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  • Tipsy Baker: Halloween Hangover

    1 vote

    Ingredients

    • 1 cup of unsalted butter
    • 1 cup brown sugar
    • 2 eggs
    • 1 tsp vanilla extract
    • 1 sifted cup of flour
    • 1 tsp baking powder
    • 1/2 tsp salt
    • 20-30 candy corn candies (for optional decoration)

    Directions

    It's been over a week since Halloween graced our jack-o-lanterned doorsteps and perhaps over an hour since the leftover candy has graced my waistline. I was taken in by the siren song of individually wrapped packets of candy corn, thinking "Oh, Halloween's on Saturday this year, we'll have a ton of kids showing up," and I bought an ambitious amount of candy. We were able to give away a bit of the goods, but not nearly as much as I'd hoped, so we're of course awash in sweets that tempt us every time we walk in and out of the kitchen. My sugar-addled brain came to the conclusion that making Botched Butterscotched Bars with Candy Corn was a nifty plan, even though the candy corn was only for garnish and we now have cake to go with candy.It's a piece of cake to bake a pretty cake... if you're feeling boozy - Photo by Wasabi Prime

    Given that it's baking and Homie don't play with a smidge of this and a dash of that, I used a recipe. However, a glass or two of wine made my head foggy and I used the wrong amounts, thankfully to non-catastrophic results. And thus, Tipsy Baking was born.

    I used a basic butterscotch bar cookie recipe from a tattered copy of The Joy of Cooking that my mom threw into a moving box when I made the trek out to Washington. I used more flour and butter than the original recipe, and it resulted in a more dense, cakey bar. Realizing the mistake, I remade the recipe using the correct measurements, but it resulted in more of a toffee-like bar that seemed confused over whether or not it wanted to be candy or a cookie. Comparing the two batches, I have to admit the tipsy batch using the mistaken quantities had a more pleasing texture, almost like a caramel pound cake. When the pan of just-baked cake emerged from the oven, I pressed in the candy corn in ample-spaced rows. The heat from the cake softened the candy corn, just enough to help fuse it to the surface. Granted, this didn't really whittle down our supply of candy corn as much as I'd hoped, but at least the finished bars looked pretty.

    Because the bars are so dense and sweet, small petit four-sized portions seemed the most appropriate, lest we turn into Mike Myers' Phillip, the Hyper-Hypo kid from 1990s SNL. In uncharacteristic Wasabi manner, I'm listing the botched-up recipe below. Wine-drinking optional but highly recommended.

    Indy's keen disguise may have worked on others, but we are not fooled. No cake for you! - Photos by Wasabi PrimeBotched Butterscotched Bars (adapted/wrecked from The Joy of Cooking)

    * makes up to 20 small, bite-sized bars

    Line a 9 x 9 inch pan with a criss-cross of parchment paper, so that all the surfaces are covered; this will make for easy removal once it's baked. Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Turn burner on to medium, take a small saucepan and melt butter and dissolve brown sugar. Mix until incorporated and turn off heat. Wait until the mixture cools slightly and slowly incorporate the eggs; can temper them in to be sure they don't scramble. Add in vanilla extract.

    Sift flour, baking powder and salt together. Take the wet ingredients and slowly incorporate with the dry until mixture is fully combined into a loose, sticky batter. Pour batter into lined baking pan and bake for 20-25 minutes, checking midway through and rotating pan for even cooking. Use a toothpick to check center for doneness -- toothpick should come out clean when it's finished baking.

    When cake is baked, remove from oven to cool. While still hot, press candy corn into surface in three or four well-spaced rows. Each cut bar should have one candy corn in the center. Remove cake using parchment paper and allow to cool on a rack. Once fully cooled, cut into small bite-sized squares and serve.

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