Baked Elements: Our Ten Favorite Ingredients
By Matt Lewis, Renato Poliafito and Tina Rupp
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About this ebook
In Baked Elements, the dynamic owners of Baked NYC and Baked Charleston, Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito, put their favorite flavors to the test with seventy-two all-new recipes featuring ten essential ingredients: peanut butter, lemon and lime, caramel, booze, pumpkin, malted milk powder, cinnamon, cheese, chocolate, and banana.
From outrageous cakes, such as Lacy Panty Cakes with Whiskey Sauce, to unbelievable cookies, such as Lime Tarragon, to bars, milkshakes, pies, brownies, tarts, and more, these sweets are delicious enough to satisfy everyday cravings and special enough to spice up any celebration.
Praised by Deb Perelman, creator of Smitten Kitchen, as “full of the stuff of American bakery-case dreams” and hailed by Serious Eats as “drool-worthy,” this essential tome is filled with infographics, quirky facts, and helpful notes that make baking show-stopping desserts as easy as pie.
Read more from Matt Lewis
Baked: New Frontiers in Baking Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Baked Explorations: Classic American Desserts Reinvented Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Baked Occasions: Desserts for Leisure Activities, Holidays, and Informal Celebrations Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
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Reviews for Baked Elements
10 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I just made my first recipe from this book and I must say it is delicious. I made the "Crunchy Peanut Butter Banana Bread". I also visited the Bakery in Brooklyn last year and it did not disappoint. I love the new way it is laid out by ingredients used. I hope to try more over the coming cooler months :)
Book preview
Baked Elements - Matt Lewis
"Baked Elements . . . is arranged by our favorite ingredients, ten distinct flavor elements from which to build a range of recipes. These are the ingredients that we would take to a desert island or rescue from a burning house. They are the basis of our bakery, our books, and to some degree, our lives . . . While we can’t expect everyone’s top ten ingredients to match ours, we do hope the recipes turn into new favorites. Enjoy."—FROM THE INTRODUCTION
Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito’s beloved bakery and sweets—sold in stores across the country—have garnered major critical acclaim. Their previous cookbooks have left fans clamoring for more. Here are the best of the best: seventy-five new recipes built around Lewis and Poliafito’s ten favorite ingredients.
PEANUT BUTTER: Crunchy Peanut Butter Banana Bread, Oopsy Daisy Cake, Peanut Butter Chocolate Whirligigs
LEMON AND LIME: Sunrise Key Lime Tarts, Lime Tarragon Cookies, Lemon Shaker Pie
CARAMEL: Caramel Coconut Cluster Bars, Alfajores, Turtle Thumbprint Cookies
BOOZE: Lacy Panty Cakes with Whiskey Sauce, Triple Rum Black Pepper Cake, Whiskey Peach Upside-Down Cake
PUMPKIN: Toasted Pumpkin Seed Brittle, Pumpkin Almond Cake with Almond Butter Frosting, Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls
MALTED MILK POWDER: Devil Dogs with Malted Buttercream Frosting, Malted Madeleines, Vanilla Bean Malt Cake
CINNAMON: Spicy Brownies, Brown Butter Snickerdoodles, Cinnamon Chocolate Soufflés
CHEESE: Orange Almond Ricotta Cheesecake, Cheddar Corn Souffle, Poppy Seed Pound Cake with Brown Butter Glaze
CHOCOLATE: Chocolate Mayonnaise Cupcakes, Candy Bar Cookies, Tunnel of Hazelnut Fudge Cake
BANANA: Banana Whoopie Pies, Chocolate Banana Tart, Honey Banana Poppy Seed Bread
Cakes, cookies, bars, milkshakes, pies, brownies, tarts, and more—these sweets are perfect for everyday cravings, special occasions, late-night celebrations, and weekend get-togethers. Chapters also include infographics—quirky facts and charts on the featured ingredients—and helpful Baked notes that make creating these desserts as easy as pie.
OUR 10 FAVORITE INGREDIENTS
MATT LEWIS & RENATO POLIAFITO
PHOTOGRAPHS BY TINA RUPP
STEWART, TABORI & CHANG NEW YORK
Introduction: A Tale of Two Kitchens
Everything You Need to Know to Get Baked
1 PEANUT BUTTER
Good Morning Sunshine Bars
Crunchy Peanut Butter Banana Bread
Homemade Peanut Butter
Oopsy Daisy Cake
Oatmeal Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Scones
Peanut Butter Chocolate Whirligigs
Bale Bars
2 LEMON AND LIME
Lime Angel Food Cake with Lime Glaze
Sunrise Key Lime Tarts
Lemon Lime Champagne Granita
Lime Tarragon Cookies with White Chocolate Lime Topping
Lemon Shaker Pie
Lemon Pistachio Cornmeal Muffins
3 CARAMEL
Caramel: Variations on a Theme
Dulce de Leche
Classic Caramel Sauce
Sweet and Salty Caramel Sauce
Antique Caramel Cake
Caramel Coconut Cluster Bars
Classic Crème Brûlée with Caramelized Brown Sugar
Alfajores
Easy Candy Bar Tart
Turtle Thumbprint Cookies
4 BOOZE
Bourbon, Vanilla, and Chocolate Milk Shakes
Lacy Panty Cakes with Whiskey Sauce
Triple Rum Black Pepper Cake
Simple Chocolate Whiskey Tart with Whiskey Whipped Cream
Whiskey Peach Upside-Down Cake
S’more-Style Chocolate Whiskey Pudding with Whiskey Marshmallow Topping
5 PUMPKIN
Toasted Pumpkin Seed Brittle
Pumpkin Almond Cake with Almond Butter Frosting
Homemade Pumpkin Puree
Chocolate-Chunk Pumpkin Bread Pudding
Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls
Pumpkin Cheesecake Bars
Pumpkin Harvest Dunking Cookies
6 MALTED MILK POWDER
Devil Dogs with Malted Buttercream Filling
Malted Vanilla Milk Shakes
Malted Milk Chocolate Pots de Crème
Milk Chocolate Malt Semifreddo with Chocolate Syrup
Malted Madeleines
Vanilla Bean Malt Cake
7 CINNAMON
Classic Carrot Cake with Cinnamon Cream Cheese Frosting
Whole-Wheat Cinnamon Sugar Pretzels
Spicy Brownies
Brown Butter Snickerdoodles
Cinnamon Chocolate Soufflés
Holiday Spice Cake with Eggnog Buttercream
Cinnamon Spritz Sandwich Cookies
8 CHEESE
Orange Almond Ricotta Cheesecake
Cheddar Corn Soufflé
Poppy Seed Pound Cake with Brown Butter Glaze
Lemon and Black Pepper Quiche
Lemon Pecorino Pepper Icebox Cookies
Chocolate Cheesecake Muffins
Cream Cheese Chocolate Snacking Cookies
Cheesy Focaccia with Caramelized Onions and Sautéed Spinach
9 CHOCOLATE
Chocolate Mayonnaise Cupcakes
Mile-High Chocolate Cake with Vanilla Buttercream
Candy Bar Cookies
Chocolate-Chip Orange Panettone
Chewy Chocolate Mint Cookies with Chocolate Chunks
Tunnel of Hazelnut Fudge Cake
Brooksters
Simple Chocolate Syrup
Chocolate Velvet Walnut Fudge with Olive Oil and Fleur de Sel
10 BANANA
Bananas Cake
Banana Mousse Parfaits
Banana Whoopie Pies
Chocolate Banana Tart
Banana Caramel Pudding with Meringue Topping
Banana in a Blanket
Honey Banana Poppy Seed Bread
Acknowledgments
Sources
Conversion Charts
Infographic Source Notes
Index
Theoretically speaking, Renato and I should have killed each other by now. We work in extremely cramped quarters, see each other more than most married couples, and jointly run a decently sized (i.e., decently stressed) bakery operation. I like to imagine that we still respect, complement, and work well together because we’ve found some harmonious balance—a spiritual tipping point—but I suppose it is much less interesting than that. It’s probably sheer willpower and our shared love of the same thing: sweets.
A TALE OF TWO KITCHENS
Thankfully, we run parallel with each other regarding all things pastry. Chocolate, peanut butter, caramel, and cinnamon play big roles in each of our daily lives, and they are never far from our reach. Also, both of us believe in eating dessert at least once (if not twice) per day, and we both feel that a bad chocolate chip cookie is one of the saddest things in the world.
That is where most of our similarities end—in the pastry corner. Our differences—the things that bring so-called balance into our hectic business lives—are just as apparent and just as necessary, and you only need to examine our respective home kitchens to understand our personalities.
My kitchen is orderly chaos. It is clean, but needs a trim. I have six-year-old candy bars in my refrigerator because I keep meaning to replicate them as desserts. I have whole-wheat flour, all-purpose flour, and bread flour stored in at least seven different bins and plastic containers throughout the kitchen without any rhyme or reason. Surplus cocoa powder is stored in the guest bedroom. Unusual or hard-to-find ingredients are put in unusual and hard-to-find places. Nothing is labeled, and yet I know where everything is. I rarely have more than three savory ingredients in my pantry at any one time, as I am comfortable making a dinner with just chocolate, cheese, and wine. I have too many cake pans, pie plates, and baking sheets, and yet I can’t part with any of them. They are like old friends with whom I like to hang out in the kitchen.
Renato’s kitchen is a study in obsessive-compulsive disorder. It is operating-room sanitary and hyperorganized. Things are washed as they are used and put back in their exact same place in the exact same way. Everything is labeled (courtesy of a handy label maker) and easily accessed. If you didn’t know any better, you would assume by looking at his kitchen that Renato was a stereotypical New Yorker—that he didn’t cook or bake at all, that he was the king of takeout—but looks can be deceiving. Though his kitchen looks barely used, he is an avid cook. In addition to making many pastries, he is also extremely comfortable with the savory—making Italian and German and American fare with great aplomb.
Our bakery kitchen, the Baked kitchen, for better or for worse (but mostly for better), has come to resemble a weird hybrid of both of our kitchens—though the bakery kitchen is more efficient, bigger, more gangly, as if on steroids. The detailed organization—the highly efficient systems and important folders and handbooks and time lines—that’s a lot of Renato with a healthy dose of fantastic staff mixed in. The odd, semi-eccentric, big-picture ideas—the let’s make something with wort (unfermented beer), the let’s write a bunch of books under impossible deadlines, the let’s create a shelf-stable, all-natural, hard-to-distribute product—that’s a lot of me tempered by Renato and said staff. It’s a big blended bakery. It’s a beast, and we feed it. Then we go home and we think about it.
We are unaware of any other way to run a bakery. In fact, our entire baking venture is either earth-shatteringly easy or appallingly narrow: we only make and serve what we like and hope the customer is game. Perhaps we should broaden our menu horizons, experiment with ingredients we normally shun, take a walk on the nouveau side—but that would seem disingenuous, if not a little dangerous. Our bakery and our books are really just a version of us—the caffeinated, much sweeter version of us.
LUNCHBOX FREUD
Self-reflection through the lens of the contents of our fifth-grade lunch boxes is worthy of both analysis and concern. True, the historical data is fuzzy, but it is strictly a function of our individual memories. Had we cataloged and parsed our average grade-school lunches for deeper meaning, certain biometrics could have been distilled, a future of eating habits could have been foretold. In retrospect, our lunch boxes were much more than just vessels for carrying food—they were mini windows into our souls.
My lunch box (the contents, not the Flintstones decor) was the envy of many school chums: a very substantial peanut butter and jelly sandwich, a candy bar (cookies on Fridays), and either a banana or a bag of pretzels or both. No vegetables. No strange lunch meats like liverwurst. At one point, Mom might have halfheartedly pushed more nutritious meals—the kind that wouldn’t attract the attention of Child Protective Services—but she eventually understood and gave in (she herself was quite happy with cake for lunch). I was already on my path, and my path was paved in peanut butter, bananas, and chocolate.
Renato’s lunch box (The Empire Strikes Back) benefited from more rarefied sandwiches. Salami (not a circular slab of bologna, mind you) with mayonnaise on Wonder bread was a common theme. On rare occasions, he was able to eat a more nutritious (if you consider grilled cheese more nutritious than salami) lunch at home before returning to recess. However, the thermos was always filled with chocolate milk, and there was always a snack. That the snack was often the underrated Whatchamacallit candy bar seems somehow prophetic. It was my favorite as well.
Had we written a cookbook based on our ten favorite ingredients when we were eleven, we are certain the chapters would be identical to the ones in this book. For whatever reason—through sheer stubbornness or perseverance—we developed particular bonds with certain foods and ingredients, and we still pursue them with tenacity.
THE FOOD PYRAMID REORGANIZED
Despite our early childhood experiences, we respect and understand nutritional guidelines. We are completely—even hyper—aware of the physiological benefits of consuming many, many servings of vegetables, fruits, and proteins and the possible physiological dangers of consuming too many servings of sugar, fat, and caffeine. In short, basic nutritional science can be summed up as asparagus is good, chocolate cake is very bad. The trouble with this quick and easily dispensed nutritional advice is that it does not take into account the psychological effects: chocolate cake inevitably will make you happier than asparagus—probably a lot happier. Happier people live longer (or so we have heard), and at the very least, they are more enjoyable to be around. I imagine life would feel very long if it were lived solely according to nutritional guidelines—dark days of nibbling leafy greens and chalky yogurt in a dimly lit room.
The Food Pyramid of yore would have made more of a lasting impact (more of a connection to the target audience) if only it allowed for a few dietary sins. Instead of a stringent and rigorous schedule of dull, by-the-numbers eating, the pyramid should have been constructed to be more bearable. It should have been threaded throughout with nods to the foods that make life worth living: butter, flour, sugar, and chocolate. I am not proposing a radicalized revamping of years of nutritional advice. I am just suggesting a mini update—a reorganization—of the dusty old Food Pyramid. We think you just might live a little bit longer and be a lot happier if you pick up that chocolate cheesecake muffin and put down that spinach smoothie (at least occasionally).
SELECTIVELY SPEAKING
Ever since I started organizing recipes—and long before we started writing cookbooks—I always sorted them according to main ingredient (banana, chocolate), as opposed to the more traditionally recognized recipe types (breakfast, lunch, dinner, pasta, poultry, meat). If I wanted to locate my favorite macaroni and cheese dish, I would flip to the cheese section of my otherwise haphazard recipe book. The idea being to answer an important question like What can I make with chocolate (or cinnamon, or peanut butter, or cheese) today?
It seems beneficial, if not completely logical, to search for chocolate recipes in a chocolate section versus sifting through pages of dessert recipes or cake or cookie or brownie recipes. Simply start with a flavor, and form will follow.
Baked Elements, like my recipe book, is arranged by our favorite ingredients, ten distinct flavor elements from which to build a range of recipes. These are the ingredients that we would take to a desert island or rescue from a burning house. They are the basis of our bakery, our books, and to some degree, our lives. These ingredients, for better or worse, form the basis of our own food pyramid.
Finalizing our top ten list was both a simple and agonizing process. It was easy because we only had to look around our bakery and our home kitchens for the ingredients we used over and over again. Theoretically, we have consumed enough peanut butter to have a peanut farm named in our honor, and we cook with enough booze to nearly qualify our kitchens as bars. Bananas are scattered throughout our kitchens in various stages of ripeness, and our pantries are overrun with different varieties and forms of malt. These ingredients, including our other favorites (lemon and lime, cinnamon, caramel, cheese, pumpkin, and chocolate), were obvious. It took about seventeen seconds to list them. The difficult part was limiting our list to just ten ingredients. Though we adore almonds and oranges and blueberries, and we somewhat understand the appeal of coconut, we just don’t use them as often as we do our top ten. Perhaps a book containing these ingredients—think classic B-sides or director’s cut—will rear its head, but they won’t be featured in this book.
As always, we strove to create recipes that are classic Baked: fun, delicious, interesting, and unpretentious. While we can’t expect everyone’s top ten ingredients to match ours, we do hope the recipes turn into new favorites. Enjoy.
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW TO GET BAKED
KITCHEN TOOLS AND EQUIPMENT
OVER THE YEARS we have acquired many, many kitchen accessories, tools, and appliances. Our drawers are bursting with heirloom baking pans and antique (and some not so antique) rolling pins, and our countertops are altars to whisks, spatulas, and bench knives. This is not how normal people should live. In fact, this is not even how most home bakers should live. But we think it’s fine. We just happen to accept our frailties and wrap them up in denial.
The home baker needs only a few must-have items to produce a multitude of cookies, cakes, pies, brownies, and bars. Simpler is always better, and less is always more. In other words, five whisks are nice (borderline hoarder) to have, but you really only need one good one. The following is a list of our favorite equipment and stuff you will need to bake almost anything from this book. (Also see Sources, this page.)
Baking sheets: The simplest baking sheets are the best baking sheets. We use inexpensive, light-colored, rimmed half-sheet pans (18 by 13 inches)—the kind you find in a restaurant supply store. These basic pans are multipurpose and should last several lifetimes. Nonstick pans are not necessary; we always line our pans with parchment paper.
Bench knife: An ordinary bench knife, or dough scraper, is bliss in a kitchen, and we use it for everything (sweet and savory). Bench knives are usually made of a 3-by-5-inch sheet of metal attached to a wooden or plastic handle. We use them to cut, portion, and turn all sorts of dough. Additionally, they are great for scraping down and cleaning surfaces. In a pinch, I have even used mine for moving cookies from pan to cooling rack.
Blender: You don’t necessarily need a blender for this book (except for our Bourbon, Vanilla, and Chocolate Milk Shakes on this page and the Malted Vanilla Milk Shakes on this page), but we are fairly addicted to ours. Besides shakes, we use them frequently for soups, sauces, smoothies, and ice cream bases.
Brownie and bar pans: Over the years, for various reasons, we have baked in various pans (light-colored metal, glass, ceramic, dark-colored metal, and some of unknown material) and they all work reasonably well, though we tend to favor glass, ceramic, and light-colored metal, as neither of us is drawn to the crispy edges created by dark metal pans (though we realize that this is a personal preference).
Bundt pan: Somewhere along the line, our Bundt pan collection became an obsession and we started to acquire too many (be warned: this could happen to you). You really only need one Bundt (10- or 12-cup Nordic Ware) in any shape. Mini Bundts work well, but you will have to decrease your baking time (usually about half the recommended time). If you do opt for a more decorative pan, be sure to grease all the nooks and crannies extra carefully to prevent unsightly surface breakage or stickage (this is a made-up word).
Cake pans: As with almost all of our pan suggestions, simpler equals better. We use a variety of economical, professional aluminum cake pans available from almost any kitchen supply store.
Cake turntable: If you decorate enough cakes, you might want to invest in a cake turntable—basically a lazy Susan for decorating cakes. You don’t need one, but it will make cake (or sugar cookie or cupcake or brownie) decorating that much easier. We recommend heavy-duty turntables for the more-than-occasional decorator. They are not inexpensive, but they will last a lot longer than the plastic versions.
Cooling racks: As we both live in New York (i.e., smallish apartments and even smaller kitchens), we both recommend using collapsible, stackable, cooling racks. As the name implies, the racks are necessary for letting air pass over and, more important, under baked goods. Additionally, we use cooling racks to temporarily store hot-from-the-oven baking sheets and to glaze cakes. Color and material do not matter, but you want to make sure at least one is large enough to hold a 12-inch cake or a tray full of cookies.
Cupcake and muffin pans: The explosion in popularity of cupcakes has given way to a plethora of cupcake pans. For testing purposes, we used the familiar 12-cup cupcake or muffin pan made of light-colored metal. If you decide to use a different cup size, you will have to adjust the baking time accordingly: mini muffins or cupcakes usually bake in half the suggested baking time (or less), while the jumbo pans usually require time and a half in the oven.
Food processor: The dreaded food processor is an absolute kitchen necessity. Yes, they are bulky, heavy, annoying to clean, and expensive, but they are also perfect for chopping nuts and malted milk balls, shredding pumpkin and cheese, and making some batters, icings, and pie dough. I use mine often