I don’t know what is happening, but the past few days, I cannot walk through the kitchen without baking. Is it the weather? Is it that I know I am getting older and there are so many recipes out there and so little time, or is it that I am just a sugar hoarder? Last night I found myself making the carrot cream cheese pound cake that I posted yesterday and it is absolutely amazing. Then this morning, I headed to the kitchen, still in jammies and pulled out the Pillsbury Pumpkin cake mix and proceeded to bake Pumpkin Poppers that I talked about the other day. I just followed the directions on the box except that I added 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice. Baked them in mini muffin pans (made 60) and then rolled them in cinnamon sugar while still hot out of the oven. Have eaten 5. Then our daughter sent us a picture of Kenley our grandaughter we are headed to see at Thanksgiving. They were making acorns out of miniature Nutter Butter cookies, Hershey Kisses and chocolate chips. A little melted chocolate holds the 3 items together, as you can see in the picture. So open those windows, celebrate this gorgeous autumn weather and get those baking pans out. Baking time is here.
Category: Desserts
Carrot Cream Cheese Pound Cake
The thought of going a full day without posting something sweet just makes me crazy. When I found this in the same old Tea Time Magazine that the Bittersweet brownie recipe came from, I saved it for when I had the energy to shred 2 cups of carrots, but now that you can buy them in the store already shredded, I love to make any type of carrot cake. This one combines the flavor of cream cheese in the cake. So…when you are thinking, “I need to eat more veggies” hiding them with cream cheese is a great way to eat healthy. At least in my world.
1 1/2 cups butter, softened
1 ( 8oz) cream cheese, softened
3 cups sugar
3 cups all purpose flour
1 1/2 teas ground cinnamon
6 large eggs
1 teas vanilla
1/2 teas lemon extract (or orange extract) (I used the orange because I added orange zest to the batter)
2 cups shredded carrots
1 cup finely chopped pecans
Preheat oven to 325. (I added orange zest along with orange extract) Grease and flour a 12-cup Bundt pan. Using mixer, beat butter and cream cheese until creamy. Gradually add sugar, beating at medium speed 5-7 minutes.
In small bowl, combine flour and cinnamon. Add 1 cup flour mixture to butter mixture, beating at low speed until blended. Add 2 eggs, beating just until yellow disappears. Repeat procedure with remaining flour and eggs.
Stir in vanilla and lemon (or orange) extract, carrots and pecans. Pour batter into prepared pan.
Bake 1 hour and 30 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool in pan on wire rack 10 minutes. Remove from pan and cool completely on wire rack.
Glaze
2/3 cup powdered sugar
4 tablespoon orange juice
Add enough powdered sugar to make glaze spreading consistency.
In small bowl, combine sugar and orange juice, stirring until smooth. Drizzle over cooled cake.
Pumpkin Poppers
Yesterday Peter & Penelope Pumpkin wandered around the Americana, stopping to have lunch and then to the movies to see Gravity. Afterward, we wanted just to sit outside with Starbucks and people watch, which is free and we enjoyed that much more than Gravity. Guess we aren’t sci-fi people, we are more people watching people. We are sitting there just enjoying the cool Fall air, watching all the people walking by when I look over to see a bakery called Deluca’s. I immediately grabbed my Saturday allowance out of hubbies wallet and headed over. When I entered, the nice little boy of 12 asked if he could help me. I told him that I wanted the lemon meringue bars that I fell in love with in New York. He informed me that they were not even associated with Dean & Duluca’s in NY but told me to follow him over to their dessert section and proceeded to show me their great desserts. One was a Whoopie Pie with a Nutella Whip filling. He actually gave me a sample of the filling and whoa, it was really good. Am going to have to make those. Then he showed me their Pumpkin Poppers. Only 99cents each and I could have eaten a dozen. There were miniature pumpkin muffins rolled in a heavy coating of cinnamon sugar mixture. All I had taken with me was $2, so I got two. Bringing them back to Peter, I told him what I had got, hoping that he would say, “oh that’s ok, you eat them both, that doesn’t sound very good to me.” But the opposite happened. He grabbed the last one and scarfed it down, like he hadn’t had sugar in a week. He looked at me and said, “these are amazing”, when are you going to make us some?” So guess what I am doing today? Making mini pumpkin muffins and rolling them in cinnamon sugar.
What a great little coffee break goodie. Wanted to give you a fresh idea of how to take your favorite pumpkin muffins to a new level. A sugar level. Easy to pop in your mouth with one hand, as you are playing Candy Crush. An really, how fattening can a little popper be?
Pumpkin, Caramel & Pecan Cheesecake
What better way to celebrate Fri than with a new recipe! It has been a very stressful morning. Decisions, decisions. We are going to some friends home for dinner and guess who volunteered to bring dessert? Knowing that I wanted to make something “fallish” two different recipes came to mind. This new recipe from Philadelphia Cream Cheese or one of my fall favs, fresh apple cake with brown sugar frosting.
Peter Pumpkin and I seem to load up on apples each and every week, thinking that what better time to begin eating healthy? Each time we come back from the grocery determined to load up our bodies with fresh fruit; thus the apples and bananas that we take out of the reusable bags. The only problem with this new resolution (actually it isn’t new, it’s something we’ve resolved to do since January, 1996, but never find the right time to begin) is that as the week goes by with the fruit still sitting there, staring back at us, it becomes apparent that it is no longer “fresh fruit” and is begging to be used in some delicious baked good that thrives on over ripe fruit to make it moisturie (I know I know, but it just seems to be the right word). So since I had apples laying out looking ever so “please use me, please use me” I decided to make a fresh apple cake tonight. But because that recipe is already on the post, I wanted to give you the other dessert that was the 2nd option for tonight. Will make it when I have used up all our over ripe fruit. Will start again on Mon with new fresh fruit. Who knows, maybe by next Fri, I will have found new recipes that use really ripe apples and bananas? In the meantime…..
Makes 16 Servings
Prep Time: 15 min (now that should catch your eye)
1/2 cup chopped pecans, divided
18 Nabisco Ginger Snaps, finely crushed
1/4 cup butter, melted
4 packages ( 8 oz ea) Philadelphia Cream Cheese, softened
1 cup sugar
1 can (15 oz) pumpkin
1 tablespoon pumpkin pie spice
1 teas vanilla
1 teas vanilla
4 eggs
25 caramels
1/4 cup milk
Heat oven t0 325. Chop 1/4 cup of the pecans very fine in a bowl. Add ginger snap crumbs and butter; mix well. Press crumb mixture onto bottom of a 13×9″ pan. Set aside. Beat cream cheese and sugar in a large bowl. With hand mixer, beat until blended. Add pumpkin, spice and vanilla, mix well. Add eggs, 1 at a time, mixing on low speed after each addition just until blended. Pour over crust.
Bake 45 min or until center is almost set. Cool completely. Refrigerate at least 4 hours.
Microwave caramels and milk in microwavable bowl for 1 1/2 min or until caramels are completely melted, stirring every 30 seconds. Add the other 1/4 cup chopped pecans and spoon over individual servings of cheesecake. Top with whipping cream if desired.
Cranberry Cobbler With Walnut Creme
My Sister-in-law is always looking for new recipes that have cranberries in them. When I came across this one in Southern Lady, I quickly tore it out to post so Janece could spend her week playing mah jong instead of combing through magazines. Janece, this one is for you. BTW, just got back from Trader Jo’s. If you have not tried their pumpkin butter, do so, it is so good. Also bought their frozen pumpkin bread pudding. If we have unexpected company I can quickly bake it and add cream sauce and wa-la….instant Autumn dessert.
4 1/2 cups fresh cranberries
2/3 cup sugar
1 tables four
1 tablespoon finely grated orange zest
2 teas cinnamon
1 teas nutmeg
For the filling, combine the cranberries, sugar, flour, orange zest, cinnamon and nutmeg in a bowl and mix lightly. Spoon into a 1 1/2 qt greased baking dish.
Topping
1 1/2 cups flour
3 tables sugar
2 1/4 baking powder
2 teas finely grated orange zest
2 teas cinnamon
1/2 teas salt
6 tables unsalted butter, chilled, cut into 1/2″ pieces
3/4 cup heavy cream
1 tables sugar
Mix the flour, 3 tables sugar, baking powder, orange zest, cinnamon and salt into a bowl. Cut in the butter until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs .Use 2 forks or a pastry blender. Add the cream and mix just until mixture forms a soft dough.
Shape into biscuits with biscuit cutter or using the top of a drinking glass (dipping the glass in flour helps release the dough onto the baking sheet). 2″ in diameter and 1/2″ thick. Arrange over the cranberries. Sprinkle with 1 tables sugar.
Bake at 375 for 30-40 minutes or until bubbly and golden brown. Serve with walnut cream or ice cream.
Walnut Cream
1 cup whipping cream
1 tables sugar
1 teas vanilla
1/4 cup finely chopped walnuts
For the walnut cream, beat the whipping cream in a bowl with mixer until soft peaks form. Add the sugar and vanilla gradually, beating until the peaks hold their shape. Fold in the walnuts. Chill until serving time.
Baking Frenzie (Chocolate Mint Chocolate Chip Cookies)
It is getting serious, I can’t stop myself from baking the last two days. Why is it that when the temps drop below 80, I feel it is my obligation to plop myself in the kitchen and not come out until flashes of cookies, cakes, cobblers are imprinted on my eyeballs.
Yesterday I made a batch of mini smore bites. I ate so many I didn’t have enough to serve last evening for a meeting. So I made another batch of 24. Because I feared that some who were coming last night might not eat chocolate, I ended up making pumpkin-gingerbread bars. Then this morning I started in again. I have made chocolate mint chocolate chip cookies and peach cobbler from a recipe that I got off Face Book. Because I felt that surely I must be burning calories with the standing and mixing, taking cookie sheets in and out of the oven, my body must be deprived of energy, thus…finishing off the smores from yesterday. I am now on a sugar rush and trying to decide which room I rearrange. While I’m trying to decide how to work off all this sugar, I will post the cookie recipe that I just made. I saw it on Just A Pinch and it sounded intriguing. It is as good as they said. The instant pudding in it can be substituted for any flavor you want. I went with Hershey’s brand chocolate instant pudding because I had bought dark chocolate-min flavored Toll House Chips. The cookies turned out so good and chocolatey.
1 small box of any flavor instant pudding
2 eggs
1 cup butter
1 cup light brown sugar
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 teas vanilla
1 teas baking soda
1/4 teas salt
2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
1 (12 oz) bag of chocolate chips (whatever flavor you want)
Preheat oven to 350. Cream butter and both sugars together. Add eggs, one at a time and vanilla. Blend and mix well. Add dry pudding; blend well. Add the flour, salt and baking soda that you have stirred together before adding to creamed mixture. When thoroughly mixed, stir in a 12 oz package any flavor chips you want.
Heavenly Smore Bites

A great dessert that you can make in 10 minutes! You will never make smores outside again! The little bit of powdered sugar in the graham cracker crumbs and melted butter make these little gems something special.
1 1/4 cup graham cracker crumbs
1/4 cup powdered sugar
6 tables melted butter
12 regular sized marshmallows
1 large (7 oz) Hershey Milk Chocolate Bar
Mix crumbs, powdered sugar and melted butter together in small bowl with fork until well blended. Place a tablespoon of mixture in each of 24 mini muffin tins. Place in preheated 350 degree oven and bake for 5 min. Remove from oven and place 1/2 of small square of Hershey bar in each cup while still hot. Cut a marshmallow in half and place over chocolate. When you have finished with all 24 cups, put back in oven and cook for about 3-4 minutes, or until marshmallow is melted and covering the cup. Let cool in tin for 10 minutes before removing. (I had one the minute they came out of the oven, as I just couldn’t wait. They are amazingly good…will probably have them all eaten by this afternoon and will have to make more for our meeting tonight. But, as they say, a girl has to do what a girl has to do.)
Pumpkin Bread Pudding
Windows are open, the Tunnel of Fudge cake I made yesterday is long gone (no I didn’t eat it by myself, I had a little help from my friends, which reminds me of a little song..although if they were truly my friends, they wouldn’t have eaten so much and left more for me.) so today am trying this new recipe. Was just a little blurb inserted at the bottom of a page in my new SL, advertising Domino Sugar. Will make it and let you know how good it is. Sounds really delish and fallish!
Serves 8 to 10, depending on serving size
4 cups white bread, cut into cubes
4 eggs (FYI, unless a recipe specifies differently, use large eggs in recipes, as the recipes are written with that size in mind)
3 egg yolks
1 1/2 cups milk
1 1/2 cups heavy cream
3/4 cup canned pumpkin puree
1 cup granulated sugar
1/4 teas salt
1 tables rum or brandy or vanilla
1/4 teas nutmeg
1 teas cinnamon
1/4 teas cloves, ground
2 tables butter; cold, cut into pieces ( I can tell you right now, that I will be using probably 4-5 tables)
1/2 cup nuts, if desired
Preheat oven to 350. Grease a 13x9x2 baking pan. Dry bread cubes on cookie sheet in oven 10-15 minutes. Place bread cubes in pan; in large mixing bowl, whisk together all pudding ingredients except butter. Pour mixture over bread cubes. Let sit 10 minutes until bread is fully soaked. Dab butter over top. Bake 40-50 minutes. Pudding should be set in center by not dry. Serve with warm Crème Anglaise sauce. Recipe for that below.
Crème Anglaise
Whisk together 1 cup heavy cream, 2 large egg yolks and 1/4 cup sugar in a 2 qt saucepan. Cook over medium heat, whisking constantly so mixture doesn’t scorch or scramble, 8 to 10 minutes or until mixture thinly coats back of a wooden spoon. Add 1 teas vanilla and 1 cinnamon stick, if desired. Pour mixture into a bowl. Fill a large bowl with ice. Place bowl containing cream mixture over ice and let stand. Stirring constantly. 30 minutes. Remove cinnamon stick. Cover and chill 1 hour to 3 days.
Paula Deen’s Tunnel Of Love Fudge Cake
During the dinosaur age, known as the 70’s and 80’s, there was a cake that became so popular that you couldn’t go to any social gathering without being served a piece of Tunnel of Fudge cake. It was all the rave and people just couldn’t get enough of this gooey and yummy cake. I like to think that it was this cake’s fault that contributed to my “baby fat” look, that I still am so proud to sport even today, in my “golden years”. When Duncan Hines did away with the frosting mix that you added to one of their cake mixes, that made this cake possible, America cried. What would we do without our Tunnel of Fudge cake? What would we serve for company, holidays and birthday’s? What was happening to the world? Why would Duncan Hines do this to us when we were just getting over having to wear tie dyed shirts, clogs and bell bottom jeans?
In came Paula Deen with her version of our most beloved cake. Once again, we can get those pretty cake plates out and proudly serve America’s Cake. Thanks to Paula, we can go back to the kitchen and whip up this miracle of a cake. Who knew that Paula would be our cake hero? Not only do we love her for her southern fried everything, her southern drawl, her recipe for bread pudding made with Krispy Kreme donuts, but now, the Tunnel of Fudge Cake. Gather your friends, family, your Bible study group, your bridge and bunco groups and present them with this wonderful treasure from days gone by….
Tunnel of Fudge Cake
Serves 16
3/4 pound (3 sticks) butter
6 eggs
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 (12 1/2 oz) can creamy double Dutch frosting
2 cups all -purpose flour
2 cups chopped pecans or walnuts (the nuts really are necessary in this recipe to give it the right texture)
Preheat oven to 350. Cream room temperature butter in a large bowl on high speed. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well. Add sugar gradually, creaming at high speed until light and fluffy (goodbye light and fluffy rear end, hello saggy and droopy butt)
Gradually add flour. By hand, stir in frosting mix and nuts until well blended. Pour batter in well-greased and floured Bundt pan. Bake for 60-65 minutes. Cool 2 hours before removing from pan. Cake will have a dry brownie-type crust and a most center with a tunnel of fudge running through it.
Pennsylvania Dutch Apple Pie
Looking up a recipe for a friend, I came across this pie recipe that I had forgotten. It is so simple and it will make you the star of the show when you bring it to any holiday dinner. BTW, I want to pass along a tip. A friend came to dinner the other night, bringing with her a great cherry pie. Between she, her husband, Randy and I, we each ate 1/4 of the entire pie. The crust was delicious and until yesterday, I didn’t realize that the crust was a box mix from Betty Crocker. She said that is all she uses and all you do is add water and roll. The reason I have never liked bought pie crusts is they taste so salty and just never had that homemade taste, but this one, oh my, this one was truly a great crust and I really didn’t guess that it wasn’t home made. So look for it on your grocer’s shelves. (Do I sound like a commercial or what)? Anyway, back to the recipe. Using a unbaked pie crust, place 7-10 apples, (cored, peeled and sliced) into a 9″ unbaked pie crust. If using a frozen pie crust, get the deep dish and be sure you place on a rimmed baking tray to bake as it will bubbly over.
Mix 1/2 cup brown sugar, 1 teas cinnamon, 1/8 teas cloves. Sprinkle over apples.
Sprinkle 1 tables water or fresh lemon juice if you prefer over the top of apples.
Crumb Crust:
1/2 sugar
3/4 cup flour
1 stick butter
(I added another teaspoon of cinnamon to this crumb mixture as we love cinnamon)
Mix together the sugar and flour. Cut the butter into the sugar and flour using a pastry blended or 2 forks or food processor until mixture resembles crumbs. Sprinkle over pie.
Bake at 400 for 40-45 minutes. If pie begins to brown to much, cover lightly with foil.
This pie is served every Fall in Pennsylvania Dutch country. A combination of Granny Smith and red, such as Cortland or Mcintosh works best.
Serve warm with cinnamon ice cream.
Once you serve this, it will become a holiday tradition at your house.





