Sunday, April 21, 2013

I Made a Mess: Chocolate Peanut Butter Tart


Some of my counter, covered in flour, sugar, and cocoa powder

I made a mess.

It was a fun mess, but a mess nonetheless.

For dessert for Shabbat lunch, I decided to attempt this recipe. Chocolate and peanut butter is usually a pretty winning combination, even though I myself am not overly fond of peanut butter (I once legitimately got yelled at for this. I was told in no uncertain terms that, ‘Ambrosia is the food of the gods, and everyone knows that’s wine. But if it wasn’t wine, it would be PEANUT BUTTER.’ Sheeeeeesh).

I like Annie’s Eats blog. I really do. Despite the fact that she seems able to fit more into her day than I can in a week, despite that she (and her entire family) look kind of like those too-perfect fake family photos you get in the frames before you put your own picture in where you’re smiling weirdly and still have red eye (but who cares because pictures are fun!) and despite the fact that she loves using mason jars with a snooty little lemon wedge for drinking glasses and her food always looks perfect.

Especially this tart. I have no idea how she got her lines so straight or perfectly marbled or none of her crust to stick to her pan or whatever, but even with my flaws, this thing tasted pretty darn good, and that’s coming from someone who doesn’t even like peanut butter.

A few notes about this recipe:

-Since I keep kosher and was making this dessert for Shabbat lunch which is traditionally meat, I didn’t use margarine or heavy cream because I wanted to keep it pareve. I used Smart Beat margarine (I do my darndest to not use hydrogenated oils) in the crust, and I subbed Silk Sunflower drink for the heavy cream because it was the only thing in the goshdarn store (including soymilk) that didn’t have an OU-D on it.

-Ok, she says this dough will be ‘quite soft’. Understatement of the year. Maybe it was because I was working with margarine instead of butter, but this dough was suuuuper soft—like cookie batter soft. Called over the hubby expert before I put it in the fridge to chill and he said it looked ok. But even after an hour of chilling in the fridge, the idea of rolling this out with a rolling pin was laughable. We sort of smooshed it around the tart pan with a spatula (maybe chilling longer would have helped? Of course, that would entail actually planning your Fridays so you that have enough time to make a simple dessert. Planning is for suckers.)


 So. Squishy.

-Ironically, once I put it into the oven to bake, it reacted like a normal pie crust—which means those pie weights would have been helpful, since it did puff up in the oven. Live and learn.

-Annie is in love with chilling things. Maybe that’s why her dessert was more symmetrical than mine…ANYWHOO, here’s what I did: Baked the crust, stuck it in the freezer. Melted the peanut butter. Took pie crust out of freezer. Spread peanut butter. Put pie crust back in freezer. Did the whole melty cream/chocolate chip thing the way she describes it in the recipe (not my fave way to melt chocolate chips. Prefer double boiler method, but I digress! Perhaps for another post.). Took pan out of the freezer. Spread melty chocolate thing. Piped peanut butter messily and tried to make it look pretty.

End result:


 You can tell where my edges got a little too drizzly. Stuck it back in the freezer. Moved it to the fridge a couple of hours before we were ready to eat it, but it probably could have stayed in the freezer longer. And yes, it basically did taste like a giant peanut butter cup. Enjoy!

Original recipe:

DIRECTIONS


3 comments:

  1. I WANT TO EAT THIS.

    Also planning for suckers = new life motto

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  2. I love your description of Annie's Eats and other such blogs. The other category of Stepford Wife blogs are teaching blogs. They always make PERFECT DIYs for their classrooms and their classrooms always look cutesy and, again, PERFECT. Those people ALSO cook (sometimes)! And use mason jars.

    Though mason jars are cute.

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  3. Mason jars ARE cute! I really do love them, and all these blogs. It just fits so well into the authors' whole 'perfect idea for everything!' personas. I can imagine teaching blogs being like this also--all the perfect cutouts, and color coordinated corkboards that don't exactly reproduce in individual classrooms...of course, underneath my sarcasm is tons of jealousy and admiration. So now I get to poke fun AND learn how they do it (and maybe one day copy their ideas and have a sloppily painted craft/messy recipe book of my own).

    I like spending hours browsing the internet for new recipes under the guise of 'research'.

    So glad you like the blog, and thanks for reading. If you have any recipes you want me to try, I'm totally open to suggestions!



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