hotter too and that means a more even color and slightly crunchy ponco. Which is what we want.

Ingredients
1 cup or 125g flour
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 egg
1/2 – 2/3 cup or 120-156ml milk
1/4 cup or 60ml bacon grease

Method
Whisk the flour together with the baking powder and salt in a mixing bowl. Add in the egg and 1/2 cup or 120ml of the milk. Whisk briskly.



Add more milk as necessary to get a medium thick batter – not a thick as for American pancakes, not as thin as for French crepes.

Warm your bacon grease in a large pan over a medium high heat, until it starts to shimmer. (Ideally, you will have cooked your bacon in this same pan and removed all but about 1/4 cup or 60ml of the grease, so that there are little sticky bits from bacon still in there.)

All at once, pour in the batter and turn the heat down to medium.



Cook the ponco until the bottom is golden and little bubbles form and pop all over it, with just the very center still liquid. This takes just a few minutes. I let it cook just a minute or so longer than this.


Turn it over very careful so you don’t splash hot bacon grease on yourself and cook the other side till golden. You can see here how some of the sticky bacon bits have become one with the ponco. So good!

Food Lust People Love: Ponco is a traditional Welsh breakfast recipe of batter fried in flavorful bacon fat. Made with flour, milk and eggs (or sometimes just flour and milk) ponco is cheap and filling but, oh so delicious!

I placed the ponco on a couple of paper towels briefly to absorb excess grease when I took it out of the pan, but honestly, it was surprisingly not very greasy. Some of the Welsh ponco recipes I found said to serve it with butter and bacon. I’d also suggest some golden syrup or honey to join the butter in filling those wonderful holes.

Food Lust People Love: Ponco is a traditional Welsh breakfast recipe of batter fried in flavorful bacon fat. Made with flour, milk and eggs (or sometimes just flour and milk) ponco is cheap and filling but, oh so delicious!


Enjoy!

Many thanks to Felice from All That’s Left Are The Crumbs for hosting this month. Check out all the great breakfast bread 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: Ponco is a traditional Welsh breakfast recipe of batter fried in flavorful bacon fat. Made with flour, milk and eggs (or sometimes just flour and milk) ponco is cheap and filling but, oh so delicious!

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