TwD: Expresso Cheesecake Brownies
TwD: Applesauce Spice Bars
Thanks to Karen of Something Sweet by Karen for the pick this week! These bars are definitely a little taste of fall. 
These were very moist and even better the next day. I scraped the bowl after the batter went in the pan...and after the glaze went on. Brown sugar, butter, and cream! Did burn my tongue a bit though. These were so moist that little chunky bits of raisin and pecan and apple fell out through the cooling rack. More treats for the cook! It's like the crunchy bits of fried food - it's the best part and it doesn't count if no one sees you snag it.
TwD: Brownie Buttons
So I've been M.I.A. lately, mostly because I've been busy getting out of MIA...moving. Ah moving. The excitement of an adventure and a move to the next big thing, and the sadness of leaving behind good friends and good times. Mostly I'm excited, though moving can be a bit tiring. Which is one reason why this week's recipe chosen by Jayma of Two Scientists Experimenting in the Kitchen was perfect. It was easy, miniature, and yummy. I thought the brownies were a bit dry but Mom and Sister loved them. I skipped the orange zest (for lack thereof) and am thinking it might have helped after reading Jayma's blog. I also skipped the white chocolate topping (for the same reason as the orange zest) and replaced is with a German chocolate-esque caramel coconut glaze. Some of the brownies got crowned with an almond, and after trying both, they all got stuck with one. These little addictive brownies were too poppable to stay around long. Thankfully, I only made half a recipe that gave me 12 little brownie buttons.
Oh, and I love the name Brownie Buttons. I think Dorie must have fun with the names sometimes.
Coconut Topping
2 Tablespoons butter
2 Tablespoons light brown sugar
1 Tablespoon milk
1/4 teaspoon vanilla
1/3 cup sweetened coconut
Heat butter, sugar, milk, and vanilla over medium-low heat until boiling. Stir frequently and boil rapidly. The color will appear lighter. Add the coconut and continue to boil until it returns to a rapid, frothy boil. Continue to boil until it thickens slightly. Spread over cooled brownie buttons. The topping with hardened slightly after cooling, but will remain gooey.
TwD: HONEY PEACH ICE CREAM
I'm surprised I liked the honey taste as much as I did. I'm more of a purist when it comes to fruit ice creams. This was divine though. I halved the recipe and boiled all the peaches in the honey (because I didn't read far enough ahead in the recipe). Next time (and there will definitely be a next time), I'll try just half in the honey and half added plain later. I'm hoping this will allow the peaches to stand alone in taste and mingle with the honey.
TwD: PARISIAN APPLE TARTLET
TwD: CINNAMON SQUARES
MIDNIGHT MUSHY PEAS
A few things conspired together this week to leave me in the kitchen on a Friday night, making mushy peas.

(Now I've never made mushy peas before, and though I have traveled to and in the UK, I've never had them. I'm not sure how this is possible because it's the kind of simple dish that I jump at on a menu, especially served with a nice fish and chips.)
First, I'm reading James Joyce's Dubliners. In one of the chapters, The Gallants, a man feasts on "a plate of hot grocer's peas, seasoned with pepper and vinegar...He ate his food greedily and found it so good that he made a note of the shop mentally." This always happens to me - I read something that starts a craving! But who knows what hot grocer's peas are? An annotation in Dubliners says that grocer's peas are large, pale processed peas, closer to pease pudding than to fresh peas. Pease pudding (or pottage) is, as it turns out, a thicker pea mash, and the ancestor of boiled peas. Regardless, I read "hot grocer's peas" and thought...mashed up green peas...yum.
Secondly, this morning I had four wisdom teeth yanked out of my head. Since I got IV sedation, I couldn't eat this morning and didn't want to eat after the surgery...until about 10pm. That's when I thought...mushy peas would be perfect! I can't really open my mouth that much and can't chew at all. I related this to my boyfriend, who inquired what in the world mushy peas were. My explanation was somewhere along the lines of - it's a British dish of mashed up green peas with salt, pepper, milk, and butter. Oh, he replied, baby food. Nooooo. So much better. And so much more complicated.
Researching on the good ol' internet, I found two basic camps for mushy peas. One in which frozen and/or canned marrowfat peas are acceptable. One in which only dried marrowfat peas are used. This latter group seems much more the purist, and I like that. Baking soda is added to the soaking process. This is what breaks up the peas. I vow to try the long version one day. But tonight, I took the easy way and made a single serving of mushy peas broken up with a potato masher. (I used English peas because that's what was in the freezer.)
MIDNIGHT MUSHY PEAS
1/2 cup frozen English peas
pinch of salt
pinch of sugar
pinch of black pepper
1 Tbs milk
1/2 Tbs butter
- Boil the peas until they are done done.
- Season to taste.
- Add the milk and butter.
- Mash mash. Until the done done peas are broken up and the milk and butter are absorbed.
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