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Sweet

Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

brown butter chocolate chip cookie recipe oneandahalfslices

OneandahalfSlices has no shortage of chocolate chip cookie recipes – we’ve got your vegan chocolate chip cookies, your authoritative chocolate chip cookies (coming soon), and now what? Brown butter? What’s it for and is it worth it?

The short answer is yes. Browning your butter gives your dough or batter this deep earthy, nutty quality that is… delicious.

Okay, so is it difficult?

Absolutely not. Turns out the whole “brown butter” craze simply requires melting your butter stovetop until it begins to bubble, reduce, and turn – you guessed it – brown. 

So why wouldn’t you brown your butter?

At this point, I’m not sure. I’ll be browning my butter until further notice. In some recipes, like my French Madeleines, it is integral to the flavor of the batter, but in other cases (like chocolate chip cookies), it’s just plain tasty. This recipe yields about a dozen crispy cookie that is extra sweet and super flavorful.

what you need

1 stick of butter

1/3 cup dark brown sugar

2 tablespoons granulated sugar

1 large egg

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

3/4 cup flour

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/4 teaspoon baking powder

1 1/2 cup chocolate chips of choice 

how to make it

Brown your butter. Place butter in a small saucepan stovetop over medium-high heat. Once it begins to bubble and chirp, stir it occasionally to ensure it does not burn. Remove butter from stove and place in separate container to cool once it turns caramel brown in color.

Mix the sugars into the melted butter with a whisk. Add the egg and the vanilla extract, and whisk another ~3 minutes. 

Add all the dry ingredients and combine with a rubber spatula until just mixed through. Do not overwork your dough or mix everything to death. There is no need. You’ll only give yourself a hand cramp.  

Finally, add the chocolate chips, chocolate chunks, or whatever cacao varietal you have chosen. Scoop the cookies into 12 or so balls (don’t flatten these – they will spread out on their own) and cook on 350 for 11-12 minutes, cool on wire rack, and enjoy whilst warm!

More Chocolate Chip Cookies
One and a half Slices cookies

Oatmeal Everything Cookies

This is a super versatile, unique, hearty cookie recipe with very low sugar. They’ve got just about everything you could want in a cookie – coconut, dried fruit, nuts, seeds, chocolate chips. You can swap in and out things you may prefer – like pecans or chopped hazelnuts, different kinds of chocolate chips, etc. You could probably cut the sugar more if you used, say, golden raisins or dried blueberries, which are quite a bit sweeter than the cranberries. The higher the cacao percentage of your chocolate, also, the less sweet the cookies will be. I’ve made them with 100% bars before all chipped up and the rich, cacao-forward flavor is incredible. In short, get fancy. Play around. Make these your weeknight go-to cookie. And keep some in the freezer for late night cravings or, idk, breakfast… 🍪

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chocolate chip cookie recipe oneandahalfslices

JT Chocolate Chip Cookies

A few years back, thanks in large part to the New York Times, the baking world coalesced around Manhattan-based Chocolatier Jacques Torres’ chocolate chip cookie recipe, with its large, angular baking chips and its flat, disc-like appearance. And they were not wrong. Jacques Torres cookies are everything a cookie should be – large, crispy, with a perfectly balanced flavor and excellent chip-to-dough ratio. No complaints. Well, one complaint. Two flours are required, neither of which you are already likely to own. But if you make these a few times a year to freeze single-serving-style, it’s worth it to go the extra mile on the flour front. Bottom line, this is a reliable cookie that will not disappoint.

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vegan chocolate chip cookie recipe one and a half slices

Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies

Ah, the elusive and controversial – almost biblical – chocolate chip cookie. There are sure to be several chocolate chip cookie posts on this blog before we are through. For a while there, I was captivated by the dueling flours of Jacques Torres chocolate chips cookies, popularized by the New York Times. I still maintain that the best chocolate chip cookie I have ever had is found in central Manhattan on the counters of Culture Espresso. But I am happy to say that my current favorite chocolate chip cookie is vegan! Accidentally, as it turns out. I did not make this recipe because it was vegan, but it turned out to be one of the best chocolate chip cookies I have ever tasted.

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French Madeleines

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

French Madeleine Tea Cakes

Or 'The Remembrance of Things"

tea cake cookie recipe one and a half slices french

“Will it ultimately reach the clear surface of my consciousness, this memory, this old, dead moment which the magnetism of an identical moment has travelled so far to importune, to disturb, to raise up out of the very depths of my being? I cannot tell. Now that I feel nothing, it has stopped, has perhaps gone down again into its darkness, from which who can say whether it will ever rise? Ten times over I must essay the task, must lean down over the abyss. And each time the natural laziness which deters us from every difficult enterprise, every work of importance, has urged me to leave the thing alone, to drink my tea and to think merely of the worries of to-day and of my hopes for tomorrow, which let themselves be pondered over without effort or distress of mind.

And suddenly the memory returns. The taste was that of the little crumb of madeleine which on Sunday mornings at Combray (because on those mornings I did not go out before church-time), when I went to say good day to her in her bedroom, my aunt Léonie used to give me, dipping it first in her own cup of real or of lime-flower tea. The sight of the little madeleine had recalled nothing to my mind before I tasted it; perhaps because I had so often seen such things in the interval, without tasting them, on the trays in pastry-cooks’ windows, that their image had dissociated itself from those Combray days to take its place among others more recent; perhaps because of those memories, so long abandoned and put out of mind, nothing now survived, everything was scattered; the forms of things, including that of the little scallop-shell of pastry, so richly sensual under its severe, religious folds, were either obliterated or had been so long dormant as to have lost the power of expansion which would have allowed them to resume their place in my consciousness. But when from a longdistant past nothing subsists, after the people are dead, after the things are broken and scattered, still, alone, more fragile, but with more vitality, more unsubstantial, more persistent, more faithful, the smell and taste of things remain poised a long time, like souls, ready to remind us, waiting and hoping for their moment, amid the ruins of all the rest; and bear unfaltering, in the tiny and almost impalpable drop of their essence, the vast structure of recollection.

And once I had recognized the taste of the crumb of madeleine soaked in her decoction of lime-flowers which my aunt used to give me (although I did not yet know and must long postpone the discovery of why this memory made me so happy) immediately the old grey house upon the street, where her room was, rose up like the scenery of a theatre to attach itself to the little pavilion, opening on to the garden, which had been built out behind it for my parents (the isolated panel which until that moment had been all that I could see); and with the house the town, from morning to night and in all weathers, the Square where I was sent before luncheon, the streets along which I used to run errands, the country roads we took when it was fine. And just as the Japanese amuse themselves by filling a porcelain bowl with water and steeping in it little crumbs of paper which until then are without character or form, but, the moment they become wet, stretch themselves and bend, take on colour and distinctive shape, become flowers or houses or people, permanent and recognisable, so in that moment all the flowers in our garden and in M. Swann’s park, and the water-lilies on the Vivonne and the good folk of the village and their little dwellings and the parish church and the whole of Combray and of its surroundings, taking their proper shapes and growing solid, sprang into being, town and gardens alike, all from my cup of tea.”

– Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time, Swann’s Way (1913)

what you need

7 tablespoons unsalted butter

1/2 cup white sugar

3/4 cup flour, sifted (feel free to use pastry flour or cake flour if you have it)

2 large eggs

lemon zest

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1 Madeleine pan

how to make it

If desired, brown the butter in a saucepan; otherwise, simply melt the butter and let it stand to room temperature. 

Beat eggs and sugar together for ~8-10 minutes until it becomes fluffy, yellow, and ribbons run through it when a beater is removed. This is what makes a Madeleine a Madeleine – the fluffy, airy, egg beating process. 

Mix in the vanilla extract and the lemon zest. Then sift the flour and baking powder over the mixture, folding in with a rubber spatula, careful not to deflate or overmix the batter. 

Cover and chill the dough for 1 hour. In the meantime, brush each Madeleine divot in the pan with melted butter and preheat the oven to 350.

When the dough is ready, spoon about a tablespoon into each Madeleine divot, careful not to overfill the little molds. The dough will spread out quite a bit, so just one tablespoon in the center of the mold will suffice. The dough will be sticky and thick. 

Cook the Madeleines for ~8-10 minutes, or until the little edges just begin to brown. Remove and let cool in their tins before extracting them and sprinkling them with powdered sugar. Sere immediately.

Other Literature-Inspired Sweets
one and a half slices harry potter recipe butterbeer hogwarts winter grog

Butterbeer (hot)

Whether you like your butterbeer hot, iced, boozy, or clean, I’ve finally got the recipe for you. Personally, I see no way to drink it other than hot and boozy. #youreawizardharry 🪄

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one and a half slices harry potter recipe butterbeer hogwarts winter grog

Butterbeer (iced)

Whether you like your butterbeer hot, iced, boozy, or clean, I’ve finally got the recipe for you. #youreawizardharry 🪄

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Sweet Potato Pie

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Sweet Potato Pie

sweet potato pie Thanksgiving oneandahalfslices

The first time I had sweet potato pie was in college at the University of Florida. I went to the Wednesday afternoon farmer’s market and spent $4 on a miniature pie from a local pie shop. At the time, the idea of a sweet potato pie struck me as odd, as a baked potato pie might, but I took a chance. What hit my mouth was an exquisite, sweet, smooth rendition of sweet potatoes like I had never tasted them before. And suddenly, just like that, I was a sweet potato pie fan (not convert, mind you, because my locally-sourced pumpkin pie is an all-time fav). Naturally, given that we’re in spooky season, I asked The Piemaker to tackle this one since I had pumpkin covered. And man, did he deliver. We made the CSA happy as well with its falltime mandate to consume 4 lbs of sweet potatoes per patron per week given the surplus. So if you’ve never tried sweet potato pie, I challenge you to give it a chance. If you’ve never made a pie from the actual vegetable/fruit and usually buy canned filling, I challenge you to give that a chance. In any event, this is a great place to start. Happy Fall! 🍂

what you need

Dough

**this is the Serious Eats pie dough recipe and we will be using it again

2 1/2 cups all purpose flour

2 tablespoons of sugar

1 teaspoon of salt

2 1/2 sticks salted butter, cut into pats

6 tablespoons (ish) ice cold water

Filling

1 pound sweet potatoes

1/2 cup unsalted butter at room temp

1/4 cup granulated sugar

1/4 cup brown sugar

1/2 cup whole milk

2 tablespoons maple syrup

2 large eggs

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

1/4 teaspoon salt

pinch of clove

heavy whipping cream

🍁

how to make it

Dough

Place about two thirds of the flour, all of the sugar, and the salt into a food processor and pulse twice to mix. Then spread the butter pats evenly across the surface and pulse until the dough just begins to come together. Sprinkle the remaining flour on the surface and pulse again until just incorporated. 

Transfer to a bowl and sprinkle with the water 1-2 tablespoons at a time. Using a rubber spatula, work the water into the dough so it begins to hold together. Do not overwork your dough. 

Once incorporated, divide into two disks, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for ~2 hours. Remove from fridge, roll out on floured surface, and place in pie dish. For this pie, we did not par bake this crust.

Filling

Preheat the oven to 400 and bake sweet potatoes wrapped in foil for 45-60 minutes depending on size. You should poke your sweet potatoes with a fork and be sure to place them on a sheet pan because they tend to leak sweet stickiness all over your oven. 

Allow sweet potatoes to cool completely and then puree the flesh in the food processor, lowering the oven temperature to 350. Add remaining ingredients to the food processor and puree until smooth and combined. Check for flavor. 

Pour filling into the crust and bake for 50-60 minutes until a knife comes out clean. 

We are partial to homemade whipped cream for topping, sometimes adding cinnamon or maple syrup for extra flavor. A torched meringue, however, would really take this up a notch. 

More from The Piemaker
pecan pie recipe maple bourbon one and a half slices

Pecan Pie

This is the dessert for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner generously provided by The Piemaker. I’ve never been a huge pecan pie fan (nor was I a big Key Lime Pie fan) until The Piemaker came into my life. This pecan pie is as ‘from scratch’ as it comes, with hints of bourbon and maple folded into the filling, served with a luxurious maple cinnamon cream. This is a decadent dessert – decadent is an understatement. But if you’re looking to level up your Holiday meal game, this is the place to start. We definitely felt the need to eat one and a half slices… 😃

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one and a half slices key lime pie florida summer recipe

Key Lime Pie

This pie is spring and summer, Florida, and sunshine in dessert form. It is as light and airy as crisp, springtime air, with a tangy, vibrant flavor reminiscent of the place where Key Limes originate – The Florida Keys. It also isn’t sickeningly sweet like so many restaurant-grade key lime pies.

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Pecan Pie

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

(Bourbon Maple) Pecan Pie

From the @whiskey_CA_mmelier Collaboration Dinner

pecan pie recipe maple bourbon one and a half slices

This is the dessert for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner generously provided by The Piemaker. I’ve never been a huge pecan pie fan (nor was I a big Key Lime Pie fan) until The Piemaker came into my life. This pecan pie is as ‘from scratch’ as it comes, with hints of bourbon and maple folded into the filling, served with a luxurious maple cinnamon cream. This is a decadent dessert – decadent is an understatement. But if you’re looking to level up your Holiday meal game, this is the place to start. We definitely felt the need to eat one and a half slices….. Pairing. For dessert, @whiskey_CA_mmelier wanted a really luxurious and unique bourbon to complement the salty pecans, salty crust, and sweet filling. We narrowed it down to two, both from Calumet Farm. The 15 year was treating us all well but the general consensus ended up being the Small Batch. 

🥧

what you need

Dough

**this is the Serious Eats pie dough recipe and we will be using it again

2 1/2 cups all purpose flour

2 tablespoons of sugar

1 teaspoon of salt

2 1/2 sticks salted butter, cut into pats

6 tablespoons (ish) ice cold water

Filling

3/4 cup granulated sugar

1/4 cup maple syrup

1 cup light corn syrup

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

4 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

1/2 cup salted butter

3 cups pecans; coarsely chop 2 cups and leave the third cup whole

To Serve. Pour half a cup of heavy whipping cream into a mix bowl and mix with a hand mixer on high until loose peaks form. Add 1 tablespoon of maple syrup and a dash of cinnamon powder, and mix for another ~30 seconds until well combined. This is your maple cinnamon cream for serving. 

Pairing. Calumet Farm Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whisky.

how to make it

Dough.

Place about two thirds of the flour, all of the sugar, and the salt into a food processor and pulse twice to mix. Then spread the butter pats evenly across the surface and pulse until the dough just begins to come together. Sprinkle the remaining flour on the surface and pulse again until just incorporated. 

Transfer to a bowl and sprinkle with the water 1-2 tablespoons at a time. Using a rubber spatula, work the water into the dough so it begins to hold together. Do not overwork your dough. 

Once incorporated, divide into two disks, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for ~2 hours. Remove from fridge, roll out, and place in pie pan. *Note: you want this crust slightly salty as the pecan pie filling is quite sweet, so if you don’t use salted butter, be sure to add a little extra salt.

Pie.

Heat oven to 400. Par bake the pie crust for 15 minutes in heated oven using pie weights (or dried beans in my case) to weigh it down. Remove from oven and lower temperature to 350.

Whisk together sugar, maple syrup, corn syrup, cinnamon, salt, and vanilla. Add eggs and whisk thoroughly until combined. Brown butter in saucepan over medium-high heat (until it turns brown… stirring so as not to burn). Gradually pour butter into the egg mixture (slowly… so as not to scramble your egg!).  Mix in the two cups of chopped pecans.

Spoon pecan mixture into pie crust. Now you’re going to use that last cup of whole pecans to get super fancy, placing them around the top of the pie so the end product looks as pictured. 

Bake for 20 minutes in the oven, then remove from oven and cover with tinfoil so the crusts do not burn. Another 30 minutes in the oven and the middle should be set. Let cool and serve at room temperature with the fresh maple cinnamon cream!

More from the Collab Dinner
brussels sprout recipe whiskey pairing whisky one and a half slices

Spicy Brussels

Brussels Sprouts are one of our favorite falltime veggies, especially when they’re made crispy. There are so many unique toppings for sprouts (sprouts!) that they’ll never get boring. Here they are paired with a round, fruit-forward Orkney Island Scotch Whiskey to really accentuate their sweetness.

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one and a half slices sazerac rye whiskey rcipe

Sazerac

This is the opening cocktail for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner. The Rye Sazerac is one of the oldest, prohibition-era cocktails. It’s classic, elegant, and simple. With rye whiskey, lemon, absinthe, and bitters, a Sazerac is as refined as a cocktail can be. Here we present this  simple cocktail recipe as a forward to the rest of a classic meal. The absinthe on the nose provides an interesting twist to a classically whiskey-based cocktail. We used Sazerac Rye as the base.

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pot roast recipe one and a half slices whisky pairing

Pot Roast

This is the main course for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner and, my, what a deep, flavorful pot roast this is! Let me start by saying that I sourced a 4.6 pound chuck roast from the Spring House Farm Store to feed the four of us and had no regrets. A simple pot roast is easy enough to pull off especially if you have a slow cooker, but this really takes the flavor profile up a notch to make this velvety, sinful, fall-off-your-fork roast with plenty of fall veggies.

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Sweet

Pavlova Cake

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Pavlova

Pavlova cake is my new favorite dessert. It is the single most elegant, delicate, graceful dessert I have yet encountered – more so than soufflé, macaron, or profiterol. It is crunchy and mallowy, creamy and mildly sweet, and very customizable. Its cloud-like cream topping rests on a pillowy meringue base, topped with the fruit, chocolate, or accent of your choosing. Best made in low humidity, I give you, (Australian) Pavlova. Also check out this post for mini pavlovas with cardamom cream and pistachio!

🌻🌻🌻

what you need

1 cup white sugar + 2-3 more tablespoons extra

4 large egg whites

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/2 teaspoon cream or tartar (sub arrowroot, rice wine vinegar, or lemon juice)

1 teaspoon corn starch

1 pint heavy whipping cream

Fruit of choice, maple syrup, chocolate shavings, cocoa powder, cinnamon, etc. for topping.

Latest Posts

Strawberry & toasted pistachio with cardamom cream

Cinnamon cream with raspberry & toasted coconut 

Strawberry with milk chocolate shavings 

Strawberry & toasted walnut with maple cream

Dark chocolate shavings & toasted pecan

Grand Marnier cream with strawberry

Blackberry & pomegranate seed

Dark chocolate shavings over honey cream

how to make it

Preheat the oven to 350 and prepare a baking sheet with parchment paper.

Base. Beat the egg whites until peaks are stiff and stand upright when the beaters are inverted. Add in the sugar and continue beating until the peaks are stiff and glossy. This should take just under 10 minutes. Stir in the cream of tartar and cornstarch.

Spoon meringue onto parchment paper and smooth with a spatula using a circular motion. The meringue should form an 8-9 inch circle with a dip in the middle and higher edges.

Bake. Place in oven and immediately reduce oven temperature to 200. Bake the large Pavlova for approximately 90 minutes or until edges become golden and the top cracks slightly. 

Top. Beat the heavy whipping cream (I use just under a pint) until soft peaks form. Add desired amount of sugar for sweetness and beat until medium peaks form. Pro-tip: try adding cinnamon and/or maple syrup to the whipped cream to sweeten and flavor. Spoon whipped cream onto meringue base and use a spatula to spread it and smooth it to desired aesthetic. 

Decorate. This is the fun part. Sprinkle on your fruit of choice, cinnamon, chocolate shavings, or anything else that occurs to you. Some of my favorite combinations are listed to the left!

Slice and serve immediately. Pavlova will keep overnight in the refrigerator. You can easily make the meringue base and whipped cream in advanced, and assemble the Pavlova at the last minute for serving.

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Local

Grain, Meal, Rice

It’s no secret that I’m a proponent of local. Local meat, local produce, #getacsa. But what about grains?

Can those be local? Do we even produce them here in Virginia? About a year ago, I sifted through my pantry and saw flours from Bob’s Red Mill and King Arthur, lentils from the Dakotas, and rice from India or the Lundberg family in California. ‘There have to be mills around here somewhere,’ I thought. And the search was on.

Ritual Fine Foods maintains a list organized by US state for where to source local and organic grains.

Below, you’ll find several mills local to Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and the Carolinas, which is the general area I’m going to go ahead and call “local” for myself. Most of them ship but I set out on a mission to visit each one and replace 90% of the packaged items in my pantry with locally-sourced grains, meals, and rice.

Wade’s Mill. Wade’s Mill is an awesome mill just outside of Charlottesville, VA. It’s been milling local grains since 1750, is open to visitors, and even hosts an annual 5K. The mill offers: grits, cornmeal, corn flour, wheat flour (whole wheat and white), wheat bran, farro and winter wheat, buckwheat flour, rye flour, and spelt flour. 

Migrash Farm in Maryland, milling kosher Chesapeake grain. For us Virginians, this is as truly local as it gets! Migrash is a small operation but the quality of its product is fantastic. It is said of Migrash that “the primary farmer can be contrarian and ornery; others who work there abiding and of refined character.” The harvests appear on the website but, typically, the mill offers: flours made from einkorn, seasonal wheats, rye, and spelt, in addition to rolled oats (for oatmeal!) corn flour, cornmeal, grits, and whole kernels.

Anson Mills is a larger operation out of South Carolina and is featured in many farm-to-table settings (restaurants, B&Bs, etc.) throughout the region, to include at The Biltmore Estate. The mill offerings are diverse: grits, corn, and polenta made from white, yellow, and blue corn; gold and brown rices and rice flours; semolina, pizza flours, bread flours, pastry flours, and whole wheat and white flours; rye flour; rolled oats; farro; gluten-free flour; and season peas (such as red peas!). 

Castle Valley Mill just outside of Philadelphia mills mostly local PA grains. The mill offers: whole and ground emmer, spelt, and rye, grits, cornmeal, and flours.

My CSA, run by Potomac Vegetable Farms, partners with many local operations to offer more products than just produce. Recently, they provisioned dried black beans and crowder peas sourced from The Farm at Sunnyside (@farmerchefcasey). And oh my God, they are the BEST black beans I have ever tasted. 

Which brings me to some gaps in local sourcing. If anyone knows where to find the following items locally in the region, please drop it in the comments section: lentils, beans (of any kind), dried peas (of any kind), petite couscous, steel-cut oats, barley, and quinoa

Finally, a couple things to note before seeking out local grains and legumes:

  1. Since they do not contain preservatives, they don’t keep as well or as long as the ones bought in the store. Yes, I invested in some large glass cannisters and, yes, I love them. But this isn’t necessary. Just make sure you have enough cool, dry storage space in your pantry and some room in the freezer as well.
  2. The local flours often require more in recipes, sometimes almost double. For example, when I made pancakes with the local flour, I needed close to four cups as opposed to the two cups of all-purpose flour the recipe called for.

things you can make with rice

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Veggie

Cornbread

one and a half slices recipes local delicious food

Basic Skillet Cornbread

cornbread recipe authentic one and a half slices

If you are from the south, you know that the only way to make cornbread is in a skillet. It should be drier than it is wet, breadier than it is cakey, and not overly sweet (but lightly sweetened with fresh honey). It should also be free from whole corn kernels. In my opinion. If you’re looking for that spongy corn cake served in Barbeque restaurants, this is not it. But this is what you need if the black eyed peas are soaking.

what you need

1 1/2 cup fresh ground corn meal

1/2 cup plain flour

2 tablespoons honey

1 teaspoon salt

1 tablespoon baking powder

2 eggs

2 tablespoons oil (vegetable, safflower, olive)

1 1/4 cup whole milk

how to make it

Utensils: cast iron skillet

Preheat oven to 425 and oil the cast iron skillet. Put it in the oven to heat up a bit.

Mix dry ingredients together. Separately, beat the wet ingredients together. Then mix all ingredients and pour into the warm cast iron skillet.

Bake for 20-25 minutes. If the top does not brown enough for your liking, feel free to broil for a minute or two.

Note on Local Grains, Meal, & Rice

Check out the Grain, Meal, & Rice post.

The Story Behind One(andahalf)Slices

One(andahalf)Slices was originally conceived as a non-fiction book, the subject of which was to posit the First Principles of healthy, holistic living.

(Interlude: First Principles and Fermi Questions are cognitive heuristics that allow us to simplify complex concepts and seemingly intractable problems)

There were going to be four sections in the book corresponding to my four first principles for health: Movement, Hydration, Nutrition, and Rest. The sections were to contain chapters on how to pursue these things in daily life, recipes, thoughts, funny stories, and other things. Fundamentally, I wanted the text to underscore the two things that, in my opinion, are hardest for humans: 1) balance and 2) consistency

To treat oneself with indulgence and discipline in equal measure. And to do so consistently.

Nothing earth shattering, right?

Anyway, I kept a running list of chapter ideas in my little black work notebook for a year or two. Even wrote a couple. The idea for the title OneandahalfSlices came to me one day while eating pie with a friend.

After finishing my first slice of pie, the usual debate began in my head: ‘Man, I want another piece. No, you don’t need one. But you’re literally going to finish this entire pie later anyway so might as well. Seriously, a little self control never killed anyone.’ until I settled on the obvious answer… to have another HALF slice of pie.

“I’m going to have half a slice more,” I announced.

“Who has a HALF a slice of pie?” my friend scoffed from the couch, without looking up from her second piece.

And that got me to thinking… who DOES only have half a slice of pie. Or pizza. Or cake. Or cornbread. Well… I do. All the time. In fact, I frequently eat one and a half slices of many things. Because two slices is just too much but one slice is never quite enough. To treat oneself with indulgence and discipline in equal measure and to do so consistently. 

OneandahalfSlices became, in a way, a philosophy. Go to the gym every day and do something without needing to set a personal record, even if that something is just to stretch. Drink plenty of water without denying yourself bourbon, red wine, and coffee. Eat well and cook most of your own food, but every so often, mix corn flakes into Haagen-Dazs strawberry ice cream because there is just no need to take life all that seriously. Sleep in every so often without becoming chronically lazy. 

OneandahalfSlices is more than a title. And this blog is more than a collection of recipes. It’s a continued exploration… with stories unfinished and questions unanswered. Which is why the title is much more suited to something that will evolve as opposed to something that would be forever codified between a cover page and a conclusion.

I’ve tried vegan and vegetarian diets. People have told me repeatedly that the moniker ascribed to my approach to eating is called paleo. But there is a lot I haven’t tried as well. Like hunt my own food and learn how to process meat. Like meet the local farmers and purveyors of Virginia grain and groceries. Those questions will all be asked here and the stories told here as well.

Experiences will be curated, people will be invited, and many different perspectives will be welcomed.

But for those not in need of a philosophy, what you’ll find here are just recipes. Delicious, simple, tried and true, healthy (most of the time) recipes. Because food is much more than what we put in our mouths for energy. It is culture, sustenance, and identity all in one, with history as rich as the flavors that we taste.

#oneandahalfslices

#equalpartsdisciplineandindulgence

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Biscuits

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Basic Flaky Biscuits

My biscuit philosophy (because everyone has a biscuit philosophy, right?) is similar to my chili philosophy. Don’t try to make it fancy; just make it good. Well, these are good. No wait, really good. Flaky, buttery, salty perfection. 

I understand there to be about as much controversy over biscuits as there is over chili. Lots of different preferences and lots of this-is-how-my-grandmother-used-to-make-it lore. There is the traditionally Southern “cathead” biscuit; a dense biscuit made with buttermilk. Then there are drop biscuits, flakier styles, and dumplings. The American conceptualization of the biscuit dates back to the late 19th century, though the original biscuit came to being in the UK and first appeared in North America in a variation on the theme of biscuits and gravy.  

My personal preference is for super flaky, crispy-topped biscuits. In other words, not the cathead style. This recipe satisfies. Biscuits are not difficult to make, though they require  technique that, once mastered, becomes foolproof.

Makes around a half dozen biscuits. 

what you need

2 cups all-purpose flour 

2 tablespoons baking powder

1 tablespoon sugar

1 teaspoon salt

5 tablespoons cold, salted butter

1 cup whole milk, very cold

(You can go through the trouble to purchase or make buttermilk if you wish, but I don’t personally find it necessary. To make buttermilk, simply let a cup of milk come to room temperature, then add a squeeze of lemon juice or a tablespoon of white or rice wine vinegar and let stand for a couple of hours. The acid will start to ferment the milk… buttermilk).

how to make it

Biscuits are not difficult.

They simply require a little technique.

  1. Keep cold ingredients cold. Like really cold.
  2. Do not overwork the dough.
  3. Do not ‘seal’ the biscuit when cutting.

Preheat oven to 425. 

Sift or mix together all dry ingredients. Dice butter and add to dry ingredients. Cut the butter into the flour with a pastry cutter (I use a fork). Or place it all in a food processor and pulse until pea-sized chunks remain.

The butter must be kept extremely cold! A friend once advised freezing the butter and grating it into the flour using a cheese grater. Works well.

Add the milk and combine until the dough just holds together (and no further). Again, you can do this with a fork, a spatula, or a food processor, but do not overmix this dough. 

Turn the dough out onto a surface with some flour and mold into a lumpy, shaggy pat (technical term). To create the flakes, you need to fold the dough over on itself several times, without overworking and without smashing it down too hard. You also want to do this quickly as your hands will begin to warm the butter – this will cause the dough to become easier to work with over time but you are making your biscuits more dense in the process. So, fold the dough on itself 5 or 6 times, pushing down lightly after each fold.

Press into pat and cut biscuits using a round cookie cutter or (my method) a glass cup. Do not twist the cup as you press down to cut the biscuit as this will ‘seal’ the sides and prevent the biscuit from rising. Press straight down and bring straight back up. If you prefer drop biscuits, you can do that as well.

Cook biscuits for ~15 minutes until golden brown. Observe the seraphic rise of the layers upon layers of glorious flakes that you have crafted, and serve with the liquid citrine nectar of the Gods that is local to your area – honey (in my case, orange blossom).  

🍯🍊

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Sweet

Maple Dutch Baby

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Maple Dutch Baby

maple dutch baby pancake recipe oneandahalfslices

This recipe came to me verbally over a campfire and some slow-roasted shrimp and pineapple skewers. Two of the coolest people I know just moved out to Colorado and their parting gift to me was to tell me about the incredibly simple, unique beauty that is the breakfast Dutch Baby pancake. “Just whisk the milk, flour, and eggs, and make sure your pan is really, really hot.” Okay, fair enough. Thank you Mike and Sherry. 🥰

what you need

3 eggs

3 tablespoons butter, preferably salted

1/2 cup milk

1/2 cup flour

1 tablespoon sugar 

Cinnamon & nutmeg

Cast iron skillet

Topping options: powdered sugar, maple syrup, fruit (stewed apples or berries), fresh whipped cream

A note on humidity: I make this all the time in Virginia and it comes out beautifully. But I have made it several times in Florida with little success (even during the winter months). Humidity has a huge impact on this dish. Cutting down on the sugar can help since sugar retains moisture. 

how to make it

Preheat oven to 425.

Blend all ingredients except the butter in a blender until smooth. 

Place butter in cast iron skillet and transfer to oven until the butter has just melted. 

Remove skillet from oven and slosh (technical term) the butter around until it coats most of the bottom of the skillet. Then pour in the batter and return to the oven. 

Cook for 20 minutes. The pancake should become puffy and golden. Then, lower the temperature to 300 and bake for 5-10 more minutes. During this entire process, try to avoid opening the oven at all. 

Remove, decorate, cut into slices, and serve. Drizzle with maple syrup and fruit. Or top with powdered sugar, fresh whipped cream, and a compote. Get creative!

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