
Let's start with salad. This one seems like a LOT of work.
Or if you prefer, we can go straight to dessert. For once you can eat with your fingers. Sort of.
Is this one man-friendly? Cabbagey chili with plops of mashed potatoes?
The weather's turned crisp and the leaves are growing crunchy, and while I'm no fan of the pumpkin spice craze, when I discovered frozen pumpkin in the freezer, I knew it was time for a batch of cookies.
I found a recipe online, and then tweaked it by substituting molasses for some of the sugar, replacing a quarter of the flour with whole wheat, and pumping up the spice level.
My beloved likes her cookies in the style of crisp English biscuits, but once in a while I indulge my predilection for the soft, cakey variety, and that's what you'll get with this recipe. The molasses provides an earthy fullness, the whole wheat offers a bit of texture, the chocolate introduces a melting quality, and you're left with a slight afternote of heat from the cayenne. A thoroughly satisfying, thoroughly fall treat.
Let me know if you like them!
INGREDIENTS
1 cup pumpkin puree
½ cup molasses
½ cup granulated sugar
½ cup oil (canola or vegetable)
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 large egg
2 teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
¼ teaspoon all spice
¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper
½ cup whole wheat flour
1½ cups all purpose flour
½ to 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
DIRECTIONS
Combine all ingredients except the flour and chocolate chips. When well mixed, add both types of flour and continue blending. When the flour has been incorporated, stir in the chocolate chips.
Plop by tablespoon or a smallish cookie scoop onto a parchment-lined baking sheet.
Bake at 375 degrees until tester comes out clean; around 10 to 12 minutes, depending on cookie size.
Senora Marta Brunet, a distinguished Chilean writer, is of Spanish or rather Catalan descent and she describes gazpacho as a meal of the Spanish muleteers. And meal it seems, in this version, rather than soup. These muleteers, she says, carry with them on their journeyings a flat earthenware dish--and garlic, olive, oil, tomatoes and cucumbers, also dry bread which they crumble. Between two stones by the wayside they grind the garlic with a little salt and then add the oil. This mixture is rubbed all round the inside of the earthenware vessel. Then they slice the tomatoes and cucumbers and put alternating layers of each in the dish, interspersing the layers with layers of breadcrumbs and topping off the four tiers with more breadcrubms and more oil. This done and prepared, they take a wet cloth, wrap it round the dish and leave it in a sunny place. The evaporation cooks the contents and when the cloth is dry the meal is ready. Too simple, my dear Watson.
"Nothing is smarter, nothing more pleasing, than a fruit finale to a meal."Clearly he agrees.