Posts Tagged: peanut butter


10
Nov 09

Baked By Melissa

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Those of us with the insatiable sweet tooth know the plague of guilt that comes with being a dessert lover. The sugar, butter, and flour all add up to one thing: massive calorie spike. Most of this can be negated with daily exercise, but it is not an easy life. The recent surge in cupcakeries has been particularly debilitating for dessertaholocis, who flock to the small shops for the trendy treats. However, most cupcakes (small as they are) are the caloric equivalent of a large piece of cake.

Not to worry. There’s Baked by Melissa.

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Right around the corner from my office in SoHo is a small window shop called Baked by Melissa. Their miniature storefront is indicative of their product: mini stuffed cupcakes. Each cupcake is only slightly larger than a quarter, which is perfect for your mid-day/mid-afternoon/pre-dinner sugar fix. They pack a rich, flavorful punch in a small package, and while BBM makes no claims to low-fat or “good for you” desserts, splitting a set of three ($3) with a good friend leaves the sweet tooth satisfied, and keeps the guilt at bay. With 9 flavors to choose from, there’s a little love for everyone.

I personally recommend the three pictured above: Peanut Butter Cup, Cookies and Cream, and Mint Chocolate Chip. They had the richest flavor, and Melissa’s chocolate cake is much better than her vanilla (the exception being the Cinnamon, which I also recommend).

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3
Nov 09

Ultimate Bacon Chocolate Showdown Round 2: Candy Making

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For those of you who have been following, my indecisive mind can’t determine which of the Vosges Mo’s Bacon Bars I like more: Milk or Dark chocolate. In an attempt to make a decision, I have put the bars through a series of side-by-side tests to see how they measure up. This week’s test was in the spirit of Halloween: Candy Making.

I wanted to see how each of the bars could be used to create other chocolate confections. After flipping through countless candy recipes, I decided on something simple, classic, and delicious: peanut butter cups. Continue reading →

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1
Nov 09

Sugary, Industrial, Morning Bliss

Doughnut Plant

Good Morning, (or in my case, Evening) Sugar High!

I received my first Doughnut Plant doughnut about four weeks ago when they were brought to me in a simple, industrially reminiscent box with a bow of kitchen string tied around. The box is simple and is not made to impress with it’s good looks or withstand extreme conditions. It has a singular purpose: to deliver sugary breakfast pastry.

My favorites so far have been the Trés Leches (with a sweet, creamy filling) the Carrot Cake (with a cream cheese filling, that happens to be my very picky father’s favorite) and the Pumpkin Cake. I am not normally a cake doughnut kind of person, but the crispy outer glazes and moist light cake inside make these irresistible. The yeast doughnuts have a very different character to them. First, they are very, very large. While the variety of flavors is impressive (coconut creme with coconut filling, chunky peanut butter icing with raspberry jelly, pumpkin, etc) they are overall a bit too sweet and sugary for my sensitive teeth. The taste is great, but I can only eat about a quarter of the whole doughnut. Although the glazes tend to be too heavy on the sugar, the dough itself is light and chewy.

One of the best flavors available is the crème brulée. It is a smaller doughnut with rich creamy filling and a crispy burnt sugar topping. They are best eaten right in the shop, as they are not nearly as much of an experience the next day. If you are only buying one doughnut, everyone recommends trying this one in particular.

Although I’m not sure you could go wrong with any choice at Doughnut Plant. The exceptionally helpful staff will be sure to steer you in the right direction based on mood.

Doughnut Plant Doughnuts best paired with: a bottle of the local milk they sell in-store.

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1
May 09

Baked and Wired

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I’ll say it now: I was not impressed. 

The atmosphere at Baked and Wired seemed very promising when I first walked in. The store is divided in half–on one side you go to get your drinks and morning pastries, and the other side is dedicated solely to the sale of baked goods, your cupcakes, your brownies, different types of sweet bars, etc. The iced green tea that I had was refreshing, and I drank most of it while trying to decide which flavors of cupcakes to buy. 

 

I let the girl at the baked goods counter know that I wanted a box of four, and asked her for her recommendations. Her first one was the carrot cake, but I had to say no to that when she told me that it has nuts in it (I really don’t do actual nuts in cake…it’s one of my weird quirks). She also recommended their strawberry and their red velvet, so I said yes to those. I saw that they had a peanut butter and chocolate cupcake, so naturally I had to try one to compare it to those of the other cupcakeries I have recently visited. My final choice was along the same lines: the chocolate cake with dark chocolate frosting. For my own personal enjoyment, and for the sake of comparison.

When I first opened the different and interesting wrapper to the red velvet cupcake, I was taken aback at first. Instead of a consistent red coloring throughout the cake, there were dark brown splotches. It made the red seem less vibrant, and, to me, this is a sign that someone in the back wasn’t paying attention when the mixer was going. The cake itself tasted like red velvet, but the frosting seemed to be more buttercream than it was cream cheese. There were hints that the flavor was hiding in there somewhere, but I had to go looking for it. 

I had really been looking forward to the strawberry cupcake, since the girl at the counter had recommended it to me on the basis that it had real, whole strawberry pieces in the cake. I tried a bit of the frosting before even biting into the cupcake, and was immediately thrown back to my hometown and my family’s favorite place to get breakfast and coffee: Dunkin’ Donuts. The frosting reminded me of the strawberry icing you find on a Dunkin’ Donuts donut. It was sugary, grainy, and tasted artificial. The cake itself was dense with little flavor besides the strawberry pieces. It was almost as if they were trying to go for a shortcake-like cake, but failed to produce the buttery rich flavors that are usually a part of that experience. There was also too much frosting on this one. I took most of it off.

The peanut butter chocolate was also a let down. When I held it in my hand, it was heavy, like i was holding a large cup of water.  Before I could even remove the excess frosting, it did it for me. Half of the frosting slid off of the cupcake the moment the wrapper came off. The flavor of the frosting did not compensate–it tasted more like dry roasted peanuts tossed into buttercream frosting instead of smooth creamy peanut butter frosting. The chocolate cake was moist and had a good chocolate flavor to it, but I was surprised to find small granules of some unknown substance in the cupcake–I think that it might have been ground up peanut pieces. I told the girl at the counter that I did not like nuts in my cake, so I was particularly miffed. If they’re not nuts, I have no idea what I was eating.

I will update the entry once I’ve tried the chocolate one, but I don’t think that I would be going back to Baked and Wired even if the chocolate cupcake blew me half way to China.

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28
Apr 09

Red Velvet

 

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I don’t get down to the Penn Quarter of DC very often, so when I found myself there the other day, I had to stop by Red Velvet Cupcakery. After having seen their menu online: Red Velvet , I was really intrigued by the peanut butter cup, which featured a salted peanut butter frosting. 

Admittedly, the peanut butter cup was not quite what I had expected. The frosting was thick, and closer to actual peanut butter than I prefer. I’m just more of a whipped frosting person myself. The chocolate cake was moist and had a rich chocolate flavor, with surprising bits of chocolate scattered throughout. The peanut on top was superfluous, but I appreciate their decorative purpose. 

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The three other flavors I sampled were their Vanilla Bean, Devil’s Food, and Southern Belle. The Devil’s Food was the best chocolate cupcake that I have sampled here in DC–the cake was dark, and the chocolate frosting on top was rich, creamy, and slightly bitter, making it the perfect topping to the cake. The frosting on the Vanilla Bean was a Madagascar Bourbon vanilla buttercream that was slightly sugary for my taste, but my friend John raved about it. He said that it was the perfect taste for his sweet tooth. 

Normally, cream cheese frosting sits too heavy in my stomach for me to really enjoy the experience, however the whipped cream cheese frosting on the red velvet cake of their Southern Belle was not only lighter than most cream cheese frostings, it was in perfect proportion. It was smooth and rich in flavor, yet light on the stomach. Perfection. 

While Red Velvet is a bit far for normal visits, I will have to go at least once more to sample some of their other flavors, and to have at least one more red velvet.

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