15 November 2011

A Smorgasbord of Treats

For those of you alarmed by the different nature of my last post, this post should make up for it.

Last night I made brownies, but I didn't stop there. While the brownies were in the oven, I made mints too! Then I went to bed and woke up this morning and made peanut butter cookies! Lots of baking going on when I really should be doing anything but. I have a lot going on since it is my last semester of college, which I have mentioned, but it is getting a little hectic to say the least with under a month to go.

Lets start with brownies. I wanted to experiment with some kind of add-in that I hadn't tried before. I had some cream cheese in the fridge and some blackberries so I made a blackberry cream cheese to swirl in. Since I wasn't sure how berry cream cheese would compliment the brownies, I only added it to half of the brownies. Both sides turned out wonderfully. I have been craving brownies for a long time and these hit the spot. The berry cream cheese totally worked with the brownies, and the blackberry taste wasn't too strong (which I was worried about). My favorite part of the berry cream cheese brownies was how the seeds from the berries mixed in so every couple of bites I'd get a seed. Those of you who aren't a fan of crunchy seeds probably wouldn't enjoy these brownies as much.

Mixing up the brownie batter.

My very elementary attempt at blackberry cream cheese, with a touch of honey

Since brownies take forever to bake, I decided to occupy my time with another recipe. I actually found the brownie recipe in the little recipe book that came with my stand mixer (which I've used many other times). This same recipe book has a recipe for no-bake mints that I have always been curious about. The mints were very simple to make, just a few ingredients; all I had to do was mix it together, shape the mints, and then store them in the fridge! I was done in 20 minutes. The mints are pretty good, but I think that tonight I may try dipping some in chocolate for a peppermint patty effect.



Mints!

Half and half brownies... just ignore the fact that I poked them a billion times...

Today also happens to be the birthday of one of my awesome friends, Holley, so I wanted to make some cookies for her. Since Holley is the birthday girl, I asked what she had in mind and she requested peanut butter cookies. I've been wanting to make peanut butter cookies forever and had them in mind as well; apparently these cookies were meant to be! In case the coincidence wasn't enough, I recently purchased a giant tub (see photo below) of peanut butter from Costco, so I definitely had the means (and then some) to make peanut butter cookies.

In case you didn't believe me; this thing is enormous! Also, that is a full-sized mixing spoon.. mixing this jar of peanut butter up for the first time was extremely difficult as evidenced in the mess that I was making when I took this photo.

The peanut butter cookies turned out a little crunchier than I would have liked, but they still have an addictive property about them... I ate three right away. I also dipped some of the cookies in chocolate to mix it up, but I was operating under a time crunch so I wasn't able to share any because the chocolate hadn't hardened enough by the time I needed to leave. The chocolate had set by the time I got home and is a nice compliment, but I think next time I'll mix peanut butter in with the chocolate to give it more flavor.

Peanut butter cookies ready for the oven.

Chocolate-dipped! Holley, if you read this... I'm sorry these weren't ready in time to bring to class!

13 November 2011

Analyzing the Competition

Some of you may have noticed that the sole purpose of my blog isn't actually to continually provide you with delicious recipes and sub-par photos. For those of you who aren't aware, Beluga Bakery is actually my senior project at Alaska Pacific University and I have every intention of starting this business after I graduate. As of now it is just a dream, but that dream is rapidly growing and expanding. In fact, I just finished the rough draft of my business plan Friday. I'm pretty happy about that and feeling more accomplished than I have the majority of this semester. With just about one month to go in my college career, things are coming down to the wire and as more deadlines come up, so do thoughts like, "OH MY GOD WHAT AM I GOING TO DO AFTER THIS IS ALL OVER!?" Starting 10 December 2011, I will be armed with a degree from APU in Liberal Studies, a business plan, a hope and a dream. I don't want to get stuck doing something that I don't love. Life is too short for that. So, Beluga Bakery must come to life.

With that said, today I am going to share one of my recent senior project/business planning activities that I think was actually pretty interesting and definitely informative. Oh, and don't worry, the enjoyment of baked goods was involved. In fact, there was so much enjoyment that it became discomfort in the form of a sugar overdose and stomach ache.

Last weekend, Tom and I traveled to a few local businesses here in Anchorage that I believe will be competition for the future Beluga Bakery. We started with Fire Island Rustic Bakeshop, moved on to Sugarspoon, Modern Dwellers, and then ended at the Flying Dutchman. We got one of every cookie being sold that day from each place, brought them home and taste tested that night. This is what the collection looked like prior to our digging in:

Too. Many. Cookies.
We started with what we believed was going to be the least enjoyable, the Flying Dutchman. Here's what the box full of Flying Dutchman cookies looked like:


Keep in mind that none of these photos were taken with the intention of being put on my blog. I took these for personal reference so that I could remember each cookie consumed amongst the mass of cookies that night. Cookies are not the Flying Dutchman's strong suit. When we picked up the cookies, I also got a tart, which was delicious, but none of these cookies were too great. The moppens, however, were delicious. I'm not exactly sure what a moppen is, but it tasted like a little shortbread cookie. They weren't too bad. Nothing in this cookie box that was worth going back for, though.

Next we opened up the bag from Modern Dwellers. Although Modern Dwellers isn't exactly a bakery, they provide baked goods with organic ingredients on a regular basis, which definitely poses a significant threat to Beluga Bakery. When we stopped in they had two cookies available, both a dark chocolate oat cookie, and another oat cookie made with their spicy Mayan chocolate.  Here's what they looked like:


The spicy chocolate cookie was spicy! I have gotten their spicy drinking chocolate before and I definitely enjoy it but it was pretty intense to bite into this cookie. The spice lingered. Both cookies had a really nice consistency and were obviously high quality, kind of expensive, but worth it in my mind!


Next we moved on to the cookie from Sugarspoon. They usually only have one cookie available at Sugarspoon each day because they are more of a dessert/pastry place, with lots of different cakes, bars, etc. I've never been crazy about Sugarspoon, but I think it's okay. The cookies at Sugarspoon are huge! Here's what it looked like:

Practically the size of the plate, insane!
 Butterscotch oatmeal was a fun combination, I'm not crazy about butterscotch, but it was a perfectly acceptable cookie. Nothing I would go back to buy, but edible. The consistency was nice and the cookie was baked fairly evenly. Overall, nothing too impressive, which has been my general experience at Sugarspoon.

Lastly, we tried the cookies from Fire Island Rustic Bakeshop. We definitely saved the best for last. Fire Island had a fair amount of sandwich cookies, and some interesting flavor choices, like a ginger molasses cookie with lemon creme filling. Here's a close-up of that cookie:

Once again, sorry for the poor quality phone photos, but I didn't have a blog post in mind at the time,
There were two other sandwich cookies: a chocolate cookie with chocolate creme filling, and a peanut butter cookie with peanut butter creme filling (hands down the best cookie of the night). The bakeshop also had a chocolate chip cookie, and various flavors of Parisian macaroons (we tried both pumpkin and chocolate). All of Fire Island Rustic Bakeshop's cookies were definitely worth going back for.

Easily the best cookie tasted that night: peanut butter with peanut butter creme filling. Delicious.

A little something different...Parisian macaroons.

 We ranked each cookie on a 1 to 5 scale, and then gave each bakery an overall rating. I averaged these rankings to come up with our own perceived quality of each of the four bakeries:

Flying Dutchman: 2.432
Modern Dwellers: 3.625
Sugarspoon: 3
Fire Island Rustic Bakeshop: 3.875

Perhaps we were tough critics, but it was nice to get an idea of the competition in the Anchorage area. I feel a little more prepared now, and a little more confident about the quality of my product.

03 November 2011

Snickerdoodles

An easy classic that most everyone enjoys


It's Thursday, which means.... baseball night! Wooooo! Since none of you understand what "baseball night" is, allow me to explain. You see, my boyfriend has this hobby called "baseball." This particular hobby requires an entire night each week (and then some) to be dedicated to it, and Thursday happens to be the night. Being the needy girlfriend that I am, I now have no idea what to do with myself on Thursday nights. Typically, I lounge around feeling sorry for myself while being horribly unproductive. Tonight I decided to break the cycle (which really started just last week when the first official "baseball night" occurred, so I suppose I shouldn't really call it a cycle...) and bake some cookies. I honestly haven't had much motivation to bake anything this week because I'm still trying to cleanse my body of all the sugar I consumed over Halloween weekend. However, staying true to my promise of a weekly post, I decided to bite the bullet and bake something. So I hope everyone appreciates this post!

Since I lack motivation, I decided to keep it simple and go with snickerdoodles. Like the Mexican wedding cookies I made last week, snickerdoodles are delicious but I've only baked them a few other times. The first batch was pulled from the oven about ten minutes ago, and they look good! That's right, ten minutes ago. This is the timeliest blog post I've written; it's just about as close to live blogging as I'll ever get.

Since my phone proved easier to use than my real camera (and thanks to MobileMe I can almost instantly get the photos from my phone to my blog without the involvement of any cords), I stuck with the same system as last week as far as photos are concerned. In all honesty, taking pictures is probably one of my least favorite things to do when I'm baking. That's not to say that I don't enjoy photography, because I do (I even took a photography class during my sophomore year of college!); it's just that I find the combination of photography and baking to be much too arduous.

Not as messy as the Mexican wedding cake cookies! Also, you can check the accuracy of my recipe.



These cookies turned out really well and I am definitely satisfied with the recipe. My recipe card says that I obtained this recipe on food.com, but that was a while ago so I no longer have the direct link.

Snickerdoodles:

For the dough:

  • 1 cup butter
  • 1 1/2 cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 3/4 cup flour
  • 2 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
For the cinnamon sugar:
  • 3 tablespoons sugar*
  • 3 tablespoons cinnamon* 
*This is what the recipe says, but I used less cinnamon and more sugar, because I didn't fancy this exact combination. I ended up with something that was more like two parts sugar to one part cinnamon.

Directions: Cream butter and sugar, add remaining ingredients. Chill dough for 5-10 minutes while preparing cinnamon sugar. Roll balls of dough in cinnamon sugar, bake at 350 for 10-15 minutes.
 

Ready to go!