Chocolate Chip Pancakes

In my house, we never call these chocolate chip pancakes. We call them jockstrap pancakes. Why jockstrap pancakes you may ask? It is not a secret that I am the world’s worst texter. Seriously, my finger accidentally may touch the letter next to the letter that I need AND I press enter way to fast. So one day, I texted my husband asking him what he wanted for dinner. When he could not decide, I started typing in some ideas. Chocolate chip turned into jockstrap. I have no idea where this came from auto correct, but it has took.   These pancakes are on the table within 20 minutes and are very yummy.   Feel free to add whatever add-in you prefer instead of chocolate chips.

Chocolate Chip Pancakes

Slightly Adapted from All Recipes

Ingredients:
1 ½ cups all purpose flour
3 ½ tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 tbsp white sugar
3 tbsp butter, melted
1 egg, room temperature
1 ¼ buttermilk
1 cup chocolate chips
Butter for griddle

Directions:

In a large bowl, combine flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar. Whisk in melted butter, egg, and buttermilk, until combined. Do not over mix this batter. Mix in chocolate chips in. Pre heat a large griddle over medium-high heat. Place a little butter to oil up the griddle. Pour about ¼ cup of the batter onto the hot skillet. Cook until bubbles appear on the pancake, about 2 minutes. Flip and cook until golden, for another minute or two.

Nut-Free Granola

Sometimes plain yogurt just does not do it for me. I need to mix it up with something. Most granola in the supermarket have either shredded coconut or abundance of nuts, again something I don’t like. A good granola is like finding a good wine that you want to keep going back to. This granola has large clumps that allow crunch to occur while you are eating yogurt. It is so easy to make it, that it may become part of your breakfast/snack rotation.

Nut Free Granola
Adapted from Smitten Kitchen’s Cookbook and Melissa d’Arabian

Makes – at least 4 cups

Ingredients:

2 cups old fashioned oats
1 cup wheat bran
1/3 cup flax seed
1 cup rice krispies or puffed wheat cereal
¾ cup steel cut oatmeal
2 tbsp. melted butter
½ cup maple syrup
½ tsp. salt
1 tbsp. cinnamon
2 egg whites

Preheat oven to 300F. Combine old fashioned oats, wheat bran, flax seed, cereal, and steel cut oatmeal, salt and cinnamon. Add melted butter, maple syrup, and egg whites. Lay flat on a parchment paper lined cookie sheet. Cook for 45 to 55 minutes. When dry to the touch, take out of the oven. Allow to cool for 5-8 minutes. Break up the granola into clumps. Store in an airtight container.

Mini pumpkin chocolate chip muffins

After a few weeks of weather going from summer like temperatures to winter temperatures, we have finally settled on fall.   Every time I think of fall I think of apples and pumpkins. I am definitely not the person who loves pumpkin everything. However, pumpkin items here and there are okay, especially with chocolate. I do not think there is anything that I wouldn’t pair with chocolate, except maybe peanut butter. I will save my hatred for peanut butter to another post.

These mini pumpkin chocolate chip muffins are so easy to make. It does not even require a mixer. I used a fork, spatula, and a large bowl. These can be easily whipped up for when company decides to come over for brunch or a football game.

Mini pumpkin chocolate chip muffins
Adapted from Food.com
Makes about 48 mini muffins

Ingredients:

4 eggs
½ cup packed brown sugar
½ cup white sugar
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 (15 oz) can pumpkin
1 cup vegetable oil
¼ cup Greek yogurt
3 cups flour
2 tsp. baking soda
2 tsp. baking powder
2 tsp. cinnamon
½ tsp. all spice
½ tsp. nutmeg
1 tsp. salt
10- 12 oz dark chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 400F. Place paper liners into mini muffin tins. In a small bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, all spice, nutmeg, and salt.   In a large bowl, mix/beat eggs, sugars, vanilla extract, pumpkin, oil, and Greek yogurt. Mix the contents of the small bowl into the large bowl. Mix only until combined. There may be streaks left if you over stir. Pour chocolate chips into the mixture, again three to five strokes, max. Using a cookie scoop (medium), scoop mixture and place one scoop into each cavity. Bake for 10-12 minutes. Cool in muffin tin for 5 minutes. Take muffins out of tin and place each mini-muffin on a cooling rack.

TIP TUESDAY: Vanilla Sugar

Save your vanilla beans after you scrape out the good stuff inside for another recipe, place the rest of the vanilla bean into a container filled with sugar. Shake the container every so often. After some time, you will see some vanilla flecks in the sugar. Feel free to substitute with some recipes. Donuts and cookies work but a pinch of vanilla sugar in tofu – I don’t think so.

Apple Cinnamon Steel Cut Oatmeal

I love weekends. I can make a hot breakfast instead of eating yogurt or another portable breakfast item at work.  Now is the best time to make this breakfast and it is apple season.   I want to go apple picking but I am not available until next weekend.  I am afraid there will be no apples left by the time I can go.  In the mean time, I am getting fresh apples from the farm stand I go to.  Use your fresh apples to make this.

Apple Cinnamon Steel Cut Oatmeal

apple cinnamon oatmeal

Adapted from Alton Brown’s Steel Cut Oatmeal

Serves: 1, but easily doubled, tripled…

Ingredients:

1 tsp. Margarine or butter
1/3 cup of steel cut oatmeal
1 cup of water
1 apple, cubed thin
1/3 cup of milk
1 tsp honey
Cinnamon

In a medium saucepot, melt the margarine on medium heat.  Pour the steel cut oatmeal into the saucepot to toast for two minute.  During this time, place the water in a microwave safe cup and turn on for until it boils or just use boiling water.   Lower heat to simmer for approximately ten minutes without stirring.  Add milk and apples and cook for another ten minutes.  Stir occasionally during this time.  Stir in honey.  Shut off heat.  Add cinnamon to taste.  Pour into a bowl and enjoy!

TIP TUESDAY: Make your own breadcrumbs

Like most people, I have a lot of bread lying around for various reasons: bought too much or did not eat a lot of bread in the previous week. Rather than throwing it out, make it into breadcrumbs.

Homemade Breadcrumbs

Preheat oven to 350F. Slice bread/rolls into slices.  Place slices on baking sheet.  Toast each side of the for three minutes. Cool on baking sheet.  Rip slices into smaller pieces and place in blender or food processor and turn on until desired crumb size.

Suburbanwhisk travels…to Las Vegas

In August, I was able to take a long weekend to Las Vegas with my husband.   Right there, it was a very different trip as if it is was a bachelorette party.  Using our American Express points, we were able to able to score our flight and hotel for free.  Little did we know when I planned the trip, it was going to be restaurant week.  There were great deals to be found.

STAY: Palazzo – The Palazzo hotel is connected to the Venetian hotel at the north end of the strip.  It is across the street from the Wynn and a mall.  I noted to my husband, that this is one of the only hotels in a city that I actually never wanted to leave.  Everything I needed for a relaxing vacation was part of this resort.  The room was huge, approximately the size of our first apartment.  We were able to use the pool at Palazzo or Venetian.  We tended to choose the Palazzo side, as it was not as active as the Venetian side.  It should be noted that each side also had a day club.  TAO Beach Club was on the Venetian side.

Palazzo

EAT: Obviously, the most important part of the trip!  Due to the great deals of restaurant week and not wanting to leave the hotel, I did violate my main rule – Do not eat at a restaurant that you can have in the city.

Lavo: We had brunch here our first day here.  Being a guest of the hotel, we received bottomless mimosas (nothing wrong with this) and 30% off.  Hubster had a Lobster Benedict and I had blueberry pancakes.  Look at these beauties.

lobster benedictblueberry pancakes

Michael Mina:  My parents ate here a few years ago.  All they have spoke about Vegas, is this meal.  Being restaurant week, we got a three course meal for $50, along with wine pairings for an additional $25.  I had miso cod, which was not as salty as it could be.  My husband found a wine that he loved that he would have never considered before.

Hubby didn’t think he ate or drank enough after this meal. On our way back to the Palazzo from the Bellagio, we stopped off at B&B Burger and Beer.  Hubby had a huge burger along with a chocolate milkshake made with chocolate beer.

Morels French Steakhouse & Bistro:  We needed a restaurant that would allow children for brunch as we met up with some friends who relocated to Vegas.  Sometimes, this is a hard feat.   Their restaurant week deal was a three course meal for $20.  Unfortunately, there were no drink specials.  I had a stuffed French Toast with mascarpone cheese.

B&B Ristorante:  Four Batali and Bastianch courses for $50 along with unlimited Fruitano.  I’m there.  Each course was better than the other.  I ate some braised beef, which is very rare for me.  It was very good.  Each course was so much food that by the third course (main meal), I was almost full.  The apricot and peach sorbets were very light at the end.

Wicked Spoon:  This buffet gets decent reviews.  They tried hard to make fancier dishes.  We went for Monday lunch.

CUT:  This steakhouse has a bar menu that you can get along with the steaks by the bar.  We ordered a bunch of small plates.  Each dish was very good.  The only bad thing is that they did not participate in restaurant week.

Before we left we went to Emeril Lagasse’s Stadium.  This restaurant is a stadium seating of couches along with lots of televisions to watch sports.

Where has suburbanwhisk been?

It has been a full month since my last post! Where did the month go?  September and October are crazy months as I am a school psychologist.  I spent a lot of the beginning of the month making sure my school’s special education students were in the right class, including the transfer students.  Then, I got the flu shot.  Most people would be fine, but not me.  Forty-eight hours later, a sinus infection came.  Three weeks later, I am finally feeling almost like my old self.  All of this in the middle of the Jewish holidays.

Noteworthy, my Ebinger’s Blackout Cake made it to DessertStalking’s blog as one of the four chocolate cakes of the week. Thanks DessertStalking!

Stay tuned to suburbanwhisk for more posts to come!

Ebinger’s Blackout Cake

Growing up I heard various stories from my father about growing up in Brooklyn.  Ebinger’s Bakery was spoken about a lot.  While the bakery closed before I was born, it is all I have heard of, especially this cake.

Now, my father sends me recipes with indications of try to make this or make this for… This recipe came with a statement “You will make this.”  There were no opportunities to say no.  Dad  – Challenge accepted.

After I served this cake to my dad, he stated that it was just as good as he remembered.

Keep in mind – When you make this cake, it has to be eaten within 24 hours once you make it.

Ebinger’s Blackout Cake

Taken from NPR

Ingredients:

Cake

½ cup unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
2 tbsp. boiling water
2 oz. unsweetened chocolate, chopped
¾ cup milk 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened slightly
2 cups sugar
4 large eggs, separated, room temperature
2 tsp. vanilla extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt

Filling

1 tbsp plus 1¾ tsp. unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
2 cups boiling water
¾ cup plus ½ tsp. sugar
1 oz.  bittersweet chocolate, chopped
2 tbsp. cornstarch dissolved in 1 tbsp. cold water
¼ tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2 tbsp. unsalted butter

Frosting

12 oz. semisweet chocolate, chopped
12 tbsp. ( 1½ sticks) unsalted butter
½ cup hot water
1 tbsp. light corn syrup
1 tbsp. vanilla extract

Make the cake:  Preheat the oven to 375F.   Butter and lightly flour two 9-inch cake pans. In a small bowl, place the cocoa and whisk in the boiling water to form a paste, set aside.  In a saucepan, combine the chopped chocolate and milk over medium heat.  Keep stirring until the chocolate melts, approximately three minutes.   Remove from the heat.  Take a small bit of the chocolate milk combination into the cocoa paste.  Put the rest of the cocoa paste mixture into the milk mixture.  Return to the pan and stir for one minute on medium heat.  Set mixture aside until cool.

In a mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and sugar together.  Beat in the egg yolks, one at a time, along with the vanilla.  Stir in the chocolate mixture slowly.  In a small bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.  Slowly add the flour mixture into the chocolate mixture.  Fold until just mixed.  In another bowl, whisk the egg whites until soft peaks form.  Fold the egg whites in the batter, until no streaks remain.   Divide the batter into the prepared pans and bake for about thirty minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.

Make the filling:  Combine the cocoa and boiling water in a small saucepan over low heat.  Stir in sugar and chocolate.  Add cornstarch paste and salt to the pan and bring to a boil, stirring constantly.  You don’t want lumps in your filling.  Remove from heat and whisk in vanilla and butter.  Place mixture into a bowl, cover, and refrigerate until cool

Make the frosting:  In a double boiler, melt the chocolate until smooth.  Remove the top part of the double boiler and whisk in the butter, one tbsp. at a time.  If necessary, return to the top of the heat to melt the butter. Whisk in the hot water all at once and whisk until smooth.  Add corn syrup and vanilla.  Cover and refrigerate for up to 15 minutes before using.

Assemble the cake:  Slice each cake layer in half to form four layers.  Set the worst layer aside.  Place one layer on a cake board.  Put ½ of the filling on top.  Cover with a second layer, followed by the other half of the filling.  Place the third layer on.  Put a thin layer of frosting on the top and sides of the cake. Refrigerate until firm – approximately 15 minutes.  Crumble up the fourth layer.  Apply the rest of the frosting to the cake.  Quickly add the cake crumbs.  Refrigerate the cake for at least one hour before serving.