Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts

March 9, 2015

Chocolate, Peanut Butter, and Banana Crepes

Does anyone else find it impossible to walk into Barnes and Nobles without buying something?

Seriously. I've always had some type of a love affair with books, so B&N might as well just be labeled "Michelle Give Up Saving Money and Buy Books You Don't Have Time To Read Instead". It gets pretty intense when I walk in there. All the books are just so perfectly arranged with such pretty covers and endless ideas inside them! They're enticing. Especially because I am a naturally curious person (almost to a fault, in fact-- my questions often get me into uncomfortable situations with strangers). Books are just full of so many things that I want to learn and haven't yet, and they are never ending. I just love the idea of an infinite amount of knowledge floating around different societies, all impacting people in one way or another.

I'm pretty sure I'm just justifying my addiction to reading with some poetic and philosophical blabber, but whatever. It works. I actually branched out from my fiction section and invested about $150 in some Marketing, Management, and Psychology books that I've had my eye on for a few months. I also saw a new book concerning eating eisorders (actually, anorexia mainly), and so I pounced on that right away. When I first entered college, I was absolutely positive I was going to work with eating disorder patients. My goals have since changed to prenatal and early childhood nutritional counseling, but I can't help still sticking my nose into the eating disorder literature that I see. I actually finished the book, which is How To Disappear Completely: On Modern Anorexia, in a few days because it was so dang good.

Ok, I know that this is supposed to be a cooking blog, not a book one. I'll get on with it, and stop ranting about the money that I pour down the drain for cut-up trees, some ink, and a plethora of ideas and proverbial experiences.

Today's recipe really just fits the mood I'm in, which is chocolate + banana + peanut butter. I sometimes get random cravings for bananas (and, let's be honest, everyone always wants chocolate), and it can be boring to just keep adding them to yogurt/oatmeal each morning. So I've gotten into the habit of spreading some type of nut butter (usually almond, but peanut butter is good too) on the banana and eating it like that. I figured I would combine all three into a recipe, and it didn't take long for me to know exactly what I wanted the form to be. This weekend, I had some extra time to play around and decided that I was going to tackle the crepes that have been floating around my mind for a decent amount of time. These crepes are honestly just delicious, and they were fun to make!

Something that I know a few of you are thinking: Oh no. Crepes. I'm not a French chef, I just cook at home for fun, so why would I want to try something so hard? And to that I say: blasphemy! We are wayyyy too risk-adverse as a society, and we underestimate our own skills. People are really afraid of making crepes, because they seem to fancy, but I 100% believe that you (yes, YOU, right there) can take these crepes and not only make them, but make them awesomely! It's totally worth the first few mistakes, because you get an end result of creamy honey-peanut butter spread, a drizzle of decadent chocolate, and sweet banana, all wrapped up in an indulgent little package. For breakfast. Breakfast! Perfect excuse to eat sweets, particularly ones that are actually healthier for you.

(But you won't know it).



Chocolate, Peanut Butter, and Banana Crepes
Makes 8 Crepes

Ingredients:

Batter:
  • 1/4c. (34.5g) whole wheat flour
  • 1/4c. (34g) all purpose flour
  • 2tbl unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 large egg, beaten
  • 3/4c. unsweetened almond milk
  • 1/8tsp salt
  • 2tsp melted butter
  • 2 tbl sugar
  • cooking spray
  • 1tsp vanilla
Filling:
  • 1/4c. smooth peanut butter
  • 1/4c. honey, warmed (microwave works wonders)
  • 1/2c. low fat cream cheese
  • 4 small bananas
  • 1/2c. sugar-free chocolate syrup (such as Hershey's)  
Instructions
  1. Whisk all batter ingredients in a bowl until smooth. The batter will be watery.
  2. Heat up a nonstick pan over medium-high heat. Spray with cooking spray, and then gently wipe the pan with a paper towel so the spray is evenly covering all of it.
  3. Using a ladle, pour 3tbl of batter onto the center of the pan.
  4. Holding onto the handle of the pan, remove it from the heat and swirl the pan so the batter coats the bottom of the pan. You want to make the coating as thin as possible.
  5. The batter will quickly (about 1 min or less) dry and loose its shine. It's time to turn the crepe over. Use a non-metal spatula to loosen the crepe from the pan. Use the spatula to flip over the crepe. It's perfectly acceptable to use your fingers if necessary.
  6. Continue cooking the crepe until it is done. You will know because the sides will start to rise up very slightly, and it will no longer look "gummy" or "watery". After the crepe has finished cooking, gently slide it out onto a plate. If you like, you can stack the crepes in a ovenproof dish and keep them warm in the oven set at 195 degrees.
  7. To make crepe filling, place peanut butter, honey, and cream cheese in a medium bowl. Beat with an electric mixer until well-mixed and creamy, about 1 minute. Cut each banana into round slices (cutting width-wise), making them very thin, and set aside.
  8. To assemble the crepes: Take a cooked crepe and lay it out on a plate. Spread 1 and 1/2tbl of the peanut butter mixture on the top half of the circle, then cover it with banana slices (the equivalent of 1/2 of a banana). You can either fold the "unfrosted" half of the crepe on top of the frosted half and then fold again, or you can roll it up. Drizzle each crepe with 1tbl of the chocolate syrup. 
Nutritional Information (Per Crepe):
Sodium: 121mg
Total Fat: 8g
       Saturated: 3g
       Trans: 0g
Protein: 6g
Sugar: 23g
Calories: 242

December 29, 2014

Chocolate Chip Bread Pudding


I seriously feel like I was just celebrating New Years 2014, and in a bit over two days we will be celebrating New Years 2015! It just absolutely astounds me how quickly a year can pass, and how everything just rushes by in a cacophony of memories and noises and experiences.

This is the time of the year where, if we are lucky, we have family or friends over to help celebrate the season with us. It often means that we have a lot of things to do: shopping, cleaning, traveling, hosting, and, of course, cooking. It can be ridiculously stressful to be balancing all of these things at once, which is so opposite of the point of having everyone over (or going over, if you are that lucky one who is going to someone else's house). Maybe there are kids running around, or animals tearing up some random piece of furniture (or climbing the tree, knocking over the Menorah, eating all the sugar cookies...), or people who you haven't seen in forever and have changed. It can be overwhelming. But among all the stresses of this season, we need to remember how to value and savor each and every moment. 

For me, that means not worrying about what I am going to cook, because that's such a silly distraction from the things that really matter: people, memories, laughter. (If you're in my family, also tears every time the Muppet Christmas Album comes on because gosh darn it, Kermit the frog somehow makes us all emotional in seconds). I make a lot of cook-ahead dishes that I can just shove in the fridge overnight, because the last thing I want to do in the morning before I've had my coffee is actually make something for a group of hungry people. Not happening. Not without caffeine. So I do things like french toast or quiches, or the bread pudding recipe I'm sharing today (because who doesn't love chocolate for breakfast, right??)

Slightly related side note: Does anyone else go through "phases" of breakfast? I feel like I have a weird habit of eating the exact same thing for breakfast for months, until all of a sudden BAM-- I switch to something new or I add in a new element.  For example, when I was a kid it was totally pancakes. Pancakes were the bomb, as the kids say (am I getting my hip lingo right? I'm a mess). And then when I was in elementary school (when I started to take cooking super seriously) I switched to mushrooms sauteed in butter over scrambled cheddar eggs (sounds fancier than it was, I promise). Then I went through an overnight oatmeal stage (with plenty of sugar and yogurt), and for the past few months I've just been eating bagels with peanut butter because I am a college student and have no sense of what time is. With coffee.

Always with coffee.

Anyways. So that's the mode I've been in for a while now, and making stuff ahead just was not in my mind. But here come the holidays and I actually have time and people to cook things for, and it's marvelous! So here comes the bread pudding. Bread pudding with chocolate. 



So we need to have a serious discussion about this bread pudding. Because it is kind of (aka most definitely) ah-may-zing. Amazing. First, the photo above is from before it was cooked because as soon as it came out of the oven it magically disappeared. Maybe into some tummies. But, no photo happened. Sooo... Trust me when I say it gets all golden and melty and perfect, ok? It's rich but not too rich because it's the holidays and we need room for all those other sweet, delicious dishes, right? But this is basically an excuse to eat dessert for breakfast-- which obviously isn't a thing we should do all the time BUT it's also important to actually live your life and not be obsessive about food and to let yourself enjoy a treat. Which this is. It's a breakfast treat. Who wouldn't want to dig into cubes of whole wheat French bread that have been soaked in a vanilla custard, baked until creamy on the inside and with a nice crust of sugary-cinnamonness (not a word, but it is now) on the outside, with chunks of chocolate scattered throughout? Like... what? Holy fudge muffin, yum.

Plus, plus-- this is actually a lighter version of the original bread pudding. If I hadn't made the recipe myself, I would never have believed it was healthier for you. I didn't tell anyone, and no one knew or guessed. The huge pan was demolished by happy, hungry, and (unknowingly) kinda-healthy people. So the basic consensus is that bread pudding for breakfast equals yes. Everything in moderation, yeah? This serves twelve and so you get a perfectly-sized piece that is a great way to start out a sleepy morning, and coffee may be required because it is coffee.

But for real: this bread pudding is decadent and the perfect way to make your morning a little more indulgent. Plus stops you from needing to worry about basically anything but preheating the oven in the morning in order to bake it. Aka please enjoy more time with those around you, because that is what matters. And if you don't have people around you currently, then go out and explore! Enjoy the season! Look online at some cute cat videos via YouTube! Wear fuzzy socks! And eat Chocolate Chip Bread Pudding.



Chocolate Chip Bread Pudding

Inspired by Cooking Light

Serves 12 


Ingredients:

  • 1 pound whole wheat French bread loaf, left out 2 days, crust on, cut into 1-inch cubes
  • 1 (12oz can) evaporated (not condensed-- very different things) fat free milk
  • 2c. skim milk
  • 2/3c sugar OR splenda*
  • 1tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2tsp cinnamon
  • 3 large eggs, beaten
  • 2 large egg whites, beaten
  • 1/4c. mini chocolate chips
*I personally always prefer the Splenda recipe, because I have nothing against Splenda, but I understand that some people do, so sugar is always an option still. Splenda substitutes just fine in this, though. 
 

Instructions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350F
  2. Meanwhile, coat a rectangular glass baking pan (I used 13x9x2) with cooking spray. Put the bread cubes into the pan; set aside.
  3. Thoroughly whisk together the evaporated milk, the skim milk, splenda, vanilla, cinnamon, and eggs together in a large bowl (about 4 minutes). Pour the custard mixture over the top of the bread, pushing down cubes to make sure that they are all covered. Let sit for 20 minutes to overnight, allowing the bread to absorb the custard. Occasionally press down on the bread to ensure saturation, and if needed feel free to gently rotate some top pieces to the bottom of the pan to make sure they sake up well.
  4. Bake for 35 minutes at 350F. Remove the pan from the oven and evenly sprinkle the chocolate chips over the top. Return to oven and bake another 20 minutes, or until a knife inserted into the center comes out almost clean (a tad of moisture isn't bad-- its part of the creaminess).
  5. Allow to cool slightly (this tastes wonderful after refrigerated, too) and serve.
Nutrition Information (With Sugar):
Sodium: 248mg
Total Fat: 4g
      Saturated: 1g
      Trans:0g
Sugar: 30g
Protein: 9g
Calories: 259

Nutrition Information (With Splenda):
Sodium: 248mg
Total Fat: 4g
      Saturated: 1g
      Trans:0g
Sugar: 8g
Protein: 9g
Calories: 173