About Kathy

I write, I eat, and I live in greater Boston. I love it here and I share my occasional thoughts on food on my blog http://www.kathycancook.com

Browned Butter Rice Krispy Treats

RiceKrispytreat1
I have a confession: I love rice krispy treats. I love them in an unabashed I will gorge myself silly on them if they are in the house kind of way.  I love them in a “these are made with breakfast cereal so they totally count for breakfast” kind of way.
RiceKrispytreat2
I’ve been making these little snacks for at least three years, every six months or so I get a hankering and cook up a batch.  It takes ten minutes at the most and you get to have a super classy and delicious dessert/snack/breakfast at the end.  I made these ones with my sister and she took all the pictures for me, I also made her some salted caramel sauce that same night so we got creative with the drizzling.
RiceKrispytreat3
Now go grab the ingredients and make these.  They’ll cost you less than $3 and they disappear within twenty four hours. I promise.

Browned Butter Rice Krispy Treats
This recipe is adapted from Flour:Spectacular Recipes from Boston’s Flour Bakery and Cafe by Joanne Chang – I love this book, you should too.

  • 9 cups of rice cereal (generic Rice Krispies are totally fine)
  • 1 bag of marshmallows (I use Jet-Puffed Mini Marchmallows becasue they melt better)
  • 1 cup unsalted butter
  • 1/2 a vanilla bean (optional but it really does make it better)
  • 1/2 tsp coarse kosher salt
  • Lightly grease a 9×13 pan with butter, just to coat. Measure out the rice krispies into a large bowl.
  • Add the butter and the caviar from the vanilla bean (all those seeds inside when you split it) to a medium pot. Melt the butter over medium heat and keep a close eye on it. The butter will go from browned to burnt in about two seconds. Wanna Be a Country Cleaver has a great How To for browned butter over on her blog if you want some pictures and a step-by-step tutorial.
  • Add the marshmallows to the browned butter and stir to combine and melt. This will be a bit sticky and not all of the butter will blend with the marshmallows, that’s ok.
  • Pour the butter/marshmallow/vanilla bean mix over the cereal and stir quickly. The sugars in the marshmallows cool fairly quickly so being well prepared and stirring fast is key here.
  • Press the rice krispy treat mixture into your greased pan. I frequently use a piece of parchment to smooth out the top of my treats without getting my hands messy.
  • Sprinkle your coarse salt on top of the treats. The salt can be added to the cereal if you prefer but I always find that it falls to the bottom of the mixture when that happens.
  • Enjoy with a drizzle of caramel you made for your big sister, because she asked for it and you just couldn’t say no.

Tropical Thumbprint Cookies

thumbprint2Right before Christmas my dear friend Jess celebrated her birthday and I refused to let it pass unacknowledged. So I took the day off, brought her out to a nice seafood dinner and never called her again, brought her out to brunch at the Deluxe Town Diner, shopping for treats, and finally home where I gave her my favorite cookbooks and told her to pick a treat. She chose an adult thumbprint cookie from Baking by Dorie Greenspan.  It looked easy enough but then I realized I didn’t quite have the ingredients it called for but had a few other things that would work as substitutes and made it work.
thumbprint_flourWhat came out were perfectly bite sized cookies with a lovely yielding texture and bright non-winter tropical flavors of coconut, mango, and passionfruit. Dorie Greenspan’s recipe called for hazelnuts, but I didn’t have any so I swapped in  a combination of finely ground pepitas, pecans, and coconut – hers were also raspberry jam filled but Jess wanted something tropical and as all I had that could be considered tropical was coconut milk we went to the store and ended up getting this in Medley of Fruits. It made perfect curd (thanks Ina Garten!) and was just right in our thumbprints. There’s something truly indulgent about making cookies on a whim because it’s a friends birthday and it just feels right.
thumprint_doughThese were a perfect birthday treat for Jess and I sent her home with most of the leftovers, knowing full well that I wasn’t going to finish them and she would be MUCH better served by having them at her home.
thumbprints_curdMy point? Go make these cookies for yourself, right now. It’s cold and snowy outside and, honestly, all you want is a little bite of the tropics to make you at least fantasize about warmer weather and longer days, AMIRITE?
thumbprint1Tropical Thumbprint Cookies
The cookies are adapted from Baking: From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan. The curd is straight from this recipe by Ina Garten but I substituted finely shredded unsweetened coconut (about 3 Tbs) for the lemon zest and fruit juice for the lemon juice (1/2 cup).

For the Cookies

  • 1 3/4 cup Finely Ground Nuts (I used 1 cup of ground pepitas and pecans and 3/4 cup of finely shredded unsweetened coconut)
  • 1 3/4 cup AP Flour
  • 1/2 cup Sugar
  • 1 cup Unsalted Butter, softened
  • 1 tsp Pure Vanilla Extract
  • 1/2 tsp Almond Extract
  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
  • Whisk the nuts, coconut, and flour together
  • In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment beat the butter and sugar together for 3-4 minutes on medium, until light and fluffy. Add the extracts and beat to blend them in, another minute.
  • Reduce the mixer speed to low and add the flour/nut combination. Mix the dough just until the flour is incorporated, about 2 minutes.
  • working in scant tablespoons create dough balls in your hands. Once the dough is shaped using your thumb (or the rounded handle of a utensil) press dimples into the cookies.
  • Bake the cookies for 15-18 mins, they will be a little bit browned and crispy, don’t worry about under baking these though as the lack of eggs makes the dough fine to eat on it’s own. Also, I enjoyed the tenderness the cookies had when they were a hair underdone.
  • Allow the cookies to cool completely after removing them from the oven.
  • Fill the dimples in the cookies with your homemade curd, or jam, or whatever thick, treacly thing you want to put there – but the curd went a LONG way.
  • Enjoy, with a cup of tea and a friend on her birthday.

On My Shelf: Baking: From My Home to Yours

cookbookshelfIt’s pretty apparent that I bake a lot. I make cookies, cakes, cupcakes, quick breads, anything that will encourage a sweet tooth. So I pretty much always keep an eye out for the next awesome baking book. I’m always looking for a book of fail-safe recipes that will offer consistent and reliable baked goods that I will love, because here’s the thing – there are a LOT of cookbooks out there, each more complicated then the last and some not offering good or reliable information. That’s one of the reasons I started this series on the blog. I want my readers to know what I bake from because it’s what I find reliable consistently. I never give you a book I’ve only cooked from once, I must have cooked a couple of things from the book and liked them. There’s no point in sharing a recipe I’m not in love with and there’s ABSOLUTELY no point in telling my readers to spend money on something without making sure it’s perfect. I feel this way about a lot of things – kitchen ware, cookbooks, electronics, I like consistency and reliability. I like Dorie Greenspan.

baking1

Every time I look for a new baking recipe I turn to Baking: From My Home to Yours, from cookies to cake to cheesecake, the girl owns her recipes. They are well tested and reliable, but not represented as practically perfect – because lets face it, none of us are. This book offers real recipes, and real variations that make sense. She doesn’t suggest you use fifty bowls for one cake or ask for weird, obscure ingredients that are hard to find, or worse, expensive. These are tested recipes for early morning baking and perfect birthday cakes.
baking2

When I bake from this book it’s the cake portion of the black and white celebration cake, or the black and white banana loaf, or the basic cheesecake, or, well you get the idea. I can’t choose a favorite recipe because everything I’ve made from it has been successful, and I’ve never received a complaint on something I made. Is there a better recommendation than that?

Unposted Eats and Life 2012

09201312542

I know that I’ve recently been… away. Over the past year I have experienced a lot of life changes. I started 2012 on unemployment, looking for work and curling up with my kitten and tea every day. It was hard. I felt very overwhelmed. I kept up with this blog but I didn’t mention it, I’m not terribly personal here. Quirky anecdotes and fun food photos are usually what I share. But let’s be honest, I’m not that one dimensional; I like other things – like art, art history, books, video games, my kitten, BF, and many other things besides. Being unemployed for the better half of a year kind of broke me, I was frustrated and unhappy for a lot of the time. I cooked a lot of the same meals, for comfort and ease. Food wasn’t my top priority for a long time. I sort of lost my inspiration and motivation. It sucked.

In March I got involved in Hyper-Local Brewfest, a beer festival sponsored and organized by Sustainable Business Networks of Massachusetts. I’d been a volunteer for them for the past few years with Boston Local Food Festival so when they wanted to run a spring festival I was one of the first to jump on the wagon and start waving the flags. I helped them to run the festival and was offered a job, part-time, running the fall version alongside Boston Local Food Festival. So I did it. From mid-June through Early October I worked hard and pulled off a successful and elegant beer festival, it was fun – but not ideal, also part time. I was struggling – financially and emotionally, my heart just wasn’t in it. So I kept looking; I got a handful of interviews, each a touch more promising than the last in terms of places I would fit well in, they were small successful start-ups and with each no call or polite no thank you email I was a little more crushed and downtrodden.

092013124343

As seems to so often happen in seemingly unending rough patches a little glimmer of hope popped up. My friend Dan mentioned in a casual aside that he was starting as head cook for a burrito bar in Belmont, a small place with lots of character, good food, and good coffee. I asked if they needed help and got a second part time job working with him in the kitchen. We had fun – cooked and talked food for 18 hrs a week and it felt like a rest every time I went in for a shift, but it was still part-time, the enemy of post-grads everywhere trying to pay off mountains of college debt. I didn’t expect to have so much fun there, to sincerely enjoy my kitchen time the way I did, but it always meant that by the end of my work day I didn’t have that urge to cook, I had worked it off at work. I left work feeling satisfied and the more time I spent there the more I slowly came to realize that I just couldn’t go back to an office job. I liked the movement, I liked the energy and the pace, I liked that when a customer was happy they came up to you after their meal and let you know. I felt connected, I wanted it to succeed. SO I stuck with it. I was working two part time jobs and could make things work.

Until I couldn’t. Boston Local Food Festival came and went, and my time there was done. So I gave up that part time work, then my hours in the burrito bar were cut back. I was devastated, but I tried to make it work, BF was supportive and made enough money for us to get by so it was worth a shot. But I was frustrated and the idea of going back to an office seemed awful, work in an uninspiring job while fantasizing about the things I could do if I tried or work toward the things I want to do? So that’s what I am doing, looking for work that makes me happy and uses my skill-set. I am looking through doors that I once felt were closed to em and keeping an ear out for any and all opportunities that can make me a better person and employee, if food is involved all the better.

092013125011

It took me over a year to get over losing my former job. I felt hurt and broken by that job – worn down and strung out in all the most unpleasant ways, losing that job was a relief, but it hurt. It hurt to have someone tell me I wasn’t good enough no matter how hard I tried, and it hurt to fail. I didn’t tell anyone for a long time. I was embarrassed, I definitely didn’t write about it here. But, just recently I cleaned up the box of cubicle stuff I had from my old job; pictures to brighten it up, pens, various desk items, toys to entertain me when I got bored. And I realized how far I’ve come over the past year and more. I’ve grown up. I’ve found a niche I think I fit in and I like it. It makes sense.

092013124146

The pictures in this post are all eats I photographed this year, homemade or eaten out, that I haven’t shared. There’s a lot more here that I didn’t photograph and there are a fair few things I’ve already shared but these are some favorites, or things that stood out in my year of eating out, consoling in comfort food, and watching some of my favorite people’s kids grow from infants to people. It’s been a great year and I have so many great people who stood beside me while I figured my shit out. Thanks, all of you. I am looking forward to 2013. New year, new goals, new leaf.