A Spicy Sign of Autumn

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Nothing gives me warm feelings of chilly fall nights like thinking about Sweetzels Spiced Wafers.

Growing up, you don’t process food intellectually, you just become accustomed to flavors of your life. You don’t think about what’s local and what’s seasonal and what’s traditional, you’re just happy to chow down on what’s put in front of you, so you absorb the traditions of countless previous generations until it becomes second nature.  This is how the Philly region’s take on ginger snaps came to be a personal favorite, and one that is inseparably identified with the coming of autumnal chill.

Why do these simple cookies have such a hold on me?  For one thing, they’re really tasty.  The Wafers feature the perfect blend of sweetness and spice, evoking everything good about a pumpkin pie.  Even better than the flavor is the incomparable texture.  Many ginger snaps and spice cookies err too far on the side of chewiness or crispiness, but the Spiced Wafers find the perfect balance — like an al dente pasta cooked by a master chef.

And here’s the best part…if you have a glass of milk handy, you can make something unbelievable. Dunking these cookies is like playing a high-stakes game of chicken.  Too long in the drink and they’re mush — breaking up and sinking to the bottom of your cup.  Not long enough and it just feels “undercooked.”  But if you can find the sweet spot — I’m guessing somewhere around five seconds — you’ll have a melt-in-the-mouth spiced dream.

But perhaps even more than the taste, they signal a season change: their Halloween-colored box comes with a punch-out cardboard mask. I’m working through my first box of the year right now, but a recent get-together with my family got my gears turning.  How could I incorporate my new toy — the ice cream maker — with the Spiced Wafers to knock everyone’s socks off for dessert?

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You Know You’re in a Fancy Restaurant When…

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You know you’re in a fancy restaurant when there is a dish that ends in:  “____ (fill in the number) ways.”  Duet of chicken (Dale, Top Chef, Season 3), Trio of Pig and whatever whatever a few ways.  The examples could go on forever.  And to be honest, I’m not really a fan of the trend.  But, this, well, this is pretty bad ass.  I consider anything thought of on a lazy Sunday afternoon, while in PJs, bad ass.

And, you don’t have to dirty your kitchen very much with this 2 way dessert. In fact, it’s actually less work. Brilliant!  Unfortunately, I can’t take credit for this creation.  Anna (aka homemade hot chocolate) strikes again.  This dessert, actually, is perfect with some drinkable chocolate.

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Pumpkin Pie = So 2007

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Editor’s Note: As promised, here’s the baking post from Alex, which we solicited in exchange from promoting this great event. If you’re interested in trading recipes for exposure, always feel free to holler at ES!

If you’re like me and get sad every time you have to throw away a bag of wilted spinach or a moldy piece of bread (“Oh spinach, you taste so good and I could have eaten you, but I didn’t get to you fast enough…”), you understand my perspective on pumpkins. Fun to carve, but then they get all droopy and then they start to smell bad, and you MAYBE roasted the seeds, but probably just carved the pumpkin and left it to die, and now, sadly, you have to throw it away. This always gets me thinking about how to salvage the wreckage, aka what pumpkin-flavored things to cook with the remains…

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Good Things Come to Those Who Slack

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This post is so long overdue that I’m a little embarrassed to even blog it. Way back when, I bought lavender flower as a random splurge purchase, and asked you all what the eff I could do with this stuff. You gave me a ton of good ideas, and I was all gung-ho to make lavender pork rubs and lavender chicken and lavender chocolate cream pie. For my first step, I said I would make lavender shortbread cookies, since that sounded like the easiest.

I don’t know why I thought that sounded the easiest, considering I know eff all about baking. Even gansie called me out on that one.

gansie:  WHOA!

youre going to bake?

Well, four months later I finally put down the sautee pan and got around to it. Let me tell you, even though it involves baking and sugar and flowers and other sweet things, this is not a pretty story. Follow me after the jump. It’s gonna get ugly.

I started with this lavender shortbread cookie recipe. My first problem came with the very first direction: 1 1/2 cups butter (softened). Oops! I swear I did leave butter out to soften, but this was four months ago, when I first posted about lavender. By the time I actually got around to making this, there was no softened butter to be found in my kitchen.

A more patient man might have left butter out and waited an hour, but if you know anything about me by this point, you know that man is not me. Instead, I just melted the butter on the stovetop. I’m sure this is some kind of baking sin; feel free to lambaste me in the comments. Whatever, it gets worse.

I rolled my dough together and chopped in my lavender. I didn’t have fresh mint or lemon, as the recipe called for, but figured these were unessential. The dough certainly seemed fine without them. I thought about throwing in some almost-turning blueberries on the bottom shelf of my fridge but thought better of it and congratulated myself for being disciplined as I wrapped the dough up to chill for an hour.

Usually I am too impatient to let food chill for an hour (I mean, come on, there are cookies coming, how long can you be expected to wait?) But I felt bad about the butter fiasco so I decided to give the dough its due time. Instead of rushing it, I went about my business, cleaned my kitchen, went for a run, and took a shower (freelancing is productive!)

So I get back to the dough, about two-and-a-half hours later, thinking that leaving it in for longer than necessary was just fine, if not better, right? Noooooo. Untrue. The ball of dough was hard as a rock. Completely un-rollable. Even after I left it out for another half-hour and it chilled out, it was all crumbly and would not come together as dough should.

At this point I realized I had strayed far enough from the recipe that I might as well do whatever I wanted, so I threw an egg in there to wet it up a bit and bring it all back together. Realizing my jig as a disciplined baker was up, I said fuck it and threw in the blueberries. Pine nuts too. The directions call for you to roll the dough out to 1/4-inch thick, but it was way too wet for that now, so I just spooned it out and dropped balls of the dough on the cookie sheet, chocolate chip cookie style.

The baking part itself went by relatively un-disastrous. I kinda wanted them to be a little darker, but the bottoms started browning so I got scared and took ’em out.

The verdict: The lavender brings a sweet, earthy taste that I def like. The only prob is that sometimes you get a cookie that smells too strong of lavender and you just can’t help but think of soap. They don’t taste like soap, mind you, but that’s just what my nose associates lavender with. The cookie as a whole worked out well, but come on, it’s butter, sugar, and extras. How badly could even a non-baker like me screw it up?

I’d write out the recipe, but let’s face it, if you’re gonna take a stab at blueberry-pine nut-lavender shortbread, you’re probably not the recipe-following type either.

Hott Links: Me Want Cookie

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– This is gonna be a tough truth for a lot of you, but the world finally has an answer to the question: When cookie monster eats, where do the cookies go? [Slashfood]

– Speaking of foodie monsters, Rachael Ray is trying on a new hipster personality for size. The Rayster is hosting a party at SXSW music festival this year, complete with performances from nerdy math rockers Battles and a yum-o little band by the name of Holy Fuck. [Pitchfork]

– And while we’re on the topic of food TV, rumor has it that the Food Network will soon be available in dead tree format. [TV Food Fan]

Photo: Diamond’s are a girl’s best friend.

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