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Sweet

Olive Oil Brownies

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Olive Oil Brownies

one and a half slices chocolate cacao bean to bar bean-to-bar beantobar local recipe

I don’t really like brownies. But once a year, I’ve got to have them. 

I’ve made these twice so far this year and, I’ve got to say, the recipe is narrowing in on perfect. Chewy but not gooey. Crispy on the edges. Not too oily. Not too buttery. Maybe just slightly too sweet. And, ofc, no seed oils.

It’s got olive oil for skin and health, and tahini for the luteal phase. Texture 10/10

I mean, just look at that crumb.

For those chocolate-y days, you can have this in 45 minutes (you know, the days where your mother buys you a chocolate book for Christmas that makes you crave chocolate things every time you pick it up and you’re the slowest reader ever so it takes you four months to finish it and by the time you’re finished you’ve eaten more chocolate in those four months than you typically do in a year but hey at least it’s better quality chocolate)?

Book recommendation below. Then, the recipe.

one and a half slices chocolate cacao bean to bar bean-to-bar beantobar local recipe

what you need

*note: for baking chocolate and cacao powder,  my go-tos are Guittard and Navitas

2 large eggs, at room temp

1/2 cup (75oz) dark or semi-sweet chocolate

1/2 cup coconut sugar (can sub brown sugar)

1/2 cup granulated sugar

1 teaspoon salt

3 tablespoons almond flour

1/2 cup cacao powder 

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/3 cup tahini

1/4 cup good olive oil (that you would eat)

(optional) flaky sea salt, fresh nutmeg, and whipping cream

how to make it

Method: stovetop

Heat oven to 350.

In a saucepan, combine your tahini, olive oil, and chocolate over medium heat. Stir until smooth and glossy (do not let it get too hot), and remove from heat.

In separate bowl, mix cacao powder, almond flour, and salt together. Set aside. 

In yet another separate bowl, beat both sugars, vanilla, and eggs together with a hand mixer for 5 minutes until very fluffy. Pour in the cooled chocolate mixture and stir until combined. Fold in the dry mixture until just combined.

Do not overmix.

Pour into a parchment-lined baking dish of choice (an 8×8 works great. mine was a little smaller, so the brownies a little thicker, so the cooking time +5 mins).

Top with flaky sea salt. Cook in a warm oven for ~24 minutes or until top is cracking. Let cool for 30 minutes before cutting. 

pro tip: like this needs leveling up but do it anyway. take some heavy whipping cream and whip it with some coconut sugar or maple syrup until soft peaks form. spoon it over your brownie and, HERE’S THE HOT TAKE, grate some fresh nutmeg on top. this is a game changer. a flavor changer. an all around good idea.

after all, few things are made worse by freshly grated nutmeg. 

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Categories
Sweet

Crispy Waffles

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Crispy Norwegian 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).  

what you need

3/4 cup all-purpose flour

Dashes of cinnamon, nutmeg, and cardamom

2 tablespoons sugar

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/4 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/4 cup cornstarch (this is what makes them crispy!)

1 cup whole milk (non-dairy milk will work as well)

1/3 cup melted coconut oil

1 egg (this is also what makes them crispy!)

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

how to make it

Mix dry ingredients together well. 

Add all wet ingredients and whisk until combined.

Let batter stand 10 minutes (allowing baking powder and soda to activate and bubble). 

Pour ~1/2 cup batter into waffle iron and cook until desired doneness (for me, that’s between 4 and 5 minutes). 

Top with maple syrup, berries, berry compote, and/or fresh whipped cream. 

Note: You are going for near perfect fill levels when pouring batter into your waffle iron. Overfill and your waffles will be spongy and undercooked. Underfill and the top portion of the iron won’t make contact with the batter. Both cases will result in waffles that are not as crispy as desired.

Backstory

Doing a PhD brought many new rituals into my life – not all of them welcome and many of them nocturnal. One such ritual was the routine production of these heart waffles between the hours of 1:00am and 4:00am. The Piemaker made these for me when I couldn’t sleep or when I just had to get up and keep my hands on a keyboard through the wee hours of morning twilight. These waffles were one of many things that got me through. They became synonymous with crisis. Bad day, waffles. Can’t sleep, waffles. Impossible due dates, waffles. Disheartening advisor meeting, waffles. Today, I can happily say these waffles have returned to a symbol of happiness and calm mornings. But every once in a while, like this morning when the alarm sounded at 4:30am to write a particularly pernicious proposal for work, I make it until mid-morning, underslept and overcaffeinated, and turn to Norwegian waffles. For other PhD-related stories, see Mongolian Beef Fried Rice

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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.  

more literature-inspired recipes
Categories
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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Categories
Sweet

Banana Bread

one and a half slices recipes local delicious food

Mom's 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. 😉

what you need

1 stick (1/2 cup) butter

3/4 cup sugar

1 1/2 cup flour

2 1/4 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon salt

2 eggs

3-4 ripe bananas, depending on size

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

(optional) 3/4 tablespoon orange zest

(optional) 3/4 cup golden raisins

(optional) 3/4 cup walnuts 

(optional) 3/4 cup chocolate chips of choice

how to make it

Heat oven to 350.

Cream butter and sugar using food processor or hand mixer. Add eggs and vanilla, and beat for another 30 seconds. Add bananas, mash them up, and stir until well combined. Add cinnamon, nutmeg, and orange peel, and stir. Stir in flour and raisins/nuts/chips (if using) until just combined. 

Spoon into loaf pan, mini loaf pans, standard muffin tins, or mini muffin tins. Cooking times follow.

Standard loaf: 35-40 minutes (makes 1)

Mini loaves: 35-40 minutes (makes 4)

Standard muffins: 35-40 minutes (makes 12)

Mini muffins: 20-25 minutes (makes ~30)

Enjoy with tea or coffee!

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Sweet

Key Lime Pie

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Key Lime Pie

one and a half slices key lime pie florida summer recipe

(refresh August 2024) Let me start by saying that I don’t like key lime pie. Don’t get me wrong, I love pie… just not key lime pie. Cold, custard-y pies have never been my thing. So when a good friend of mine went on a key lime pie baking binge one summer, I wasn’t thrilled. This pie changed my mind. 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. The luxuriously silky whipped cream topping allows you to control a bit of the sweetness as well. In short, this pie is spring and summer, Florida, and sunshine in dessert form, and it has been made, at this point, over a dozen times. And, yes, you can make it with your run-of-the-mill Persian limes if you can’t find Key Limes.

what you need

Crust

1 1/2 cups finely ground Graham crackers

2 tablespoons sugar

7 tablespoons butter, melted

salt

Filling

1 1/2 tablespoons lime zest

3 large egg yolks

14 oz sweetened condensed milk

2/3 cup fresh lime juice (from ~10-12 Key Limes or 3-5 Persian limes)

3/4 cup heavy whipping cream

1 tablespoon sugar

how to make it

Make crust. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Combine Grahams, sugar, and salt in bowl and mix. Mix in butter until all Grahams are thoroughly coated and press crust with fingers into the bottom of a glass or ceramic pie dish. I like to add a dash of cinnamon to my crusts. Bake crust for ~10 minutes until the Grahams begin to darken in color.

Make filling. Beat zest and egg yolks together until the yolks begin to thicken, ~5-7 minutes. Add condensed milk and continue to beat until thick, ~3 minutes. Stir in lime juice until completely combined. Pour mixture into pre-baked pie crust and bake for another ~10 minutes, or until filling is set. Place pie in fridge to cool completely before topping, ~1-2 hours. 

Make topping. Whip cream with desired amount of sugar. Pile and spread cream on top of pie. It is not necessary to spread cream all the way to the edges; just do what you feel. Chill pie an additional 2-3 hours to ensure it is completely cool before slicing. Top with Graham cracker crumb sprinkles, lime zest curls, and/or lime wedges. 

#saltlife

I am from Melbourne Beach, Florida. From a long, skinny barrier island that runs some 100 miles down the East Coast of the state, beginning at Cape Canaveral and the home of NASA and ending level with Lake Okeechobee. Only accessible via bridge (albeit short ones), Melbourne Beach is a magical place in Florida insofar as it is one of the last places in Florida to have escaped abrasively flamboyant tourism. Disney World does not reach there, and it is still entirely possible to find a beach without another person on it and kayak a river in the company of manatees and dolphins. One of the best things about Melbourne Beach (aside from perennial sunshine) is the width of the island itself, at times no more than 1/4 mile wide, meaning you can get from a brackish fishing oasis to the Atlantic Ocean in 5 minutes on foot. Floridians can be a little cultish when it comes to Florida identity. When you live in a place where more than 85% of the population are tourists, it really means something to be a Local.

So let’s talk about some Melbourne Beach gemstones. 

Longdoggers. Longdoggers is the quintessential Melbourne establishment. The original sits right on A1A beachside, but with 6 different locations, you’re never far from killer waffle fries and house-brewed Hatteras Red beer (brewed just across the bridge at Intracoastal Brewing). Longdoggers sells a variety of LOCAL t-shirts and actually lives into that brand, sponsoring many of the local surf competitions and recreational sports teams. It also sponsors local beach cleanups and has a strong commitment to reducing the environmental impact of its establishment. As they say, “we live here.”

Sunrises. Obviously, on this side of FL, the sunrises are better than the sunsets. I’ll keep it simple. Don’t miss them. Head to the beach, consider a sunrise beach run, then over to The Blueberry Muffin for… a blueberry muffin.

German Food. Oddly enough, some of the best German food I have had outside of Germany is served in a house on the riverfront in south Melbourne Beach. Cafe Coconut Cove is local, secluded, authentic, and pretty romantic. 

South Beaches. I’ve noticed that the Satellite Beach and Indialantic beaches have become more and more crowded in recent years, with expanded parking and lower speed limits on A1A due to crowds. For a more secluded beach experience, head south. Beaches such as Ponce de Leon beach will have a fraction of the folks.

Kayaking. There are about 100 places to kayak and paddleboard in Melbourne, but, again, for a more authentic and remote experience, consider heading south. To rent a kayak and head out among the dolphins, you’re looking for Honest John’s Fish Camp

Fresh Fish. The freshest fish in Melbourne is obviously caught yourself, but if a fishing charter isn’t on the agenda, there are several places to get fresh catch. (If a fishing charter is on your list, Captain Nathaniel Lemmon’s river fishing charters are solid). Clayton’s in Rockledge or The Green Turtle  on Eau Gallie both have fresh selections.

Causeway Runs. There are three main causeways leading to the Melbourne Beach: 192, Eau Gallie, and Pineda. 192 will provide the easiest run as it is the shortest of all three bridges. Pineda would be the best run as it is the tallest and crosses two rivers: both the Indian River and the Banana River. But there is no sidewalk. Epic fail Melbourne, FL city planners. Eau Gallie causeway is your ticket. At medium height and with ample sidewalk, it provides wonderful views running from mainland to beachside, then on down Riverside Drive. 

Rocket Launches. Melbourne is a unique place to watch a rocket launch. If you’re up near Pineda on the beachside or at one of the Patrick Air Force Base beaches, the sonic boom will ripple the water around your waist. SpaceX is sending something up once every couple of weeks these days and also continuing to practice its re-entry and water landings, which can be fun to watch. 

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Sweet

French Toast

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

X French Toast

one and a half slices maple brunch recipe measurelesslivemore

Good french toast… like really good french toast… is about 25% quality of your bread (brioche, please, mmm) and 75% technique. The technique isn’t difficult but it is a bit time consuming. And it is best executed alongside bacon (let’s be honest, what isn’t at its best with bacon?).  This french toast came to me by way of a circuitous route, but it is here to stay (story below). It is thick-cut, only mildly sweet, and pairs well with deep maple and salty bacon. 

what you need

1 loaf challah bread (or bread of choice, but I strongly recommend challah)

5 eggs

1 1/2 cups whole milk 

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

2 tablespoons raw granulated sugar

the zest of 1 lemon

2 teaspoons freshly grated nutmeg 

1 package bacon (if desired) OR 3 tablespoons salted butter

**cooking note: while this recipe calls for bacon and brioche, I recently made this more quickly with some leftover sliced baguette from a party. The lemon and nutmeg really elevate the flavor even if you don’t go all in on the bacon-and-brioche method. The result is in the title image.

how to make it

About half an hour before you’re ready to cook, beat eggs, milk, cinnamon, sugar, and vanilla together. Slice the middle of the challah loaf into four thick pieces (about 1 inch wide). Arrange the slices in a deep dish pan and pour the egg mixture over the slices, careful to coat each. Let stand for 15 minutes. Flip each slice and let stand for another 15 minutes. In this interim time, cook up your bacon in a large pan stovetop and set aside.

Pour bacon grease into a cup for disposal but leave the grease residue in the bottom of the pan (if not using bacon, melt the salted butter in the pan over low/medium heat). Sprinkle half the lemon zest and nutmeg into the butter as it melts. Place all four slices of bread in the pan once completely heated and do not move them (you are looking to get a solid sear/char on the bread as you would a piece of meat). Sprinkle remaining lemon zest and nutmeg over top. Cook on lowest possible heat setting for 12 minutes. Your goal here is SLOW and LOW. Low heat; slow cook time.

If the pan looks a bit dry, add a small pat of butter to the center before flipping the slices. Flip each slice and, again, do not move the slices around. Cook on the second side for 12 minutes. At this time, flip each slice and press down on each slice firmly. Cook for an additional 5-8  minutes, until both sides are brown.

Serve with warm maple syrup, a dollop of plain (unsweetened) Greek yogurt, and the side of bacon. 

Backstory

We’ve all got one (or several). Well, most of us do. An ex. My exes have left breadcrumbs along the trail of my life – songs that represented our partnership, local hangouts to which I was hesitant to return after our parting, favorite t-shirts I no longer wanted to wear. But none so powerful, so moving, so unforgettable as this. french. toast.

So, (as all good stories are wont to begin), there was this guy… 

He was a great guy, a smart guy, a guy who was additive in many ways to my already busy and complicated life. He did many things that were helpful like hang pictures straight (for the chick with ZERO spatial reasoning) and advise on car specifications and scotch selection. He did many things that were sweet, like clean my house and make me jewelry. But at the end of one particularly cold February day, we left our sushi nights behind and went our separate ways – such is life – both all the more wiser. When someone exits your life, by choice or by instruction, a hole remains that is difficult to fill until a new routine is formed – new music played in the car, new Tuesday night haunts, and, in this case, new mid-morning brunches. Because this man made me french toast. all. the. time. He made homemade, from scratch, brioche french toast with bacon, and cleaned my kitchen when he was finished. 

After we parted ways, I found myself craving the ex-boyfriend french toast. The puffiest, crispiest, briochiest french toast drowned in legitimate maple syrup, the batter for which was not imposingly sweet, that kept me full for 8 hours given the equal balance of carbohydrates and protein (5 eggs, milk, yogurt, and bacon all to balance out that bread/syrup combo). So, naturally, I started ordering from the local diners. “One order of french toast, please. Hold the syrup (I’ll use my own).” Nothing compared. So I started trying to make the french toast myself, re-creating the method I had watched him execute in my kitchen over the course of months. The result was disastrous. Soggy french toast. Burnt french toast (but somehow still soggy). Overly sweet french toast. Bland french toast. 

It took months of practice – of perfecting, re-creating, re-perfecting, and experimentation to nail it. It has two secrets: 1) low and slow, and 2) cook it in bacon grease. And now, I proudly present to the world, my mastered, ‘moved-on,’ ex-boyfriend French Toast. I hope it brings you all the Sunday morning joy without the heartache of a broken relationship. Next up, queue the Jack Johnson for high school Banana Chocolate Chip Pancakes… 

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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
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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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Cocktail

Bourbon and Blood

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

Bourbon and Blood Cocktail

In the spirit of getting more cocktail recipes on the blog, Halloween, and using up the Solerno Blood Orange Liquor that I have moved exactly six times without touching a drop, I decided to experiment with a trendy, spooky cocktail. Naturally, I added my own twist by pulling out the blow torch and smoking the crap out of half my kitchen. I also dimmed the original recipe slightly so it was less sweet because Solerno can be a syrup-y addition to any cocktail. What remains is a still-sweet, slightly smoky, herbaceous, auntumn cocktail.

🍊

what you need

1.5 oz bourbon or rye of choice (need some whisky recommendations? Check out my Whiskey post.)

1/2 oz Solerno Blood Orange Liquor

1/2 oz sweet vermouth

3 dashes bitters of choice (I used 1 dash Fee Brothers Black Walnut bitters and 2 dashes Reagan Orange Bitters)

Optional garnish: rosemary, thyme, tarragon, or a candied orange peel

how to make it

Start by smoking your glass. Don’t know how to smoke a cocktail? Check out the videos in the Smoked Old Fashioned post. I singed (not burned) a few rosemary sprigs several times under my cup and let it stand while I made the cocktail in a separate mason jar. My friend pointed out that the singed rosemary looks like a smoked a cockroach. I did not, in fact, smoke a cockroach…

In a separate vessel, mix all the ingredients together with large ice cubes and stir to combine. Upturn your smoky glass and immediately insert a large ice cube, spinning the ice cube a couple of times so the ice absorbs the smoke. Pour the cocktail over the top, garnish, and enjoy!

Other Cocktails
sidecar recipe jewels blood oranges oneandahalfslices

City of Jewels Sidecar

This is a unique, festive twist on a class Sidecar cocktail, which makes it great for the holidays. We incorporate the lavish blood orange to elevate the flavors. A classic Sidecar contains cognac, orange liquor, and lemon juice. Here, we substitute blood orange juice for lemon juice and use Solerno blood orange liquor instead of Cointreau. 

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one and a half slices fall sangria recipe

Spiced Sangria

Surprisingly, Sangria creates the perfect canvas for a fall cocktail. Its summer value is still very much appreciated, but if you ask me, I vote it should be enjoyed year round. This Sangria is spiced with fall spices and ready to welcome in chillier weather. And it was the perfect entree into our inaugural Saturday Supper this year.

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one and a half slices cucumber mint cocktail recipe

Cucumber Mint Gimlet

With this cocktail, I officially declare it summer. This beautifully crisp invention came from a friend of mine after two bottles of Prosecco’s worth of Aperol Spritz’s and my vehement proclamation: “will you please do something with this cucumber?!” Little did I know the ‘something’ would become one of the highlights of the evening. The cucumber mint gimlet is crisp, vibrant, cool, and everything a summer cocktail should be. It also paired perfectly with our Mediterranean-themed meal which included homemade tzatziki sauce. 

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one and a half slices the cherry blossom cocktail mocktail recipe local washington dc

Cherry Blossom Cocktail

I have recently mastered a new go-to spring mocktail leveraging one of my all-time favorite cocktail ingredients: Damask Rose Water. The result is that this indulgence comes in two forms: cocktail and mocktail. This, my friends, is springtime in a glass. If you need to freshen up, leave the gin. If you’re down, 1oz of Bo & Ivy has you covered.

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