Summer Peach and Apricot Pie

Pies are a beautiful thing. When I passed the fresh apricot bin in the grocery store the other night, I couldn’t resist picking up some to turn onto a bed of crust and deliciousness. The peaches were calling to me, too, so here we have a combo of some of my favorite summer fruit treats.

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I was lucky enough to have some pie last week that had marzipan incorporated into the filling, which completely blew my mind. It was fairly subtle, but oh so dreamy. Ginger, cinnamon, and nutmeg play supporting roles here, but the real shocker is the crust.

It’s made with vodka. I felt like a real lush walking into the store this morning at 9am and picking up a flask-sized bottle of the cheapest stuff on the shelf, but Cook’s Illustrated has never steered me wrong and this case was no exception. The beauty of it is that it prevents too much gluten from forming, which allows you to add additional liquid without making the crust tough. That little extra liquid makes the dough easier to roll out and your life more enjoyable. The alcohol completely evaporates during cooking and there is no taste of it left in the final product.

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Two things to be extra cautious about when dealing with pie crust: temperature and geometry. The fats and liquids MUST be cold (this is not a drill) and the dough discs you form should be as round as possible.

Summer Peach and Apricot Pie

Crust from Cook’s Illustrated

Innards inspired by Cook’s Illustrated, Martha Stewart, and Suzie

Crust

2.5 c flour
1 t salt
2 T sugar
12 T unsalted butter, cut into cubes and chilled
1/2 shortening, cut into 4 pieces and chilled {do not substitute the shortening for butter. It is very key in getting the right texture)
1/4 water, chilled
1/4 vodka, chilled (do not substitute)

In a food processor, process 1.5 c of the flour, salt, and sugar until incorporated, about 2 1-sec pulses. Sprinkle the butter and shortening over the mixture and process for 15 seconds, or until the mixture resembles cottage cheese. Fluff the dough and distribute it evenly around the blade, then add the rest of the flour. Go another 4 to 6 1-second pulses, or until the dough mass breaks up a bit. Empty into a mixing bowl, sprinkle with the water and vodka, and press together gently with a rubber spatula. When it is sticky and comes together, divide it in two, press each ball into a disc shape, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 45 minutes or up to 2 days. If the later, let stand for about 3o min at room temperature when ready to use.

On a heavily floured surface (and with plenty of flour on top of the dough), roll out one of the dough discs. Be gentle and only go one “forward and back” motion with your rolling pin at a time, turning the dough 45 degrees between each roll. When you have a 9-in round, flip the dough over (using the rolling pin to support it) and continue rolling without moving the dough (just angle the rolling pin in order to make it all even). When you have a 12-in round, gently fold the dough into quarters and transfer it to the pie dish. Unfold it and pick up the outer edge in order to work the dough down into the crease of the pie pan. Place the dish into the fridge while you work on the filling.

Filling

3 large, ripe peaches
12-15 apricots
1 c sugar
1 T lemon juice
3-5 T tapioca or potato starch (if your fruit is very juicy, use more starch)
pinch each of cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, and ground ginger
1/2 c marzipan

Bring a pot of water to a boil and prepare an ice bath for the peaches. Score the bottom of each peach with a paring knife, making a small “X”. Place the peaches in the boiling water for 1 minute (more or less depending on the ripeness of the peach) and remove with a slotted spoon into the ice bath. After a couple of minutes, use a paring knife to peel away the skin from each peach. In a large bowl, mix together the sugar, lemon juice, starch, and spices. Cut the peaches and apricots into half-inch (you should have about 8 cups when all is said and done) and add to the mixing bowl.  Mix everything together so that the peaches and apricots are well coated with syrupy goodness.

Preheat your oven to 500 degrees and place a baking sheet on the middle rack.

Roll the marzipan into a ball and roll it out to a 9″ round on the floured work surface from the dough. Take the pie dish with the dough out and place the marzipan on top of the bottom crust layer, so that it will be under the filling. Pour the filling in and take out the other disc of dough from the refrigerator. Using the same method as before, roll out to a 12″ round and place over the pie and filling. Cut the edges so that you have about 1″ hanging off. Tuck this edge under itself, as if the edge of the crust was diving back into the pie dish. Using your thumb and forefingers, flute the edge all the way around. Brush the top with water and sprinkle with 1 T granulated sugar. Place the pie on the baking sheet in the oven. Reduce the oven temperature to 425 and bake for 25-30 minutes, until the crust is starting to brown. Reduce again to 375, rotate the pan and bake an additional 25-30 minutes, until the pie is bubbly and golden brown. Let rest on a cooling rack for 2 ish hours.

Muy bueno.

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The Best Chocolate Cake

This is the only chocolate cake recipe you will ever need. Ever.

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It is moist, light, intensely chocolatey, and– to top it all off– it’s the easiest recipe on the planet. Half the time when people say “I have the best recipe for chocolate cake!” It’s THIS recipe. Thank you, Barefoot Contessa, for supplying us with a wonderful addition to the world of food.

This time around I went with coffee buttercream and Heath Bar toffee bits, because…I don’t really need to explain myself. It was delicious. Amen.

The cake is pretty delicate and has a fine crumb, so be wary when you start to frost– bits of cake may start to come up and mix in with your icing.

The Best Chocolate Cake

from Barefoot Contessa

1 3/4 c flour
2 c white sugar
3/4 c cocoa
2 t baking soda
1 t baking powder
1 t salt
1 c buttermilk
1/2 c oil
2 eggs
1 t vanilla
1 cup hot coffee

Preheat oven to 350. Grease and line your baking pans with parchment (you can either do 3 6″ pans or 2 8″ or 9″ pans. You MUST line them with parchment. This is not optional. This cake sticks like the devil to the bottom of pans and you will kick yourself if you do not use parchment.) In a mixing bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients (flour, sugar, cocoa, soda, powder, and salt). In a separate bowl, combine the buttermilk, oil, eggs, and vanilla. With the mixer on low, slowly add the wet ingredient mixture, until just incorporated. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and slowly add the hot coffee. It will be very, very liquidy. Divide the batter evenly between your pans and bake for 30-35 min (6″ pans), 25-30 min (8″ or 9″ pans), or 15-20 minutes (cupcakes). Let cool completely and frost with whatever your heart desires. Or just eat it straight, because it is magical.

Seriously, though. Best cake ever.

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Peanut Butter Crispy Bars

You know those sad individuals who are allergic to peanuts? The ones whose noses snivel at the mere mention of their nemesis and don’t even know what they’re missing? I wouldn’t trade places with them for all the light sabers on Tatooine. Peanut butter is the light of my life, the proof that good exists in this cruel world!

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I’ve tried a couple of peanut butter bar recipes lately, but none have been up to snuff and it’s made me question the immense faith I put into Pinterest’s ability to answer my every desire. Nothing keeps me away from that crack-cocaine website for too long, and when I returned with renewed hope I found a promising, mouth-watering, stab your best friend in the back for the glory of it all kind of recipe.

It combines the beauty of a layered bar, with it’s crispy crust and velvety center, with that of an actual piece of heaven. I want to be eating it all the time, so that I can grow to be the size of a house and say “Yes. It was worth it.” Because it WAS.

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Peanut Butter Crispy Bars

from Amandeleine

Crispy layer:
1 3/4 c rice krispies
1/4 c water
1/4 c sugar
3 T light corn syrup
3 T melted butter
Chocolate Peanut Butter layer:
1 c creamy peanut butter
5 oz milk chocolate chips
Chocolate Glaze:
3 oz milk chocolate chips
1/2 t light corn syrup
4 T butter, cut into small pieces

For the crispy layer, grease an 8×8 baking pan. Place the cereal in a large bowl and set aside. In a small saucepan, place water and gently add the sugar and corn syrup, being careful not to let it touch the sides. Bring to 235 degrees over medium high heat, stirring gently and frequently (this takes about 5-10 minutes after the mixture boils. Be very careful– hot sugar is one of the worst kinds of burns you can imagine). Remove from heat, stir in the butter, and quickly stir the sugar mixture in with the cereal until completely coated. Press it into the greased pan and set aside.

For the chocolate peanut butter layer, place both ingredients into a mixing bowl and set it over a small saucepan of simmering water. Stir constantly with a spatula until it is all melted together, then remove from heat and pour over the crispy base. Place in the refrigerator for 1 hour.

For the chocolate glaze, place all ingredients into the clean mixing bowl over simmering water and stir until all is melted together. Pour over the peanut butter and refrigerate another hour, or until set. I couldn’t wait and dove into mine well before that.

Nailed it.

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