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Archive for October, 2014

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It’s Monday morning and I am starting the week off with a confession. You ready? ok…

I am SO FRICKIN’ EXCITED for Taylor Swift’s new CD.

My roommates were both gone this weekend so in addition to being lazy and binge watching Law and Order: SVU, I listened to the songs she has released so far off her new CD over and over and over again while baking these cookies and dancing around my kitchen. I’m loving the new songs so much. It was kind of the perfect weekend.

Ok, now that I have professed my love for T-swift, I will get to the cookies. These beauties were inspired by Taylor when she posted on her instagram (really? are we even surprised I follow her?) that she had made “chai sugar cookies with eggnog frosting aka christmas in September”. I couldn’t get the idea of chai cookies out of my head after that. Especially when October hit, the weather cooled and my body just wanted to hibernate and drink tea all day. I did a bit of research (by which I mean I internet stalked her) and discovered that she made sugar cookies with chai tea in it. Like, she cut open a chai tea bag and poured it into the batter for sugar cookies. This presented me with 2 problems: 1. For some reason, me and sugar cookies don’t mix. I don’t have a sugar cookie recipe on this blog because I never like the results. So using sugar cookie as a base wasn’t going to happen and 2. I don’t have a bagged chai tea I love. Whatever, call me a snob but I like this version way better. So to put meh tea into a meh cookie base wasn’t going to fly for me. Plus, I was in fall mode and I wanted to add pumpkin some how.

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Thus, this cookie was born. It’s a chai cookie with just a tiny hint of pumpkin, which is exactly what I was going for. Everything is so super pumpkin-y right now that I wanted something a little more subtle. It still feels like fall though with all the warm spices. You just want to cozy up on the couch with a good book, a cup of tea and an obsene amount of these cookies.

Chai Spiced Cookies with Pumpkin
inspired by Taylor Swift
modified from My Baking Addiction

  • 2 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 3/4 cups white sugar
  • 2 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
  • 1 cup vegan butter (such as Earth Balance), softened
  • 1/4 cup pumpkin (or 1 “Ener-G” egg)*
  • 1/2 a vanilla bean, seeds removed (or 1/2 tsp vanilla extract)

*Using Pumpkin instead of an Ener-G egg with produce a softer, richer cookie. Ener-G will produce a more traditional cookie texture. I kept the pumpkin version of the cookie in for 1 minute longer then the Ener-G because of this.

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper; set aside.

2. In a large bowl, sift together flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. Set aside.

3. In a medium bowl combine sugar, cinnamon, ginger, cardamom, and allspice. Remove 1/4 cup of the sugar-spice mixture, set aside to reserve for rolling the cookies.

4. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or in a large bowl with an electric mixer, beat the butter and sugar-spice mixture until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes.

5. Beat in pumpkin and vanilla bean seeds, combine until fully incorporated.

6. Slowly blend in dry ingredients mixing until just combined.

7. Roll dough into balls (about 2 tsps of dough each) and then into the reserved sugar-spice mixture. Place dough balls on prepared baking sheet about 1 1/2 inches apart.

7. Bake in preheated oven for 8 to 10 minutes

8. Let stand on baking sheet two minutes before removing to cool on wire racks.

As I  mentioned in the note above, these cookies will be soft and doughy so be careful not to overcook thinking that they aren’t done.

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These cookies are just so spot on. They are just the perfect fall cookie without being in-your-face pumpkin. One of my friends tried it a few weeks ago and said it may be her new favorite cookie, which is kind of awesome! If you want more of a fall kick, try adding some Pumpkin Spice chips which are out in the baking sections now. I was going to give that a whirl but never made it to Target this weekend.

If you want a pumpkin cookie with chai spice try making this cookie and replacing the 1 tsp of pumpkin pie spice with the spices in the below recipe and omit the chocolate chips. I haven’t tried it yet but I bet it would be delicious!

This actually isn’t my first time baking to celebrate the release of a CD. Back in 2010, Taking Back Sunday released a live album called Live from Orensanz and I baked some  cupcakes to give out at work. It won be a pair of Matt Rubano Macbeth sneakers…which Macbeth NEVER sent me. I emailed them for months to try and get them and they never came. Shady, shady company. Not cool at all.

TBS cupcakes

Have you ever done anything fun for the release of an album or movie or anything? I can’t be the only weird one out there. Share your stories below!!

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DSC_0711 The last few weeks have been hard. Like, I’m-not-even-sure-how-I’m-awake-and-functioning-right-now hard. In an attempt to make ends meet when moving back to Boston, I took a job at a cafe, which was part-time, and worked as a temp through a temp agency. This worked out well for a while but then I landed a 9-5, M-F desk job through my temp agency. Yeah! But since it’s a temp job, I still needed to keep the cafe job. Which is how I ended up working every single day for the past 30 days- Desk job Monday through Friday, Cafe job Saturday and Sunday. Surprisingly, it’s the cafe job that has been the most exhausting. 8 hours on your feet running around, making sandwiches and coffee and being ‘on’ for the customers is a long day. This is why the recipes haven’t been pouring out. Mostly when I come home, I’m putting my energy toward seeing all my friends that I have missed over the past nine months…or I’m sleeping. Ok, it’s mostly sleeping.  Energy for dinner? Does an apple with peanut butter and chocolate chips count? How about left over chips and salsa and pumpkin beer? There’s veggies in salsa! Despite the hectic, hectic schedule I’ve been leading, I have had time to consistently make one thing: Cold brew coffee. Yes, please! It took me a little while to get used to and to work out the proportion of water to coffee I like but it’s so easy. I can prep it on Saturday night, strain it on Sunday night and have coffee all week. It’s perfect. Because clearly, I am running on nothing but caffeine at this point. DSC_0695 So here is the thing about cold brew coffee: there are a lot of different ways it can be made and everyone seems to have a different strategy. Some people suggest freshly grinding your beans but leaving them fairly course- others say to grind them super fine. Some say let your grinds sit in water at room temperature, others say in the fridge. You have to find what you like best. The below recipe is a combo of everything I read and found online and what works for me. What you have to remember though is that this is a concentrate. It doesn’t have the bitter, acidity that traditional coffee has so it may be easy to mistake the smoothness for it not being “strong”. So not the case. There was definitely a day when I didn’t cut the coffee  and boy was I  jittery at my desk! Another thing to note is cold brew coffee is naturally sweeter. American Test Kitchen suggests replacing your sugar with a pinch of sea salt to bring out that sweetness. I haven’t tried that but I can tell you that when I’m not using the below flavored sweeteners (which I use a very little of!) that I’m not adding any sweetener at all. It’s a great way to cut that morning sugar rush out. OK, Enough Talk! Here’s the coffee and flavored syrups I’m loving right now :

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Option 1 for filtering out your grinds: Fine Mess Sieve and coffee filter over a bowl

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Option 2 for filtering out your grinds: Single-serving coffee cone and filter over your storage container. My preferred option.

Cold Brew Coffee Concentrate with Pumpkin Spice Syrup or Chocolate Syrup

Coffee:

  • 1 cup of whole coffee beans, medium roast is ideal
  • 4-5 cups of water depending on your preference (American Test Kitchen recommends 1 cup of grinds:4 cups water. I like 5 just as much and it’s a little cheaper. Stretching that buck!)

Directions:

  1. Grind your coffee beans to a “fine” consistency* (To grind my coffee, I use something like this)
  2. Transfer grinds to a large bowl, french press or mason jar. I use a large 1/2 gallon mason jar
  3. Add your desired amount of water. Give it a quick stir to make sure all the grinds get mixed in. Cover.
  4. Let sit for 24 hours, preferably in the fridge.**
  5. Strain out coffee grinds. If you are using a french press, the french press does the bulk of the work for you. Depending on how fine your grinds are, though, you may still need to filter them. For everyone else, you can line a strainer with a coffee filter or you can use a single-serving drip coffee cone, which is what I use. So cheap and so effective. I’ve also done the mesh strainer/coffee filter combo over a bowl as well and both work fine. See the two photos above for these two options.
  6. Serve over ice or heat up. Either way, Enjoy!

*”espresso or turkish” consistency is how everyone describes it online but seriously? My coffee grinder is the cheapest out there and there aren’t settings. Just grind it really well. According to American Test Kitchen, the fine grinds release more flavor **You can let it sit for longer. I’ve left mine for 36-48 before in the fridge and it was totally fine. Just don’t go less then 24 hours or it will be too weak. Some will argue that letting it sit at room temperature produces better results but I like mine in the fridge because I almost always drink my coffee iced. Try both ways to see if you have a preference. DSC_0703 Chocolate Syrup from Vegan in the Freezer

  • 1 cup of water
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 3/4 cup Unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp of vanilla

Directions:

  1. Bring the water to a boil and add the sugar.
  2. Stir until the sugar dissolves, which should be about a minute.
  3. Stir in cocoa and salt. Reduce heat so the mixture is simmering. Continue to let it simmer for 3 minutes, stirring constantly.
  4. Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla.
  5. Let cool. It will thicken as it cools.

DSC_0742 Pumpkin Spice Simple Syrup from The Messy Baker

  • 1 1/2 cups water
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar, light or dark
  • 1 cup of granulated sugar
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground ginger
  • 1/2 tsp ground cloves (I used 1/4 cause I don’t love the taste of cloves)
  • 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 cup pumpkin puree
  • 1 1/2 TBS vanilla extract

Directions:

  1. In a medium saucepan, add water and both sugars. Simmer on medium-low until the sugar dissolves, about 4 minutes
  2. Turn the head down to low and whisk in cinnamon, ginger, cloves, nutmeg, and pumpkin puree. Simmer for 8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Do not allow the mixture to come to a boil.
  3. Remove from the heat and strain through a mesh strainer lined with cheese cloth or a very thin, clean tea towel. If you are too lazy/too busy for this (um, me!), then skip this step. The spices and the pumpkin will sink to the bottom of the storage container leaving the syrup at the top to scoop out. You could also give the syrup a stir before using and include the pumpkin and spices in your coffee. I actually don’t mind it like that. I think it’s more flavorful! Just make sure you don’t forget step 4 below.
  4. Allow the syrup to cool to room-temperature before stirring in the vanilla extract. Store in a mason jar or airtight container. The syrup with last for 1 month at room temperature or 3 months in the refrigerate.

DSC_0696 So there are 3 recipes for you! Does that make up for the fact that I have been negligent for the past month? Probably not but I just gave you Pumpkin Spice Simple Syrup so that should count for something! Seriously, these recipes are so versatile! I use the chocolate syrup in hot and cold coffee (though I prefer it in hot I think), drizzled over ice cream or really, drizzled over anything! As for the Pumpkin Spice Syrup, come on! This is about 10x better then that crap you buy at Starbucks. 1. It taste better. A confession for you: I really hate Starbucks PSL. And I love Starbucks and Pumpkin. It taste so chemically to me! This stuff does not, 2. There is actual pumpkin in it! 20 bucks says the PSL does not have real pumpkin and 3. You can also use it in black tea, which is delicious, or over ice cream. Really, you can’t go wrong with either and I think you should go ahead and make these now. Also, if you could send a jar my way that would be awesome. God knows, I can’t get enough coffee lately!

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Harvard Yard

Harvard Yard

I can’t believe it’s been over a month since I posted. It breaks my heart! I love fall so much and I usually love cooking and baking during October. Things have been so full on though since I moved back to Boston. Until last week, I had been working every single day for over 30 days straight. It was exhausting!! I was lucky if I had the energy to pour myself a bowl of cereal for dinner and eat it before passing out at an embarrassingly early hour, never mind making actually recipes. I haven’t even decorated for Halloween yet!!

But things are marginally slowing down here. I have my weekends back (for now…) and I’m almost all caught up on things that I didn’t have time to do while working. So, I can finally devote some more time to the blog! YEAH! I made some insanely yummy pumpkin things: granola, muffins and simple syrup (SO much better then Starbucks), some chai cookies and a kale salad (cause, you know, veggies and stuff), which I hope to get to you in the coming weeks (though I probably just jinxed myself).

For now, here is a recipe round-up of all my favorite fall foods that I have posted on the blog before. I know round-ups seem like a cop-out but I love doing them. I enjoy going back through and revisiting recipes I forgot about (Hello, Pumpkin Beer Pretzels and Pumpkin Cookie Dough Truffles!!) and reminding everyone of some favorite dishes (Black Bean Butternut Squash Burritos, Southwestern Pumpkin Burgers and Beer Bread…all SO good!).

Mini Pumpkin Baked Donuts

Mini Pumpkin Baked Donuts

Breads and Breakfasts

Apple Butter
Apple Cider and Pumpkin Spice Mini Baked Donuts

Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal
Autumn Breakfast Hash
Beer Bread with Pumpkin Beer

Mini Pumpkin Loaves

Pumpkin Beer Pretzels
Pumpkin Pancakes

Pumpkin Cranberry Soup

Pumpkin Cranberry Soup

Entrees and Actual Food

Apple Sage Pizza
Black Bean Butternut Squash Burrito
Butternut Squash-Apple Soup
Butternut Squash “Cheez” Sauce (and Jack o’ Lantern Quesadillas)
Butternut Squash Chipotle Chili
Butternut Squash Kale Rice Bowls
Cream of Mushroom Soup with Cashew Cream
Pumpkin Cranberry Soup

Red Bean, Potato and Kale Soup
Southwestern Pumpkin Burgers
(aka my all-time fav vegan burger)
Spicy Black Bean Quinoa Soup (this is the most repeated recipe on the blog. In fact, my mom just made it for me for my birthday last week.)
Sweet Potato Lentil Stew

Peanut Butter Cup Pumpkins

Peanut Butter Cup Pumpkins

Desserts

Deep Dish Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookie Pie
Graham Crackers (for your pumpkin pie crusts)
Peanut Butter Cup Pumpkins
Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Truffles
(I want these right now!!)
Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies

What are some fall staples I’m missing? I’m thinking definitely bulk up that dessert section! It’s looking a little sad. What are some fall vegan treats that you guys would like to see? Let me know in the comments below and I’ll see what I can do for you.

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