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Category Archives: Breakfast

  • Chocolate Breakfast Muffins

    June 18, 2012

    15 Comments

    Chocolate breakfast muffins with fresh cherries and blueberries.

    When is a cupcake not a cupcake? When you call it a muffin. And if you want to push things a bit more, you call it a breakfast muffin. Excellent. But whatever you call it, this is one fine muffin. Moist, chocolatey and filled with chocolate chips, these are hard to resist. And since we have been known to enjoy hot chocolate and chocolate croissants for breakfast at times (and perhaps even a slice of chocolate cake..;-), we don’t see any reason why we can’t have a chocolate cupcake muffin for breakfast every once in a while.

    These take less than 20 minutes to bake, but it is hard to wait.

    And just to tempt you a little more, these are very easy to make. Mix dry ingredients, mix wet ingredients, then combine them with some melted butter (of course). You don’t even need to beat the batter, just make sure it combines and then pour the batter into muffin cups and bake for 15-20 minutes.  Serve with fruit and, perhaps, more butter. A very happy breakfast, in less than 45 minutes.

    Mix the dry ingredients.

    Mix the wet ingredients.

    Combine into a nice batter and bake. Easy.

    And if you want to feel a little better about the recipe you can substitute white whole-wheat flour and fruit like dried cherries for the chocolate chips. We tried it, and it works just fine. So you can eat a chocolate muffin with some ostensible health benefits (or at least some guilt remediation). But since chocolate makes you feel like you’re in love, we think that is benefit enough.

    Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Breakfast, Dessert Tags: breakfast muffins, chocolate breakfast muffin, chocolate chip muffin, chocolate cupcake, chocolate muffin, cooking, food, photography, recipes
  • Cinnamon-Filled Scones

    May 28, 2012

    18 Comments

    Cinnamon-filled scones.

    The concept of the “lazy days of summer” doesn’t really apply to Carolyn. While the boys and I are still snoozing on Saturdays, she is up making pancakes, scones or muffins. She takes very good care of us, we are very lucky. And this weekend we were very,very lucky and got some cinnamon-filled scones. And they were great. Along with a few berries from the garden (the berries in the photos are part of this weekend’s haul) and a cup of coffee, this was a perfect breakfast. Lots of happy faces at the table this morning.

    Notice the “cake-like” crumb. This is a good thing.

    These scones are a bit different as well. Based on a King Arthur Flour recipe (and you do know about King Arthur Flour, don’t you?), these scones have a mixture of cinnamon chips and a rich cinnamon filling. The filling impacts the moisture of the scone while baking, and the result is a more tender and slightly less flaky scone. This recipe is almost “scone as coffee-cake”, and since scones are much easier to make, this is a very good thing, and a very good recipe.

    The recipe is pretty standard for scones, with the exception of the cinnamon filling and layering it into the dough. The filling is a combination of sugar, cinnamon, flour, butter and milk that, if the butter is soft, takes just a few minutes. Otherwise the steps should be familiar to the home baker (and similar to our Maple Syrup Scones). Dry ingredients are combined and butter is cut into the mixture. Wet ingredients are combined and then added to the dry ingredients and then the whole is lightly kneaded into a dough.

    Cinnamon filling is easy to make.

    Cut the butter into the dry ingredients.

    Combine wet ingredients with dry to form the dough.

    The extra step for this recipe is splitting the dough in half so you can place a later of cinnamon filling in the scone. This can be done two ways. The first way is to simply layer half the dough in a 9-inch baking pan, spread the cinnamon filling in and then layer in the rest of the dough. We like it this way, as we get a more rustic appearance. But if you like a more uniform look, split the dough and roll out two circles that will fit in the baking pan. Then simply place a circle of dough in  the pan, layer on the cinnamon filling and place the other circle on top. Finish with a light brushing of milk and a sprinkle of sugar.

    Layer in 1/2 the dough and then the cinnamon filling. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Breakfast, Dessert Tags: baking, baking recipe, breakfast, cinnamon filled scones, cinnamon scone recipe, easy coffee cake, food, photography, recipes, scone recipes
  • Banana Espresso Chocolate Chip Muffins

    May 20, 2012

    14 Comments

    Banana Espresso Chocolate Chip Muffins

    One of our major gripes about “healthy” cookbooks is that they are often the culinary equivalent of kissing your cousin. The recipes kinda work, but the result is usually “meh” food that celebrates what isn’t in the dish, and not giving you something that is healthy and tastes good. We think food, “healthy” or not, should taste good and satisfy your soul. So when we recently got Heidi Swanson’s “Super Natural Cooking”, we were curious to see how the recipes would turn out.

    If you are unaware of Heidi Swanson, she is a successful food blogger and designer. Her blog 101 Cookbooks is a nationally recognized blog for simple recipes using sustainable, whole foods. We are fans of the blog and decided to give the cookbook a try. The theme of “Super Natural Cooking” is the use of whole, natural foods in easy, basic vegetarian recipes. Think of the book as a solid introduction to the world of whole-foods cooking (and if you don’t know about ingredients like amaranth or quinoa, you soon will).

    Happily, Swanson does a good job of providing simple recipes that highlight the natural ingredients, rather than trying to re-engineer classic dishes. We are moving through her recipes and they are clear, well-written and the results are tasty. One of the first recipes we tried from the cookbook were for her Espresso Banana Muffins, but Swanson notes that adding chocolate chunks is a good option- so we ran with that and adapted the recipe.

    Banana Espresso Chocolate Chip muffins sound exactly like what they are. The “natural” adaptation is the use of white whole wheat flour and cane sugar instead of their refined cousins white flour and sugar. The white whole wheat flour provides a slightly nuttier flavor than white flour, which is welcome in this dish, as it compliments the bananas. As for the use of cane sugar, most people will be hard-pressed to taste a difference in flavor. Cane sugar has more of the natural molasses than refined sugar and gives a bit of pleasant (at least to us) “funk” to the sweetness of the sugar. To be honest, we use cane sugar syrup in cocktails all the time but could not taste it in the muffins. But this is fine, it just makes the point that cane sugar is a worthy option to replace refined sugar, if you are so inclined.

    As for making the muffins, it’s a traditional muffin recipe. The dry and wet ingredients are combined separately and then the dry ingredients are folded into the wet ingredients. Mix as little as possible to keep the muffins from getting tough. Pour into cups and bake. The only “extra” step is mashing the bananas, which takes less than a minute. And you can use a stand mixer, or not. Easy. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Breakfast, Dessert, Fruit Tags: 101 cookbooks, Banana Espresso Chocolate Chip Muffin recipe, Banana Espresso Chocolate Chip Muffins, banana muffin, banana muffin recipe, food, heidi swanson, muffin recipe, natural foods cooking, recipes, white whole wheat flour
  • Maple Syrup Scones

    April 24, 2012

    11 Comments

    Maple Syrup Scone with lime curd and clotted cream

    Most weekends, and some weekdays, Carolyn will bake fresh muffins, scones or coffeecake for the boys and I (yes, she is perfect and we are very grateful). Carolyn has dozen of good recipes, but recently has been working with recipes from “Breakfast, Lunch, Tea” a cookbook from the Rose Bakery in Paris. The cookbook is very well-designed, with stylish photos and is turning out to be a very good resource for baking and some savory dishes. It is a good cookbook and worth a look.

    One of the best things we have tried from the cookbook so far is a simple recipe for Maple Syrup Scones. Scones are a great treat for breakfast and can be made that morning- so they are a good pastry to have in your toolkit. This is a simple recipe, but the addition of the maple syrup adds wonderful flavor and aroma that just screams “breakfast time”. I won’t lie, it is a joy to wake up to the smell of Carolyn baking tasty treats.

    Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Breakfast, Dessert Tags: breakfast, maple scone, maple scone recipe, maple syrup scone recipe, maple syrup scones, rose bakery, rose bakery cookbook, scone recipes
  • Tropical Granola

    April 6, 2012

    4 Comments

    Tropical granola. Yum.

    Aloha. A good chunk of the Putney Farm crew are on the road this week, so we will be posting from the tropics. (Jeni and friends will be holding down the fort and eating all the bacon, a nice consolation.) And since we are in the tropics, we will be sticking with the theme. Expect some tiki cocktail recipes soon, after some “testing”. But for now, let’s start with breakfast.

    As you may know, Carolyn makes homemade granola on a regular basis. The boys and I can’t get enough of it- the boys even sell it at school events. But as it is spring and we are in warmer climes, Carolyn developed a tropical version of the recipe, and it’s great.

    Carolyn took the base granola recipe and added macadamia nuts, sesame seeds, nutmeg, ginger, dried mango and dried pineapple. What you get is a sweet and slightly spicy (from the ginger) version of granola. We also use olive oil in our granola, it adds a distinctive savory note (along with some salt) that rounds out the flavor. If you want a lighter flavor, basic vegetable oil will also work, but try it with the olive oil- you may never go back.

    A final note on how to manage the texture of the granola- if you want big chunks press down firmly on the granola with a spatula before you put the baking sheet in the oven. If you like a more crumbly granola, skip this step. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Breakfast, Fruit Tags: breakfast, granola, granola recipe, macadamia nuts, pineapple, Tropical granola
  • The Putney Farm Bacon Chronicles: Breakfast Bacon

    March 29, 2012

    1 Comment

    Along with our running tests of chocolate chip cookie recipes, we continue to tinker with our homemade bacon recipes (our main bacon recipe is here). This week we made what we call “breakfast bacon”, a sweeter, “porkier” bacon we thought would go well with traditional breakfast fare like eggs and pancakes.

    For our breakfast bacon we made a cure with no garlic, less herbs and pepper and a LOT more sugar. In this cure we almost doubled the normal sugar, with ¼ cup of both dark brown sugar and grade B maple syrup. We also finished the bacon in the oven, rather than smoking it, with the hope that we would get the pork, sugar and salt as the dominant flavors.

    How did the breakfast bacon experiment go? It went pretty well, the bacon was very tasty and we had a good pork belly to work with, so it was very attractive, meaty bacon (yes, I just described bacon as “attractive”). A number of us tasted, and all liked the bacon very much, as it was both sweeter and “porkier” than our savory bacon. The extra sugar also caramelized slightly on the bacon when cooked, which a few of us liked. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Breakfast, Home-Cured Meats, Lunch / Salads / Sides Tags: bacon recipe, bacon recipes, breakfast, breakfast bacon, chocolate chip cookie, home cured bacon, home cured bacon recipe

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