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Sweet

Sweet Coconut Cookie Snacks

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Sweet Coconut Cookie Snacks

Yo, LOVE is in the freaking AIR! It’s Valentine’s Day (or thereabouts) and I made treats / used it as an excuse to be a little extra (remember when I sprinkled the lemonade???). For✌🏼Day this year, I made homemade cereal (yes, you read that correctly), homemade peanut butter cups (because I have issued a blanket moratorium on seed oils in my house), and these adorable four ingredient cookie snacks that are kind of like those samosa Girl Scout cookies. Now before you go off on a V Day tangent, I would like to stress that these cookie snacks are my new go-to, Valentine’s Day aside. They are the perfect dessert. I mean perfect.✨ And they are super easy to make. If you have kids, I ultra recommend these as a dessert option. There is zero sugar as they are sweetened with dates.

💖💖💖

Now, on the homemade cereal side, I forget about once every three years that I do not enjoy self-torture and make the cutest homemade cereal, a la Molly Yeh (champion of all things cute and sprinkles). Is it worth it? Probably not. Do I forget this periodically? Absolutely I do. This year it made for great mailing gifts but, man, is it a lot of work. Hundreds of hand-cut, 1/4 inch hazelnut cookies. In the words of Charlie Brown, good grief.

what you need

(this makes 6-8 cookies)

1 1/2 cup unsweetened shredded coconut <– these words matter

1 cup (~8) pitted, soft Medjool dates

1 tablespoon smooth almond butter

1 cup semisweet or dark chocolate chips + 1 tablespoon coconut oil

(optional) 1 tablespoon honey

how to make it

  1. In the oven, toast the coconut shreds for ~5 minutes on 350, or until beautifully golden brown. 
  2. Use the food processor to process the dates until they are in smaller chunks. Add in the coconut and the honey, if using, and mix until a grainy “dough” forms. Using your hands, form 6-8 little discs, ~1/2 inch high, with the dough. Use a chopstick to poke a hole through the middle. 
  3. Plop the discs in the freezer. Yes, plop.
  4. On the stove, melt the chocolate and coconut oil in a small saucepan or small double boiler (truth: I totally set a bowl on top of a pot with water in it.
  5. Once the chocolate is melted, remove cookies from freezer and dip the underside of each cookie in the chocolate, returning it to the plate with the chocolate side up.
  6. Return to freezer for ~30 minutes or until chocolate hardens completely. 

P.S. The homemade cereal contains: homemade hazelnut cookies, tiny amaretto meringues, toasted coconut flakes, mini chocolate chips, and dried tart cherries. 

additional quirky dessert ideas
Categories
Sweet

Coricos Cookies

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

Coricos

also known as Mexican Corn Cookies

Recently I took an incredible trip to Mexico. Not because Mexico is incredible. But because the dance and stretch of Mikkala at Living Yolates, and the flavor and nutrition of Sarah at My New Roots… are incredible. Among the many personal discoveries of the trip were a few culinary tidbits that I’ve brought home (along with an early morning yoga mat/kitchen dance routine that will live in my heart and my home forever):

  • Masa Harina and the riotous deliciousness of Mexican gluten-free pastries (I kid you not… ya’ll know I am not gluten-free). 
  • Falling back in love with cacao nibs
  • Creamy cashew-based inspo
  • The difference between virgin and non-virgin (aka slutty) coconut oil
  • AMARANTH!

Much of this will find its way here over the next several months, I’m sure, but for now, I give you the most delectable gluten-free delight. My new favorite cookie. The masa harina corn cookie. And before you freak out, masa harina is easy to find. Bob’s Red Mill makes it and I got mine at Whole Foods. 

🌽🌽🌽

One other note on [sugar]… technically these are supposed to be made with piloncillo which is a crystallized sugar used extensively throughout Mexico made directly from the juice of the sugar cane. Here in the States you might know it as turbinado sugar. You can get piloncillo at most grocery stores with a Latin section like Giant, but in this recipe I chose to make the syrup using my new favorite coconut sugar (another discovery in Mexico). And yes, if push comes to shove, you can just use regular cane sugar or brown sugar (cane sugar + molasses) to make the syrup, but both coconut sugar and turbinado sugar add some subtle nuance to the flavor that I prefer. 

what you need

[SYRUP]

1 cup water

1/2 cup coconut sugar or 1 chunk of piloncillo

1 cinnamon stick

1 star anise

1 whole clove

 

[DOUGH]

1 cup butter (at room temp)

2 eggs (at room temp)

4 cups masa harina

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

salt

 

[OPTIONAL VARIATIONS]

1/2 cup dried cranberries

3-4 tablespoons shredded, unsweetened coconut 

1-2 tablespoons fresh honey

how to make it

Preheat oven to 350. 

[make syrup] Place all ingredients in a small saucepan and heat until just boiling. Reduce to a low simmer and let simmer away for 15 minutes until a very light syrup forms (no need for 100% syrup consistency). The mixture will reduce by approximately half and make your kitchen smell amazing in the process. Remove the cloves, cinnamon stick, and anise, and let the mixture cool in a glass while you make the dough. 

[make dough] whip the butter together with salt using a hand mixer until extremely fluffy (like soft kittens or puffy clouds). Add eggs and continue mixing until combined. Add masa harina and baking powder and, using a rubber spatula, mix the dough until it begins to incorporate. Then slowly, in batches, pour in the syrup and mix the dough with the spatula until combined. If your dough looks slightly dry (mine did), don’t hesitate to add a tablespoon or two of fresh honey. See pictures below for reference.  

[shape & bake] traditional coricos are made to look like thin little donuts (like simit, if you are familiar with Mediterranean cuisine). Roll little bits of dough out using your hand and form the little circles, placing them on a parchment-lined baking sheet. You can also just make the cookies in the shape of little round pats. These cookies will not spread, so choose your shape wisely. 

[get fancy] these cookies are mildly sweet and pleasant on their own, however if you want to spice them up a little like I did, add the cranberries and coconut to half the dough. The little round pat cookies are the cranberry ones and then little circles are the plain ones. See pictures below for reference.  

Categories
Local Sweet

Happy Christmas 2022

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

Happy Christmas 2022

and a Rice Krispie Treat with #holidayvibes

If you worked for me, with me, or with Merigold Analytics in 2022, chances are you got one of these in early December. These little boxes are filled with the stuff dreams are made of – stickers, marshmallows, and Oreo cookies. This Christmas season, OneandahalfSlices made layered rice krispies stuffed with Oreo, Biscoff, Graham, candy cane, and many, many, tiny marshmallows. We celebrated Christmas this year bouncing between Arlington, Virginia, Georgetown, DC, and Melbourne, FL. We cheersed at the Four Seasons and set to work tying yellow ribbon around tiny take-out boxes. However you choose to be festive this year, I hope it includes a OneandahalfSlices recipe or two. Here are a few words of wisdom and 2022 in review in case you need suggestions.

Favs of the year (that got made over and over and over):

chimi (for steak or fish)

borek (for brunch)

paper plane (for libation)

crab avocado toast (for brunch)

signature salad (for weeknight)

tira (for special occasion)

katsu ramen (for the baby love)

fettuccine (for Sunday)

madeleines (for anytime)

I’d give you guys the recipe for Rice Krispie treats but it’s so stupid easy it hardly warrants a post. Melt 3 tablespoons of salted butter with most of one bag of mini marshmallows. Stir it constantly and once it bubbles, add six cups of rice krispie cereal along with the remaining marshmallows, mix, and spoon into a 9×13 pan. Let cool.

Eat the whole pan at once. 

I made variations of the theme of rice krispie treats this year for every customer demo, every large engineering meeting, and, yes, the OneandahalfSlices Christmas presents. The message for this holiday seasons is simple:

never bake without libation

love on your analysts and engineers 

measure less and live more

whatever you do, love your day

See you all next year. 

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Sweet

JT Chocolate Chip Cookies

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

Jacques Torres Chocolate Chip Cookies

chocolate chip cookie recipe oneandahalfslices

This is the quintessential chocolate chip cookie (yeah, I know, OneandahalfSlices probably doesn’t need another chocolate chip cookie recipe but this is unlikely to be the last…).

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.

 🍪🍪🍪

what you need

2 scant cups cake flour

1 2/3 cups bread flour

1 1/4 teaspoon baking soda

1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1 1/4 cup butter, room temperature

1 1/4 cups light brown sugar

1 cup granulated sugar

2 eggs

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1 dash cinnamon

12 oz chocolate chips of choice – the look and feel of these cookies is best with the thin Ghirardelli 60% baking bars chipped into chunks. I used 1 Ghirardelli bar and 1 cup of Ghirardelli semi-sweet baking chips (gold package).  

how to make it

Heat oven to 350.

Mix flours, baking soda, baking powder, and cinnamon together with a whisk (plus some salt if using unsalted butter). In separate bowl, cream butter and sugars with hand mixer until fluffy. Add vanilla and eggs, and mix again until combined. 

Using a spoon, mix the flor mixture into the sugar mixture until just combined. Add chocolate chips of choice and fold into the dough. 

Chill dough overnight (ideally – I made them straight away and they are still good!). The flavors blend a bit more when the dough is allowed to rest chilled. 

To make these cookies, you want your dough balls to be on the larger side: 3″-3.5″. Bake ~15 minutes until golden brown. If they are large, you may need to go up to 18 minutes.  

Other Cookie Recipes
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 madeleine cake recipe proust one and a half slices

French Madeleines

“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…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…all from my cup of tea.”

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

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brown butter chocolate chip cookie recipe oneandahalfslices

Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

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. So why wouldn’t you brown your butter? At this point, I’m not sure. I’ll be browning my butter until further notice. This recipe yields a crispy cookie that is extra sweet and super flavorful.

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Sweet

Oatmeal Everything Cookies

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

Weeknight Oatmeal Everything Cookies

One and a half Slices 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… 🍪

what you need

1 cup flour

1 1/2 cups rolled oats

1/2 cup (1 stick) butter at room temperature

1 large egg

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

1 tablespoon ground ginger

1 teaspoon nutmeg 

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 cup light or dark brown sugar

1 cup chocolate chips of choice (I prefer these cookies with +70% cacao… I’ve even made them with 100%)

1/2 dried cranberries

1/2 cup unsweetened coconut flakes (flakes, not shredded or grated)

1/2 cup pepitas

how to make it

Heat oven to 350.

Cream the butter and sugar together either with a hand mixer or with a fork until light and fluffy. Add the vanilla and egg, and beat until combined. Stir in flour, spices, and baking powder until a mild dough forms.

Mix in the rolled oats. Then add the coconut, pepitas, chocolate chips, and cranberries, and stir until combined. Mold the cookies into pressed patties (not round balls). This recipe will make somewhere between 15 and 24 cookies depending on how large you make them. 

Bake on a cookie sheet for ~15 minutes or until just golden brown. Serve warm. 

More Cookies
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Local

One Year Anniversary

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

Happy Anniversay OneandahalfSlices!

The first year of OneandahalfSlices was one of immense learning and creativity. From instrumenting WordPress, to logo design, amateur phone photography, Instagram recipe reels, and posting tempo. As of this writing, there are 76 well-curated recipes – some of them as old as my personal culinary history and some of them new to me in 2021. They include meat-forward and vegan meals alike, a lot of international flavors (Moroccan, Thai, Indian, Japanese, Italian), sweet things, and some staple cocktails.

To celebrate, I’ve got three things for you:

1) I asked my very talented and beautiful niece, owner of Liz Bakes, to make some custom OneandahalfSlices cookies for the occasion! Those cookies, along with the custom cat cookies she made honoring the household cats, are featured below. Find her on Insta and DM her to place an order for custom cookies for virtually any occasion. She’s based in Atlanta but ships nationwide.

2) The Year in Review. Scroll down for the Top 9 recipes (most liked, most re-created, most celebrated) from the first year of OneandahalfSlices!

3) A killer playlist for 2022. Need some new vibes to get creative, focused, vibrant? Got you covered. Just hit shuffle.

Now, onward into 2022. Sneak preview of what is to come… Tiramisu, even more ramen!, essential lasagna, even more chocolate chip cookies!, risotto, and many, many other delicious things.

Happy Cooking!

🥘

Liz Bakes Custom Cookies
The First Year in Review

Sausage Lentil Stew

Flaky Cobbler

Beautiful Berry Pavlova

Perfect French Toast

Perfect Pot Roast

Homemade Granola

Skillet Cornbread

Best Caesar Salad Dressing

Moroccan Chicken Tagine

🥗🍴🍻

Finally some shout-outs to those who have supported and entertained me culinarily this year!

(if you’re a Virginian, you’re going to want to read this)

  1. Longstone Farm (farm) – from your Sunday suppers, to your self-service farm stores, to your delicious, local pork, chicken, and beef, I enjoyed every moment I spent with you in 2021. You’re amazing people with an amazing mission, and an inspirational sense of purpose in our local agricultural community. 
  2. Sumac VA (restaurant) – you’ve cooked some of the tastiest meals I’ve eaten in 2021, 100% locally-sourced, in the midst of the most beautiful scenery in Sperryville, VA. Keep cooking!
  3. Patowmack Farm (restaurant) – you’re the most wonderful date night spot in Virginia, MD, and DC hands down. Elegant, inspired, Michelin-quality, locally-sourced cooking at its finest. 
  4. Spring House Farm (farm) – your farm store in Leesburg is enviable and I made a monthly trip out to you for chicken and beef for the entirety of 2021. To be continued in 2022.
  5. Potomac Vegetable Farm (farm) – thank you for being my local CSA, with ample pick-up locations, vegetable and meat options, and excellent organization. Your produce is something I feel good about eating and cooking year-round. 
  6. Whiffletree Farm (farm) – your local turkey and goose do not disappoint for the holidays and your self-service farm store in Warrenton is accessible and convenient. Your grass-fed beef is also unmatched. 
  7. Organic Butcher of McLean (market) – thank you for always having interesting meats and local products. You were the source of my 2021 boar chops, my experimentations with rabbit, and many other experimental meats in 2021.
  8. Seylou Bakery and Mill in DC (restaurant) – your locally sourced pizza on sourdough is quite honestly the best pizza I’ve ever had in my life. Worth the drive.
  9. The Dabney DC (restaurant) – you’ve become one of my favorite Michelin restaurants downtown with an elegant emphasis on local sourcing and Virginia/Maryland-based cuisine. Spending New Year’s Eve with you was unforgettable.
  10. Caboose Brewery in Vienna, VA – from locally-sourced small plates to Virginia’s best, local beer, there is truly nothing better than a Sunday morning run to your Vienna location or an after work stop-in. Plus, the comfy t-shirts!
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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… 🍪

Go To Post »
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.

Go To Post »
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.

Go To Post »
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Sweet

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 (iced)

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

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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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Sweet

Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies

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

Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies

vegan chocolate chip cookie recipe one and a half slices

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. When it comes to cookies, I am not personally concerned with thickness, but I do err on the side of crispy as opposed to chewy. These came out piled a bit higher than I might have liked but the texture is perfect – crispy on the outside with a traditional baked goods interior. And… the best part is…no butter!

what you need

2 cups all purpose flour

1 1/2 cups chocolate chips (see note below)

1 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 cup white sugar

1/2 cup dark brown sugar

1/2 cup vegetable oil (I use safflower)

1/4 cup water

Note on chocolate chips: Chocolate chips can fundamentally change a cookie. I prefer different types depending on my mood – from teeny, tiny miniature chips to oversized, large chocolate baking disks. These were made with your average-sized chip. In any case, 50% cacao or more is recommended. I usually buy Guittard chips (with Ghirardelli chips coming in a close second). These are made with Guittard Semisweets (orange package), but I am also quite fond of Guittard Akomas (pink package) and Guittard Extra Darks (red package). There is always the option to use closer to 85% cacao bars and chip them up yourself. 

how to make it

Preheat oven to 350. Whisk dry ingredients (excluding both sugars) together in small mixing bowl and mix in the chocolate chips. 

In large bowl, whisk together the oil and sugars or beat with a hand mixer until the mixture is light and fluffy, ~3-5 minutes.

Add the flour mixture to the sugar mixture and stir until just combined, careful not to overwork the dough. Form dough into 1-1 1/2 inch balls.  

Bake cookies for 10-15 minutes (mine take a little longer after freezing). 

Cookie hack!: If you’re like me, you a) want a cookie every single night of the week, and b) will by all means eat an entire tray (or package) of cookies if such an option is provided. Cookie hack: Make one (1) batch of cookies, freeze all cookies, and take them out, one at a time, one day at a time. Bottom line is you are supposed to chill the cookies for 12 hours before baking.  I tend to make one or two right out of the shoot and they are great. They cook in 10-12 minutes. When you do freeze them, however, they will take more on the order of 15-20 minutes to cook through. You want them light brown on top. 

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