Pumpkin Spice Energy Bites

Last Updated July 16, 2024

The great thing about these Pumpkin Spice Energy Bites is that they whip up so quick. In less than 15 minutes you can have delicious morsels easy to grab for a snack, pack for a quick lunch, or take on long car rides.  They're so easy to make you might spend more time assembling the ingredients, or mis en place, than making them!

These little balls of energy are all about that pumpkin and spice and everything nice, and health and wealth with all of that schmealth. Or something like that. These will not make you rich. Or give you schmealth. I would never wish schmealth on anyone. That sounds like some terrible disease. Nor will these actually bite you. You bite them. Nom nom nom.

 Now if I would stop rambling you probably could've had them already made...Scusami.

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Pumpkin Spice Energy Bites

Makes about 12-15 Bites

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup / 90g rolled oats

  • 1/4 cup / 65g peanut butter

  • 1/4 cup / 60g pumpkin purée

  • 1/4 cup 45g ground flax seeds or wheat germ

  • 1/4 cup / 45g mini chocolate chips

  • 3 Tbsp / 60g maple syrup or honey

  • 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • 1/4 tsp cloves

  • 1/4 tsp ginger

  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg

Directions:

  1. In a medium bowl combine all ingredients; mix well.

  2. Roll mixture into approximately 1 inch balls.  Place in a container and store in the refrigerator, or freeze for snacking at a later date. 

Jenny's Notes:

  • With these types of recipes you do not have to be overly exact in your measurements.  If the dough seems too soft, simply add more oats or flax.  Too crumbly and you can add any number of things, honey, maple syrup, peanut butter...the choice is yours to personalize as you wish!

  • To make these energy bites vegan, be sure to use maple syrup instead of honey. For gluten-free energy bites, make sure your oats are certified gluten-free. For dairy-free, ensure your chocolate chips are dairy-free.

Pumpkin Spice Energy Bites
Yield 12-15
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Total time
15 Min

Pumpkin Spice Energy Bites

A quick and versatile snack, on the go breakfast, or dessert full of pumpkin and fall spice that is easily made vegan, gluten-free, and dairy-free.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. In a medium bowl combine all ingredients; mix well.
  2. Roll mixture into approximately 1 inch balls. Place in a container and store in the refrigerator, or freeze for snacking at a later date.

Notes

With these types of recipes you do not have to be overly exact in your measurements. If the dough seems too soft, simply add more oats or flax. Too crumbly and you can add any number of things, honey, maple syrup, peanut butter...the choice is yours to personalize as you wish!To make these energy bites vegan, be sure to use maple syrup instead of honey. For gluten-free energy bites, make sure your oats are certified gluten-free. For dairy-free, ensure your chocolate chips are dairy-free.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

119.52

Fat

6.04 g

Sat. Fat

1.44 g

Carbs

14.60 g

Fiber

2.81 g

Net carbs

11.78 g

Sugar

5.77 g

Protein

3.37 g

Sodium

28.96 mg

Cholesterol

0.00 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 12 servings.

pumpkin spice, energy balls, vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, fall recipe
snacks
American
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @jennyblogsandbakes on instagram and hashtag it #jennyblogs

Now that didn't hurt, did it?  Happy snacking!

Pumpkin Sticky-Bun Muffins

In the midst of all the political upheaval, here is a little reprieve from the chaos to focus on the important things in life: pumpkin and autumn.  This is all I am going to write today, you have plenty of other lengthy essays from one political stand point or another to read at your leisure, you don't need another one from me.  You're welcome.  Go and make these Pumpkin Sticky-Bun Muffins in peace.

On another note, today’s recipe features nuts, namely, pecans and walnuts. If you’d like to get your mind off of politics and instead learn all about walnuts and how nutritious they are, click here!

Montreal, Canada

Montreal, Canada

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Recipe adapted from Southern Living


Pumpkin Sticky Buns

Makes 24 + a few extra

Ingredients:

I used walnuts in this batch

I used walnuts in this batch

  • 2 cups / 250g pecans or walnuts, or a mixture

  • 1/2 cup / 113g butter (1 stick), melted

  • 1/2 cup / 100g brown sugar

  • 2 Tbsp / 40g maple syrup

  • 2 cups / 256g whole wheat flour

  • 1 1/2 cups / 180g all-purpose flour

  • 2 1/2 cups / 500g sugar

  • 1 tsp cinnamon

  • 3/4 tsp cloves

  • 3/4 tsp nutmeg

  • 1/2 tsp ginger

  • 1 tsp baking soda

  • 1 tsp salt

  • 1 15 oz / 425g can pumpkin purée

  • 3/4 cup / 168g oil

  • 4 eggs

Directions:

Oven 350°F / 170°C.  Grease 2 12-cup muffin tins.

  1. Arrange pecans or walnuts evenly on a baking sheet.  Bake for about 10 minutes or until fragrant and slightly darker in color. 

  2. In a small bowl combine butter, brown sugar, and maple syrup.  Evenly distribute among the 24 muffin cups, putting about a tsp of the mixture in each.  Sprinkle evenly with toasted pecans and set aside.

  3. In a large bowl combine flours, sugar, spices, baking soda, and salt.  Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients.

  4. In another medium bowl beat together pumpkin, oil, eggs.  Pour this mixture into the well in the dry ingredients, stirring just until moistened and combined.  Spoon batter over pecans in muffin tins, filling about 2/3 full. 

  5. Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.

  6. Immediately run a knife around the edge of the muffins to loosen and invert pan onto a wire rack or counter to remove muffins.  If you wait too long the muffins will stick to your pans.  

Jenny's Notes:

  • This recipe makes extra batter, you may choose to make more pumpkin muffins, or grease a bread pan and make pumpkin bread.  Extras muffins or bread can always be frozen for a later date. 

  • I don't recommend using paper liners for this recipe.  However, to help with the clean up, be sure to immediately remove muffins from pans and soak pans in hot soapy water.

Pumpkin Sticky-Bun Muffins
Yield 26-28
Author
Prep time
40 Min
Cook time
35 Min
Total time
1 H & 15 M

Pumpkin Sticky-Bun Muffins

Whole wheat pumpkin muffins made with a sticky, gooey caramel and nut topping.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Oven 350°F / 170°C. Grease 2 12-cup muffin tins.
  2. Arrange pecans or walnuts evenly on a baking sheet. Bake for about 10 minutes or until fragrant and slightly darker in color.
  3. In a small bowl combine butter, brown sugar, and maple syrup. Evenly distribute among the 24 muffin cups, putting about a tsp of the mixture in each. Sprinkle evenly with toasted pecans and set aside.
  4. In a large bowl combine flours, sugar, spices, baking soda, and salt. Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients.
  5. In another medium bowl beat together pumpkin, oil, eggs. Pour this mixture into the well in the dry ingredients, stirring just until moistened and combined. Spoon batter over pecans in muffin tins, filling about 2/3 full.
  6. Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
  7. Immediately run a knife around the edge of the muffins to loosen and invert pan onto a wire rack or counter to remove muffins. If you wait too long the muffins will stick to your pans.

Notes

This recipe makes extra batter, you may choose to make more pumpkin muffins, or grease a bread pan and make pumpkin bread. Extras muffins or bread can always be frozen for a later date. I don't recommend using paper liners for this recipe. However, to help with the clean up, be sure to immediately remove muffins from pans and soak pans in hot soapy water.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

323.77

Fat

18.03 g

Sat. Fat

3.58 g

Carbs

39.27 g

Fiber

2.73 g

Net carbs

36.55 g

Sugar

24.87 g

Protein

4.10 g

Sodium

179.52 mg

Cholesterol

37.96 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 26 servings.

pumpkin sticky buns, cinnamon, pumpkin spice, nutmeg, cloves, pecans, walnuts, caramel, fall recipe, whole wheat pumpkin muffins
breakfast, brunch, snack, dessert
American
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Scrumptious Apple Cake

One of the many things I love about Michigan is the diversity of seasons.  Autumn is no exception, with the leaves turning brilliant shades of red, orange, yellow, burgundy, green, and brown.  I love a brilliant brown, don't you?  It's just the prettiest.  I kid.

Back to how great Michigan and autumn is.  The dried cornstalks and gourds come out, decorating the fields and porches; pumpkins appear in all the stores, asking to be taken home and carved.  The air turns as crisp and refreshingly cool as the apples hanging on the trees in the orchards.  The cool, dewy mornings call for cozy sweaters, wool socks, warm scarves; the rainy afternoons make a crackling fire, a hot cup of apple cider, and a good book all but necessary.  Comforting squash soups and crusty breads, pumpkin pies and cinnamon rolls just out of the oven, and family nearby makes the dusk that comes sooner and sooner a welcome friend.  Autumn is wonderful, but Traverse City, Michigan, really is an idyllic place to experience it.   

Hannah, myself, and my mom apple picking

apple picking

We all know, the food of choice in autumn is pumpkin. 

So here is a recipe for Scrumptious Apple Cake.  Ha.  I just wanted to trick you into thinking this would be a recipe for something pumpkin. There will be plenty of pumpkin in the near future, but today I wanted to share with you this recipe, Scrumptious Apple Cake by my mamma. Yes, scrumptious is part of the title  It is not simply a scrumptious Apple Cake, it is a scrumptious Scrumptious Apple Cake. Trust her on this one.  

Now, if you have some fancy, two-tier frosted apple cake envisioned in your brain, erase that and think simple.  It's more like a moist bread.  9x13 pan.  I think I just felt some of you relax; "no cake tins?  Phew, 9x13 I can do..." and yes, it is so simple.  Did I mention scrumptious?   

The apples in this recipe are handpicked by my mom, Hannah, and yours truly.  Apple picking is one of the things I look forward to most in September, I recommend you find the nearest apple orchard and go!

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Recipe from my mamma


Scrumptious Apple Cake

Serves 18-20

Ingredients:

For the Cake

  • 1 cup / 225g oil

  • 2 cups / 400g sugar

  • 2 eggs

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • 3 cups peeled chopped apples, about 3 medium

  • 3 cups / 360g all-purpose flour

  • 1/2 tsp salt

  • 1 1/2 tsp baking soda

  • 1 tsp cinnamon

  • 1 tsp nutmeg

For the Cinnamon Topping

  • 1/4 cup / 50g sugar

  • 1 tsp cinnamon

Directions:

Oven 350°F / 177°C.  Greased 9x13in / 23x33cm pan. 

Make the Cake

  1. In a large bowl combine oil, sugar, eggs, and vanilla; beat.  Stir in chopped apples. 

  2. In a separate bowl whisk together flour, salt, baking soda, cinnamon, and nutmeg.  Add this mixture to first mixture and stir until combined.  Pour into prepared pan.

Make the Cinnamon Topping

  1. In a small bowl combine sugar and cinnamon.  Sprinkle evenly over batter in pan.

  2. Bake for 30-40 minutes or until toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.  

Jenny's Notes:

  • My mom is very adverse to nuts in her desserts.  However, many people do enjoy nuts in their desserts, and if you do, a cup of chopped nuts added to the batter would do the trick.  You could also add about 1/2 cup chopped nuts to the topping.  *This note is not Jean-approved.  :)

Scrumptious Apple Cake
Yield 18-20
Author
Prep time
25 Min
Cook time
40 Min
Total time
1 H & 5 M

Scrumptious Apple Cake

A moist cake with apple chunks, a hint of nutmeg, and a gooey cinnamon sugar top.

Ingredients

For the Cake
For the Cinnamon Topping

Instructions

Make the Cake
  1. Oven 350°F / 177°C. Greased 9x13in / 23x33cm pan.
  2. In a large bowl combine oil, sugar, eggs, and vanilla; beat. Stir in chopped apples.
  3. In a separate bowl whisk together flour, salt, baking soda, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Add this mixture to first mixture and stir until combined. Pour into prepared pan.
Make the Cinnamon Topping
  1. In a small bowl combine sugar and cinnamon. Sprinkle evenly over batter in pan.
  2. Bake for 30-40 minutes or until toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.

Notes

If you enjoy nuts in your desserts, a cup of chopped nuts added to the batter would do the trick. You could also add about 1/2 cup chopped nuts to the topping.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

299.52

Fat

13.26 g

Sat. Fat

1.03 g

Carbs

43.25 g

Fiber

1.16 g

Net carbs

42.09 g

Sugar

27.09 g

Protein

2.83 g

Sodium

178.26 mg

Cholesterol

20.67 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 18 servings.

quick bread, cinnamon sugar, apple cake, dessert, fall recipe, apple recipe
dessert
American
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @jennyblogsandbakes on instagram and hashtag it #jennyblogs
2016-09-25 14.09.03.jpg

Burgundy Chocolate Cherry Cookies

September 24 feels like a very significant day.  You know, one of those days where you feel like it's someone's birthday (well, that's always true, even if you don't know them), a holiday, or something significant happened for you on that day.  But, I have nothing.  Except, this day last year my friend Hannah and I got off our first and hopefully last overnight train in Europe...terror....nope, not that.  Oh, it's the third day of autumn.  OH YEAH.  That's significant, we'll roll with that.  If you still have a nagging feeling like you're forgetting something, best wish everyone you meet a happy birthday, just in case...

...and make these Burgundy Chocolate Cherry Cookies so it really didn't look like you forgot....worst case scenario it's no one's birthday and you have to eat them yourself...

...actually, it's always a good idea to have cookies on hand, whatever the occasion, if even just to say "Happy September 24!" Especially these ones. 

Let me list some reasons for you.  Wine, chocolate, very chocolate, cherries, super chocolatey, and very chocolatey.  In fact, the batter is so chocolatey it makes the semi-sweet chocolate chips look like light milk chocolate.  But they are not.  So chocolatey. 

Go make them. And Happy Birthday.

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!


Burgundy Chocolate Cherry Cookies

Makes about 3 dozen cookies

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups / 240g all-purpose flour

  • 3/4 cup / 75g cocoa powder

  • 1 tsp baking soda

  • 1 tsp salt

  • 1/4 cup / 56g oil

  • 3/4 cup / 150g sugar

  • 3/4 cup / 150g brown sugar

  • 1 egg

  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

  • 1/2 cup / 118g burgundy red wine

  • 12 oz / 340g bag semi-sweet chocolate chips

  • 1 cup / 120g dried cherries

Directions:

Oven 375°F / 190°C. Have ready 1 or 2 ungreased baking sheets.

  1. In a medium bowl whisk together flour, cocoa, baking soda, and salt.

  2. In another large bowl combine oil, sugar, brown sugar, egg, and vanilla.  Carefully stir in wine.  Stir in dry ingredients until fully incorporated, then add chocolate chips and cherries.  Dough will be soft, but shouldn't be too soupy.  If it is, add a touch more flour.

  3. Spoon little mounds onto a baking sheet and bake for 6-8 minutes, until edges look set but center still looks wet.  Allow to cool for several minutes on baking sheet before transferring to a wire rack or counter to cool completely.

Pairs wonderfully with...the remainder of the bottle of wine you used to make these...

Jenny's Notes:

  • Feel free to use any kind of red wine you like for these!  I have used the an Italian red, Savini Montepulciano d'Abruzzo Riserva with great success, and the cookies in the photos I used a French red, Côtes du Rhône.  I chose to call these Burgundy because of the Burgundy wine region, which I think would be lovely in these, (the wine, not the region) and saying "Burgundy Cookies" is a whole lot easier than "Côtes du Rhône Cookies," no?  And, red (wine) plus brown (chocolate) makes burgundy.  Yes.  Maybe. Some other good wines would a pinot noir, cabernet, or merlot.

Burgundy Chocolate Cherry Cookies
Yield 36 small cookies
Author
Prep time
25 Min
Cook time
8 Min
Total time
33 Min

Burgundy Chocolate Cherry Cookies

Double chocolate chip cookies made with a splash of red wine and tart dried cherries.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Oven 375°F / 190°C. Have ready one or two ungreased baking sheets.
  2. In a medium bowl whisk together flour, cocoa, baking soda, and salt.
  3. In another large bowl combine oil, sugar, brown sugar, egg, and vanilla. Carefully stir in wine. Stir in dry ingredients until fully incorporated, then add chocolate chips and cherries. Dough will be soft, but shouldn't be too soupy. If it is, add a touch more flour.
  4. Spoon little mounds onto a baking sheet and bake for 6-8 minutes, until edges look set but center still looks wet. Allow to cool for several minutes on baking sheet before transferring to a wire rack or counter to cool completely.
  5. Pairs wonderfully with...the remainder of the bottle of wine you used to make these...

Notes

Feel free to use any kind of red wine you like for these! I have used the an Italian red, Savini Montepulciano d'Abruzzo Riserva with great success, and the cookies in the photos I used a French red, Côtes du Rhône. I chose to call these Burgundy because of the Burgundy wine region, which I think would be lovely in these, (the wine, not the region) and saying "Burgundy Cookies" is a whole lot easier than "Côtes du Rhône Cookies," no? And, red (wine) plus brown (chocolate) makes burgundy. Yes. Maybe. Some other good wines would a pinot noir, cabernet, or merlot.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

140.06

Fat

4.82 g

Sat. Fat

1.84 g

Carbs

23.42 g

Fiber

1.24 g

Net carbs

22.18 g

Sugar

15.64 g

Protein

1.73 g

Sodium

104.48 mg

Cholesterol

5.17 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 1 cookie.

Double chocolate cherry cookies, dried tart cherries, double chocolate chip cookies, Burgundy cookies, wine, red wine
dessert, cookies
American
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Blackberry Banana Bread with Cinnamon Streusel

Last Updated July 10, 2024

Wild blackberries abound in Italy. 

Ok, that's a bit general, I have not been everywhere in Italy, but I can safely say that they are abundant in Florence and Cinque Terre.  I'm all for anything free and tasty, so I will always stop and pick a few when they are in reach. 

Most evenings I like to go for a "passeggiata," or stroll, usually along the Fiume (river) Arno, and there are lots of vines that grow down towards the river.  A fence conveniently kept me from clambering down and picking any, getting torn up by the thorns, and possibly dying in the pursuit, but that didn't stop a little nonna one evening from trying her best to reach through the fence and grab a few tasty morsels.  I admired her greatly. 

Along the hiking trails of Cinque Terre there was also a plethora, and they were perfectly placed along the trail for me to grab handfuls here and there, energy bursts for the 2 hour (solid uphill, both ways) trek!  Especially helpful since I had already eaten my packed lunch before we even started hiking...

Then there was that one time when a friend, who loves to do triathlon and ride his bike for millions of miles, said he had passed a huge group of blueberry bushes while riding up in the rolling hills of Tuscany.  So a group of us drove up to the spot, prepared with bags, open mouths, and welcoming stomachs.  A couple of us headed to the nearest loaded bush, and although my first thought was "those are strange looking blueberries", it didn't occur to me to stop and figure out what they were before picking or eating any.  They had been told to me as blueberries, therefore they must be.  So the first thing I do? Pop one in my mouth.  It was the single most sour/bitter thing I have ever had in my mouth.  And I like sour things, I like straight lemon juice and lemons.  But this had a pit and I was expecting a sweet blueberry.  I swiftly spit it out and we didn't pick or eat anymore.  For awhile after we were convinced it was nightshade, OH NO, and I thought I might die.  Not really, it wasn't.  But don't eat something in nature if you don't know what it is.  JENNY.  I'm looking at you.  

Another evening I took a different route for my passeggiata and passed tons of blackberry bushes.  They lined the road for quite a ways, and so I went back several times with friends to pick a couple bagfuls.  I gained a few battle scars from the prickers, some "ciao bella's" from people passing on the road probably wondering what is that weird girl doing climbing on the road guard half hidden/hanging from thorns in bushes, but most importantly, free berries.  And what do you do when you have too many blackberries to eat?  You bake with them, of course.  Delicious and tender banana bread with little bites of blackberries dispersed throughout topped with a sweet cinnamon streusel.  

*All photos of food in this post are credited to my friend, Bailey Shoemaker Guthrey. She’s a visual design natural!

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Recipe by Jenny


Blackberry Banana Bread with Cinnamon Streusel

Ingredients:

For the Blackberry Banana Bread

  • 2 cups / 240g all-purpose flour

  • 1 tsp baking soda

  • 3/4 tsp salt

  • 3/4 cup / 150g sugar

  • 1/2 cup / 112g oil

  • 2 eggs

  • 2-3 large bananas, mashed, about 300g

  • 1 tsp vanilla

  • 1 1/4 cups / 181g blackberries

  For the Cinnamon Streusel

  • 3/4 cup / 90g all-purpose flour

  • 1/3 cup / 67g sugar

  • 1 tsp cinnamon

  • 3 Tbsp / 42g cold butter

Directions:

Oven 350°F / 177°C.  1 greased 9x5in / 23x13cm loaf pan.

Make the Blackberry Banana Bread

  1. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt.

  2. In another large bowl, beat together sugar, oil, eggs, banana, and vanilla.  Add dry ingredients and stir until just combined.  Gently fold in blackberries. 

  3. Pour into prepared pan.

Make the Cinnamon Streusel

  1. In a medium bowl whisk together flour, sugar, and cinnamon.  Using a pastry cutter, a fork, or my preferred method, clean hands, add butter and mix until crumbles form, like coarse pebbles. 

  2. Sprinkle evenly over batter in pan and bake for 35-40 minutes, or until toothpick comes out almost clean.  

  3. Allow to cool in pan at least 10 minutes before removing to cool completely.

Jenny's Notes:

  • Feel free to substitute any type of berry for the blackberries!  Blueberries and raspberries are also delicious.   

  • This is a great recipe to use up sourdough discard. Use up to 100g and add in with the wet ingredients, proceed as instructed.

  • Bananas are always a bit of guess work to measure because recipes will give measurements without having any idea how big or small your bananas are. If you see a recipe with a measurement of 300g, like the one above, and that ended up being 2 + 7/16 of a banana, what are you going to do with the remaining 9/16 of that mushy banana? No worries, using a little more or less banana than called for shouldn’t yield anything other than delicious bread.  The more banana the more moist it will be, and also a touch heavier. Go too far and it will start becoming gummy.

Blackberry Banana Bread with Cinnamon Streusel
Yield 8-10
Author
Prep time
25 Min
Cook time
40 Min
Total time
1 H & 5 M

Blackberry Banana Bread with Cinnamon Streusel

Moist banana bread with little explosions of blackberries throughout and a sweet cinnamon streusel on top.

Ingredients

For the Blackberry Banana Bread
For the Cinnamon Streusel

Instructions

Make the Blackberry Banana Bread
  1. Oven 350°F / 177°C. 1 greased 9x5in / 23x13cm loaf pan.
  2. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt.
  3. In another large bowl, beat together sugar, oil, eggs, banana, and vanilla. Add dry ingredients and stir until just combined. Gently fold in blackberries.
  4. Pour into prepared pan.
Make the Cinnamon Streusel
  1. In a medium bowl whisk together flour, sugar, and cinnamon. Using a pastry cutter, a fork, or my preferred method, clean hands, add butter and mix until crumbles form, like coarse pebbles.
  2. Sprinkle evenly over batter in pan and bake for 35-40 minutes, or until toothpick comes out almost clean.
  3. Allow to cool in pan at least 10 minutes before removing to cool completely.

Notes

Feel free to substitute any type of berry for the blackberries! Blueberries and raspberries are also delicious.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

474.54

Fat

20.00 g

Sat. Fat

4.11 g

Carbs

68.73 g

Fiber

2.39 g

Net carbs

66.34 g

Sugar

32.50 g

Protein

6.35 g

Sodium

428.44 mg

Cholesterol

57.79 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 8 servings.

banana bread, blackberry banana bread, cinnamon streusal, wild blackberries, blackberries in Italy, quick bread
Breads, breakfast
American
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Salted Caramel Thumbprint Cookies

I'm not sure where August went off to, but happy September!  Sometimes when I think too much about time, and how fast it goes by (and I'm still young by most people's standards!!) I get a little nostalgic.  I'm sorry future self, I hear it only gets worse!  However, when that happens, sometimes it's best to make cookies.  And eat a few.  A recipe for success! Sorry couldn't resist...

Now, if you followed my lead and made lots of caramel last week, (then I left you hanging and didn't blog for a while, so sorry.  It's called: Apartment hunting in Italy) then you were probably wondering what to do with all of it.  A little on ice cream, a little in coffee, a little for dipping, a little in the freezer for emergency situations, and some left over for....these salted caramel thumbprint cookies! Or if you opted for the eating by spoonful, no worries, the recipe is still up and you can just go make some more, fret not!

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Recipe adapted from The Busty Baker


Salted Caramel Thumbprint Cookies

Makes about 18 Cookies

Ingredients:

  • 3/4 cup / 90g all-purpose flour

  • 1/4 cup / 25g cocoa powder

  • 1/4 tsp salt

  • Scant 1/2 cup / 100g oil

  • 1/4 cup / 50g sugar, plus more for rolling

  • 1 egg yolk

  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

  • 2 oz / 60g semisweet chocolate or 1/3 cup chips, melted and cooled

  • 1 cup / 300g caramel sauce, or make a 1/2 recipe of this caramel sauce

Directions:

Oven 350°F / 177°C.  Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or silicone.

  1. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa, and salt. 

  2. In a separate bowl, combine sugar and oil.  Beat in egg yolk and vanilla, then mix in melted chocolate, scraping down sides of bowl with a spatula as needed.  Add flour mixture and stir until just combined.  Dough will be soft.

  3. Place dough in fridge for about 20-30 minutes, or until dough thickens enough to be rolled into balls.  Alternately, place in the freezer to speed up the process. 

  4. Place some sugar in a small bowl.  Roll dough into about 1-inch balls, then roll in sugar.  Press thumb into the center of each cookie, place on cookie sheet and bake for about 8-10 minutes.  If centers have puffed up, remove from oven and press down again.  Return to oven and bake for 3-5 minutes more, until edges are cracked and set but center still looks soft.  Remove from baking sheet and allow to cool. 

  5. When cookies are almost cool, spoon caramel into centers.  Sprinkle with coarse sea salt. 

Jenny’s Notes:

  • Cookies still warm when caramel is added makes for ooey gooey drippy caramel...yes please!

Salted Caramel Thumbprint Cookies
Yield 18
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Cook time
15 Min
Inactive time
20 Min
Total time
50 Min

Salted Caramel Thumbprint Cookies

Decadent chocolate cookies with a pool of salted caramel in the middle.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Oven 350°F / 177°C. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or silicone.
  2. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa, and salt.
  3. In a separate bowl, combine sugar and oil. Beat in egg yolk and vanilla, then mix in melted chocolate, scraping down sides of bowl with a spatula as needed. Add flour mixture and stir until just combined. Dough will be soft.
  4. Place dough in fridge for about 20-30 minutes, or until dough thickens enough to be rolled into balls. Alternately, place in the freezer to speed up the process.
  5. Place some sugar in a small bowl. Roll dough into about 1-inch balls, then roll in sugar. Press thumb into the center of each cookie, place on cookie sheet and bake for about 8-10 minutes. If centers have puffed up, remove from oven and press down again. Return to oven and bake for 3-5 minutes more, until edges are cracked and set but center still looks soft. Remove from baking sheet and allow to cool.
  6. When cookies are almost cool, spoon caramel into centers. Sprinkle with coarse sea salt.

Notes

Cookies still warm when caramel is added makes for ooey gooey drippy caramel...yes please!

Nutrition Facts

Calories

194.68

Fat

11.94 g

Sat. Fat

4.17 g

Carbs

21.83 g

Fiber

0.61 g

Net carbs

21.23 g

Sugar

16.84 g

Protein

1.30 g

Sodium

51.79 mg

Cholesterol

24.50 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 1 cookie from a batch of 18, using Jenny's homemade caramel sauce.

chocolate thumbprint cookies, salted caramel, homemade caramel, caramel sauce
dessert
American
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Caramel Sauce

Everyone should have a good caramel sauce on hand, in my mind it's an essential tool in the baker's repertoire.  It's simple to make and not too time consuming, the only special item you will need is a candy thermometer, and you can find those pretty cheaply.  Everyone will love you for making it.  Take it one step further to make salted caramel, and everyone and their brother will love you, too. 

So get your thermometers ready, let's get cracking!  Actually, we will not be going to the soft-crack nor hard-crack stages like on your thermometer, so calm down.  If we did, our caramel would not be soft and pour-able but capable of cracking teeth.  

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Recipe adapted from Martha Stewart


Caramel Sauce

Makes 2+ cups

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups / 400g sugar

  • 2 Tbsp / 40g light corn syrup

  • 2 Tbsp / 28g water

  • 1 cup / 237g heavy whipping cream

  • 1/4 tsp coarse salt

  • 1/2 cup / 113g cold, unsalted butter

Directions:

  1. Combine sugar, corn syrup, and water in a medium sauce over high heat.  Allow to cook without stirring until the mixture turns a beautiful amber color.  (If it turns an ugly amber color, I can't help ya. Just kidding. Proceed.)  This could take anywhere from 10-20 minutes, depending on how hot your stove top cooks.  Keep a watchful eye on it, as it goes fast from light golden, perfectly amber, to burnt.  

  2. Remove from heat and carefully pour in cream, a little at a time, as it will bubble up and spatter at you.  Stir until all the cream is mixed in. 

  3. Attach a candy thermometer to the pan and return to the heat.  Cook until mixture reaches 238°F / 114°C, about 2-5 minutes. 

  4. Remove from heat and stir in salt.  Stir in butter, one tablespoon at a time, until completely smooth.  Transfer to a bowl and allow to cool completely before using.  Store in the refrigerator. 

Jenny's Notes:

  • Don't like using corn syrup? Neither do I, in which case you can substitute honey for the corn syrup.  Keep in mind that it will give it a honey taste, so use discernment for which type of dessert you will be using it with and who you will be serving it to, if honey will suit or not. Honey also has a tendency to result in a slightly grainy caramel, rather than the silken smooth corn syrup caramel, especially if you are using a natural or raw honey that naturally crystallizes. (This is actually a sign of good honey.) Again, use your best judgment!

  • To make salted caramel, use salted butter and/or up the salt in the recipe to 1/2-1 tsp or to taste.

  • This is great in coffee, for cookies, swirling in brownies, using as a filling between cake layers, dipping apples and fruit into, on ice cream, and anything else you like to use caramel sauce for!  Get creative and may the streams of caramel forever be abundant in your life.   

Caramel Sauce
Yield 16
Author
Prep time
10 Min
Cook time
25 Min
Total time
35 Min

Caramel Sauce

A reliable and versatile caramel sauce you can use on most anything! Think in coffee, for cookies, swirling in brownies, using as a filling between cake layers, dipping apples and fruit into, on ice cream, or by the spoonful!
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Combine sugar, corn syrup, and water in a medium sauce over high heat. Allow to cook without stirring until the mixture turns a beautiful amber color. (If it turns an ugly amber color, I can't help ya. Just kidding. Proceed.) This could take anywhere from 10-20 minutes, depending on how hot your stove top cooks. Keep a watchful eye on it, as it goes fast from light golden, perfectly amber, to burnt.
  2. Remove from heat and carefully pour in cream, a little at a time, as it will bubble up and spatter at you. Stir until all the cream is mixed in.
  3. Attach a candy thermometer to the pan and return to the heat. Cook until mixture reaches 238°F / 114°C, about 2-5 minutes.
  4. Remove from heat and stir in salt. Stir in butter, one tablespoon at a time, until completely smooth. Transfer to a bowl and allow to cool completely before using. Store in the refrigerator.

Notes

Don't like using corn syrup? Neither do I, in which case you can substitute honey for the corn syrup. Keep in mind that it will give it a honey taste, so use discernment for which type of dessert you will be using it with and who you will be serving it to, if honey will suit or not. Honey also has a tendency to result in a slightly grainy caramel, rather than the silken smooth corn syrup caramel, especially if you are using a natural or raw honey that naturally crystallizes. (This is actually a sign of good honey.) Again, use your best judgment! To make salted caramel, use salted butter and/or up the salt in the recipe to 1/2-1 tsp or to taste.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

204.83

Fat

11.08 g

Sat. Fat

6.98 g

Carbs

27.32 g

Fiber

0.00 g

Net carbs

27.32 g

Sugar

27.31 g

Protein

0.48 g

Sodium

42.98 mg

Cholesterol

31.92 mg

Nutritional information is approximate; based on roughly 16 servings of 2 Tbsp each.

Homemade Caramel, Caramel Sauce, Caramel fruit dip, Caramel recipe
Dessert
French
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Peanut Butter Energy Bites

What is energy, and why do these bites have so much?  I'm not about to give you a lesson in physics, I'll leave that to Iggy Azalea, but basically they are filled with good calories (energy) from the nutrients and natural sugar.  If there is the word energy in the title, it probably just means it's high calorie.  But if they were called Peanut Butter Calorie Bites, who would make them?  Calories get such a bad rap, poor things.  Calories, I can't liiive without yooooou!  Literally. (If you just sang that to the tune of "Without You" by Badfinger, congratulations. Me too.) 

So if you need a boost of energy or a quick pick-me-up, these are your friends.  Also great if you are about to expend a lot of energy, like going for a run or playing Twister, or after.  They are small but pack a punch, so they don't make you feel too full.  

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Recipe adapted from Gimme Some Oven


Peanut Butter Energy Bites

Makes about 15 1-in. diameter balls

A mass of energy...

A mass of energy...

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup / 90g oats

  • 2/3 cup / 67g flaked or shredded coconut, unsweetened

  • 1/2 cup / 130g peanut butter

  • 1/2 cup wheat germ (50g), chia seeds (80g), or ground flax seed (90g)

  • 1/3 cup / 110g honey or maple syrup

  • 1 tsp / 5g vanilla extract

  • 1/2 cup / 85g mini chocolate chips

Directions:

  1. In a medium bowl, combine all ingredients.  If dough is too dry to form balls, add more honey or peanut butter; if they seem too sticky, add more oats or wheat germ. 

  2. Form into balls and store in the fridge or freezer for when you want a quick snack.

Jenny's Notes:

  • For vegan bites, be sure to use dairy-free chips and use maple syrup instead of honey.

  • For gluten-free bites, make sure your oats are certified gluten-free and use chia or flax seeds instead of wheat germ. 

  • You can get creative with these bites, substitute or add to the chocolate chips with your favorite dried fruit or nuts, or even types of cereal, such as grape-nuts, puffed rice, granola, etc.

Peanut Butter Energy Bites
Yield 15 Balls
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Total time
15 Min

Peanut Butter Energy Bites

All the goodness of granola bars in an easier, rolled form. Packed with energy and nutrients, these peanut butter, coconut, chocolate chip energy bites are perfect for a quick snack or pick-me-up.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. In a medium bowl, combine all ingredients. If dough is too dry to form balls, add more honey or peanut butter; if they seem too sticky, add more oats or wheat germ.
  2. Form into balls and store in the fridge or freezer for when you want a quick snack.

Notes

For vegan bites, be sure to use dairy-free chips and use maple syrup instead of honey.For gluten-free bites, make sure your oats are certified gluten-free and use chia or flax seeds instead of wheat germ. You can get creative with these bites, substitute or add to the chocolate chips with your favorite dried fruit or nuts, or even types of cereal, such as grape-nuts, puffed rice, granola, etc.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

167.43

Fat

9.64 g

Sat. Fat

4.52 g

Carbs

18.89 g

Fiber

2.68 g

Net carbs

16.21 g

Sugar

10.10 g

Protein

4.14 g

Sodium

44.67 mg

Cholesterol

0.00 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 15 servings.

peanut butter energy balls, chocolate chips, coconut, granola bar bites
Snacks
American
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Espresso Oatmeal Cookies

Coffee. What a beautiful word.  It incites such eager anticipation, excitement, thirst, and general burst of energy even before drinking said caffeinated beverage.  It's loved the world over, with different ways and preferences for roasting, preparing, and consuming, but in the end it's something we share together, with our family, friends, and our early mornings and foggy brains. 

My mom's coffee bar. A nice mix of the Italian Moka pot on the left, an American drip coffee machine, Chemex, and a French Nespresso machine.

My mom's coffee bar. A nice mix of the Italian Moka pot on the left, an American drip coffee machine, Chemex, and a French Nespresso machine.

In Italy coffee is a way of life.  More or less espresso, because if you order a caffé or caffé normale, you will get a shot of espresso.  Drip coffee, or so to speak "normal" coffee for Americans is rare to find here.  Almost all of their drinks are espresso based and served in small espresso cups, such as cappuccino, macchiato, ristretto, etc. Whereas our coffee is served in large mugs and not nearly as strong, usually the smallest size being a 12 oz if you go to a coffee shop.  If you think about it, the Americano is aptly named, being watered down espresso.  And what is espresso?  Strong coffee.  So if you add water to strong coffee, what do you get?  A bigger cup of not as strong coffee, more similar to American coffee.  And we seem to like that quantity.  Soup bowls of it in the morning.  You know it, all the mugs with "Don't talk to me before coffee," "Coffee First," and the likes.  And we go out for coffee dates with friends that last an hour, two, or three.  And that 20 oz mug of coffee will last for almost that long. 

In Italy, you go to a bar, order your coffee at the bar, and throw that espresso back within a minute or two.  Sometimes you sit down, but usually only if you are with someone and are at your leisure.  Un caffé, or espresso, only costs 1 euro usually, so it doesn't set you back too far.  You're not dropping $5 on an Ethiopian single origin organic latte with raw honey and cardamom with a twist of lemon.  Actually, that sounds really good right now.  

Un cappuccino from News Caffé in Florence

Un cappuccino from News Caffé in Florence

Not to infer that Italians always drink their coffee out and at the bar, especially when they drink it throughout the day; something with milk for breakfast, such as a cappuccino, espresso to finish off the other meals and at any other time of the day that tickles their fancy. They also prepare their own at home as well, usually involving the beloved Moka pot.  According to my Italian workbook, the average Italian drinks 600 cups of caffé and cappuccino per year, and of these cups 70% are drunk at home while only 20% are drunk at a bar, and 10% at work. 

Another interesting tidbit about espresso is that the word "espresso" is the Italian past tense of "esprimere" or "to express."  The Italians love to express themselves (but who doesn't?) and I like to think of it as just another way in which they do that, in their art and passion for creating and drinking coffee.  It also denotes express meaning the speed in which the beverage is both prepared and consumed.  The express lane.  So don't be too harsh on your friends when they call espresso "expresso."  They're actually not as far off as we think.  But still, be a good friend and correct them.

Does all this talk of coffee leave you wanting some?  Me too.  And cookies.  But I always want cookies.  You know those people who sport the mugs saying not to talk to them before coffee? Yeah, I can be that way before cookies.  So today, cookies with espresso in them!!!

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Adapted from She Bakes Here


Espresso Oatmeal Cookies

Makes about 30 small cookies

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup / 120g all-purpose flour

  • 1 1/4 cups / 100g oats

  • 1/4 cup / 25g cocoa powder

  • 1 tsp baking powder

  • 1/2 tsp baking soda

  • 1/4 tsp salt

  • 1/2 cup / 113g oil

  • 1/2 cup / 100g brown sugar

  • 1/2 cup / 100g sugar

  • 1 egg

  • 1 tsp / 5g vanilla extract

  • 2 tsp ground espresso beans, ground coffee, or instant coffee

  • 1 cup / 170g mini chocolate chips

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350°F / 177°C.

  1. In a large bowl, whisk together flour, oats, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.

  2. In another large bowl, mix together oil, brown and white sugar.  Beat in the egg, vanilla, and espresso powder until well combined.

  3. Add the dry mixture and chocolate chips to wet mixture and mix until well combined. 

  4. Drop dough by spoonful onto cookie sheets and bake for 7-10 minutes or until edges are set and center still looks a touch wet.  Allow to cool for 1-2 minutes before removing from cookie sheet.

Jenny's Notes:

  • Only have white sugar or brown sugar on hand?  In a recipe such as this they can easily be substituted for each other.  You can use all white or all brown sugar.  In Italy true brown sugar is hard to find, and it can have a strong molasses taste. I frequently use all white sugar and eliminate the brown sugar here, I can't have all my desserts tasting like molasses and gingerbread and Christmas time! :)

Espresso Oatmeal Cookies
Yield 30
Author
Prep time
20 Min
Cook time
10 Min
Total time
30 Min

Espresso Oatmeal Cookies

Decadent double chocolate oatmeal cookies livened up with espresso.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F / 177°C.
  2. In a large bowl, whisk together flour, oats, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
  3. In another large bowl, mix together oil, brown and white sugar. Beat in the egg, vanilla, and espresso powder until well combined.
  4. Add the dry mixture and chocolate chips to wet mixture and mix until well combined.
  5. Drop dough by spoonful onto cookie sheets and bake for 7-10 minutes or until edges are set and center still looks a touch wet. Allow to cool for 1-2 minutes before removing from cookie sheet.

Notes

Only have white sugar or brown sugar on hand? In a recipe such as this they can easily be substituted for each other. You can use all white or all brown sugar.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

119.65

Fat

5.97 g

Sat. Fat

1.35 g

Carbs

16.11 g

Fiber

0.95 g

Net carbs

15.17 g

Sugar

9.72 g

Protein

1.47 g

Sodium

60.91 mg

Cholesterol

6.20 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on one cookie from a batch of 30.

cookies, oatmeal cookies, double chocolate oatmeal cookies, coffee cookies, espresso cookies, mocha cookies
dessert, cookies
American
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Peanut Butter Pie with Chocolate Whipped Cream

Shortbread crust.  A layer of creamy peanut butter filling.  Topped with a mountain of chocolate whipped cream.  And chocolate shavings.  Because, we're so fancy, you already know.  Did I mention No-Bake?

I first made this pie with a pretzel crust.  The salty sweetness really off-set the creamy full-bodied mouth feel of the layers well.  Yes, sometimes I describe dessert and food like wine.  It just works so well.  But if you ever catch me saying "I prefer the '98 vintage of this cheesecake" or something along that line, I might have taken it too far.  Ew, rancid cheesecake.  Anyway...

The next time I made this pie was in Italy.  Pretzels do exist here, but they have a very strange texture.  Think pretzels that went stale and chewy and then got so stale they got crispy again, almost. But still a little chewy.  And don't chop well in a food processor. It took over 8 minutes to get them partly broken up.  The crust was still good, but it looked more like a bird's nest of pretzel sticks than a uniform crust.  

Oh hey, Thanksgiving pie. And there is Lucia the poinsettia in the background. Good times, good times.

Oh hey, Thanksgiving pie. And there is Lucia the poinsettia in the background. Good times, good times.

Regardless, all the Americans in Italy are so peanut butter deprived that everyone loved it.  In fact, two days later was Thanksgiving and it was requested of me to make and bring this pie to Thanksgiving dinner.  Not pecan pie.  Not pumpkin pie.  Peanut Butter Pie with Chocolate Whipped Cream.  With a delicious but slightly strange looking crust.  

When I made the pie this time, I used shortbread cookies with great success.  The Italian supermarkets have practically a whole aisle devoted to all their different kinds of shortbread cookies, called frollini.  A nice big 800g bag for 1.5-2.5 euros?  Hehe don't mind if I do.  Shortbread with cream, or chocolate and stars, buckwheat, almond, almond and chocolate, hazelnut, stuffed with apricot, stuffed with chocolate, coarse sugar-topped, made with egg, chocolate drops...the varieties go on. 

Someday I will share with you the pretzel crust, but when I have access again to pretzels that behave in a food processor and I can get some decent photos.  But until then, get your hands on some shortbread cookies.  You could make some homemade (classic shortbread consists of just 3 ingredients: flour, butter, sugar) or if you're in the States buy some Sandie's shortbread cookies or something similar. 

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Recipe adapted from the Cooking Channel


Peanut Butter Pie with Chocolate Whipped Cream

Makes 1 9in / 23cm pie - 8-12 servings

Ingredients:

For the Shortbread Crust

  • about 15 / 150g shortbread cookies

  • 4 Tbsp / 56g butter, melted

For the Peanut Butter Filling

  • 1/2 cup / 119g heavy whipping cream

  • 1/2 cup / 113g mascarpone or cream cheese, room temperature

  • 1/3 cup / 87g creamy peanut butter

  • 1/4 cup / 50g brown sugar

For the Chocolate Whipped Cream

  • 3-4 oz / 100g good quality dark chocolate, chopped

  • 2 cups / 474g heavy whipping cream

  • Extra chocolate in bar form, for chocolate shavings, optional

Directions:

Make the Chocolate Whipped Cream First

  1. Place chocolate and cream in a double boiler or a glass or metal bowl over a pan of simmering water.  The bottom of the bowl shouldn’t touch the water.

  2. Gently stir until chocolate is mostly melted.  Remove from heat and continue stirring until chocolate has completely melted.  Place in the refrigerator for 2 hours. 

Make the Shortbread Crust

  1. In a food processor, pulse cookies until they become crumbly.  Add butter and pulse until smooth and can be pressed into a crust.  Depending on the type of cookies you use, you may need to add a touch more melted butter to ensure the crust will stay together.  Press into a 9in / 23cm pie dish and refrigerate.

Make the Peanut Butter Filling

  1. In the bowl of a stand mixer or with a handheld mixer, whip heavy cream until stiff peaks form.  Transfer to another bowl. 

  2. Again, in the bowl of the stand mixer beat mascarpone, peanut butter, and brown sugar together until smooth.  Gently fold in the whipped cream with a spatula.  Pour filling over crust and return to the refrigerator. 

Assembly

  1. Once the chocolate cream is cooled, beat with a stand mixer or handheld mixer until stiff peaks form.  Remove pie from the refrigerator and spread or pipe chocolate whipped cream over the top. 

  2. Use a vegetable peeler or knife to shave a chocolate bar over the pie for the finishing touch. 

Jenny's Notes:

  • Try using Nutella or Biscoff spread instead of peanut butter.  YUM.

Peanut Butter Pie with Chocolate Whipped Cream
Yield 8-12
Author
Prep time
50 Min
Inactive time
2 Hour
Total time
2 H & 50 M

Peanut Butter Pie with Chocolate Whipped Cream

No-bake pie with shortbread crust, mascarpone peanut butter filling, chocolate whipped cream and topped with chocolate shavings.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

For the Shortbread Crust
For the Peanut Butter Filling
For the Chocolate Whipped Cream

Instructions

Make the Chocolate Whipped Cream (first)
  1. Place chocolate and cream in a double boiler or a glass or metal bowl over a pan of simmering water. The bottom of the bowl shouldn’t touch the water.
  2. Gently stir until chocolate is mostly melted. Remove from heat and continue stirring until chocolate has completely melted. Place in the refrigerator for 2 hours.
Make the Shortbread Crust
  1. In a food processor, pulse cookies until they become crumbly. Add butter and pulse until smooth and can be pressed into a crust. Depending on the type of cookies you use, you may need to add a touch more melted butter to ensure the crust will stay together. Press into a 9in / 23cm pie dish and refrigerate.
Make the Peanut Butter Filling
  1. In the bowl of a stand mixer or with a handheld mixer, whip heavy cream until stiff peaks form. Transfer to another bowl.
  2. Again, in the bowl of the stand mixer beat mascarpone, peanut butter, and brown sugar together until smooth. Gently fold in the whipped cream with a spatula. Pour filling over crust and return to the refrigerator.
Assembly
  1. Once the chocolate cream is cooled, beat with a stand mixer or handheld mixer until stiff peaks form. Remove pie from the refrigerator and spread or pipe chocolate whipped cream over the top.
  2. Use a vegetable peeler or knife to shave a chocolate bar over the pie for the finishing touch.

Notes

Try using Nutella or Biscoff spread instead of peanut butter. YUM.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

636.86

Fat

54.27 g

Sat. Fat

29.83 g

Carbs

27.35 g

Fiber

1.81 g

Net carbs

25.54 g

Sugar

20.45 g

Protein

7.07 g

Sodium

259.95 mg

Cholesterol

119.26 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on the pie cut into 8 servings; includes chocolate shavings.

peanut butter pie, no bake pie, summer dessert, chocolate whipped cream, mascarpone, shortbread crust
dessert, pie
American
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Amaretto Mascarpone Coffee Cake

Guest Photography featuring Bailey Shoemaker

Guest Photography featuring Bailey Shoemaker

When my roommate Rachel moved back to the States at the at the end of June, it wasn't possible to take everything with her.  Some things got left behind, and I got to inherit them.  Dishes? Yay, I don't have to eat off my hands.  Laundry hamper?  Keeping all the dirty clothes in one place, I like it.  Coffee grinder?  Yahoo, fresh ground coffee in the morning!  And a of bottle Disaronno?? Oh, joy! What baking adventures lie before us, my sweet (literally), Italian made, amaretto flavored, almond liqueur? Maybe cupcakes, coffee cake, and cookies, oh my! 

Today, coffee cake.  With a layer of slightly sweet mascarpone in the middle to balance the sweetness of the Disaronno and oatmeal crumble on top. 

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Recipe adapted from Call Me PMc


Amaretto Mascarpone Coffee Cake

Makes 1 8in / 20cm coffee cake, about 12 servings

Ingredients:

For the Cake

  • 1 1/4 cups / 150g all-purpose flour

  • 1/2 cup / 100g sugar

  • 1/4 tsp baking soda

  • 1/4 tsp baking powder

  • 1/4 tsp salt

  • 1/4 cup / 56g oil

  • 1 whole egg + 1 egg white

  • 1/4 cup / 60g amaretto

  • 1/3 cup / 79g buttermilk or sour milk

For the Mascarpone Filling

  • 8 oz / 225g mascarpone, room temperature

  • 1/4 cup / 50g sugar

  • 1 egg yolk

For the Oat Streusel

  • 1 cup / 120g all-purpose flour

  • 3/4 cup / 150g sugar

  • 1/2 cup / 45g oats

  • 1/4 tsp salt

  • 1/2 cup / 113g butter, room temperature

Directions:

Oven 325°F / 163°C.  Grease well either an 8in / 20cm spring-form pan or 8x8in / 20x20cm square pan. 

Make the cake

  1. In a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, combine flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.  Add oil and mix until crumbly.  Add eggs, milk, and amaretto and beat until smooth. 

  2. Pour half of this batter into prepared pan.  Set remaining half aside while you make the mascarpone filling.

Make the Mascarpone Filling

  1. In the bowl of a stand mixer or with a handheld mixer, beat mascarpone, sugar, and yolk just until creamy.  Pour over cake batter in pan and carefully spread to edges. 

  2. Pour remaining cake batter over mascarpone filling and spread to edges. 

Make the Oat Streusel

  1. In a medium bowl combine flour, sugar, oats, and salt.  Cut in the butter with a pastry cutter, fork, or clean hands.  Combine until coarse crumbs form.  Evenly crumble over the top of the cake batter in pan.

  2. Bake cake for 25-30 minutes or until center is almost set but still has a slight jiggle to it.  Allow to cool completely before slicing and serving. 

Jenny's Notes:

  • Don't have mascarpone on hand, but do have cream cheese?  They can usually be substituted for each other, and certainly in this case if you wish.  Mascarpone is a decadently creamy Italian cheese, a touch thicker than cream cheese, but it is the same price here as the cream cheese, if not cheaper.  Despite what you've probably heard most of your life, even sadly from chefs and cooks on TV, it is not pronounced mas-car-pone nor mars-cah-pone, but mas-car-pone-NAY.  Let that Italian fly free and pronounce the hard E at the end!

  • You can get creative with what type of liqueur or liquor you use in this coffee cake!  Bailey's, rum, Kahlua, Triple Sec...

  • I suggest serving (to the adults, of course!) with hot coffee with a splash of milk and amaretto...your very own caffè corretto!  Caffè corretto means "corrected coffee."  Because we all know, coffee without alcohol isn't correct...haha.

Amaretto Mascarpone Coffee Cake
Yield 12 servings
Author
Prep time
45 Min
Cook time
21 Min
Total time
1 H & 6 M

Amaretto Mascarpone Coffee Cake

Moist coffee cake flavored with amaretto liqueur and a decadent mascarpone filling, topped with an oat streusel
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

For the Cake
For the Mascarpone Filling
For the Oat Streusel

Instructions

Make the Cake
  1. Oven 325°F / 163°C. Grease well either an 8in / 20cm spring-form or 8x8in / 20x20cm square pan.
  2. In a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, combine flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Add oil and mix until crumbly. Add eggs, milk, and amaretto and beat until smooth.
  3. Pour half of this batter into prepared pan. Set remaining half aside while you make the mascarpone filling.
Make the Mascarpone Filling
  1. In the bowl of a stand mixer or with a handheld mixer, beat mascarpone, sugar, and yolk just until creamy. Pour over cake batter in pan and carefully spread to edges.
  2. Pour remaining cake batter over mascarpone filling and spread to edges.
Make the Oat Streusel
  1. In a medium bowl combine flour, sugar, oats, and salt. Cut in the butter with a pastry cutter, fork, or clean hands. Combine until coarse crumbs form. Evenly crumble over the top of the cake batter in pan.
  2. Bake cake for 25-30 minutes or until center is almost set but still has a slight jiggle to it. Allow to cool completely before slicing and serving.

Notes

Don't have mascarpone on hand, but do have cream cheese? They can usually be substituted for each other, and certainly in this case if you wish. Mascarpone is a decadently creamy Italian cheese, a touch thicker than cream cheese, but it is the same price here in Italy as the cream cheese, if not cheaper. You can get creative with what type of liqueur or liquor you use in this coffee cake! Bailey's, rum, Kahlua, Triple Sec...

Nutrition Facts

Calories

414.77

Fat

22.26 g

Sat. Fat

10.64 g

Carbs

47.32 g

Fiber

0.99 g

Net carbs

46.33 g

Sugar

27.48 g

Protein

5.34 g

Sodium

305.52 mg

Cholesterol

77.06 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 12 servings.

coffee cake, cream cheese coffee cake recipe, mascarpone coffee cake, amaretto, disaronno, oat streusel
breakfast, dessert, brunch, cake
American
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No-Bake Pumpkin Date Bars

image.jpg

Last updated June 27, 2024

"La vita è troppo breve per mangiare e bere male" - Eataly

These bars feature a creamy, pumpkin chocolate chip filling atop a wonderfully soft and chewy-sweet date crust. They can easily be made gluten-free, vegan, and dairy-free. On top of that, they’re no bake! You could eat them anytime for breakfast or a healthy snack (to be pronounced snaaaaaack with the Italian hand going) because there is no refined sugar (except from the chocolate chips), but there is protein from the beans, fiber from the oat flour and dates, antioxidants from the maple syrup and spices, and lots of vitamins and minerals from the pumpkin and above mentioned ingredients! 

You guys, this is such a win-win.  In fact, these bars might help you not die. 

That last claim is not backed by science. 

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. Where possible, links are prioritized to small businesses, and American companies and products made in the USA for American readers. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Adapted from Imma Eat That


No-Bake Pumpkin Date Bars

Serves about 9-12

image.jpg

Ingredients:

For the Date Crust

  • 1 cup / 160g packed pitted dates

  • 1 cup / 140g raw almonds

  • pinch of salt

For the Pumpkin Chocolate-Chip Filling

  • 1 15 oz can / 400g white beans, drained (navy beans, great northern, etc.)

  • 1 cup / 240g pumpkin purée

  • 1 cup / 100g oat flour

  • 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon

  • 1/4 tsp cloves

  • 1/4 tsp ginger

  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg

  • 1/4 tsp salt

  • 1/4 cup / 40g packed pitted dates

  • 5 Tbsp / 100g maple syrup or honey

  • 1 tsp / 5g vanilla extract

  • 2/3 cup / 113g semi-sweet mini chocolate chips, plus extra for topping

Directions:

Make the Date Crust

  1. In a food processor combine dates, almonds, and salt.  Pulse until the almonds are finely ground and everything comes together into a soft, crumbly dough that sticks together when pressed between your fingers.  If after a few minutes the crust doesn't come together, add a few more dates.

  2. Spread and press crust into a 8x8in / 20x20cm or 9x9in /23x23cm square pan. 

Make the Pumpkin Chocolate-Chip Filling

  1. In a food processor, combine all the filling ingredients except for chocolate chips.  Blend until smooth.  Scrape filling into a bowl and stir in chocolate chips.  Spread over crust and top with more chocolate chips. 

  2. Cover and refrigerate for two hours before slicing and serving. 

Jenny's Notes:

  • Don't have oat flour? Make your own! Put the amount of oat flour you need of oats in a food processor or blender, plus a little extra for good measure, and blend until finely ground into flour. Tada!

  • If you like sweeter desserts, or are serving a crowd that isn't used to "healthy" desserts, you could always add up to an extra 1/2 cup / 100g or so of brown sugar to the filling.

Vegan Version: Simply make sure your chocolate chips are vegan, as some brands contain dairy.

Gluten-free: Use certified gluten-free oats.

Dairy-free: Make sure your chocolate chips are dairy-free.  asy, no?

No-Bake Pumpkin Date Bars
Yield 9-12
Author
Prep time
20 Min
Inactive time
2 Hour
Total time
2 H & 20 M

No-Bake Pumpkin Date Bars

Raw Pumpkin Bars with an almond date crust topped with lightly sweetened pumpkin and chocolate chip filling. Vegan, Gluten-free, and dairy-free, no bake..

Ingredients

For the Date Crust
For the Pumpkin Chocolate-Chip Filling

Instructions

Make the Date Crust
  1. In a food processor combine dates, almonds, and salt. Pulse until the almonds are finely ground and everything comes together into a soft, crumbly dough that sticks together when pressed between your fingers. If after a few minutes the crust doesn't come together, add a few more dates.
  2. Spread and press crust into a 8x8in / 20x20cm or 9x9in /23x23cm square pan.
Make the Pumpkin Chocolate-Chip Filling
  1. In a food processor, combine all the filling ingredients except for chocolate chips. Blend until smooth. Scrape filling into a bowl and stir in chocolate chips. Spread over crust and top with more chocolate chips.
  2. Cover and refrigerate for two hours before slicing and serving.

Notes

Vegan Version: Simply make sure your chocolate chips are vegan, as some brands contain dairy.

Gluten-free: Use certified gluten-free oats.

Dairy-free: Make sure your chocolate chips are dairy-free. 

  • Don't have oat flour? Make your own! Put the amount of oat flour you need of oats in a food processor or blender, plus a little extra, and blend until finely ground into flour! Tada.
  • If you like sweeter desserts, or are serving a crowd that isn't used to "healthy" desserts, you could always add up to an extra 1/2 cup / 100g or so of brown sugar to the filling.


Nutrition Facts

Calories

360.82

Fat

12.91 g

Sat. Fat

3.10 g

Carbs

56.60 g

Fiber

9.02 g

Net carbs

47.58 g

Sugar

29.52 g

Protein

10.64 g

Sodium

24.38 mg

Cholesterol

0.00 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 9 servings.

raw, vegan, dairy-free, egg-free, gluten-free, pumpkin bars, fall dessert, no bake
dessert, bars
American
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image.jpg
Maple syrup made by my dad, home-ground oat flour, dry beans, homemade vanilla extract

Maple syrup made by my dad, home-ground oat flour, dry beans, homemade vanilla extract


Peanut Butter Cheesecake Bars

Bars. Like cookies, but without all the rolling and fussing. Just…plopping in a pan and baking. I like it.

These bars are extra special because they are cheesecake bars. I really like cheesecake.  I mean creamy, not overpoweringly sweet, with a bit of graham cracker accompanying each bite.  Good morning, sunshine!  I also really like chocolate and peanut butter.  So today let's make some peanut butter cheesecake bars with chocolate chips. 

Fair warning: These particular bars can be very difficult to make.  You have to be able to resist eating all of the dough.  If you can do that, then the actual making of these are quite simple.  Va bene? Va bene.

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Adapted from Pinch of Yum


Peanut Butter Cheesecake Bars

Serves 9-12

Ingredients:

For the Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough

image.jpg
  • 6 Tbsp / 84g oil

  • 1/2 cup / 100g sugar

  • 1/2 cup / 100g brown sugar

  • 1/2 cup / 130g peanut butter

  • 1 egg

  • 1 cup / 120g all-purpose flour

  • 1 tsp baking soda

  • 1/2 tsp salt

  • 1/2 cup / 40g rolled oats

  • 1 1/2 cups / 255g mini chocolate chips

For the Cream Cheese Filling

  • 8 oz / 225g cream cheese, room temperature

  • 1/4 cup / 50g sugar

  • 1 egg

  • 1 tsp / 5g vanilla

Directions:

Oven preheated to 325°F / 163°C

Make the Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough

  1. Mix together the oil, sugars, and peanut butter in a large bowl until well combined.  Add the egg and beat well.

  2. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, salt, and oats.

  3. Stir flour mixture into sugar mixture, then add chocolate chips and stir until evenly distributed. Set aside.

Make the Cream Cheese Filling

  1. Beat cream cheese in a stand mixer or with a handheld mixer until smooth, about 30 seconds. Add sugar, egg, and vanilla and beat until thoroughly combined. 

Assembly

  1. Press half of the cookie dough into the bottom of an 8x8in / 20x20cm or 9x9in / 23x23cm pan.  Pour and spread cream cheese filling evenly over dough.  Using your hands, crumble the remaining half of cookie dough over cream cheese until it is thoroughly covered.

  2. Cover with tinfoil and bake for 15 minutes.  Remove foil and continue to bake for another 10-15 minutes, until cream cheese center is almost set and the top is lightly golden brown. 

Peanut Butter Cheesecake Bars
Yield 9-12
Author
Prep time
25 Min
Cook time
30 Min
Total time
55 Min

Peanut Butter Cheesecake Bars

Layers of peanut butter chocolate chip and oat cookie layers with a cheesecake filling.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

For the Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough
For the Cream Cheese Filling

Instructions

Make the Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough
  1. Mix together the oil, sugars, and peanut butter in a large bowl until well combined. Add the egg and beat well.
  2. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, salt, and oats.
  3. Stir flour mixture into sugar mixture, then add chocolate chips and stir until evenly distributed. Set aside.
Make the Cream Cheese Filling
  1. Beat cream cheese in a stand mixer or with a handheld mixer until smooth, about 30 seconds. Add sugar, egg, and vanilla and beat until thoroughly combined.
Assembly
  1. Oven preheated to 325°F / 163°C
  2. Press half of the cookie dough into the bottom of an 8x8in / 20x20cm or 9x9in / 23x23cm pan. Pour and spread cream cheese filling evenly over dough. Using your hands, crumble the remaining half of cookie dough over cream cheese until it is thoroughly covered.
  3. Cover with tinfoil and bake for 15 minutes. Remove foil and continue to bake for another 10-15 minutes, until cream cheese center is almost set and the top is lightly golden brown.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

596.11

Fat

34.98 g

Sat. Fat

12.70 g

Carbs

62.57 g

Fiber

2.60 g

Net carbs

59.97 g

Sugar

44.08 g

Protein

10.24 g

Sodium

458.31 mg

Cholesterol

73.10 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 9 servings.

cheesecake, bars, peanut butter chocolate chip cookie cheesecake bars, peanut butter oatmeal, cream cheese
dessert, bars, cheesecake
American
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Chocolate Brownie Cookies

Cioccolato Cioccolato Cioccolato!

Cioccolato Cioccolato Cioccolato!

Don't be fooled, these cookies are nothing more than a chocolate bar with a few added ingredients to allow them to be legally called "cookies."  In trying to decide what to call these, Chocolate Candy Bar Cookies and True Chocolate Cookies were contending, but I can thank some taste testers for calling them out for what they really taste like: fudgy brownies in cookie form!  Oh yes, they be so chocolatey, so fudgy, so soft. 

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Recipe adapted from the Clinton St. Baking Company Cookbook


Chocolate Brownie Cookies

Makes about 24 cookies

Ingredients:

  • 2 Tbsp / 28g oil

  • 14 oz / 400g chopped quality semi-sweet or bitter-sweet chocolate

  • 2 large eggs

  • 3/4 cup / 150g sugar

  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

  • 1/2 cup / 60g all-purpose flour

  • 1/4 tsp baking powder

  • 1/4 tsp salt

Directions:

Oven preheated to 350°F / 177°C. Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.

  1. In a medium saucepan combine oil and 7 oz / 200g of the chopped chocolate, .  Melt over medium-low heat, stirring frequently, until chocolate is mostly melted.  Remove from heat and continue to stir until chocolate is completely melted.  Set aside.

  2. In a medium-large bowl, whisk together eggs, sugar, and vanilla until well combined.  Stir the melted chocolate mixture into the egg mixture.  It's okay if it is still a little warm. 

  3. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt.  Stir flour mixture and remaining 7 oz of chocolate chunks into chocolate mixture until well combined. 

  4. Place the bowl with the chocolate mixture in the freezer for 15-25 minutes.  Check and stir the dough every 5 minutes or so until batter has thickened and set up.

  5. Drop small spoonfuls of dough evenly spaced on the prepared cookie sheets, leaving about 2 in / 5 cm between the cookies as they will spread quite a bit.  About 12 cookies will fit on a standard sheet.  

  6. Bake for 6-8 minutes or until cookies start to crackle and the edges set. 

  7. Remove from the oven and allow to cool for several minutes before transferring to a wire cooling rack or plate.  Or counter.  Or mouth.  Whatever floats your boat with these!  Maybe just don't eat all of them or your boat will sink...

Chocolate Brownie Cookies
Yield 24
Author
Prep time
45 Min
Cook time
8 Min
Inactive time
25 Min
Total time
1 H & 18 M

Chocolate Brownie Cookies

Rich, fudgy, chewy chocolate cookies that are mostly made of pure chocolate with just enough other ingredients to politely be able to be called "cookies".
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Oven preheated to 350°F / 177°C. Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.
  2. In a medium saucepan combine oil and 7 oz / 200g of the chopped chocolate, . Melt over medium-low heat, stirring frequently, until chocolate is mostly melted. Remove from heat and continue to stir until chocolate is completely melted. Set aside.
  3. In a medium-large bowl, whisk together eggs, sugar, and vanilla until well combined. Stir the melted chocolate mixture into the egg mixture. It's okay if it is still a little warm.
  4. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt. Stir flour mixture and remaining 7 oz of chocolate chunks into chocolate mixture until well combined.
  5. Place the bowl with the chocolate mixture in the freezer for 15-25 minutes. Check and stir the dough every 5 minutes or so until batter has thickened and set up.
  6. Drop small spoonfuls of dough evenly spaced on the prepared cookie sheets, leaving about 2 in / 5 cm between the cookies as they will spread quite a bit. About 12 cookies will fit on a standard sheet.
  7. Bake for 6-8 minutes or until cookies start to crackle and the edges set.
  8. Remove from the oven and allow to cool for several minutes before transferring to a wire cooling rack or plate.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

139.00

Fat

6.53 g

Sat. Fat

3.29 g

Carbs

18.11 g

Fiber

0.63 g

Net carbs

17.48 g

Sugar

14.85 g

Protein

2.06 g

Sodium

48.51 mg

Cholesterol

19.33 mg

Nutritional information is approximate; based on 1 cookie.

cookies, brownies, chocolate crackle cookies
dessert, cookies
American
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Oh, the symphony of crackle!

Oh, the symphony of crackle!


Peanut Butter Brownie Trifle

image.jpg

Yes, a trifle, not a truffle.  It is neither a chocolate truffle nor does it require pigs or dogs to dig it up, thankfully.  Although I personally would love to go truffle hunting, or more or less watch the pigs/dogs truffle hunt.  Then eat them, of course.  The truffles, not the dogs or pigs. 

What's the difference between a truffle, a truffle, and a trifle? 

  • The original truffle, as I will call it here, is the fungus found in the ground.  There are two main kinds: black and white.  They are difficult to find, hence the need for dogs and pigs, and very expensive.  And divine to eat.  If you haven't eaten one, you definitely should, even if just to say you have.  All your foodie friends will hold you in high esteem henceforth.  ;)

  • Then there is the chocolate truffle, which is essentially a chocolate confection made to look like the original truffle.  It usually consists of a ganache (chocolate melted with heavy cream) center, covered in chocolate.  Also delicious. 

  • Thirdly, the trifle.  It is originally an English dessert, you could think of it like a large parfait to share.  My mom calls it a "Dump Cake" and in the south it is called a "Husband's Delight."  It usually consists of layers of cake, custard or pudding, whipped cream, and various fruits.  The possibilities of flavors and combinations are endless, and yes, delicious.

The moral of the story is, if someone offers you a truffle, a truffle, or a trifle, always say yes.  Because they are all delicious. 

Today’s trifle is also delicious. It has layers of fluffy peanut butter vanilla pudding, peanut butter chip brownies, and Reese’s peanut butter cups. Each element is simple to make, and homemade. It might dirty several bowls and pans, but it is so worth it! It’s creamy, chocolatey, peanut buttery. It’s rich, a little bit goes a long way. And yet it has you coming back for more. A crowd favorite!

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Recipe adapted from Taste of Home


Peanut Butter Brownie Trifle

Serves about 12

Ingredients:

For the Vanilla Pudding *Make this first*

  • 3 Tbsp / 37g sugar

  • 4 1/2 tsp / 11g cornstarch

  • 1/8 tsp salt

  • 1 1/4 cups / 297g cold milk

  • 2 tsp / 10g vanilla extract

For the Peanut Butter Chip Brownies

  • 5 Tbsp / 70g oil

  • 1 cup / 200g sugar

  • 2 eggs

  • 1 tsp / 5g vanilla extract

  • 1/3 cup / 33g cocoa powder

  • 1/2 cup / 60g all-purpose flour

  • 1/4 tsp salt

  • 3/4 cup / 132g peanut butter chips

image.jpg

Extras

  • 1/2 cup / 230g creamy peanut butter

  • 1 1/2 cups / 356g heavy whipping cream, whipped until stiff peaks form

  • 1 12 oz package / 340g miniature Reese's cups, each cut in half

 

Directions:

Make the Vanilla Pudding

  1. In a small saucepan, whisk together sugar, cornstarch, and salt.  Gradually whisk in milk. 

  2. Heat over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until pudding thickens and the whisk leaves a trail. 

  3. Remove from heat and add vanilla.  Place a piece of plastic wrap directly onto the pudding and put in fridge or freezer until pudding is thick and set. 

Meanwhile,

Make the Peanut Butter Chip Brownies

Oven preheated to 350°F / 177°C. Lightly grease an 8x8in / 20x20cm baking dish.

  1. In a medium bowl, mix together oil, sugar, eggs, and vanilla. 

  2. In a separate bowl, whisk together cocoa, flour, and salt.  Stir dry mixture into wet mixture.  Stir in peanut butter chips.  Spread evenly in prepared baking dish.

  3. Bake for 12 - 15 minutes or until toothpick inserted off center comes out mostly clean.  Allow to cool. 

Assembly

  1. Once pudding is set, mix in peanut butter.  Gently fold in whipped cream.

  2. Cut cooled brownies into bite size pieces, about 1in / 2.5cm squares.

  3. In a large glass bowl, layer in this order:

    • 1/3 of the brownies

    • 1/4 of the Reese's cups

    • 1/3 of the pudding mixture

    • another 1/3 of the brownies

    • another 1/4 of the Reese’s cups

    • another 1/3 of the pudding

    • final 1/3 of the brownies

    • another 1/4 of the Reese’s cups

    • final 1/3 of the pudding

    • final 1/4 of the Reese’se cups for decoration on top

  4. Chill until ready to serve.

Jenny’s Notes:

  • Placing plastic wrap directly onto pudding instead of just over the bowl prevents the “skin” from forming.

  • Both the brownies and the pudding can easily be made a day ahead.

Peanut Butter Brownie Trifle
Yield 12 servings
Author
Prep time
45 Min
Cook time
15 Min
Total time
1 Hour

Peanut Butter Brownie Trifle

A rich trifle dessert with layers of whipped peanut butter vanilla pudding, peanut butter chip brownies, and peanut butter cups.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

For the Vanilla Pudding *Make this first*
For the Peanut Butter Chip Brownies
Extras

Instructions

Make the Vanilla Pudding
  1. In a small saucepan, whisk together sugar, cornstarch, and salt. Gradually whisk in milk.
  2. Heat over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until pudding thickens and the whisk leaves a trail.
  3. Remove from heat and add vanilla. Place in fridge or freezer until pudding is thick and set.
Make the Peanut Butter Chip Brownies
  1. Oven preheated to 350°F / 177°C. Lightly grease an 8x8in / 20x20cm baking dish.
  2. In a medium bowl, mix together oil, sugar, eggs, and vanilla.
  3. In a separate bowl, whisk together cocoa, flour, and salt. Stir dry mixture into wet mixture. Stir in peanut butter chips. Spread evenly in prepared baking dish.
  4. Bake for 12 - 15 minutes or until toothpick inserted off center comes out mostly clean. Allow to cool.
Assembly
  1. Once pudding is set, mix in peanut butter. Gently fold in whipped cream.
  2. Cut cooled brownies into bite size pieces, about 1in / 2.5cm squares.
  3. In a large glass bowl, preferably a cylinder, layer in this order:
  4. 1/3 of the brownies
  5. 1/4 of the Reese's cups
  6. 1/3 of the pudding mixture
  7. another 1/3 of the brownies
  8. another 1/4 of the Reese’s cups
  9. another 1/3 of the pudding
  10. final 1/3 of the brownies
  11. another 1/4 of the Reese’s cups
  12. final 1/3 of the pudding
  13. final 1/4 of the Reese’se cups for decoration on top
  14. Chill until ready serve.

Notes

  • Placing plastic wrap directly onto pudding instead of just over the bowl prevents the “skin” from forming.
  • Both the brownies and the pudding can easily be made a day ahead.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

606.07

Fat

41.47 g

Sat. Fat

13.60 g

Carbs

51.17 g

Fiber

3.43 g

Net carbs

47.74 g

Sugar

36.05 g

Protein

13.34 g

Sodium

349.61 mg

Cholesterol

68.20 mg

Nutritional information is approximate; based on 12 servings.

peanut butter,trifle,dump cake, husband's delight, Reese's dessert, chilled dessert, vanilla pudding, whipped cream
dessert, trifle
American
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IMG_4139.jpg

Healthy Chocolate Chip Banana Cookies

Last updated September 27, 2024

image.jpg

What has chocolate and oats in it, tastes like a cookie, but is sneakily nutritious for you?  These cookies!  Yay for things that taste good and are healthy simultaneously.  And don't forget fun to make!  So many wins, I want to make these all over again.  Instead, I shall have just as much fun writing out the recipe for you.

These cookies make an excellent on the go snack or breakfast. They’re easily gluten-free if you use certified GF oats, dairy-free (just make sure your chocolate chips don’t have any dairy hiding in them), and vegan if you use a flax or chia seed egg! See recipe notes for how to make a flax egg.

All of the sweetness in these cookies comes from dates and banana, with a boost from the chocolate chips.

This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase using these links, Jennyblogs may receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This helps to support Jennyblogs. For further information see the privacy policy. Grazie!

Recipe adapted from Veggies Don't Bite


Chocolate Chip Banana Cookies

Makes about 30 cookies

Ingredients:

image.jpg
  • 1 1/3 cups / 215g pitted dates (about 15 regular dates or 12 medjool)

  • 1/4 cup / 60g almond milk (or milk of choice)

  • 1/2 cup / 130g peanut butter

  • 1 small / 80g very ripe banana, mashed

  • 1 egg

  • 1 1/2 tsp / 7g vanilla extract

  • 1 cup / 80g rolled oats

  • 1/2 tsp baking soda

  • 1/2 tsp salt

  • 2 cups / 340g semi-sweet chocolate chips

  • 1/2 cup / 62g chopped pecans (optional)

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350°F / 177°C. Prepare 1 or 2 cookie sheets lined with parchment paper or silpat.

  1. In a food processor, blend dates until very finely chopped.  Slowly add milk and continue to blend until a smooth paste forms.  (Be careful adding the milk as it may splatter; food processors aren’t always splatter proof.) 

  2. Add peanut butter, banana, egg, and vanilla to the date paste and mix well. 

  3. In a separate bowl whisk together oats, baking soda, and salt.  Add to date mixture.

  4. Stir in chocolate chips and pecans just until combined.  Refrigerate dough for 15 minutes. 

  5. Drop by spoonful onto prepared cookie sheets and bake for 12-15 minutes until edges start to turn lightly golden.  Allow cookies to cool and set a bit before removing from pan. 

Jenny's Notes:

  • These can easily be made vegan, dairy and/or gluten-free: Make a flax egg instead of a normal egg by adding 1 Tbsp ground flax seeds to 3 Tbsp water, use vegan chocolate chips (usually this means just making sure there is no dairy), use certified GF oats and vanilla extract.  Voila!  Now anyone can eat these delicious morsels. 

Healthy Chocolate Chip Banana Cookies
Yield 30
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Cook time
15 Min
Inactive time
15 Min
Total time
45 Min

Healthy Chocolate Chip Banana Cookies

Chocolate Chip Banana Cookies loaded with oats, peanut butter, chocolate chips, and pecans are easily made vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, egg-free! Most of the sweetness comes from dates and banana.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F / 177°C. Prepare 1 or 2 cookie sheets lined with parchment paper or silpat.
  2. In a food processor, blend dates until very finely chopped. Slowly add milk and continue to blend until a smooth paste forms. (Be careful adding the milk as it may splatter; food processors aren’t always splatter proof.)
  3. Add peanut butter, banana, egg, and vanilla to the date paste and mix well.
  4. In a separate bowl whisk together oats, baking soda, and salt. Add to date mixture.
  5. Stir in chocolate chips and pecans just until combined. Refrigerate dough for 15 minutes.
  6. Drop by spoonful onto prepared cookie sheets and bake for 12-15 minutes until edges start to turn lightly golden. Allow cookies to cool and set a bit before removing from pan.

Notes

These can easily be made vegan, dairy and/or gluten-free: Make a flax egg instead of a normal egg by adding 1 Tbsp ground flax seeds to 3 Tbsp water, use vegan chocolate chips (usually this means just making sure there is no dairy), use certified GF oats and vanilla extract.  Voila!  Now anyone can eat these delicious morsels. 

Nutrition Facts

Calories

130.36

Fat

7.42 g

Sat. Fat

2.64 g

Carbs

16.47 g

Fiber

2.03 g

Net carbs

14.43 g

Sugar

11.53 g

Protein

2.39 g

Sodium

84.40 mg

Cholesterol

6.20 mg

Nutritional information is approximate; based on 30 serving, includes pecans.

chunky monkey cookies, vegan, dairy free, gluten free, egg free, refined sugar free, chocolate chip banana cookies, healthy
dessert, cookies
American
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IPA Pretzel Bread

Last Updated September 27, 2024

IMG_4049.JPG
This post was written from the London Heathrow Airport!

This post was written from the London Heathrow Airport!

Bread is delicious. #FACT.

Then when you make pretzel bread and add beer to it, it becomes extra delicious. #FACTZ. And that’s exactly what this bread is, boiled beer bread.

Pretzel bread is made simply by boiling bread dough in baking soda water. This particular recipe adds a bit of beer to the boiling water, because if you’re going to make beer bread, you might as well go all out!

Beer in baking

Beer can be added to all kinds of desserts from cookies and brownies to cakes and breads, even caramels and candies! It creates tender baked goods, can help raise, and of course, adds wonderful flavor notes. One of the beauties of baking with beer (and wine!) is choosing from all the different varieties, as each will lend its own unique flavor.

If you’re new to baking with beer, you’ll probably want to start with the recipe’s suggested beer, an Indian Pale Ale if you decide to make this bread. Once you start to get an idea of how beer acts and tastes in recipes, you can begin to branch out and try your favorite beers to find matches with different baked goods. For example, stouts (think Guinness) are lovely in chocolate cake. A staple of a bakery I worked in was a Chocolate Guinness Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting. Actually, the photos of the bread you see in this post are made with an American Pale Ale from Short’s Brewery, not an Indian Pale Ale. But they’re similar, I don’t know I’d notice the difference between breads made with an IPA or an APA. Just stay away from light beers, those are watery and not good for baking.

If you don’t like beer, chances are you will still like desserts and breads made with beer. Most of the alcohol gets baked out as well, so if it’s more the alcohol you avoid that can be reassuring. However, you’ll probably want to make your own informed choice on that as there will still be trace amounts of alcohol even after baking/cooking. :)

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Recipe adapted from Little Market Kitchen


IPA Pretzel Bread

Makes two loaves

Ingredients:


    •    1/2 cup / 119g warm water (about 105-110 Fahrenheit)
    •    2 1/4 tsp / 7g active dry yeast
    •    1 1/2 cups (12 oz) / 356g IPA or beer of choice, room temperature, divided into 1 cup and 1/2 cup
    •    4 cups / 480g bread flour or all-purpose flour
    •    1 Tbsp / 13g sugar
    •    1 tsp / 5g salt
    •    3 Tbsp / 42g oil
    •    10 cups / 2,370g water
    •    1/2 cup / 110g baking soda
    •    1 egg yolk beaten with 1 Tbsp / 15g water
    •    coarse or flaked salt, for sprinkling


Directions:

Oven preheated to 425°F / 218°C. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or Silpat.

IMG_4056.JPG
  1. Pour warm water into the bowl of a stand mixer or large bowl.  Sprinkle yeast over the water and let sit for about 10 minutes, or until bubbly and frothy.

  2. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, and salt. 

  3. Once the yeast is active, add the flour mixture, then the oil, then 1 cup / 237g of the beer.  Mix in a stand mixer with dough hook or knead by hand until a soft, but not sticky, dough forms, about 10 minutes.  If it's too soft, add more flour, or if it's too dry/stiff, you can steal a bit of beer from the reserved 1/2 cup / 119g. 

  4. Give the dough a few kneads by hand if a stand mixer was used and place in a large lightly oiled bowl. Flip dough once so both sides are oily. Cover with a clean towel or plastic wrap and place in a warm place to rise until doubled in size, about 1 hour.  

  5. In a large pot, combine water, remaining 1/2 cup / 119g beer, and baking soda.  Bring to a boil. 

  6. Once bread has doubled in size, punch down and divide in half.  Shape each half into a round loaf. 

  7. Working with one loaf at a time, lower into the boiling water using a large sieve or spatula, boil for 30 seconds and flip in the water once.  Remove and place on prepared baking sheet. Repeat with second loaf. 

  8. Brush the loaves with the egg yolk and water mixture, sprinkle with salt. 

  9. Bake in preheated oven for 20 minutes then place a piece of tinfoil on top to keep the bread from darkening too much.  Bake for an additional 3-8 minutes until a baking thermometer inserted near center reads at least 190°F / 88°C. 

  10. Allow to cool, slice, and enjoy!

Jenny’s Notes:

  • If the dough is too soft when trying to create a round and it won’t hold its shape, add flour a bit at a time until it will.  Dough that relaxes a little bit out of shape is ok, just keep in mind that adding too much flour will create a dry bread. It’s about finding the balance between creating a soft dough yet strong enough to hold it’s shape. Properly kneaded dough is also important in a free form loaf holding its shape.

  • This bread makes excellent toast. I think I say that about every bread recipe. Toast is so good.

IPA Pretzel Bread
Yield 16
Author
Prep time
35 Min
Cook time
28 Min
Inactive time
1 H & 10 M
Total time
2 H & 13 M

IPA Pretzel Bread

Pretzel bread and beer bread combine in this flavorful bread made with India Pale Ale.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Oven preheated to 425°F / 218°C. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or Silpat.
  2. Pour warm water into the bowl of a stand mixer or large bowl. Sprinkle yeast over the water and let sit for about 10 minutes, or until bubbly and frothy.
  3. In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, and salt.
  4. Once the yeast is active, add the flour mixture, then the oil, then 1 cup / 237g of the beer. Mix in a stand mixer with dough hook or knead by hand until a soft, but not sticky, dough forms, about 10 minutes. If it's too soft, add more flour, or if it's too dry/stiff, you can steal a bit of beer from the reserved 1/2 cup / 119g.
  5. Give the dough a few kneads by hand if a stand mixer was used and place in a large lightly oiled bowl. Flip dough once so both sides are oily. Cover with a clean towel or plastic wrap and place in a warm place to rise until doubled in size, about 1 hour.
  6. In a large pot, combine water, remaining 1/2 cup / 119g beer, and baking soda. Bring to a boil.
  7. Once bread has doubled in size, punch down and divide in half. Shape each half into a round loaf.
  8. Working with one loaf at a time, lower into the boiling water using a large sieve or spatula, boil for 30 seconds and flip in the water once. Remove and place on prepared baking sheet. Repeat with second loaf.
  9. Brush the loaves with the egg yolk and water mixture, sprinkle with salt.
  10. Bake in preheated oven for 20 minutes then place a piece of tinfoil on top to keep the bread from darkening too much. Bake for an additional 3-8 minutes until a baking thermometer inserted near center reads at least 190°F / 88°C.
  11. Allow to cool, slice, and enjoy!

Notes

If the dough is too soft when trying to create a round and it won’t hold its shape, add flour a bit at a time until it will.  Dough that relaxes a little bit out of shape is ok, just keep in mind that adding too much flour will create a dry bread. It’s about finding the balance between creating a soft dough yet strong enough to hold it’s shape. Properly kneaded dough is also important in a free form loaf holding its shape.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

149.06

Fat

3.44 g

Sat. Fat

0.35 g

Carbs

23.58 g

Fiber

0.84 g

Net carbs

22.74 g

Sugar

0.91 g

Protein

4.04 g

Sodium

2046.95 mg

Cholesterol

11.53 mg

Nutritional information is approximate; based on 1 slice, if each loaf yields 8 slices.

beer bread, pretzel bread, IPA bread, baking with beer,
bread
American
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Hershey's Chewy Brownie Pie

Hershey’s Chewy Brownie Pie is like a chewy, slightly cakey blondie with bits of Oreo and smothered in a sweetened condensed milk glaze with melty chocolate chips.

After that description, you might agree with me that the name of this doesn’t really prepare you for what you’re about to eat. Hershey’s I associate with chocolate. Chewy, sure. Brownies are usually, well, brown. And pie? Pies usually have a crust. This does not have a crust and I don’t know what makes it a brownie pie other than it being round? Whatever category this best fits in, what we do know is that it’s a dessert, and it’s delicious. It’s also easy to make, unless you like to make things complicated like me, then you can make your own homemade sweetened condensed milk. Which is not hard, but does add in one more step. Whatever you call and however you make it, I love this Hershey’s Brownie Pie Thing.

The base is made with a Hershey’s Cookies ‘N’ Cream bar. This is a specialty product I’ve never seen in Europe. If you’ve never had one, it’s just a white chocolate Hershey chocolate bar with bits of Oreo cookie in it. They remind of me my childhood.  I probably only had one a handful of times, but I have a couple very fond memories of my mom letting my brother and me have one. For my European friends, you could try substituting white chocolate with some Oreo cookies crushed into small chunks, or even using just white chocolate.

The original recipe uses a can of sweetened condensed milk, but I made my own for the first time this week, and I like it so much better!  Not to mention no BPA from the can, and you can use organic milk and sugar.  Win win.  Plus you can nonchalantly throw out that the sweetened condensed milk is made from scratch when people ask you what it is or what's in it.  Win win win.

I tweaked a couple other small details in the recipe to make it a little less rich, but it's pretty delicious.  

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Recipe adapted from Fahrenheit 350


Hershey's Chewy Brownie Pie

Serves 8-12

Ingredients

For the brownie:

  • 6.5 oz / 184g Hershey's Cookies 'N' Cream Candy Bar (that’s 1 giant bar)

  • 1/2 cup / 100g sugar

  • 1/2 cup / 113g salted butter

  • 2 eggs, lightly beaten

  • 1 tsp / 5g vanilla

  • 1 cup / 120g all-purpose flour

  • 1/2 tsp baking powder

For the topping:

Directions

Preheat oven to 350°F / 177°C.  Grease a 9in / 23cm spring-form pan.

Make the brownie:

  1. In a small saucepan, combine Cookies 'N' Cream bar, sugar, and butter over low heat just until melted, stirring occasionally. 

  2. Remove from heat and whisk in eggs and vanilla.

  3. Stir in flour and baking powder just until combined. 

  4. Pour into prepared pan and bake for 15-18 minutes or until edges are lightly golden brown and toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean. 

Add the topping:

  1. Immediately pour sweetened condensed milk over brownie, spreading to the edges.  Sprinkle on the chocolate chips.  Allow to cool before removing outer ring of spring-form pan and cutting. 

Jenny's Notes:

  • Want it denser and richer?  Omit the baking powder from the brownie and layer more mini chocolate chips on top.  Want it less rich?  Simply reduce the sugar in the brownie! Keep in mind that reducing sugar may result in a less chewy and more cakey brownie.

  • If you don’t have a springform pan, you could use a cake pan in its stead.

Hershey's Chewy Brownie Pie
Yield 8-12
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Cook time
18 Min
Total time
33 Min

Hershey's Chewy Brownie Pie

A chewy, white chocolate brownie flecked with Oreo chunks, topped with a sweetened condensed milk glaze and melty chocolate chips.
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

For the Brownie
For the Topping

Instructions

Make the Brownie
  1. Preheat oven to 350°F / 177°C. Grease a 9in / 23cm spring-form pan.
  2. In a small saucepan, combine Cookies 'N' Cream bar, sugar, and butter over low heat just until melted, stirring occasionally.
  3. Remove from heat and whisk in eggs and vanilla.
  4. Stir in flour and baking powder just until combined.
  5. Pour into prepared pan and bake for 15-18 minutes or until edges are lightly golden brown and toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean.
Add the Topping
  1. Immediately pour sweetened condensed milk over brownie, spreading to the edges. Sprinkle on the chocolate chips. Allow to cool before removing outer ring of spring-form pan and cutting.

Notes

  • Want it denser and richer?  Omit the baking powder from the brownie and layer more mini chocolate chips on top.  Want it less rich?  Simply reduce the sugar in the brownie! Keep in mind that reducing sugar may result in a less chewy and more cakey brownie.
  • If you don’t have a springform pan, you could use a cake pan in its stead.


Nutrition Facts

Calories

484.70

Fat

24.51 g

Sat. Fat

14.74 g

Carbs

58.68 g

Fiber

1.33 g

Net carbs

47.85 g

Sugar

42.43 g

Protein

7.55 g

Sodium

204.36 mg

Cholesterol

88.45 mg

Nutritional information is approximate. Based on 1 serving if the pie is cut into 8 servings.

Blondie, White chocolate brownie, Oreo brownie, sweetened condensed milk brownie
Dessert, Bars
American
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Homemade Sweetened Condensed Milk

Making your own homemade sweetened condensed milk is as easy as simmering two ingredients on the stove.

As long as you have an extra hour or so or plan ahead, you’ll no longer need sweetened condensed milk from a can! Not to mention, it can actually be quicker to make than a trip to the store if you’re out, plus no BPA from a can! Overall it’s just a really lovely idea.

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Homemade Sweetened Condensed Milk

Makes the equivalent to a 14 oz can

Ingredients

  • 3 cups / 711g milk

  • 1 cup / 200g sugar

Directions

  1. In a medium-small sauce pan, combine milk and sugar over lowest heat. Take a toothpick or food-safe wooden rod or dowel, insert into pan until it touches the bottom, then make a mark where the milk reaches. Each time you check the milk you can insert this toothpick to get an idea how far the milk is reduced without having to measure.

  2. Simmer for about an hour, checking occasionally, especially toward the end. Depending on your burner this time can vary. It can go very quickly from the perfect thickness to burnt. 

  3. When it's reduced by just more than half (60% is how much a can of sweetened condensed milk is generally condensed) and thick, it's done! 

Jenny's Notes:

  • While whole milk would be the choice closest to the canned version of sweetened condensed milk, you can use whichever you prefer, knowing that the fat content or varying plant-based milks will give slightly different flavors and textures.

  • Some recipes only call for 1/2 a can of sweetened condensed milk, which would normally leave you with an open half can in the fridge for forever until you find another recipe that calls for just half.  With this recipe, you can just make half and simmer for about 30-45 minutes instead of an hour. No waste!

  • If you're careful, you can slightly over-reduce this, to where the milk solids turn golden.  Immediately remove from heat and whisk to keep the milk solids from burning to the bottom of the pan.  It gives it a wonderful toasty, nutty flavor.  This is to sweetened condensed milk what browned butter is to normal butter.  If you followed me on that, you are following me to a very happy place. 

  • Accidentally over-reduced and now your sweetened condensed milk is too thick?  No worries, as long as it’s not burnt, just add a dash of milk and whisk, repeat until the desired consistency is reached. 

Homemade Sweetened Condensed Milk
Yield 10 servings
Author
Prep time
2 Min
Cook time
60 Min
Total time
1 H & 2 M

Homemade Sweetened Condensed Milk

Homemade sweetened condensed milk as good as or better than the can!
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. In a medium-small sauce pan, combine milk and sugar over lowest heat. Take a toothpick or food-safe wooden rod or dowel, insert into pan until it touches the bottom, then make a mark where the milk reaches. Each time you check the milk you can insert this toothpick to get an idea how far the milk is reduced without having to measure.
  2. Simmer for about an hour, checking occasionally, especially toward the end. Depending on your burner this time can vary. It can go very quickly from the perfect thickness to burnt.
  3. When it's reduced by just more than half (60% is how much a can of sweetened condensed milk is generally condensed) and thick, it's done!

Notes

  • While whole milk would be the choice closest to the canned version of sweetened condensed milk, you can use whichever you prefer, knowing that the fat content or varying plant-based milks will give slightly different flavors and textures.
  • Some recipes only call for 1/2 a can of sweetened condensed milk, which would normally leave you with an open half can in the fridge for forever until you find another recipe that calls for just half.  With this recipe, you can just make half and simmer for about 30-45 minutes instead of an hour. No waste!
  • If you're careful, you can slightly over-reduce this, to where the milk solids turn golden.  Immediately remove from heat and whisk to keep the milk solids from burning to the bottom of the pan.  It gives it a wonderful toasty, nutty flavor.  This is to sweetened condensed milk what browned butter is to normal butter.  The photo on this post are of this golden nutty version!
  • Accidentally over-reduced and now your sweetened condensed milk is too thick?  No worries, as long as it’s not burnt, just add a dash of milk and whisk, repeat until the desired consistency is reached. 


Nutrition Facts

Calories

120.77

Fat

2.31 g

Sat. Fat

1.33 g

Carbs

23.41 g

Fiber

0.00 g

Net carbs

23.41 g

Sugar

23.55 g

Protein

2.24 g

Sodium

30.77 mg

Cholesterol

7.11 mg

Nutritional info is approximate. Based on 1 serving of 2 Tbsp made with whole milk.

homemade sweetened condensed milk
miscellaneous, toppings
American
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Biscoff Oreo Layer Bars

Bucca di Beppo, using the proper snaaaack hand.

Bucca di Beppo, using the proper snaaaack hand.

You had me at Biscoff.  Then you had me again at Oreo.  These bars are decadent and disappear quickly.  I had barely pulled them out of the oven when my nieces and nephews appeared at the door looking to see if we had any "snacks." (To be said, "snaaaaaacks," with the Italian hand gesture.)  Normally these bars should be cooled and chilled before slicing, but in this instance we used bowls and spoons to scoop up the warm, melty, ooey-gooey, Biscoff Oreo-ness with a hint of peanut butter atop a shortbread crust.  I practically had to put caution tape around the remaining few bars so I could get a picture of them before they all disappeared.  I don't own caution tape, but I think it would be a very handy thing to have around. 

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Recipe adapted from Call Me PMc


Biscoff Oreo Layer Bars

Ingredients:

For the Crust

  • 1 1/3 cup / 160g all-purpose flour

  • 3/4 cup / 150g brown sugar

  • 6 Tbsp / 85g salted butter, cold, cut into cubes (3/4 of a stick)

For the Layers

  • 1/3 cup / 59g peanut butter chips

  • 12 Oreo cookies, crushed (You could always use more, my Oreo loving friends)

  • 14 oz can / 398g sweetened condensed milk

  • 1/2 cup Biscoff spread

Directions:

Oven preheated to 350° / 177°C

Make the Crust

  1. Lightly grease an 8x8inch / 20x20cm pan. 

  2. In a food processor pulse together flour and sugar.  Add butter, one cube at a time.  Continue to pulse until mixture looks like wet sand and will hold together when pressed between your fingers.  Press evenly into prepared pan.

Make the Layers

  1. Sprinkle peanut butter chips evenly over crust, then the Oreos. 

  2. In a small bowl whisk together sweetened condensed milk and Biscoff until smooth.  Pour over crust and spread to evenly cover Oreos.

  3. Bake for 20-22 minutes or until edges are lightly golden and center is just set.  The filling will go from shiny to matte, forming a sort of skin over the top. 

  4. Place in the fridge until completely cool.  Cut and serve.  Store covered in the fridge.

Jenny's Notes:

  • Don't sweat if you only have unsalted butter.  To interchange unsalted for salted butter, just add 1/4 tsp salt for every 1 stick of unsalted butter.  And vice versa, if you only have salted butter and a recipe calls for 1 stick of unsalted butter and salt, just omit the salt and replace unsalted butter with salted.  I just stared at the word "salt" for too long and now it looks very strange.  Salt.  Huh.

  • ALSO.  You could use the crunchy Biscoff spread in this and I think that would be amaze-za-zing.  I haven't gotten a chance to try it yet but if you do let me know and invite me over.  :)

Biscoff Oreo Layer Bars
Yield 12-16
Author
Prep time
25 Min
Cook time
22 Min
Inactive time
1 Hour
Total time
1 H & 47 M

Biscoff Oreo Layer Bars

Shortbread crust with Oreos, Biscoff caramel, and peanut butter chips
Cook modePrevent screen from turning off

Ingredients

For the Crust
For the Layers

Instructions

Make the Crust
  1. Oven preheated to 350° / 177°C
  2. Lightly grease an 8x8inch / 20x20cm pan.
  3. In a food processor pulse together flour and sugar. Add butter, one cube at a time. Continue to pulse until mixture looks like wet sand and will hold together when pressed between your fingers. Press evenly into prepared pan.
Make the Layers
  1. Sprinkle peanut butter chips evenly over crust, then the Oreos.
  2. In a small bowl whisk together sweetened condensed milk and Biscoff until smooth. Pour over crust and spread to evenly cover Oreos.
  3. Bake for 20-22 minutes or until edges are lightly golden and center is just set. The filling will go from shiny to matte, forming a sort of skin over the top.
  4. Place in the fridge until completely cool. Cut and serve. Store covered in the fridge.

Notes

Don't sweat if you only have unsalted butter.  To interchange unsalted for salted butter, just add 1/4 tsp salt for every 1 stick of unsalted butter.  And vice versa, if you only have salted butter and a recipe calls for 1 stick of unsalted butter and salt, just omit the salt and replace unsalted butter with salted.

ALSO.  You could use the crunchy Biscoff spread in this and I think that would be amaze-za-zing.

Nutrition Facts

Calories

393.06

Fat

16.94 g

Sat. Fat

7.20 g

Carbs

56.29 g

Fiber

1.07 g

Net carbs

55.22 g

Sugar

39.04 g

Protein

5.59 g

Sodium

174.15 mg

Cholesterol

26.55 mg

Nutritional info is approximate. Based on 12 servings.

Biscoff bars, biscoff caramel, shortbread bars, oreo caramel bars
dessert
American
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