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Chocolate

Chocolate Peanut Butter Brookie Bars

February 12, 2018
Recipe for Chocolate Peanut Butter Brookie Bars! | FakeFoodFree.com

I’m fairly certain that I have never made a brookie.

I’ve heard of them before, sure. But for some reason, last week when I was trying to think of some kind of chocolate dessert I could make for the blog that was Valentine’s Day-ish, the thought of a layered dessert led to a brownie, led to a cookie, led to a brookie. 

I have a history of grand layered dessert ideas failing me. Orange slices on cakes tend to get swallowed from view when baked. And fillings or layers? Let’s just say they are a lot like socks in the dryer. They exist when I place the pan in the oven only to mysteriously disappear when the timer buzzes. 

So needless to say, I wasn’t quite sure how these would turn out. 

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Dark Chocolate Bark with Cashews, Coconut and Currants

June 14, 2016

This dark chocolate bark is studded with salted cashews, toasted coconut and dried currants. It makes a delicious dessert when paired with the Laphroaig 10 Year Islay Single Malt Scotch Whisky I recently received for review. 

Dark Chocolate Bark with Cashews, Coconuts and Currants paired with Laphroaig Scotch | Fake Food Free | Product review

If my Dad could total up the number of pounds of cashews he has received as Father’s Day gifts over the years, I have little doubt it could fill the back of a pick-up truck. There has always been something essential about a can of his favorite nuts being a part of his gifts. 

I suspect my tendency to give food as a gift is rooted in this family practice. But these days, while my family tends to stick with things like cashews, our gift giving has expanded into the drink category. 

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Chocolate Cherry Goji Bars from Superfood Snacks

July 17, 2015

Chocolate Cherry Goji Bars from Superfood Snacks by Julie Morris | Fake Food Free

There is a good chance that just opening this book will make you healthier. I know it’s a pretty bold claim, but I’m certain it’s true. 

I received a review copy of Superfood Snacks: 100 Delicious, Energizing & Nutrient-Dense Recipes by Julie Morris a few weeks ago and it has been sitting on my desk glowing with health and vibrance ever since. I gladly accepted the offer from Navitas Naturals to review the book. They even sent along some goji berries and cacao nibs so I could make this recipe. But I wasn’t sure what to expect until I finally go the copy. 

It turns out, I’m kind of crazy about it. 

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Starry Starry Nights Chocolate Cookies

March 3, 2015

These chocolate cookies are so rich and delicious! Made with almond flour, they also happen to be gluten-free and grain-free, so they are perfect for sharing with friends. You’ll find these cookies and so many more great desserts in the new cookbook Let Them Eat Cake by Gesine Bullock-Prado.  

Starry Starry Nights Cookies from Let Them Eat Cake | Fake Food Free | Dark chocolate gluten-free and grain-free cookies.

I’ve mentioned many times before that I’m not grain-free, gluten-free, vegan, or most other food labels out there. I also feel incredibly fortunate that I don’t have any food allergies. That being said, the one thing I am when I cook and bake is a bit of a pleaser.

If I invite you over, give you a food gift, or share a potluck with you, I want you to be able to eat. Not eating sounds like no fun at all. So any tool that helps me help more people eat good food, well, I’m all for it. 

 It’s rare to come across a cookbook that is for everyone. One that you can buy for anyone on your gift list and one that you can use to make sweet treats for anyone you might be eating with. I’ve found it though, and to be honest, I’m pretty blown away by it. It’s downright awesome. 

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Bourbon Chocolate Marshmallows

December 16, 2014

Grab your mug of hot cocoa! These Bourbon Chocolate Marshmallows are the perfect topper for any of your favorite warm holiday drinks!

  Bourbon Chocolate Marshmallows | Fake Food Free

Growing up, marshmallows were the underdog in a box of mixed chocolates. They ranked just one level above that strange fruity nougat. Marshmallows covered in chocolate weren’t so disappointing to cause one to return a half eaten selection to the box, but they evoked a sigh and thoughts of something more glamorous like a caramel or toffee.

Things changed when homemade marshmallows gained popularity. That’s probably because they are ten times better than any marshmallow I’ve had from a chocolate box or a bag from the store. They are every bit as glamorous as caramel and toffee.

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Easy 4 Ingredient Homemade Peanut Butter Cups Recipe

April 18, 2014
 
Easy 4 Ingredient Homemade Peanut Butter Cups Recipe | Fake Food Free
 
 
When a holiday occurs on the same date every year, I’m usually pretty good at being prepared. But Easter? Easter gets me every time.
 

 

As seems to be the tradition, it snuck up on me once again. I just hate to miss making something for a day that can be celebrated with chocolate, so I got busy and put together some super simple, 4 ingredient peanut butter cups.
 

 

A little while back, I was sent these colorful, BPA-free silicone baking cups from The New York Baking Company. These flexible little guys turned out to be a candy cup making dream. They are oven safe up to 475 degrees F as well as freezer, microwave and dishwasher safe. I used them to form and freeze my peanut butter cups and they peeled off so easy for a perfectly ridged edge. They are such a great thing to have around for both baking and candy making.
 

 

 
Easy 4 Ingredient Homemade Peanut Butter Cups Recipe | Fake Food Free
 
I tried to keep these peanut butter cups as simple, clean and unrefined as possible for a better treat. While they only contain four ingredients, I do want to note that natural peanut butters can vary widely in texture. If your jar is brand new, you may have some extra oil to deal with, but if it’s been in the fridge a few days it will likely be firmer. Textures can vary by brand as well.

 

 
 
 
Right now I use the natural crunchy Kirkland brand peanut butter from Costco – just peanuts and sea salt. My peanut butter was thick after being refrigerated. If you are using a just opened jar, you might need to add a little more powdered sugar when making the filling. You want it to be like a thick cookie dough that you can form into a small disk.

 

 
These cups are large and super rich so one can easily serve two people. But I promise not to judge if you eat the whole thing.

 

 
Easy 4 Ingredient Homemade Peanut Butter Cups Recipe | Fake Food Free
 

Easy 4 Ingredient Homemade Peanut Butter Cups

Makes: 8 large peanut butter cups

 

 
Ingredients:
1 cup dark chocolate chips (I use Ghirardelli® 60% Cacao Bittersweet Chocolate Chips)
2 tsp virgin coconut oil
½ cup crunchy natural peanut butter
2 tbsp powdered sugar (I use Trader Joe’s Organic)
 

 

Prep:
 
Place the chocolate chips in a microwave-safe bowl and add the coconut oil. Microwave on high until melted, about 2 minutes, but be sure to stir it every 30 seconds.
 

 

Arrange 8 silicone baking cups on a baking sheet. Transfer 1 tablespoon of melted chocolate to each cup. Place the baking sheet in the freezer for 5 minutes.
 

 

In the bowl of mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, add the peanut butter and powdered sugar. Mix on high until combined, about 45 seconds. It should resemble a firm cookie dough that can be shaped by hand.
 

 

Form the peanut butter into 8 small flat disks. Place a disk in each cup over the bottom layer of chocolate.
 

 

Pour 1 tablespoon of the remaining chocolate over the peanut butter disks. Go back with any remaining chocolate and fill the cups so that the chocolate covers all of the peanut butter.
 

 

Gently tap the baking sheet on the countertop to smooth out the surface of the peanut butter cups and release any air bubbles. Freeze for 15 to 20 minutes, or until firm.
 

 

Peel away the baking cups and store in an airtight container in the refrigerator until ready to serve.
 

 

Disclosure: The silicone baking cups mentioned in this post where provided by Rizzi from The New York Baking Company for review purposes. I was not required to write about them and received no compensation for doing so.
 
 
Thanks for reading! All images and content are the property of Fake Food Free unless otherwise stated. Please do not republish full recipes and images without written permission. What is okay? Feel free to Pin images, share links to my posts or share the photo in a round up post with the title of this recipe and a link back to the post. Confused about copyright and food blogs? Here is some helpful information on Recipe Attribution. If you want to use a photo or full recipe, just ask. I’m sure we can work something out.

Chocolate Peanut Truffles with Coconut

February 13, 2014

You can find me over at Fit Bottomed Eats today! I’m sharing about my love for peanut flour and these Chocolate Peanut Truffles with Coconut. No sugar or dairy added, and they are so easy to make. The perfect quick and  natural treat for Valentine’s Day. Head over and grab the recipe there!

 

Cookie Monster Ice Cream Sandwiches from I Scream Sandwich by Jennie Schacht

May 22, 2013
Cookie Monster Ice Cream Sandwiches from I Scream Sandwich by Jennie Schacht on fakefoodfree.com

There is a local ice cream shop in my hometown that has the best ice cream sandwiches. Chocolate chip cookies with chocolate chip ice cream. The cookies are thick and they turn chewy once frozen. They also have just enough of a salty flavor to offset the sweetness of the ice cream, making the whole treat incredibly tasty.

I’ve not made many ice cream sandwiches myself so it’s never occurred to me to try and recreate that version I loved growing up. Then I received a copy of I Scream Sandwich by Jennie Schacht. Those ice cream sandwiches from back home came to mind, but I wanted to try something that sounded different. Maybe the Vietnamese Breakfast with coffee flavored ice cream or the Got Your Goat with goat’s milk ice cream.

This book is full of ice cream sandwiches that will spark your curiosity. You’ll be pulling out the ice cream maker and calling dibs on bringing dessert to all your summer picnics. Creamy ice creams, rich gelatos and fruity sorbets are surrounded by more than just cookies.  Croissants, cakes, bars and buns are just a few of the creative exteriors to the sweet sandwiches in this book.

After my husband voiced his craving for something more classic, I decided to make the Cookie Monster. Let’s just say that after reading the recipe I realized that this sandwich was classic only in flavor. I wanted something a little different and, wow, did I get it.

Why? Well, this sandwich isn’t surrounded by a cookie, but by cookie dough! Frozen (yet soft) cookie dough around homemade chocolate chip ice cream. It’s a brilliant idea.

And you know what is even better? Despite the fact that it’s cookie dough and not a baked cookie, it tastes almost exactly like that ice cream sandwich I grew up with!

Just a few tips if you are not a regular ice cream sandwich maker (like I wasn’t). Plan, plan, plan ahead. You will need to plan for freezing time, greased parchment paper and cold bowls. Read through the recipe and read it again. It’s really not that much work when all is said and done, but you’ll want to know what to expect before you get into it. Also, some of the methods for assembly are explained in the first few pages of the book so give them a browse before you start the recipe.

Cookie Monster Ice Cream Sandwiches from I Scream Sandwich by Jennie Schacht on fakefoodfree.com

Finally, don’t expect to have much will power around these things. I thought a batch would last us a while, but these have to be the most vocal desserts I have ever made. I could hear them calling me from the freezer all day long.

Cookie Monster Chocolate Chip Ice Cream on Cookie Dough

Copyright © 2013 Jennie Schacht, reprinted with permission from Abrams Books

Chocolate Chip Ice Cream (GF)

2 cups (480 ml) whole milk
¹⁄3 cup (67 g) granulated sugar
2 tablespoons golden syrup, inverted sugar syrup or light agave nectar
2 tablespoons tapioca starch
¼ teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup (240 ml) heavy cream
½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
½ cup (100 g) bittersweet (60 to 70 percent) chocolate, chopped or chips
1 tablespoon neutral vegetable oil or coconut oil

Whisk ½ cup (120 ml) of the milk with the sugar, syrup, tapioca, and salt in a medium saucepan until no lumps remain. Stir in the remaining 1½ cups (360 ml) milk and the cream. Heat the mixture over medium-high heat, stirring with a heatproof spatula, until it begins to steam and slightly bubble at the edges. Adjust to a simmer and cook, stirring constantly, until the mixture thickens to the consistency of a cream sauce, about 3 minutes longer; do not fully boil.

Transfer the mixture to a metal bowl set over a larger bowl of ice and water. Stir occasionally until the mixture is cool, taking care not to slosh water into the bowl. Stir in the vanilla, then cover and refrigerate until very cold, at least 2 hours. Transfer the bowl to the freezer for the last half hour before spinning it.

Freeze the mixture in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s directions. While the mixture spins, melt the chocolate and oil in the microwave or in a small saucepan until you can stir it smooth. Let cool to room temperature, keeping it fluid. With the machine running, drizzle in the cooled melted chocolate during the last minute of spinning. (Alternatively, drizzle the chocolate over the ice cream as you transfer it to the container, folding it in with a spatula or ice cream paddle to break it up as you go.) Transfer the ice cream to a chilled container, cover, and freeze until firm but still spreadable, at least 4 hours.

Cookie Dough

½ cup (1 stick / 113 g) unsalted butter
¹⁄3 cup packed (67 g) light brown sugar
¼ cup (50 g) granulated sugar
2 tablespoons milk, whole or 2%
½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
½ teaspoon kosher salt
1¼ cup (165 g) all-purpose flour
1 cup (200 g) mini chocolate chips
Neutral vegetable oil, for the waxed or parchment paper

Melt the butter with the brown and granulated sugar in a small saucepan, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Transfer to a bowl and stir in the milk, vanilla, and salt until well blended. Stir in the flour until completely smooth. Let cool completely, then stir in the chips. (If the chips begin to melt, stop stirring—the swirls will be pretty.)

Line an 8-inch (20-cm) freezer-safe baking pan with two pieces of lightly oiled waxed paper or parchment paper so the papers extend well beyond the edges of the pan on all four sides as a sling for easy removal. Scatter half of the dough into the pan and use your fingers to pack it into an even layer. Top with lightly oiled waxed or parchment paper, oiled side down.

Place another lightly oiled waxed or parchment paper in the pan, leaving 2 inches (5 cm) of paper extending at each end. Scatter and press the remaining dough into an even layer. Top with lightly oiled waxed paper or parchment, oiled side down. Freeze the dough layers until firm, at least 1 hour.

SANDWICH!

Use the flaps to lift out the top cookie dough layer. Peel the paper from one side and loosely replace it. Flip the layer over and do the same to the other side. Repeat with the second cookie dough layer. Place both layers back in the freezer.

Form sandwiches using Method #4* on page 19, starting with step 3, using the bottom two pieces of parchment extended on all sides to line the pan in place of the plastic wrap. Freeze hard before cutting the sandwiches into 4 strips in each direction to form 16 bars. To make 64 bite-size treats, cut each bar into quarters.

*Place one slab of cookie dough top-side down in the pan and spread softened ice cream over it in an even layer. Top with the second slab, top-side up, pressing firmly to evenly distribute the ice cream. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and freeze until very firm, at least 6 hours or overnight, for easiest cutting.

Cookie Monster Ice Cream Sandwiches from I Scream Sandwich by Jennie Schacht on fakefoodfree.com

I should probably mention that I happily have many cookbooks to review this summer. Don’t worry, I haven’t stopped creating my own recipes. They will be interspersed regularly. But I have a passion for cookbooks and enjoy the opportunity to support the art by sharing ideas for new books for your library. I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.

Disclosure: I received a copy of this book for review purposes. I was not required to post about it and received no compensation for doing so. Thoughts here are my own.

 

 

Thanks for reading! All images and content are the property of Fake Food Free unless otherwise stated. Please do not republish full recipes and images without written permission. What is okay? Feel free to Pin images, share links to my posts or share the photo in a round up post with the title of this recipe and a link back to the post. Confused about copyright and food blogs? Here is some helpful information on Recipe Attribution. If you want to use a photo or full recipe, just ask. I’m sure we can work something out.  

Double Chocolate Orange Cookies Recipe

February 8, 2013

These chocolate orange cookies bring together two of my very favorite ingredients!

Double Chocolate Orange Cookies | Fake Food Free 
Did you ever buy those chocolate oranges? They came in the shiny foil and when you whacked it on the counter top it broke into appropriately imprinted orange slices. 
 
I think they were introduced around Christmas or Easter one year and we went crazy for them. I don’t know if they are still available, but I owe them all the credit for introducing me to the flavor combination of chocolate and orange. 
 
I don’t want to be so bold as to say that it ranks up there with chocolate and peanut butter, but if I had to pick a fruit to go with my chocolate, orange just might be it. 
 
Valentine’s Day is coming up, and while I know it isn’t everyone’s favorite holiday, I am adamant about the fact that one should, at the very least, embrace a holiday that focuses so heavily on chocolate. Forget the love, the pink, the hearts if you must, but my goodness, eat some chocolate!
 
I’m here to help you out with this recipe. A lot of chocolate, a little orange, some whole grains and raw sugar. Nice and simple, but the perfect way to celebrate Valentine’s Day.
 
 
Double Chocolate Orange Cookies | Fake Food Free
 
 

Double Chocolate Orange Cookies Recipe

Makes: 18 cookies

Ingredients

½ cup unsalted butter, softened
¾ cup raw sugar
1 large egg
½ tsp vanilla
1 tsp fresh orange juice
Zest of 1 orange
½ tsp baking soda
¼ tsp salt
¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
¾ cup whole wheat flour
½ cup dark chocolate chips
 
Prep
 
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
 
In the bowl of a mixer, cream together the butter and sugar, about 1 to 2 minutes. Scrape the sides of the bowl and add the egg. Mix until incorporated. Add the vanilla, orange juice and orange zest, mix about 30 seconds more. 
 
Add the baking soda, salt and cocoa powder. Mix until the cocoa powder is distributed throughout the dough. With the mixer on low, add the flour a ¼ cup at a time. Mix just until it is incorporated. Stir in the chocolate chips.
 
Use a small cookie scoop or tablespoon to transfer the dough to a standard baking sheet. Bake for 8 minutes. Allow to cool on the baking sheet 1 to 2 minutes and transfer to a cooling rack to cool completely. 
 
 
Thanks for reading! All images and content are the property of Fake Food Free unless otherwise stated. Please do not republish full recipes and images without written permission. What is okay? Feel free to Pin images, share links to my posts or share the photo in a round up post with the title of this recipe and a link back to the post. Confused about copyright and food blogs? Here is some helpful information on Recipe Attribution. If you want to use a photo or full recipe, just ask. I’m sure we can work something out.
 

Chewy Chocolate-Tahini Puffed-Grain Squares Recipe from Whole Grains for a New Generation

November 12, 2012

These puffed-grain squares are sweet with chocolate and slightly nutty with the flavor of tahini. A great snack from the cookbook Whole Grains for a New Generation by Liana Krissoff!

 Chewy Chocolate-Tahini Puffed-Grain Squares | Fake Food Free | A whole grain chocolate snack!  
Cookbooks. I love everything about them – the valuable information, the creativity, delicious recipes, beautiful photos and stories about the hard work that went into producing them. 
 
There is nothing better than cookbooks that cover my favorite topics and Liana Krissoff has managed to write two that fall into that category – Canning for a New Generation, and now, Whole Grains for a New Generation. 
Whole Grains for a New Generation | Interview with author Liana Krissoff on Fake Food Free
 
I received a copy of the latter just a few weeks ago, and as with most cookbooks I love, I read every recipe before I could put it down.  Liana covers whole grains with every bit of the creativity and thoroughness that she covered food preservation. My favorite part is the section on steel cut oatmeal options. Internationally inspired ideas include avocado and oranges, goat cheese and honey and blue cheese with soy sauce.
 
But don’t think for a minute that this book is all oatmeal. I consider myself pretty well versed in whole grains, but this book took them to a new level for me with recipes such as Curried Cauliflower and Sorghum, Millet Maki Rolls with Avocado Puree and Chickpea-Flour Crepes with Quinoa, Melted peppers and Goat Cheese. The book is filled with gluten-free, vegetarian and meat and fish dishes. 
 
I was excited to learn that Liana was open to email interviews, so I decided to ask her a few questions that came to mind as I browsed her work. Here are a few things she had to say. If you are as big of a cookbook and whole grains fan as I am, I think you will find them inspiring! And she also provides some great tips. See the note about prepping steel cut oats!
 
ME:  Working in public health I find it difficult to convince people to eat whole grains, let alone cook them. What are some tips you would give a person just beginning to cook or bake with whole versus refined grains? 
 
LIANA:  I think the key is to enjoy whole grains for what they are rather than expecting them to be something they’re not. I’ll be the first to admit that it’s not easy to become acclimated to most whole-wheat pasta or switch to multigrain baguettes after years of enjoying the traditional refined-wheat-flour versions. Pasta is delicious! Bread made with white flour can be truly amazing stuff! But instead of making those the basis of your meals every day, I’d suggest just skipping the pasta and white bread and making something different altogether: try a polenta tart with chard and Gruyère, for example, instead of pasta; serve your wine and cheese with a crisp seeded rye flatbread instead of white French bread.
 
I understand that in a lot of cases this does mean spending a bit more time in the kitchen, so I’ve really made an effort to simplify the recipes and pare down the processes in this book—a polenta tart isn’t the no-brainer that a big bowl of pasta with tomato sauce is, but it’s in the ballpark, totally doable.
 
Another thing I’d recommend is starting with whole grains that are especially easy to cook and easy to love: quinoa, for example. Fifteen minutes on the stovetop, and it’s so incredibly versatile: it goes with just about anything—summer or winter vegetables, meat, fish, fruit, sweets—and can act as the grain or starch in just about any meal. It also makes a great quick dessert pudding.
 
Or just focus on one meal of the day and replace your dry sweetened prepared breakfast cereal with steel-cut oats: In the evening, bring the oats and water to a boil, remove from the heat, and let stand overnight; the next morning, just warm it up and it’s ready. Try savory toppings on your oatmeal if you’re the adventurous type. Instead of store-bought snack crackers or cookies in the afternoon, pop some popcorn on the stovetop and experiment with unusual toppings—there are tons of suggestions in the book.
 
ME:  Travel and food culture inspire my own blog so I love the international influences in your recipes. Where do you get your inspiration for these dishes?
 
LIANA:  I’m glad to know that’s a selling point for cookbooks these days! A lot of my cooking is influenced simply by what I find in the stores and markets around me at any given time of year, or wherever I’m living at the time. I’m cheap, so I use whatever is most plentiful and readily available, and sometimes that means coming up with a dozen ways to use plums or whatever because they’re in season and the ones on sale happen to be really good.
 
I go to a lot of restaurants—not so many high-end places, but taco shops and pho restaurants, random Middle Eastern and African places in strip shopping centers, and German bakeries on Main Streets in the Midwest. Just becoming familiar with the wide variety of cooking techniques used around the world—by eating in restaurants (and maybe peeking into the kitchens), by reading books, by traveling—can open your mind to new ways of doing things. For example, the Indian technique of tempering, or frying whole spices in ghee or oil and adding the sizzling mixture to a dish at the end of cooking: It works so well to infuse the food with a bright but deep flavor, can’t this be applied to dishes that aren’t necessarily traditionally Indian? Would it work with a Texas-style chili? Can’t hurt to try it, right? 
 
My friends have been incredibly valuable as resources too: Their creativity and willingness to try anything are constantly inspiring. I love getting that email from a friend who’s just made the best vegetarian tom yum, or the best oatmeal cookie and has to share the recipe. My parents, too, of course, are always experimenting with new foods and have many times pointed me in a direction I wouldn’t have thought to go in otherwise. I often feel like I’m just taking in raw information, massaging it a little, interpreting it, and sending it back out.
 
ME:  If I’ve counted correctly, this is your fourth cookbook. What were your experiences with the process of writing a cookbook? Were there any major lessons learned from the first that made the ones to come easier to write and publish?
 
LIANA:  Yes, this is the fourth. The first two were work-for-hire jobs, which meant that the publisher needed books written about those particular subjects, and I was given the job of writing basically to certain specifications—although it still surprises me how much leeway I was given to come up with my own selection of recipes and to write what became quite personal books. I occasionally wonder how they let some of those headnotes fly!
 
The canning and whole grains books were more traditional arrangements, which just meant that after they were done I felt more like an “author” than a “writer.” I wish I could say that writing has gotten much easier for me, but each book has been hard in its own way. The first two because the schedule was crazy and I had to make so many slow cookers’ worth of food in a short period of time in a very small apartment. The canning book because I was essentially canning something nearly every day for almost a year. The whole grains book because I felt like I was learning about whole grains as I worked: a lot of those grains were new to me, and the experimentation phase was pretty intense. The book I’m working on now, a vegetarian cookbook, has been challenging simply because of the sheer scale of the project: How do I narrow my focus? 
 
To answer your question in a more fine-grained way, from book to book I have gotten better about methodology: my system for developing and testing recipes, and keeping track of what I’m doing and what I’ve done, has become more refined, so not as much energy is wasted on procedural issues. I don’t repeat my mistakes because I’ve misplaced a page of notes or forgotten how long I cooked something. And some idiosyncrasies I’ve just learned to deal with: I thought for this current book I’d try to write the headnotes for the recipes as I was writing the recipes themselves, so I wouldn’t be scrambling to write them at the end, but I’m realizing that this just doesn’t seem to work for me.
 
Writing clear recipes and writing fun and helpful headnotes are two different skills. One is the kind of thing I’d prefer to write standing up at the kitchen counter with my notes and timers around me, or at the very least at a desk; the other needs to be written cozied up in a soft chair with a glass of wine or cup of tea nearby, late at night with a deadline looming. So I guess I’ll be writing a couple hundred headnotes right before the manuscript is due, and I’ve come to accept that the book will probably be better and more interesting for it even if my hair is a few shades grayer at the end of the day.
 
ME:  Any tips for those out there who aspire to write their own cookbook?
 
LIANA:  People who know about publishing say that in a glutted cookbook market you need a platform, a built-in audience, a blog with a ton of traffic. And that’s probably true if what you want to write is not within a small, specialized niche. But I think that if you can find a niche and fill it very well—like Sandor Katz has done with his fermentation bibles, or Isa Chandra Moskowitz with her vegan cookbooks written in a certain clever style, or Samuel Thayer with his foraging books—you can be very successful. You just have to convince a publisher that people want to read a book about that topic even though there aren’t already a lot of books in the market segment yet.
 
Publishers tend to be pretty conservative, and want to go with what they know will sell, especially with cookbooks, which are very expensive to produce, but I would like to believe that when presented with solid market research they’ll take a chance on something different. I wrote a canning book because there weren’t very many out there yet; there wasn’t even a canning section on the bookstore shelves, and I didn’t know where bookstores would even place it, but I knew there was this latent desire for more canning books out there and was lucky to find an editor and publisher who were eager to take the plunge.
 
Think about what’s missing from your bookstore shelves. What do you want to read? That may be what you should write! I’d also suggest you read, read, read. Blogs are great, but read actual published cookbooks, too, so you know how to write a recipe clearly and make your language consistent. This is the editor in me talking, of course: Clarity! Consistency! But I’m convinced that if your mechanics are sound, your personal voice comes through more effectively and the whole pitch becomes more persuasive.
*********************************************************************
 
Such great answers to my questions.
 
I’ve tried for a while to come up with a good krispie treat-like recreation using puffed kamut and rice without much luck. I was thrilled when I saw the Chewy Chocolate-Tahini Puffed-Grain Squares in this book, and I knew right away it was what I wanted to make.
 
Chewy Chocolate-Tahini Puffed-Grain Squares | Fake Food Free | A whole grain chocolate snack!
 
These are so quick and tasty. I kept mine stored in the fridge and cut them with a serrated knife after they got firm. I love these as a fast breakfast on a busy morning or as a post-run snack. 

Chewy Chocolate-Tahini Puffed-Grain Squares 

Reprinted with permission from Abrams Books. 
Makes 16 | vegetarian 
 
From the book: 
 
These chewy, dense squares were inspired by a recipe in Terry Walters’s brilliant book Clean Food. There’s very little in here that isn’t good for you, and yet my daughter—who is certainly no stranger to real sweets—absolutely loves them. Parents in particular should appreciate the value of a treat-snack you don’t really have to think twice about allowing.
 
These keep nicely for up to two weeks in the refrigerator. If you want to keep it gluten free, use puffed brown rice or millet or a combination of the two. You might also consider substituting sunflower seeds for the almonds (allergenic to many kids) if you plan to pack one of these into a kid’s school lunchbox or send them to school as a treat for the class.
 
Ingredients
 
 1 cup (110 g) whole almonds
 4 cups (60 g) unsweetened puffed Kamut, brown rice, spelt, or millet, or a combination
2 tablespoons shredded unsweetened coconut (optional)
1 tablespoon flax seeds, coarsely ground
3 tablespoons olive or vegetable oil
1/2 cup (120 ml) honey or maple syrup
2 ounces (55 g) bittersweet chocolate, chopped
2 tablespoons tahini
Pinch of salt
 
Prep
 
In a food processor or blender, pulse the almonds until finely ground. Dump into a large bowl and add the puffed grains, coconut, if using, and flax seeds.
 
In a small heavy saucepan, combine the oil, honey, chocolate, tahini, and salt. Cook over medium heat just until the chocolate is melted and the mixture is semi-uniform. Pour over the mixture in the bowl and stir with a rubber spatula until well coated. Dump the mixture into a 9-inch (23-cm) square baking pan or dish and press firmly with your palms or the spatula to an even layer. Use a bench knife or metal spatula to cut into 16 squares, then cover and put in the refrigerator until firm, about 15 minutes. Transfer to an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.
 
 
Chewy Chocolate-Tahini Puffed-Grain Squares | Fake Food Free | A whole grain chocolate snack!

Disclosure:  This cookbook was sent to me free of charge for review purposes. I was not required to post about it and received no compensation for doing so. As always, thoughts and opinions are my own.

 

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