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Healthy Dessert Recipes – Raved About Pecan Pie!

May 3rd, 2010

Healthy desserts definitely do not need to be boring. Take this one. An amazingly delicious pecan pie recipe that has been in our family for decades. And super easy. Besides the Yum Factor, it happens to be a really healthy dessert too! (You may know that pecans are very high in all kinds of nutrition food values, so when included, they create very nutritious recipes. Plus – take a look at the flavorful sweetener we use).

You just can’t go wrong with this pecan pie recipe, which is continually raved about whenever we make it. I can’t even begin to tell you how many people over the years have said it’s the best pecan pie they’ve had. So I just had to share this specialty which has been passed down from my grandma, so this recipe is definitely tried and true. And it’s not just for the holidays (for some reason people associate pecan pie with Thanksgiving and Winter holidays, in the U.S. But make it any time! It’s also perfect for the Fourth of July! Or parties and receptions. You can use either a regular pie crust, or the mini party-style pie shells.

It only takes about 15 minutes to put together.

You will need

1 to 1 1/2 cups pecan halves

1 deep pie shell, unbaked (or mini pie shells)

1 cup pure maple syrup

Beat the above ingredients thoroughly, until mixed well.

Then add in the pecan halves and stir well.

Preheat oven to 350 F degrees. Put the pie shell (in its pie pan) onto a cookie sheet as a protection, so the pie mixture will not dribble onto your oven rack and burn while baking. Then pour the above mixture into the pie shell. The mixture will be soupy and can spill. Carefully put into oven. Bake about 50 minutes or until a knife comes out clean.

This fantastic pecan pie recipe is pretty much a no-brainer. Like I said, it takes about 15 minutes to make, but then of course allow for the baking time. You’ll sure to get compliments. So try it out!

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Create the Best Bread Pudding Recipe – New Orleans Style!

April 23rd, 2010

My grandmother had the Best Bread Pudding Recipe without a doubt. It is still one of my favorite desserts. Imagine my surprise on my first trip to New Orleans to discover all Bread Pudding is NOT alike!

There are actually several variations of this dessert. My grandmother’s version is a variation of a traditional dessert popular in British Cuisine. It is called bread and butter pudding and is often confused with bread pudding. Cubed bread is placed in a pan and then covered with an egg mixture to make a custard. After it is baked, the bread rises to the top to form a “crust” like topping. It tastes similar to French toast. The egg mixture forms a rich custard pudding at the bottom. Of course, my grandmother added her secret spices to give this a sweet nutmeg flavor. It is absolutely wonderful!

Louisiana bread pudding is made entirely differently and is just as good. The common ingredient is stale bread, but that is where the similarities end. The bread pudding consistency is similar to a moist cake and is warm served with a wonderful vanilla, whiskey, or rum sauce. The smell is heavenly and if you get a chance to visit New Orleans, this is a MUST have dessert that is served at most restaurants.

The following recipe, a specialty of my New Orleans sister-in-law, is a requested dessert at holidays, parties or any special occasion. The secret to this recipe is the bread. Stale french bread is the best. Use the long narrow loaves, if available. No matter what size pan she uses, it is always empty at the end of our family gatherings!

Best Bread Pudding Recipe

Ingredients

6 – 8 cups stale bread, broken in cubes 1 can evaporated milk 2 cups sugar 8 tablespoons butter, melted 3 eggs 2 tablespoons vanilla 1 large can fruit cocktail, drained 3/4 can condensed milk 1 teaspoon nutmeg 1 cup raisins

Directions

Combine milks, butter, eggs, vanilla, sugar, nutmeg. Fold in bread and stir. Mixture should be very moist.

Add fruit cocktail and raisins. Mix well. Pour mixture into a 9×13 baking pan. Bake at 350 degrees approximately 1 hour or until top is golden brown. Serve warm with whiskey sauce.

Variations

You can leave out the raisins. Try adding blueberries, peaches, or apples.

Although my grandmother’s recipe is still one of my favorite desserts, I can truthfully say that this is the Best Bread Pudding Recipe – New Orleans Style!

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Fast-Food Iced Coffees, McDonald's Brownie Melt, Burger King's …

April 17th, 2010

Generally speaking, fast-food joints offer mediocre fare that’s neither cheap enough nor nourishing enough to justify the havoc they wreak on their patrons’ health. Still, chains do occasionally have genuinely special items on their menus. Wendy’s Spicy Chicken Sandwich is well worth risking future infarctions for, Hardee’s breakfast biscuits are so good that they don’t even need meat, and McDonald’s french fries—when they’re piping hot and salted properly—outpace any potato chip on the market.

For some reason, though, the major fast-food places suck at dessert. Hardee’s and Chick-fil-A both have delicious hand-dipped milkshakes, but McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s, and Sonic all feature shakes and other ice-cream dishes that taste like a conglomeration of milky chemicals, palatable only if the right combination of cookies, candy, and/or whipped cream gets mixed in. (Actually, that isn’t entirely fair. McDonald’s plain ice-cream cones aren’t so bad. And its hot-fudge sundae will do in a pinch.) Still, Burger King and McDonald’s in particular keep pitching themselves as ideal spots to hang out, grab a sweet snack, and wash it down with some of their café-quality coffee. So I decided to do as both restaurants suggest, and try out the latest permanent additions to their dessert lineups.

From McDonald’s, I ordered up a Brownie Melt, accompanied by two kinds of Frappé: the Mocha and the Caramel. I have to say, first off, that I was surprised by how tasty the Frappés were. I rarely drink coffee any more, so I was glad that the coffee element of both the Mocha and the Caramel Frappé was strong without becoming overpowering. They both tasted like good coffee, not coffee flavoring or some scorched diner brew. Both were also too sweet, though they didn’t have the syrupy taste I was expecting. Between the two, I’d give the nod to the Mocha, because the flavor combination tasted more natural. I’m in favor of more restaurants adding caramel to their menus, but the Caramel Frappé was like a sugar-flavored cup of cold sugar. (Also, the Mocha Frappé comes with a hot-fudge drizzle over the whipped cream, and most desserts are improved with a drizzle of hot fudge. In fact, you can keep your fancy desserts and just leave me with a jar of hot fudge and a soup spoon.)

Frankly, if I was in the mood for a cold, creamy beverage, and McDonald’s was my only option, I’d order a Frappé before I’d order a shake. The Frappé isn’t as icy as I feared it would be, and it actually tastes more like milk than the official McD’s milkshake. One caveat, though: both times that I’ve ordered a Frappé at the drive-thru, I’ve been asked to pull forward into the little “Congratulations! You’ve just made the old lady working the beverage station heave a heavy sigh!” parking space. So if you’re in a hurry, you may want to make other plans.

As for the Brownie Melt, I have multiple qualms. First off, if you’re going to sell a hot confection covered in chocolate sauce, why not go the extra step and offer an à la mode option? I mean, the ice-cream machine is sitting right there! Charge me an extra 50 cents, walk two steps, and yank that nozzle down for a second. Bang: I just increased your profit margin, McDonald’s. You’re welcome. Yes, I will accept free hot fudge instead of money.

Of course the reason there’s no Brownie Melt À La Mode at present is because it wouldn’t work with the BM’s current packaging: a specially designed square plastic tray, resting inside a cardboard container that sports the slogan “Deliciousness defined!” And that isn’t the only unique design element of the Brownie Melt. The brownie itself doesn’t follow the expected “dense, rectangular cake” model that brownie-lovers have come to expect. It’s more like 16 brownie cubes, stacked together like Legos. (Ever had monkey bread? Picture a smaller, brownie version of that.) Why this odd configuration? Presumably so the dessert will be easier to microwave. Which means, I’m sad to report, that the Brownie Melt does not define deliciousness, unless in your dictionary the definition of “delicious” reads “scorched and rubbery, with an unpleasant sugary grit.” 

Moving on to Burger King, I treated myself to Funnel Cake Sticks and a cup of Mocha Joe. (As I was ordering, I briefly considered adding a Cupcake Shake, but I couldn’t pull the trigger. Maybe next time.) I’m afraid I don’t have much positive to say about the Mocha Joe. Everything I feared the McDonald’s Frappé would be, the Mocha Joe actually was. The coffee flavor tasted like coffee flavor, not fresh-brewed coffee. And even though the drink wasn’t blended with ice, it was almost as thick as the Frappé, and far more syrupy. I’d almost rather drink BK’s wretched fountain iced tea than ever sip a Mocha Joe again.

The Funnel Cake Sticks were at least palatable, though that’s about the best I can say for them. They resemble actual funnel cakes in that they’re crispy on the outside and chewy on the inside, and they come dusted with powdered sugar.  But they have almost no flavor, and strangely, they aren’t greasy enough. There just isn’t a lot of funnel-cake fun there. Part of the funnel-cake experience involves pulling apart a twisty hunk of fresh-fried dough. At no point in my funnel-cake-consumin’ life have I ever daintily lifted a sliver of dough and dipped it into a container of white icing, as Burger King would have me do. (I know the dessert has the word “cake” in it, but not all cake demands to be iced.) The icing BK provides doesn’t even stick to the sticks particularly well. Lift the stick from the icing, and the white stuff drips off the side and onto the fingers, like it’s being poured from a pitcher. The only way to keep your fingers icing-free is to treat the product as though it were a plate of spaghetti, and twirl the stick as you lift it quickly to your funnel-cake-hole.

But the truest sign that Burger King’s heart isn’t in this funnel-cake “dessert?” They recommend you order it for breakfast, too. That’s the fast-food mentality in action right there. Dessert? Breakfast? Why distinguish? Serving something special takes a backseat to serving something consumable.

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