Brown Butter Apple Crisp



Let's not talk about how it's not even 11:00 in the morning and I've already caught myself eating cookie dough. Let's also not talk about how I wore the same sweatpants outfit (Sweatfit? TM Pending) 2 days in a row this week. Instead let's talk about how it's the weekend, and it's just barely starting to feel like fall over here in Southern California, and I'm just trying to make up for lost time.

Let's also talk about spiced apples smothered with browned butter crumbles and baked up into cobbler. It's way more important.


Browned butter is definitely my favorite kitchen trick. Plain butter is slowly cooked to a brown color, giving it a caramel-y, nutty flavor/magical qualities. It's a real life Pretty Woman situation, right there in your kitchen.

When I first learned that you could brown butter, I was instantly obsessed. I put browned butter in any recipe I could get my hands on. Cookies, caramel corn, cake, banana bread, you name it.  I was like Oprah on her Favorite Things episode, except instead of handing out cashmere sweaters, I was throwing browned butter into everything.

My absolute favorite place to shove browned butter is cobbler (and consequently, my favorite place to shove cobbler is my face.)... ( I don't know.)


Let's talk about apples for a second. You can't just throw any old apples into your baked goods and expect good results. For baked goods, I recommend a tart apple, like a granny smith, or a pink lady, or a honeycrisp (if you are fancy and/or are cooking for the queen). For my apple crisp, I stuck with granny smith, which are typically the cheapest of the three. They baked up perfectly.

Also, be sure to serve your cobbler with a good vanilla ice cream. It's the weekend. You deserve it.


Also, just as a tip, this crumble topping works great with a lot of fruits. I've used it to cover peaches and all sorts of berries (although I usually take out the cinnamon when I cook with berries). You can definitely play around with the fruit. I've been thinking about throwing it over some pears or pumpkin, but that's just between you and me.





Brown Butter Apple Crisp

4 cups tart apples (about 4-5 apples) thinly sliced (and peeled, if you're into that)
1/2 cup butter, browned (instructions below)
1 cup oats
1/2 cup flour
1 cup brown sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon

To brown butter: Over medium low heat, melt butter. Once butter is melted, stir constantly until butter turns a brown color or you start to see brown flecks coming up from the bottom. Be sure to keep an eye on it, butter tends to go from brown to burnt real quick. Once the butter is brown, remove it from the heat and pour into separate glass or metal container until you are ready to use.  If you are still confused, America's Test Kitchen always has the answer.

For the apple crisp:

Preheat your oven to 375 F.

Place sliced apples in 9X9 or 8X8 pan (I used a pie sized pan, but I had to cut down on the amount of apples to do it)

Mix butter with remaining ingredients until all of the dry ingredients are incorporated into the butter. Sprinkle evenly over the apples. Bake for 25 minutes until topping is crispy and apples are cooked through.

(Mama's Favorite) Fudgy Chocolate Brownies




I learned a lot of important stuff in college.

Like, how you don't mess around with your boxed mac and cheeses. You get Kraft, or you wallow in regret. I mean, really. Have some self-respect.

I also learned that you can survive about three days eating only vending machine bagels for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Also, if you don't match your socks, no one will know, unless you have to go through airport security.




I also learned about brownie mix in college. I had never heard of it before. Like, it never occurred to me that people didn't make brownies from scratch. Then one day my freshman year, one of my roommates was all "let's make brownies" and one of my other roommates was like "great, here's a brownie mix" and I just sat there in a carb-induced wonder.

And while a good brownie-mix-brownie is an important staple in anyone's diet, the reason I never had a brownie-mix-brownie was because my angelic mother believes deeply in the importance of making your brownies from scratch.


My mother, the patron saint of chocolate, has a birthday on Saturday, and I figure there is no better way to honor her 30th birthday, than by doing the very thing that she would want us all to do to celebrate: devouring a pan of her favorite warm, chocolatey brownies.




These brownies are in-your-face rich, so obviously my mom would recommend that you put a scoop of vanilla ice cream on top. For balance.

You'll also want to serve these brownies warm, if you know what's good for you. (But they are also perfect served cold for breakfast the next morning.) (Just kidding, don't be like me.)

Also, for those of you who like to take sides in the great fudgy brownie vs. cakey brownie debate, you'll want to know that these brownies are definitely on the fudgy side, with just enough cakeyness, and a perfect amount of crumbly on top. I don't know. Is everyone happy?

The best/worst part about these brownies is that they are so easy to make. I mean, you most likely already have the ingredients in your pantry. Plus, for those of you who are as lazy as me, you can make these brownies in one pot (if you use a large pot). That means only one pot to clean. There is really nothing to stop you.




Before I go, I have to wish happy birthday to the woman who taught me to be brave and to be kind. But most importantly, happy birthday to the woman who taught me how to cook. You are so loved Mama!


Perfect Brownies

1 cup unsalted butter
2 cups sugar
2 tsp vanilla
4 eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup flour
1/2 cup cocoa
1/2 tsp salt
8 oz semi sweet chocolate, coarsely chopped (you can use chocolate chips, no problem)

Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9X9 pan. You can use a 9X13 pan, but your brownies will be thin and you'll need to reduce the cooking time.

In a medium saucepan, melt your butter over low heat, remove from heat. Whisk in sugar. Add vanilla. let your butter cool slightly before adding your eggs (otherwise you'll end up with scrambled eggs). Whisk everything together. If your pan is large enough, you can add the flour, cocoa, and salt right to the pan. If not, mix your dry ingredients together in a mixing bowl and add your butter mixture. Mix until combined. Stir in chocolate.

Bake at 350 for 30-40 minutes or until a fork in the middle comes out clean.

Feta Brined Chicken

I like to lovingly think of this post as the blog post where I show you all that I can do more mature/grown up recipes than cookies or sprinkles-dumped-on-things. Sort of like when Zac Efron did the movie 17 Again, or Harry Potter did that weird play with the horse.



Anyways, let's talk poultry. More specifically, brined poultry.


A brine is a salt+water concoction that will make all your poultry dreams come true. Brines add a little salt and sass to your chicken, and a whole-heck-of-a-lot of tenderness. The most important thing is that you let your chicken brine long enough for the osmosis/science to happen.

I first read about this brine in the New York Times. It was originally inspired by a brine that was made with the discarded liquid from feta cheese. I'm going to go right on ahead and assume that none of you have access to buckets full of feta cheese liquid, so instead, we're going to blend up feta cheese with some water, and seasonings, and let that chicken sit in there for at least 24 hours.

With any brine, you'll still need to season your chicken. For our brine we're going to use salt, pepper, and oregano. We're also going to drizzle olive oil all over, and use chicken with skins. Because it's what's best for everyone. That's why.




My favorite thing about this chicken is that it's pretty versatile. The first time I made it, I threw some chopped up potatoes in the roasting pan. They soaked up some of the juices and had the most amazing flavor. I'm still brainstorming a way to make gravy out of the juices and pair it with some sort of feta mashed potato concoction. I'll get back to you on that one.

This time around, I threw my chicken with some veggies, yogurt, and pita Greek style. The feta is what really ties this chicken altogether.

You can also serve this chicken shredded up on a salad, or maybe even in some sort of Mediterranean sandwich with hummus or whatever. It's a real you-do-you type of situation. Just make sure you have lots of feta on the side. It's the right thing to do.






P.S. Have you been listening to the new Beyonce song? We have been listening to it on repeat over here. And by we, I mean James. And by James, I mean me.



Feta Brined Chicken
Adapted from The New York Times

3-4 chicken breasts, skins on (I've also used thighs or a whole cut up chicken before. The brine will work great no matter what, you'll just have to adjust cooking times accordingly)

2 oz. feta cheese plus more for sprinkling
3 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt, seperated
2 tablespoons cracked black pepper, seperated
2 tablespoons Oregano, seperated
1 lemon (optional for serving)
Olive Oil

Blend 2 oz. feta, salt, 1 T and water. Don't think you can outsmart the system and just mix the cheese really well, you really need to blend it. Place chicken and brine in large ziploc bag (I recommend putting your zipped up bag in a large bowl to catch any drips). Let sit overnight.

An hour before roasting, remove from brine (discard brine) and let sit on a paper towel+plate for about an hour. This lets the chicken come up to room temp. which will help it cook more evenly and get that glorious skin nice and crispy.

Preheat your oven to 450 F. Drizzle chicken with olive oil and rub with remaining salt, pepper, and oregano. Roast until chicken is cooked through and juices run clear. Basting at least once. My chicken breasts were a little larger, they took about 25 minutes. Yours may take more or less time depending on size.

Let your chicken rest at least 15 minutes before diving in. Serve with lots of feta. I recommend mixing some feta into the juices that run off and serving that like a sauce. So good.




Poblano and Goat Cheese Cornbread + Apple Cinnamon Honey Butter

I know, I know. That's like a million things in one food item. But hear me out on this one. When James and I lived in Washington DC, one of our favorite places to eat was a little BBQ joint called Fat Pete's. Our first time there, I ordered the poblano and goat cheese hush puppies with apple cinnamon honey butter. Typically in these types of situations, I'm pretty good at sharing food, but not with those dang hush puppies. I remember being so reluctant to let James have even one of them. I went there a few weeks later with my brother, basically just to get the hush puppies. Before even entering the restaurant, I advised him to order himself some hush puppies, and warned him that I would not be sharing any of mine. None of 'em. He was just going to have to deal with it.



That's what those hush puppies turned me into. A monster.

James and I now live on the other side of the country, and as much as I wish I had the money to fly back to Fat Pete's and partake of hush puppies whenever my heart desires, I don't.Which brings us to today's recipe.

Hush puppies are basically fried cornbread. I don't have a deep fat frier, nor do I have the bravery to keep one of those devils in my house. So we're just sticking to the basics. Peppers, cheese, batter, butter. Just your basic cornbread, with a little extra.



I was born and raised in Minnesota, therefore I'm typically afraid of peppers that are any spicier than a bell pepper. But Google promised me that these poblanos were somewhere in between a jalepeno and a bell pepper. Courage, my friends. That's all it takes.

For this cornbread, poblano peppers are roasted and then chopped up. The skins and seeds are removed because I'm pretty sure that's what you are supposed to do. I'm not sure. I was more motivated by fear than by anything else.




Blistery peppers join salty, creamy goat cheese in a slightly sweet cornbread batter. Once baked, the cornbread is slathered with sweet apple cinnamon-y honey butter. Everything makes sense.


Of course you could just use normal butter and honey. But let me say a few words about this honey butter.This honey butter is fall. Move over pumpkin spice latte. Move over crunchy leaves. Move over Pinterest quotes about boots and hoodies.

Tart apples are softened up with some sugar, and spiced up with some cinnamon. Then you add honey to the mix because you are a decent human being. Then everything is whipped into butter. Naturally. This apple cinnamon honey butter is just begging you to spread it all over every complex carbohydrate in existence. Banana bread. Toast. Bagels. Croissants. Sweet potatoes. Live your dreams. Live them.





Poblano and Goat Cheese Corn Bread

*This recipe makes enough bread for an 8x8 or 9x9inch pan, I increased this recipe by 1 1/2 to fit into the skillet

2 Poblano peppers
4 Oz Goat cheese, crumbled

1/2 c sugar
1/2 c butter
2 eggs
1 cup buttermilk
1 cup cornmeal
1 cup flour
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda


To roast the peppers:
Wash the peppers and rub lightly with olive oil. Place under broiler for 5-10 minutes on each side until skin blisters and blackens slightly. Let peppers cool. Remove skins and seeds. Finely chop. Be sure to wash your hands after. If you have really sensitive skin, you may need gloves, but I didn't have any problems.

For the bread:

Preheat oven to 375 F. Melt your butter in your pan in the preheating oven. Once butter is melted whisk in sugar, eggs, and buttermilk (I just mix these right in the pan because I'm lazy, but it can get messy, you can certainly mix everything up in a separate bowl.)  Mix together cornmeal, salt, flour, baking soda and mix into liquid mixture until combined. Pour into pan. gently stir in peppers and goat cheese, making sure they are spread evenly throughout.

Bake for 30 to 40 minutes until top is golden brown or a toothpick inserted in the center comes out cleanly.


Apple Cinnamon Honey Butter:

1 granny smith apple, roughly peeled and loosely chopped
2 Tablespoons brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
2 Tablespoons honey
1 cup (2 sticks) butter

In a saucepan, cook apple, brown sugar, and cinnamon over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until sugar is melted and apples are very soft. Set aside.

In food processor or with a hand or stand mixer with a whisk attachment, cream ingredients together. If you aren't using a hand mixer, I recommend finely dicing the apple before cooking.

Cover and keep refrigerated. Allow to come to room temperature before serving.

Party Trick: White Chocolate Covered Potato Chips


I have a serious lack of self-control and a serious love of anything that combines sweet and salty. I also have a serious need for a hearty dose of salad and a walk, but that's another story. 

These potato chips are everything that my relentless sweet tooth has dreamed of. I was two seconds away from calling them "Unicorn Snacks" because really, I don't know. I'm also not entirely sure of an appropriate event to bring these to. Maybe a 3-year-old's birthday party? Again, I don't know. But, you guys. Seriously.

These beauties are stupidly easy, stupidly addictive, and stupidly all eaten already. They are sweet and salty and crunchy. They kind of remind me of a better version of those pink and white animal crackers your mom refused to buy you as a kid. 


All you need are potato chips, white chocolate, and sprinkles of your choice. If you aren't a fan of sprinkles/shrapnel it's totally cool. You can leave them off. But the chips are already crunchy, so the sprinkles fit right in. If you are more of a milk or dark chocolate fan, I say go for it. Want to add some pretzels and peanuts and Chex cereal into the chocolate mix and make it a party? I'm in. 


Before you get going, can we have a heart to heart for a second? There are two methods for making these, and both work great. but they'll give you slightly different results. 

The first method is drizzling, like I did. It's quick and easy, but the chocolate may crumble slightly and things will get a tiny bit messy at the bottom of your serving bowl. This method is more ideal if you want to throw something together quickly that's going to be devoured just as quickly.

The other method is to dip the chips about halfway into the chocolate. This method takes a little longer, but the chocolate sticks pretty dang well. I recommend this if you are planning on giving these as a gift, or bringing these to a fancier party, such as a formal 3-year-old's birthday party.

A third unrecommended option is sitting on the couch with a bowl of melted chocolate and using the chips as spoons while you watch Spanish soap operas on Netflix. 

Are we all on the same page? Good. 



White Chocolate Covered Potato Chips

1 bag ruffled or wavy potato chips
1 bag white chocolate chips
Sprinkles (of your choice)

Lay out your potato chips in a single layer (try not to let any chips overlap and leave a little space in between each chip) over wax or parchment paper inside of a cookie sheet with a rim (unless you want to spend an afternoon vacuuming sprinkles off of the floor before your husband gets home.) 

In a microwave safe bowl, microwave your white chocolate chips in 30 second intervals until melted. Stirring with each interval

To Dip: Simply dip your chip, let the excess chocolate drip off, and set on wax or parchment paper, add sprinkles and let dry (about 1 hour).

Fo' Drizzle: Transfer melted chocolate to small ziploc bag. Zip shut and twist one end of the bag so that the chocolate all ends up in one of the bottom corners. With scissors, snip off a tiny corner of your bag. Pipe onto chips in a zig zag motion, one chip at a time (resist the urge to pipe all the way across the pan). When you are finished piping, add sprinkles. Let dry completely, about 1 hour. Gently break apart chips and transfer to serving bowl.

Blueberry Lemon Bars

For the longest time I've had this dream of mixing my favorite childhood lemon bar with some berries, just to see what would happen.



When I first tried making these bars, I went the blackberry route. Blackberries are tart and sassy and have a beautiful color. Turns out blackberries are also divas. I don't know. I don't want to talk about it.

The next morning I awoke with a resolve to make my vision come to life. You may call it "way too many lemon bars for a 48 hour time period." I call it redemption.



That's when I sought out the advice of the Grandmother Willow of recipes. The queen of dinner parties.  The one and only.  The Ina Garten.




Together, Ina and I created these blueberry lemon bars. And by together, I mean that I threw some blueberries into Ina's flawless lemon bar recipe that I found on the internet. I know, totally reckless and irresponsible.




These lemon bars are everything. The crust is shortbread basically a bed of sweetened butter. The lemon custard is tangy and sweet and totally ready to party. The blueberries grace these bars like a Ludacris feature in a hip hop song. They take your typical one note lemon bars and add something fresh and sweet. The powdered sugar is just an evolutionary way to kill off people who tend to inhale when they eat.



These bars are perfect for those of you who will let go of summer when it's ripped from your cold dead hands. These bars have summer written all over them.

Blueberry Lemon Bars

Adapted from Ina Garten, Patron Saint of Bruschetta

For the Crust:
2 sticks of butter
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 cups flour
1/4 tsp salt

For the Filling:
6 extra-large eggs
3 cups sugar
Zest from 2 lemons (about 2 tablespoons)
Juice from 4-5 lemons (about 1 cup)
1 cup flour
8 oz blueberries
1 tablespoon cornstarch

Powdered sugar, for dusting

Preheat your oven to 350 F. Cream the butter and 1/2 cup sugar. Add 2 cups flour and salt and mix until just combined. Dump onto well greased 9X13 inch pan and press with floured hands until flattened. Bake for 15-20 minutes, until just brown around the edges.

While your crust is baking, whisk together eggs, 3 cups sugar, lemon zest, lemon juice, and 1 cup flour.

In a separate bowl, toss blueberries with cornstarch.

Pour lemon filling over baked crust. Pour in blueberries. They should float to the top. Make sure they are spread evenly. Bake in the oven for 30-35 more minutes until filling is set.

Let cool completely (in the fridge is best) before sprinkling with powdered sugar.





Things I Wish I Knew in High School + a Recipe for Chocolate Chip Cookies

As a teenager, I learned pretty quickly that food was my strongest social skill. I've always loved baking, and people tend to warm up to you pretty quickly if you show up with baked goods.


Let me give you a little bit of background on these cookies. I'm not going to say that I wasn't cool in high school, but I am going to say that I once went through a phase where I wore knee-length skirts over boot cut jeans, and let you infer the rest. Anyways, one day, I showed up for a school function with these chocolate chip cookies, and somehow, they became a thing. Like a big thing. Probably the only big thing that happened to me in high school. I got all sorts of requests for these cookies.They would get devoured within seconds whenever they showed up anywhere. These cookies made me at least sort of cool. I made a lot of friends with these cookies.


These cookies. They are everything your dream chocolate chip cookie is. They are soft in the middle, chewy on the edges. They are sweet and salty and vanilla-y. They are blow-your-mind-good and so easy to make.
 



With the school year around the corner, I wanted to share a few things that I wish high-school-Catherine had known. More importantly, I wanted to share my cookie recipe, because somewhere out there, there is a girl wearing a homemade dinosaur print t-shirt who is about to start high school and I want to give her a little leg up (and because we all need a little help being more cool.)

9 Things I Wish I Had Known in High School:

1. I know you hate having your picture taken, but if you make a silly face in every picture you're in, you're going to have to spend a few solid hours in your early 20's untagging yourself in all those pictures before that cute boy you met finds them on Facebook.

2. Don't be afraid to be yourself. Even if you develop the hobbies of a 70-year-old modern day woman/16-year-old pioneer day woman. Be proud of those ill-fitting clothes you sewed yourself out of that vintage fabric. Display that homemade quilt with pride. The friends you make when you are being true to yourself will be way more valuable than the friends you make when you are pretending to be someone you're not. (And one day, when the apocalypse comes, you'll be warm and well-dressed dressed)

3. It's ok to have a crush on that famous guy, but there is a line that can easily be crossed. I believe that line is somewhere around "designating a drawer in your room to store pictures of the famous guy."

4. You know that sport you always wanted to try, but were too afraid? Well try the heck out of that sport. You'll probably be terrible (at least at first). But you'll have fun being terrible. You'll make new friends. Plus, you probably won't end up roped into that other after school activity that you hate.

5. Always, always be kind. Actions that are less than kind are often the moments you will look back on with regret. Don't do or say things that you will eventually regret, especially to other people. My advice for being kind? Smile as much as you can and think before you speak/act. 

6. It's ok that you fell up the same staircase three times in a row, on the same day, in the same trip. Life will go on. Turn around, give your onlookers a good laugh, and use that story to make friends at parties for the rest of your life.

7. If you don't have self confidence, do everything it takes to get yourself some. Develop hobbies. Make good friends. Wear clothes that make you feel good. Brush your hair, and do your make-up. Treat your body well. Be kind and forgiving to yourself. And pray to whatever higher being you believe in that low rise jeans don't come back into style.

8. It's ok if your beliefs/values are different than everybody else. It really is. Stay true to what you believe. Bonus points if you can take time to learn about, and be respectful of, the beliefs and values of others. 

9. If all else fails, show up with really good cookies.




Make-Friends-With-Anyone-Amazing Chocolate Chip Cookies

1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar (packed tight)
1 stick unsalted butter, cold

1 large egg
1 (overflowing) tsp vanilla

1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt

About 1 cup of chocolate chips

Cream together sugars and butter until smooth and fluffy. Add egg and vanilla.

Mix together flour, baking soda, and salt. Add to sugar mixture.

Stir in chocolate chips. Scoop onto baking sheet and bake 10 - 12 minutes at 350 F

Tips:

Make sure that your butter is straight out of the fridge cold. If for whatever reason, your butter isn't cold, or your mixer isn't strong enough to handle cold butter, be sure to refrigerate your finished dough for at least a couple of hours. Softened butter often leads to flat, crispy cookies.

Salt and vanilla are the two ingredients that give the cookie batter the most flavor. I like to add a tiny bit extra of both to any cookie recipe I make.

I started making these cookies before I knew about the spoon and level method of measuring flour. So for this recipe I typically just scoop the flour with the measuring cup and use the side of flour container to level.

I try to underbake these cookies just slightly. You want them to be golden brown around the edges, with the centers just slightly golden brown on the tops.

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