Categories
Cocktail

Butterbeer (iced)

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Chilled, Foamy Butterbeer

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

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

🪄

what you need

1 bottle of cream soda [My brand of choice is Virgil’s Vanilla Cream]

2 oz butterscotch liquor chilled [My brand of choice is Dr. McGillicuddy’s which is, admittedly, quite difficult to find but quite worth the effort of finding it]

*note the use of “liquor” over “schnapps”

1/3 cup whipping cream

1 tablespoon sugar

a dash of cinnamon

freshly ground nutmeg for topping

1/2 tablespoon lemon zest

(optional) 2 oz cognac (or dark rum in a pinch)

how to make it

(makes 2 servings)

Whip the cream with the sugar into soft peaks. Just before it comes together, add the cinnamon to incorporate. A very soft whip works best as it allows the cream to infuse the cocktail more readily.

Add the cognac, lemon zest, and butterscotch liquor to a cocktail shaker with ample ice and shake vigorously.

Strain the mixture into two tall, preferably frosted glasses. Add a few ice cubes and pour the cream soda on top. 

Top with two dollops of the softly whipped cream and grate some fresh nutmeg lightly on top. 

Enjoy immediately, preferably while watching Harry Potter or playing Hogwarts Legacy.  

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Cocktail

Butterbeer (hot)

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Frothy, Hot Butterbeer

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

🪄

what you need

1 bottle of cream soda [My brand of choice is Virgil’s Vanilla Cream]

2 oz butterscotch liquor at room temperature [My brand of choice is Dr. McGillicuddy’s which is, admittedly, quite difficult to find but quite worth the effort of finding it]

*note the use of “liquor” over “schnapps”

1/3 cup whipping cream

1 tablespoon sugar

a dash of cinnamon

freshly ground nutmeg for topping

1/2 tablespoon lemon zest

(optional) 2 oz cognac (or dark rum in a pinch)

how to make it

(makes 2 servings)

Whip the cream with the sugar into soft peaks. Just before it comes together, add the cinnamon to incorporate. A very soft whip works best as it allows the cream to infuse the cocktail more readily.

In a small saucepan, heat the cognac and butterscotch liquor over high heat until very hot (but not boiling). Once steaming, add the bottle of cream soda along with the lemon zest. You want to leave the mixture on high heat for no more than 1 minute before killing the heat and letting the residual heat from the pot heat the liquid. 

Once warm, strain through a mesh strainer into two small mugs. Top with two dollops of the softly whipped cream and grate some fresh nutmeg lightly on top. 

Enjoy immediately, preferably while watching Harry Potter or playing Hogwarts Legacy.  

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Sweet

Pink Cake

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Pink Strawberry Cake

one and a half slices pink cake stardew valley videogame recipes media

Disclaimer: this is not my recipe. (but those are my pictures … I made the cake). This recipe is from the forthcoming Stardew Valley Cookbook (May 2024). 

More information:

What is Stardew Valley? Stardew Valley is a farming simulator videogame made by Eric Barone (solo dev) in the spirit of the Harvest Moon series and released in 2016. Since, Barone has released numerous content updates to the community completely free of charge, the latest being the 1.6 update which launched last month. (that’s a big deal in the videogame industry where every substantive addition to a game comes with a $5-$35 price tag).  

Why does a videogame have a cookbook? Because Stardew Valley is about community and it is, first and foremost, a simulation (which I have written about before). That means it is a game that includes aspects of real life, like Roblox or The Sims franchise. One of those aspects is cooking. Now you know how we got here. 

What is the significance of the Pink Cake? Nothing in particular except that it is Haley’s favorite in-game and it is the authoritative birthday cake for the storyline. Also, the game is all about farming and animals so, naturally, the recipe calls for duck eggs 🦆

What about the other recipes? Well, obviously, the cookbook isn’t released yet, but I am interested in what other recipes will be included. This is mostly because the recipes in-game are distinctly Japanese and rather odd… Spicy Eel (which increases your luck at fishing), Lucky Lunch (which increases your luck at everything), Strange Bun, Parsnip Soup, Seafoam Pudding…. you get the picture. Man, I cannot wait to see these recipes. 

The cookbook is a product of collaboration between Eric Barone himself and Ryan Novak, Barone’s friend who authored the first Stardew Valley online guide. Will I post all the recipes? No. Was I dying to post this one because they gave it to me as a thank you for my pre-order? Absolutely. And I totally used the Easter holiday as an excuse to make it. 

Cooking notes: It came out well. Moist, a little heavy, and I definitely should have used all the jam (I only used half thinking it might spill out of the sides. It didn’t.). Highly recommend if you need a quintessential, do-not-argue-with-me birthday cake… especially for a festive holiday, a young girl child, or a fellow gamer like myself. Happy baking!

🐔💕🍰

excerpt from the official cookbook below

oneandahalfslices stardew valley gamer recipe
oneandahalfslices stardew valley gamer recipe
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Categories
Cocktail

Felix Felicis

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

Felix Felicis

also known as The Kir Royale
one and a half slices kir royale felix felicis liquid luck recipe

I am jumping the gun a little bit here because technically this recipe is supposed to be featured as part of the upcoming French Dinner Series. But I wanted to start the year lucky

Where to start. 

Last year was a wizbang year professionally that culminated in the illustrious reimagination of Merigold. Last year was a lot of hard work and a little bit of luck. My first boss (yes, the same first boss responsible for my inelegant introduction to scotch) taught me many important things, one of which was to always begin elegant dinners with a champagne cocktail. His go-to was the Kir Royale. And it quickly became mine. 

So when I launched an analytic program very near and dear to my heart last year, naturally, in the spirit of my libation-inclined first boss, I named it Kir Royale. As I said, it was a lot of hard work and a little bit of luck. 

Since that time, the Kir Royale has brought luck in several locations (yes, one of them was Vegas…). It became symbolic to me for luck. In honor of the Harry Potter-themed open-world videogame finally launching this week titled Hogwarts Legacy (and to accompany my complete primary computer rebuild in preparation for the aforementioned), I dubbed the Kir Royale The Felix Felicis’.

Felix Felicis, in Harry Potter world, is the potion colloquially called Liquid Luck, and it brings some subsequent period of inescapable luck to all who drink it. Professor Slughorn gives Harry a small vile of Felix Felicis in Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince which Harry then uses (as a placebo) to give Ron confidence during Quidditch trials. Now I just have to figure out how to create a kumquat-inspired dessert and parlay it into dirigible plums…

Okay, enough lore. More cocktails. 

Bottom line, the Kir Royale was initially, to me, a symbol of elegance. Now, it is a symbol of elegance and luck. And it brought me snake shoes in 2023. It’s special. 

what you need

1/4 oz crème de cassis (French liquor made from the black currant; restaurants will sometimes substitute Chambord, made from raspberries, but this makes the drink quite a bit sweeter)

1 twist of lemon

champagne of choice 

how to make it

[pour] crème de cassis in a champagne glass

[top] with champagne

[twist] the lemon over the bubbles and garnish. 

[get fancy] with a blackberry

More Bubbly
one and a half slices aperol spritz cocktail recipe

Aperol Spritz

I am interrupting your regularly-scheduled programming here on this Easter weekend to declare Spring officially arrived here in Northern Virginia. And what better way to welcome and celebrate it than with a quintessentially-summer cocktail? (I know, wishful thinking at it’s best). So in honor of my lovely niece-in-law and nephew, I give you the Aperol Spritz, which I am now fully convinced is only complete alongside homemade pizza. Still working on the pizza but, for now, enjoy the drink!

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one and a half slices oneandahalfslices cocktail recipe Instagram inspiration summer

Summer in Madrid

Loosely based somewhere afloat in the Atlantic between a French 75 and an Aperol Spritz, I bring you Deep Summer. (And yes, our Ginger really did spend a summer in Madrid…) ☀️

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Categories
Veggie

Vegetable Tian

This dish is one of those you love to make simply because everyone goes crazy over how beautiful it is. Perfect for potlucks, Friendsgivings, and the like, this can also just majorly dress up a weeknight dinner table. You could actually make it an entire meal by adding some cooked loose sausage to the bottom along with the onion, but I’ll leave that variation up to you.

Vegetable Tian is another name for the dish we all may know as Ratatouille. You’ve seen the Disney movie with the adorable little mouse chef. Traditional ratatouille has everything from tomatoes to eggplant and, like most exquisite French cooking, is a peasant dish. It is typically made by dicing and sautéing the vegetables — super simple — served over rice or polenta. Ever since I saw the Disney movie, of course, I wanted to learn how to make the neat little vegetable stacks. But in the interim, this rendition will suffice. You can make it in a square or a round pan though, of course, I am going to recommend cast iron.

Pro tip: try to slice everything evenly. A mandoline helps… but I don’t have one. Also…when selecting your vegetables, try to pick vegetables that look more or less the same size and shape. This will help you in the stacking process.

 

🐭

🍅🥔🍆

 

🍅🥔🍆

🐭

what you need

1-2 small zucchini

1-2 medium yellow squash

2-3 roma tomatoes

3-4 small white or red potatoes

1 yellow onion, coarsely diced

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 cup parmesan cheese

thyme, salt, and black pepper for garnish

olive oil

how to make it

Preheat oven to 350 and then set to diligent work washing and slicing your vegetables. I hate to tell you this but the more thinly you slice them, the better this dish will look. Once you’ve got all your veggies sliced, drizzle some olive oil in the bottom of a cast iron skillet and sauté your onion and garlic for just a few minutes until they soften.

Remove from the heat and spread the onions out so they cover the bottom of the skillet. Then set to work alternating your vegetables in a spiral pattern or however you see fit. Once complete, drizzle with olive oil; garnish generously with thyme, salt, and pepper; and top with about 1/4 of the parmesan cheese. 

Bake the Tian for one hour. At the one hour mark, remove from the oven and add the remaining 3/4 cup of parmesan cheese. Return to the oven for just a few minutes or put it under the broiler for a minute to crisp it up. Let stand 10 minutes and serve.

More Food from Cinema!
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 chocolate cake recipe Chocolat movie

French ‘Chocolat’ Cake

You guys know I’ll take pie over cake any day, but if I’m going to indulge in cake, it can’t be the big, billowy, blustery American cake layered with frosting and unnecessary sweetness. Over and over again I gravitate towards French cakes because they are just more delicate, using minimal flour, relying instead of almond meal, and frequently topped with cream instead of icing. This one is on par with my little lemon cake but it’s chocolate… with just a few tablespoons of almond meal, it has a dense but delicate consistency. You could whip it up in under an hour for a last minute dessert and it’s beautiful with a coffee or a bourbon. #minimalistcooking

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french chocolate cake recipe one and a half slices

Simple Chocolate Cake

Now is the moment where we ask ourselves if we really needed another chocolate cake recipe. The answer (much like chocolate chip cookies) is always yes. Specifically, we can put this one in the category of #minimalistbaking and #frenchsimplicity. I’ll say this: there is a reason French cooking is king in the world of the culinary, and it has absolutely nothing to do with the decadence of the pastries or the massive amounts of butter and everything to do with its simplicity. The Five Mother Sauces, the peasant food-turned-elegant. Anyway, this cake is slightly denser than the French ‘Chocolat’ Cake as it is truly flourless. Enjoy!

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Sweet

Simple Chocolate Cake

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

Simple Chocolate Cake

french chocolate cake recipe one and a half slices

Now is the moment where we ask ourselves if we really needed another chocolate cake recipe. The answer (much like chocolate chip cookies) is always yes. Specifically, we can put this one in the category of #minimalistbaking and #frenchsimplicity right up there with the French ‘Chocolat’ Cake and the Little Lemon Cake. I’ll say this: there is a reason French cooking is king in the world of the culinary, and it has absolutely nothing to do with the decadence of the pastries or the massive amounts of butter, and everything to do with its simplicity. The Five Mother Sauces, the peasant food-turned-elegant. Anyway, this cake is slightly denser than the French ‘Chocolat’ Cake as it is truly flourless. My neighbor and I are in a debate over which one is better. Soon we will settle that debate by making a third (creating a tie breaker, am I right?). All to say that, yes, there will be yet another chocolate cake recipe coming. Stay tuned and, in the interim, throw on Chocolat and whip this one up for the ‘Would you like some chocolate cake?’ scene! 

what you need

5 eggs, yolks separated from whites

3/4 cup sugar

1 cup unsalted butter

1 1/4 cup (6oz) dark chocolate

1 1/2 cup almond flour

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon vanilla

(optional) dash of cayenne pepper

To serve: fresh whipped cinnamon cream

how to make it

Preheat oven to 350.

Fit parchment to the bottom of a springform pan. 

Melt butter, chocolate, and cayenne pepper (if using) in small saucepan stovetop over low heat. Once melted, remove and allow to cool slightly. 

Beat egg yolks, vanilla, and sugar together until the yolks turn pale yellow. Slowly, gently (so as not to scramble the egg), pour the yolks into the chocolate, stirring consistently. Add the almond flour and mix until combined. 

In a clean bowl (with clean beaters), beat the egg whites until stiff peaks form. Mix in half the egg whites to the batter, folding in gently but completely. Then do the same with the remaining half. (Yes, doing it in two stages helps keep the cake lighter). 

Pour the batter into the baking pan and cook for 40-45 minutes until set and a toothpick comes out clean. Serve topped with fresh cream and a dash of cinnamon. 

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Sweet

French ‘Chocolat’ Cake

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

French 'Chocolat' Cake

One and a half Slices chocolate cake recipe Chocolat movie

You guys know I’ll take pie over cake any day, but if I’m going to indulge in cake, it can’t be the big, billowy, blustery American cake layered with frosting and unnecessary sweetness. Over and over again I gravitate towards French cakes because they are just more delicate, using minimal flour, relying instead of almond meal, and frequently topped with cream instead of icing. This one is on par with my little lemon cake but it’s chocolate… with just a few tablespoons of almond meal, it has a dense but delicate consistency. You could whip it up in under an hour for a last minute dessert and it’s beautiful with a coffee or a bourbon. #minimalistcooking

This is also the cake recipe used in the movie Chocolat (for those who are following my cinema-inspired recipe line…). Vianne serves this cake dusted with cocoa powder and slivered, toasted almonds. I can easily envision a variation that incorporates finely shredded, unsweetened coconut as well. But we’ll leave that for another time. For now, enjoy brilliant, original, French simplicity. 

what you need

12 oz dark bittersweet chocolate, coarsely chopped

10 tablespoons of butter

2/3 cup sugar

5 tablespoons finely ground almond flour

5 large eggs, separated 

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 teaspoon cayenne pepper

salt

One and a half Slices chocolate cake recipe Chocolat movie

how to make it

Preheat the oven to 350 and prepare a springform pan by dusting it with cocoa powder and placing a round of parchment paper in the bottom.

Use a double boiler or set a bowl in a saucepan half full of simmering water on the stovetop. Melt the chocolate and the butter in this way, stirring to incorporate. Sprinkle the cayenne pepper in with the chocolate.

*Note: you never want to melt chocolate directly in a pot on the stove as it will burn. Take care not to get ANY water in your chocolate while melting it as this will cause the chocolate to separate and  harden. 

Remove from the heat and whisk in half of the sugar, the egg yolks (slowly, so as not to scramble them), the almond flour, and the vanilla until smooth. 

In separate bowl, beat the egg whites until they start to hold their shape. At this point, add the salt and gradually add the sugar until stiff peaks form and the egg whites become silky and shiny. 

Fold the egg whites gradually into the chocolate mixture just until no streaks remain. Overmixing will cause the cake to be denser than you want it.

Pour into the springform pan and bake until just set, somewhere between 20 and 30 minutes or until a toothpick comes out with several crumbs on it. 

Let cake cool completely, run a knife around the edge, release the springform pan, and serve with hot coffee. 

🎂

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Sweet

WFD Bars

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

Whipplescrumptious Fundgemallow Delight Bars

one and a half slices best chocolate bar

Okay, what?! What are those words? What is this chocolat-y gooeyness? And why?? I mean, yes!, but why?!

When I was a kid, I was a huge sugar fiend. My mother had a sort of unwritten rule in the house about no processed sugar anywhere – no soda, breakfast cereal, candies, gummies, or Hostess cakes. If we were to have dessert, we were to make it from scratch – banana bread (recipe coming soon), lemon cake, peach melba, chocolate chip cookies. While I agree 100% with this philosophy, it may have exacerbated my particular problem as I would go to friends’ houses and pour Coca Cola into Cocoa Pebbles and eat Oatmeal Cream Pies and Fruit Rollups by the box, taking advantage of my friends’ parents lack of attentiveness to our sugar intake. 

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was never my favorite movie but I was fascinated by the sugar-laced fantasy world the film brought to life. I can still picture Gene Wilder dancing through a field of sugary grass and daisies around a stream of milk chocolate, plucking a yellow tulip from its stem, using it as a teacup, then crunching into the cup itself like brittle, lemon hard candy. 🍋🌷 To me, the best part of any movie – especially a fantasy movie – is the scene setting. The Great Hall scenes in Harry Potter where the feast is served or the candy selection on the train. The Medieval fare (turkey legs, whole roasted pigs, red grapes, unleavened bread loaves, hard cheese wheels) scattered around Viking halls. The same is true for videogames. It is these little details that bring a world to life. In the case of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, the world was a saccharine, glazed, and sprinkled childhood wonder – like an Old Fashioned Soda Shoppe spilled out into the world for the taking. Brown cows and milkshakes, licorice laces and hard candies. Taffy.

I always liked the concept of a chocolate bar more than the chocolate bar itself. Something about the tinfoil waiting to be torn off. Something about the pristine molding. It was art. I almost didn’t want to eat it. 🍫🍫🍫 So when Charlie Bucket tore the tinfoil from a Willy Wonka chocolate bar, I was captivated. Then Johnny Depp got involved and I was even more captivated. That golden ticket Whipplescrumptious Fundgemallow Delight Bar became a symbol of the impossible – the intoxicating world where sugar was everywhere for the taking. Where it formed the very structure of the world from mountains to streams. Where it did not make one sick but cured all ills, like chocolate frogs in Harry Potter. 

🚗🚙🚛

Fast forward to 2021. The Piemaker and I are on a road trip. An exceptionally long road trip. 13 hours in the car with anyone will leave you wanting for conversation topics especially when the journey begins between the witching hours of midnight and 3am. The final stint between Fredericksburg and Northern Virginia found us arguing full tilt over the identity of Willy Wonka’s Whipplescrumptious Fudegmallow Delight Bar. What was it? What did “whipplescrumptious” mean? “Fudgemallow” was simple enough to unpack but what innovation, what variation on the theme of a Milky Way or a chocolate-covered graham, did “whipplescrumptious” imply? I had my thoughts as did the Piemaker. So silicone molds were purchased en route (on Amazon) and plans were made for a Whipplescrumptious competition. But then we got home, got busy, and forgot about the punchdrunk roadtrip rivalry until this weekend when I found the molds in the bottom of a kitchen drawer and decided to make good on the planned experimentation. After two failed batches of Sponge Candy – a candy with which I am intimately familiar given my two year residence in Erie, Pennsylvania – I arrived at a decent interpretation of the Whipplescrumptious Fudgemallow Delight Bar. Another variation may yet await us but the Piemaker is strongly in favor of this version. He did comment that the sponge candy is too sticky and slightly burnt on its own but integrates into the bar beautifully. For my part, I was just excited to revisit a childhood fantasy. And of course, I wrapped the bars in foil. 

what you need

2 packages (20 oz) milk, semisweet, or dark chocolate baking chips or wafers. I prefer Ghirardelli Milk Baking Chips for chocolate bars

2 trays of silicone chocolate bar molds with ~1/2″ depth (I used these)

2 cups miniature marshmallows

1/2 tablespoon salted butter

1 cup crumbled honeycomb candy (or graham crackers in a pinch)

For honeycomb candy:

1 1/8 cup granulated sugar

1/4 cup honey

Dash of cinnamon

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/2 tablespoon baking soda

how to make it

1. Chocolate. Melt 1 package of the chocolate in a double boiler (for me, this is a metal mixing bowl floating in a small saucepan filled with water. Elegant, I know). Once melted, spoon the chocolate evenly into each chocolate bar in the molds (~1 generous tablespoon per bar). Toss and catch the chocolate molds lightly in your hands so the chocolate settles to the bottom, then place in refrigerator to chill.

chocolate bar molds for one and a half slices

2. Honeycomb Candy. Place sugar, honey, vanilla, and cinnamon in saucepan over high heat and stir continuously as it begins to melt. Heat the mixture to 300 degrees (I used my meat thermometer as I do not own a candy thermometer. Make sure it gets hot enough or it won’t set!). Over high heat, this should take approximately 3-5 minutes. The mixture will smell fantastic and become a deep amber color. Remove the mixture from the heat and stir in the baking soda, noting that the mixture will froth, foam, and triple in size as you do so. Quickly pour the mixture onto a cutting board covered in wax paper and let it cool. It should be hard, crunchy, and ready for you to hit with something to break apart in 5-10 minutes. 

3. Marshmallow. Melt the two cups of marshmallows with 1/2 tablespoon of salted butter in a saucepan until just a few small lumps remain. Turn off heat.

4. Chocolate Bar. Remove chilled chocolate bars from the fridge. Carefully. use a butter knife or small silicone spatula (and your finger) to smear a small swath of marshmallow over the chocolate. Don’t swirl it around too much as the hot marshmallow will melt the chocolate. Do this for all bars in the molds. Sprinkle small, cracked pieces of honeycomb candy over the marshmallow for each bar. Chill molds. This step is messy. There was marshmallow in my hair. There was marshmallow on Aspen. There was marshmallow in the coffee maker the next morning.

marshmallow chocolate bars on one and a half slices

5. Finish. Melt the remaining batch of chocolate just like before. Remove molds from the fridge and spoon chocolate over each bar, spreading out to cover the majority of the filling, and repeating the toss-and-catch technique to settle the chocolate in the mold before chilling. Chill until set, ~30-60 minutes, wrap individually in tinfoil, and serve/gift! 🍫🍫🍫

More Sweets
one and a half slices banana bread recipe mom

Banana Bread

This delicious and simple banana bread is the timeless treat you want with your morning coffee, your afternoon tea, or just after dinner. It has a rightful place on my food blog because my mother made this recipe nearly every other Sunday growing up. There would always be a fresh loaf of banana bread in the house – her version has the golden raisins which is how I make it to this day. And it even freezes well! That’s right, throw a fresh (cooled) loaf in some plastic wrap and put it in the freezer to enjoy a few weeks later. That is, assuming there is any left. 😉

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Crispy Waffles

This may be an unpopular opinion, but I like crispy waffles. The fluffy, puffy, overly-leavened Belgian waffle never did it for me. As it turns out, there are many different kinds of waffles: Brussels waffles (puffy), American waffles (think Holiday Inn breakfast), Liege waffles (half-formed super sweet waffle-cookies), Galette or Stroop Waffles (the thin, crispy, sometimes caramel-filled cookies). Until the X French Toast experience, adventures in waffling was my favorite morningtime breakfast activity. Oddly enough, my preferred waffle is a crispy version of a Norwegian or Scandinavian waffle.

A Norwegian waffle is typically made in a heart-shaped iron and is thinner than most waffles. Upon discovering my preference, I was overjoyed to poshly note my predilection for a Scandavian culinary experience. Until the Piemaker informed me that my waffle preference mapped to the all-American Waffle House waffle. I’ve still never been to a Waffle House (don’t want to get mugged), but Googling has confirmed that, indeed, I like Waffle House waffles. Without further ado, I give you my recipe for perfectly crispy, Norwegian, Scandinavian, or Waffle House waffles (made in a heart-shaped, diamond-laden waffle iron from the 1970s, courtesy of the parents).

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chocolate recipe on one and a half slices

WFD Bars

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was never my favorite movie but the final stint of an exceptionally long road trip left the Piemaker and I arguing full tilt over the identity of Willy Wonka’s Whipplescrumptious Fudegmallow Delight Bar. What was it? What did “whipplescrumptious” mean? “Fudgemallow” was simple enough to unpack but what innovation, what variation on the theme of a Milky Way or a chocolate-covered graham, did “whipplescrumptious” imply? After two failed batches of Sponge Candy – a candy with which I am intimately familiar given my two year residence in Erie, Pennsylvania – I arrived at a decent interpretation of the Whipplescrumptious Fudgemallow Delight Bar. You don’t have to have experience with candies to make this work (I didn’t!).

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