recipe

cheddar and thyme scones with tomato jam

this has been a very fun week of gingerbread chicken coop building, cookie making, and spending quality time at home*

*and realizing what a slob i am and that i need to devote all of my holiday break to cleaning up this place. 

how do people stay clean? where do they put all of their cookbooks?? i feel like i'm in an igloo made of cookbooks and boxes that are about to be filled with cookies and it's all going to cave in on me soon unless i start adulting. at least i finally feel like eggboy and i have some time to get to work on it all. his work days are shorter since the farming season has slowed, and i have barely enough sunlight to photograph for more than a couple of hours each day, so we shall become clean people in these remaining few weeks of 2016! i have these fantasies that i'll one day be able to walk into my prop room and not have to tip toe around breakable dishes as if i'm playing twister, or that i'll be able to quickly find a specific cookbook without having to somersault through slobby stacks in our living room...

remember when fantasies were more centered around hello kitty and lisa frank chrismukkah presents? lololol. 

here is an anytime snack that is perfect for when you need something cheesy and carby but you don't have any bread in the house and yes, you could use a little break from cleaning! it's a savory scone that's laced with onions, cheddar, and tiny flecks of thyme and served with sweet tomato jam. shoutout to eggmom for stocking our freezer with garden tomatoes from the summer! they were perfect for this. these scones are crumbly yet moist and i've used kerrygold's reserve cheddar here since it's flavorful enough to cut through the scone dough that surrounds it. (also because whenever i think about scones my inner voice puts on an irish accent since i ate about 12 million of the best scones of my life when i was in ireland on kerrygold's farms.) 


cheddar and thyme scones

makes 9

ingredients

2 c flour

1 tb baking powder

1 tsp dried thyme

1/2 tsp salt

black pepper

1 tb sugar

5 oz shredded kerrygold reserve cheddar 

1/2 c  kerrygold unsalted butter, cold and cubed

1 small onion, finely chopped

1 large egg

1/2 c heavy cream

for the tomato jam:

2 lb Roma (plum) tomatoes, cored and roughly chopped

1/2 c sugar

1 tsp kosher salt

a pinch of crushed red pepper

black pepper

1 tsp lemon juice

clues

preheat the oven to 400ºf and line two baking sheets with parchment.

in a food processor, combine the flour, baking powder, thyme, salt, a few turns of pepper, and the sugar. add the cheese, reserving 1/2 cup for the topping, and butter to the food processor and pulse until the butter is pea-sized.

add the mixture to a large bowl and mix in the onion. in a small bowl, whisk together the egg and heavy cream. add this to the dry mixture and mix to combine. 

turn the dough onto a surface (you may need to give it a few kneads to bring those last few crumbs in) and pat it out into a square that is 1 inch thick. cut the large square into 9 smaller squares and place the scones on the baking sheets spaced 2 inches apart. top each with salt, pepper, and a bit of the reserved cheese.

bake the scones until they're lightly browned, beginning checking for doneness at 15 minutes. remove from the oven and serve warm with tomato jam (recipe follows).

for the tomato jam:

in a saucepan, combine the tomatoes, sugar, salt, crushed red pepper, and a few turns of black pepper. set over medium heat and cook uncovered, stirring occasionally, until most of the liquid has cooked off, 1 to 1 1/2 hours. press through a fine-mesh sieve to remove the tomato skins. stir in the lemon juice. let cool and store in the refrigerator until ready to use.


-yeh!

thank you for kerrygold for sponsoring this post!

ras el hanout loaf cake toast with yogurt and sesame sprinkles

these days my life is about:

hallmark movies, the hamilton mixtape, this is us, only wearing very soft very warm clothes, and taking in as much holiday cheer as i can possibly fit into my person. so much that i have to wear stretchy pants. there are two feet of snow outside, our chrismukkah bush is up, and i've eaten sugar cookies for more than a few meals this past week. oh! that's why i'm wearing stretchy pants. 

this holiday season has been so swell so far! unlike last year's holiday season, i don't have a book manuscript to freak out about, and unlike the year before that i don't have a wedding to plan. so it's the first time in a while that i can throw myself into this thing like the north pole 5' 7" elf that i am. you should see this snow though, it's so fluffy and white and it just keeps coming down. every time i look outside i'm all this is why i came here!!!!!!!!!!!!! 

and in my head i do this face 😛 😛 😛 😛  and this dance 💃🏼 💃🏼 💃🏼 💃🏼

last night i went to michaels to buy tins to make my first annual holiday cookie tins, inspired by the craftsman and wolves cookie tins. i can't wait to turn my kitchen into a cookie factory later this week, and to make this into an annual tradition! yesterday my kitchen was a loaf cake factory though, to make this ras el hanout cake! it's in the same family as gingerbread but slightly closer to the savory end of the spectrum. it comes from the london cookbook and it is absolutely delicious. ras el hanout is a spice blend that's common in moroccan cooking and typically might contain cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, allspice, ginger... many things that you typically find in a pumpkin spice mixture or gingerbread cake, but i've only ever used it in savory dishes because it often has cumin and cayenne as well. so i was a nervous nelly about this cake! the book has a recipe for a saffron-y ras el hanout that doesn't have cumin (see below), but i have a small cumin-heavy jar of it that i brought back from tel aviv that i tossed in. i also took way more liberties than i should have (subbed out golden syrup for more molasses, muscovado sugar for brown sugar, buttermilk for coconut milk mixed with a bit of lemon juice) because it was -6º and i couldn't be bothered to go muscovado hunting in the morning, but guess what! it turns out this cake is impossible to fuck up. it's moist, well-balanced, and kind of a modern take on gingerbread. 

rather than going the glaze or frosting route, i hopped on the #caketoast train* and had a slice of it crisped up in a skillet with a slathering of yogurt, sesame seeds, and sprinkles in a fairy toast-inspired move. the yogurt here is a nice cooling contrast to the toasty cake, almost like a healthier whipped cream, and the sesames add their nuttiness and charm. cake toast, you guys. it's officially the best way to reheat a slice of loaf cake.

*it's an imaginary train that steph, michelle, alana, lily, and i have just made up. but hop on and it make it happen! check out their cake toast!

steph: angel food cake toast

michelle: yellow cake toast

alana: chocolate gingerbread cake toast

lily: grapefruit and earl grey cake toast


ras el hanout loaf cake toast with yogurt and sesame sprinkles

loaf cake from Aleksandra Crapanzano's the london cookbook

makes one loaf

ingredients

1 c unsalted butter

1/4 c treacle or blackstrap molasses

1/4 c golden syrup, preferably Lyle's

1/2 c dark muscovado sugar

2 c all-purpose flour

1 1/2 tsp ras el hanout (recipe follows), or 1 tsp ras el hanout and 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon, plus more for sprinkling

1 tsp ground ginger

1/2 tsp baking soda

1/4 tsp sel de Guérande or other fleur de sel

2/3 c buttermilk, preferably full-fat and artisanal

2 eggs, lightly beaten

for the glacé:

3/4 c confectioners' sugar, sifted

1 tsp ginger syrup from a jar of stem ginger, or bottled ginger syrup

stemmed ginger, for garnish (optional)

 

for serving:

yogurt

toasted sesame seeds

sprinkles

clues

preheat the oven to 350ºf. if using a convection oven, preheat the oven to 325ºf. butter an 8 by 4 by 3-inch loaf pan and line the bottom with parchment paper.

in a small pot, warm the butter, treacle, golden syrup, and muscovado sugar over low heat until the butter is just melted. stir to combine.

sift the flour, ras el hanout, ginger, baking soda, and sel de guérande into a large bowl.

stir the molasses mixture into the flour mixture until just combined.

fold in the buttermilk and eggs. the ingredients must be well combined, but don't overwork the batter. a light touch is best.

pour the batter into the prepared pan. bake for 35 to 40 minutes, until the center is set and springs back when pressed gently.

let the loaf cool to room temperature and wrap tightly in parchment paper for 2 days. this will make it nice and sticky. or give way to temptation and eat it straightaway. the flavors will be less concentrated, but the smell of it cooking makes waiting hard.

to make the cake toast, skip to the next step! if not making cake toast, use the glacé. to make the glacé, place the confectioners' sugar in a bowl and whisk the boiling water into the sugar, using just enough to get your desired consistency. stir in the ginger syrup. pour the glacé over the cake. if you have stemmed ginger, chop some and use as a garnish with a light shower of ras el hanout. candied or crystallized ginger would also be a lovely option.

for the cake toast, slice thick slices of the cake and toast it in a skillet over medium high heat with a little oil until browned and slightly crispy. top with yogurt, sesame seeds, and sprinkles. 


ras el hanout

from the london cookbook

makes 1/4 cup

ingredients:

2 tsp freshly ground nutmeg

1 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper

2 tsp ground cinnamon

1 tsp ground allspice

1 1/2 tsp freshly ground cardamom

10 saffron threads (optional), rubbed between your fingers until powdery

1 tsp ground mace

1 tsp ground turmeric

1/4 tsp ground cloves

1/4 tsp cayenne pepper

1 tsp ground coriander

clue

combine all ingredients. 

leftover ras el hanout keeps in a tightly sealed jar for two months.


-yeh!


pictured: farmhouse pottery plate + cheese stone

chocolate cake with vanilla buttercream

we* made a stop motion video about the most important time of day: cake o'clock!! 

i partnered with android to demonstrate a quick easy way of decorating a string-light-inspired holiday cake (with marzipan, of course, duhhh) for their #magicminute project. because even if you're running late for cake o'clock, you still deserve festive tasty decorations. enjoy this stop motion (turn the sound on!), bop your head along, and stick around for the bloopers at the end!! below is the cake and frosting recipe that i used for it. it's my basic go-to rich chocolate cake and fluffy vanilla buttercream.  

*video credits:

indoor photography -- eggboy and me

outdoor photography -- chantell and brett

eggboy -- as himself

macaroni -- as themselves

sven and ole cat -- as their extra mischievous selves

ole handler -- eggboy


chocolate cake with vanilla buttercream

makes one 2-layer 8-inch cake

ingredients

for the cake:

1 3/4 c sugar

1 3/4 c flour

1 c unsweetened cocoa powder

1 1/2 tsp kosher salt

1 1/2 tsp baking powder

1 1/2 tsp baking soda

2 large eggs

1 c buttermilk

1 tb vanilla extract

1/2 c flavorless oil

3/4 c boiling water

for the frosting:

1 1/2 c unsalted butter

2 c powdered sugar

1/8 tsp kosher salt

1 tsp vanilla extract

1 tb whole milk

clues

for the cake:

preheat the oven to 350ºf. grease and line the bottoms of two 8-inch cake pans with parchment paper.

in a large bowl, whisk together the sugar, flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, and baking soda. in a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, buttermilk, vanilla, and oil. add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and stir to combine. whisk in the boiling water.

pour the batter into the cake pans and bake until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. begin checking for doneness at 28 minutes. let cool in the pans for 10 minutes and then remove to a rack to cool completely.

for the frosting: 

use an electric mixer to beat together the butter, powdered sugar, salt, vanilla, and milk. 

level the cakes and frost as desired. enjoy!


-yeh!

thank you android for sponsoring this video! 

rhubarb linzer cookies

eggboy and i are heading to the white house today!!! i am so giddy. i brought a lot of outfit options. i’m not sure what to expect, all i know is that we will spend time this afternoon with the white house chef and pastry chef, making gingerbread houses, mac and cheese (!!!), other festive goodies. joy and ashley will be there too!! and we’re all crossing our fingers and toes that an obama will swing by (and i am *praying* that i don’t toss my cookies in their presence). do you think the obamas make gingerbread houses?? do you think they’ve had gingerbread catastrophes too, where they had to resort to hot glue and cardboard walls to avoid any frustration induced tantrums? maybe i can show them how to make a gingerbread oval?

i am just so excited to see the white house, especially around the holidays. the strongest reference i have to it comes from house of cards and veep because i never went on my school trip to d.c. and when i spent a summer outside of d.c. in college, i spent all of my free time at georgetown cupcake. i know. it was at the heigh of my gossip girl phase, ok?

so this is all to say that eggboy and i have a jam packed morning of zipping around the smithsonian, the washington monument, that huge statue of lincoln, and as many other historical things we can find, before heading over to the big house. follow along on instagram stories!!

over the weekend, i had such a fun #mollyontherange event in grand forks! i would have had a local event earlier in the tour, but since launch date was right around the beginning of beet harvest, we held off. it was so gosh darn lovely, everyone was so so sweet, it made me love grand forks even more. i obvi couldn’t show up empty handed, so i brought this flower cake (which in typical grand forks fashion was gobbled up *except* for the flower part because people were too polite to cut into it), and these dala horse rhubarb linzer cookies because i felt like they really reflected our area. 

until i moved here, i only kind of knew the dala horse as the cake pan from ikea! but when i got here and started seeing him around town in non-ikea situations, i learned how traditional of a symbol it is in scandinavian culture. (i wish i remember where i got my little horse cookie cutter, his name is bojack, but i’m assuming it was at our town scandinavian shop.) i also learned that you’re an extra good upper midwesterner if you have a freezer full of rhubarb at all times of the year, or that even if you don’t you can get rhubarb jam at almost all of our local grocery stores. or you probably know someone who has a stash. so rhubarb is plentiful, its tartness is beautiful when smooshed between two sugary cookies, and when paired with a dala horsey, you’ve got a good grand forks cookie! 

and this is part of bob’s red mill united states of cookies campaign!! check out their cool microsite to take a look at cookies from all of the other states. this is such a tasty diverse project. my cookies use their unbleached all-purpose flour, which is extra appropriate in this case since the sugar cookie dough here is a nice all-purpose dough. you don’t have to use it for linzers, you can use it for cutouts, uh-oh oreos, cookie trees, or even mini cookie houses. it will hold its shape when you bake it and it won’t spread that much at all because there aren’t any leavening agents. this yields a slightly crispier cookie, but when sandwiched with jam or buttercream, i think it’s jussst right. 


rhubarb linzer cookies

makes 15-18

ingredients

1 c unsalted butter, softened

1 c sugar

3/4 tsp kosher salt

1 large egg

1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

1/2 tsp almond extract

3 c all-purpose flour

about 10 tb rhubarb jam (homemade or store bought)

powdered sugar, for dusting

clues

preheat the oven to 350ºf and line two cookie sheets with parchment.

in the bowl of a stand mixer, cream together the butter, sugar, and salt until pale and fluffy, about 3 minutes. beat in the egg and extracts. gradually mix in the flour until combined.

turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. (alternatively you can wrap it in plastic wrap and refrigerate it for up to 2 days before proceeding to the next step.) roll out the dough until it's 1/4-inch thick. cut out 3-inch circles using a cookie or biscuit cutter. place half of the cookies on the baking sheet 1 inch apart. use a smaller cookie cutter to cut out a shape from the center of the remaining cookies. place those on the cookie sheet 1 inch apart (you may have to bake in batches).

bake the cookies for 10 to 12 minutes, until the edges of the cookies turn slightly golden. remove the cookies from the oven and cool on a wire rack.

once cooled, place about 2 tsp of jam in the center of a cookie and then squish into a sandwich with one of the cutout cookies. repeat with remaining cookies and then let set overnight.

dust with powdered sugar before serving and enjoy!


-yeh!


Thanks to bob's red mill for sponsoring this post!

their unbleached all-purpose flour is a great versatile kitchen staple. get more recipes by visiting the united states of cookies! also get a coupon for some bob's red mill flours here.