The magic never ends here, and this is your proof: magical cups made of peanut butter--the perfect vessel for peanut butter chocolate mousse!
You'll find the entire recipe and tutorial in all its glory on Peanut Butter and Company's website.
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The magic never ends here, and this is your proof: magical cups made of peanut butter--the perfect vessel for peanut butter chocolate mousse!
You'll find the entire recipe and tutorial in all its glory on Peanut Butter and Company's website.
Cinco de Mayo! I really hope you're going to make white chocolate cups that look like margaritas. (CakeSpy)
Margarita Jell-O Shot Cake is also acceptable. (CakeSpy)
Margarita pudding cups also sound tasty. (Sweet Cuppicakes)
How to pair alcohol and cake. A fantastic article by ME. (CakeSpy)
An interesting historical look at yogurt. (Detroit News)
"New Coke"? Big flop. (History.com)
Orange blossom pistachio milk. Sounds amazing! (Kale and Caramel)
Syllabub! It's fun to say and delicious to eat, so let's revive this lost dessert. (History.com)
Homemade sprinkles. Seriously! Amazing! (Craftsy)
Chocolate lasagne meets tiramisu. Heaven! (An Italian in my Kitchen)
Ever tried natillas? Ever HEARD of natillas? (Just a Pinch)
Remember that time I went to Nanaimo, to celebrate and explore the hometown of my favorite bar? (CakeSpy)
The best cornbread recipe, ever. Bold words! I'm intrigued. (In Jennie's Kitchen)
Peanut butter melting moments with caramelized banana cream. OMG. (Dessert First Girl)
Book of the week: A World of Cake by Krystina Castella. It explores cakes all over the world, complete with recipes, lore, and history. From European stollen to honey fritters in Africa to delicious cassata cake in Italy, this is the most delicious sort of armchair travel!
When I was first introduced to this recipe in my yoga training in Asheville, NC, the name made me titter. "Golden milk" made me think of something that would be discussed on Sex and the City, not something that you'd consider preparing as a health-friendly potable.
However, since I was in yoga training, I did my best to not crack up and instead bowed my hands in prayer, said "Om nom namaste", and drank the stuff up.
Debatable name aside, I highly suggest imbibing this golden milk. Because while yes, it is healthy, the primary fact is that it is delicious.
This recipe starts by making a "tea" of turmeric boiled in water to release its flavor; then, you add milk (I used whole milk, but you can use whatever type you like, dairy or not) and sweeten it with honey to taste.
Since it's used quite sparingly, the turmeric is not overpowering--it's quite subtle, making the milk taste just a little mysterious with an unusual but pleasant nutty-spicy flavor. The honey works beautifully with this fascinating flavor, but if you prefer to omit you can; the natural sweetness of the milk will be enough for some drinkers.
I should probably tell you that it's not just a delicious beverage--it also does boast some health benefits. Turns out, turmeric is super-super good for you, with a bevy of benefits including the one that fascinates me most: It helps reduce brain plaque. I don't want brain plaque, do you?
So, go ahead. Whether you want a tasty thing to drink or want to reduce brain plaque, or BOTH, enjoy this easy and accessible yoga-people recipe that non-yogis can enjoy, too.
This recipe was given to me from one of my yoga teachers, who uses a recipe from Siri Ved Kaur Khalsa's book From Vegetables With Love. I made some adaptations to the recipe to simplify and suit it to my taste. I love warm milk, so I like it served hot, but if you prefer it chilled, that is fine too.
Makes 1 serving (can be doubled, tripled, etc)
Procedure
Wouldn't it be a beautiful world? Here's a sneak peek at a new piece of artwork I'm working on. Just as an FYI, you can buy my artwork here.
I don't know about you, but I'm mad for cocoa nibs.
In case you're unfamiliar, these little nubbly bits are dried and fermented cacao beans--chocolate in its virgin form. They have a lightly fruity, slightly bitter (no more than coffee) taste that I find fascinating, and a wonderful foil to the sweetness in baked goods.
In short form: cocoa nibs make baked goods more interesting.
Case in point: these cookies, featuring cocoa nibs and toasted walnuts.
Without the mix-ins they're a fairly standard butter cookie, with a pleasantly tender, crumbly texture. But with the mix-ins, they're interesting and slightly fancy. And if you are what you eat, interesting and fancy aren't such bad things, don't you agree?
So. I adapted the base of this cookie from a recipe I found in a vintage recipe pamphlet.
It calls for 3 cups of flour but I found it difficult to incorporate that much, so I suggest 2 1/2 to 3 cups. But rely on your instincts.
The dough will be crumbly. But it shouldn't be too hard to handle.
When the dough seems crumbly but still able to clump into cookie-balls, that is the ideal texture.
Makes about 40
Ingredients
Procedure
How to draw block letters. Totally awesome!
Learn how to draw from memory. Seriously--a great artistic skill!
How to paint on canvas: invaluable tips.
Cheese-stuffed meatballs made in the slow cooker. I am in love with this recipe.
How to cook a whole chicken in a slow cooker. Delicious.
How to make homemade sugar cubes. Easy, and how fancy!
6 easy things to draw. If you're new to drawing, this will get you started on the right foot (hand?).
Common cooking mistakes...and how to remedy / prevent them!
Awesome doodling ideas. And proof that doodling is good for your brain!
DIY brown sugar. Technically from a while back but well worth checking out. <3
This is probably the easiest way ever to make marshmallow fluff. Believe it. Ingest it. Love it.
I thought it was about time to bring back a favorite recipe. I originally posted a "breakfast cookie " recipe on Serious Eats, which was then adapted for my first cookbook, CakeSpy Presents Sweet Treats for a Sugar-Filled Life.
Well, I have brought it back again, and this one is the brunch edition. It has a touch of champagne where most cookies would have vanilla extract. "One tablespoon of champagne?!?" you may exclaim. "What shall I ever do with the rest of the bottle?". Um...it's brunch. I think you'll figure out something, my friend. If all else fails, there's this:
Makes 12 jumbo cookies
Procedure
Oh, hi, you guys. I am in the process of re-modeling my website a bit, so excuse the growing pains as I make it "mobile friendly".
Meantime, I read an article recently about how coloring book pages designed for adults are the new thing--apparently they can act as a powerful mindfulness exercise. If I uploaded it correctly, you should be able to print this out in an appropriate size for coloring. If not, you can click here and download it in a variety of sizes. Enjoy!
Double chocolate stout bread pudding with balt marley caramel. Sounds awesome! (Lost Recipes Found)
Rum chocolate pineapple brownies. Interesting. (Recipe for Perfection)
Common cooking mistakes...and how to combat them. (Craftsy)
Raspberry curd tart. I want it. (Tutti Dolci)
A guide to the iconic desserts of Kansas City. (KCUR.org)
Lemon cookie gelato. Please, can I marry this recipe? (How Sweet Eats)
No bake cookie butter bars. Be still my beating heart. (Wallflour Girl)
Bakerella's roundup of the Ben & Jerry's ice cream adventure! (Bakerella)
VERY early morning breakfast bars. I want one, or five. (Salt & Serenity)
Mango cookies. INTO IT. (Whipperberry)
Adventures in Bakebook-ing: a roundup of the totally sweet Sweetapolita blog book tour. (Sweetapolita)
Easy things to draw if you're just getting started. (Craftsy)
Westhaven cake. I'd try it. (Cooks.com)
5 foods to try in Canada. I could go for a beaver tail. (Eturbonews)
How about a Brooklyn egg cream crawl? (Airship Daily)
Ever tried a hedgehog slice? Don't worry, no actual hedgehogs were harmed in the making of. (Giramuk's Kitchen)
Caramelized white mocha meringue. Pinkies out! (Moonblush Baker)
Is rejection worse than death? (CakeSpy)
One response: is rejection worsee than death? (Slow Bloom)
Another response: is rejection worse than death? (Thick Dumpling Skin)
Check me out on the Food Psych Podcast! (Food Psych Podcast)
Book of the week: Betty Crocker's "Frankly Fancy" Foods Recipe Book. This retro recipe pamphlet is one of the more awesome ones that I have come across. It's readily available (and cheap!) on Amazon or ebay - check it out!
A turtle without nuts? Believe it. This controversial confection is a key player in the new book Turtle, Truffle, Bark: Simple and Indulgent Chocolates to Make at Home.
Is it ok to make turtles with fruit instead of nuts? I say as long as the caramel is present, proceed. What do you think? Here's the recipe.
Eek! A turtle without nuts? Well, why the hell not?
These days, we’ve got such an assortment of dried fruits to choose from, it boggles the mind. I can’t get
enough of those dried tart cherries, so let’s throw those in, along with chopped papaya and a bit of chopped, candied lemon peel. Let’s pretend these turtles are health food, and top them with toasted pumpkin seeds.
Chocolate color? Choose your poison. There is absolutely no way to do these wrong. Take two of these and call me in the morning!
Line a sheet pan with parchment paper. Spread cherries in an even layer on the parchment. Layer papaya on top of the cherries. Sprinkle lemon peel on top of cherries and papaya. Set aside.
Place prepared caramel into a bowl. Put bowl in microwave, and heat on high for 45 seconds to 1 minute. Take out of microwave, stir well with mediumsized spatula, and put back in for 30 seconds. At this point, your caramel should be in liquid form.
Scoop a dollop of caramel from the bowl with your small silicone spatula, and using your other spatula, ease the caramel off the spatula and onto the fruit. Try to make them anywhere from 1 1/2 to 2 inches in diameter, depending on the size of the turtles you’d like to make. You’ll end up with 20 to 24 caramel turtle middles.
When caramel is completely cooled, you can start assembling your turtles.
Line one or two 18x13 sheet pans with parchment paper. Using a candy funnel, deposit dollops of chocolate on the parchment paper. Each one should be approximately 1 1⁄2 inches in diameter and there should be about an inch between each dollop. Make about six dollops, then place a caramel middle on each one. Continue making bottoms, topping with caramel, every six or so. When you have all your bottoms and middles done, go back to where you started and top the caramel with chocolate. You want to use enough chocolate to mostly cover the caramel. Sprinkle pumpkin seeds on top.
When turtles are completely hardened, they will last in an airtight container for three weeks.
Excerpted with permission from Turtle, Truffle, Bark: Simple and Indulgent Chocolates to Make at Home
I don't like the term "poke cake" because quite frankly, it sounds kind of dirty. Like, I feel like I should be blushing when I talk about them. But I love, love, love eating them. Because poke cakes aren't anything dirty at all: they're simply cakes which have been poked with a skewer of some sort so that they can be more receptive to delicious soaking liquids (tres leches cake would be a famous poke cake, btw. So would Better than Sex Cake).
And I have to say: this poke cake is spectacular. It starts with a cake mix, but it's fancied up right quick by using melted butter and milk instead of the water and oil called for on the package, and then once baked, it's poked and soaked (see? dirty-sounding!) with an absolutely dazzling chocolate and sweetened condensed milk mixture. Even served just like that, this cake could make you cry with joy.
But save the tears, because there's still frosting! I used seven minute frosting, but you can use whatever type of buttercream or topping you'd prefer.
It's a joy to dig into this cake, because it has all the joy of a yellow cake but the moisture and decadence of a gooey chocolate dessert.
I'll leave it at this: it's a great cake. And anyone you make it for should consider themselves very lucky!
Makes one, two-layer, 8-inch cake
For the cake
For the topping
To top it all off
Procedure
Here's a riddle: what kind of cakes do mystery writers like?
Happily, the new book The Mystery Writers of America Cookbook: Wickedly Good Meals and Desserts to Die For is ready and willing to answer this question in the most delicious way. It is a collection of recipes culled from famous mystery writers, and it makes for mighty sweet eating.
When choosing an excerpt recipe to feature here, my eye was drawn right away to "Grandma’s Killer Chocolate Cake: via mystery writer James Patterson. I hope you'll enjoy!
Recipe headnote:
Here’s one “killer” Alex Cross always loves to catch—Grandma’s Killer Cake! A special family recipe dating from the 1940s, this decadent cake seems to get better with age; it is tastier on day two. And you need to be a good detective around the house after it has been made, sitting there in its glassdomed cake stand, staring back at you with deadly temptation, because a piece seems to mysteriously disappear every time I go into the kitchen. Not to be caught redhanded, so looms the “Killer Cake Killer”!
YIELD: 1 SINGLE LAYER 9x12 INCH CAKE OR 1 DOUBLE LAYER 9 INCH CAKE
CAKE
FROSTING
1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Cream butter and sugar together. Add eggs.
2. Blend in flour and buttermilk in alternating additions, starting and ending with the flour. Add baking soda mixture, followed by chocolate and vanilla extract.
3. Pour batter into one 9by12inch pan or two round 9inch springform pans. Bake for 30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Remove from oven and let cool.
4. Combine all frosting ingredients in a saucepan, bring to a full boil, and boil for 2 minutes. Let cool. You can put saucepan on ice if necessary to cool quickly.
5. Remove the cake from the pan, frost, and serve.
About the author: James Patterson has sold 300 million books worldwide, including the Alex Cross, Michael Bennett, Women’s Murder Club, Maximum Ride, and Middle School series. He supports getting kids reading through scholarship, Book Bucks programs, book donations, and his website, readkiddoread.com. He lives in Palm Beach with his wife, Sue, and his son, Jack.
Excerpted from The Mystery Writers of America Cookbook: Wickedly Good Meals and Desserts to Die For edited by Kate White. Reprinted with permission from Quirk Books.
Last week, I went to Florence, Colorado. In case you are unfamiliar, this is a weird but wonderful little pioneer town in Southern Colorado. It's home to a bevy of antique shops, plenty of unique architecture, and...the penitentiary. Not kidding.
It makes for an interesting town. And happily, I had some time to explore it. Let me tell you what I found there:
Before I go into food, let me tell you that there is an enterprising artist in Florence who carves tree stumps into elaborate works of art. Here I am next to one of them.
The first culinary stop was Two Sisters, which is an establishment which seems like it's of a bygone era, or at least a David Lynch movie. We got some very hearty beef strogranoff, which was the special of the day. To our amazement, when dessert came (included with dinner)...it was cinnamon rolls. Cinnamon rolls at night? Don't mind if I do.
I was surprised to see that Two Sisters had mixed reviews on Yelp. It's certainly not the place to go if you're into organic food, or even vegetarian food. But as a special occasion trip to the Colorado frontier, I thought it was full of charm and homestyle goodness.
The next morning, we went to a place called the Rose Bud Cafe. Everything you ordered arrived covered in gravy. It was that type of place. They did have cinnamon rolls, but we didn't partake. But it did get me thinking: perhaps gravy and cinnamon rolls were the official foods of the town.
Photo: Rose Bud Cafe Yelp page
After breakfast we went to the local bakery, Aspen Leaf, and picked up a variety of treats, including pecan brownies, bread pudding, and bear claws. Oh, and yes: they had cinnamon rolls.
We went to the local coffee shop, The Pour House, and got coffee. And a doughnut, made in nearby Cañon City. Why not?
We walked by this place and were intrigued, but it was not open.
That day, we went to the Pikes Peak cog railway.
Here we are from very high altitude!
For dinner, we went to my cousin Jason's house. Seriously, dudes, he built a house. They have chicks. Baby chicks. So cute!
I made the three ingredient chocolate cake from this very blog for dessert and we ate it before it even cooled. Classy!
The next morning, we went back to Two Sisters for breakfast, since it was Easter and it was the only thing open. Cinnamon roll? Oh, too full.
Luckily, a couple of the antique stores were open on Easter, so we toured them and I got THIS treasure:
I probably should have bought this, but I didn't. If you are going to Florence anytime soon, it's all yours.
We got home feeling tired and full. Overalll, it was a great and sweet trip!
Places Mentioned:
News flash: I ate frozen yogurt and I didn't hate it.
If you read this site, you know that I have strong feelings about frozen yogurt. It's not ice cream. It never will be. Keep it off my dessert plate, please.
But as part of an ice cream and frozen treat expedition for an article I was writing for New Mexico magazine, I found myself duty-bound to sample the frozen yogurt at local Santa Fe mini-chain Yoberri. And I didn't hate it.
What is so special about this particular variety of fro-yo?
Perhaps it's the fact that it's made in-house, with quality ingredients. Perhaps it's because they make it with care and precision, and it has a smooth, non-grainy texture.
Or maybe it's the toppings, which include homemade maple fudge sauce, chocolate chili sauce, and more. And fruit, if you're into that (I AM NOT).
Whatever it was, I found this frozen yogurt downright enjoyable. I got the "classic tart" vanilla, and topped it with aforementioned maple fudge sauce and (natch) rainbow sprinkles. And I ate every bite.
Don't get me wrong, my personal preference is still for ice cream; I'm of the "gimme the cream!" sort of mentality that I'm sure other ice cream aficionados will appreciate. But as frozen yogurt goes, this is some of the best I have tasted, and I would eat it again.
There, I said it. I enjoyed eating frozen yogurt.
Yoberri, two locations in Santa Fe; online here.
Battenberg cake! Make it now. (CakeSpy for Serious Eats)
Marble halvah recipe. I'm gonna try it! (Joy of Kosher)
I've been nominated to go back to Bali to teach. Vote for me? (Vote here)
My best friends, Ben and Jerry, have a sweet new product. Worth your time (Brr-rito)
Speaking of my bffs Ben and Jerry, did you see the cute cartoon I made to document my visit? (CakeSpy)
Easy pancake rolls, three ways. Don't you love the post already? (Crazy for Crust)
How to maintain a healthy relationship with sugar. By my friend Pam! (Peaceful Dumpling)
What was Abraham Lincoln's last meal? (History.com)
That led me to wonder: what about other famous people's last meals? (Mental Floss)
My kind of museum show: an exhibit on New Jersey diners. (GMnews.com)
Good eggs: the many purposes of eggs in baking (Craftsy)
Muscovado chocolate chip cookies. Get a little fancy, why don't you. (Love and Olive Oil)
In praise of doodling. (CakeSpy for Craftsy)
Carrot cake pop-tarts. (The Emotional Baker)
Matcha chantilly cakes. SO elegant. (Sprinkle Bakes)
Shortbread cookie truffles. Awesome. (CakeSpy)
Book of the week:
Will It Waffle?: 53 Irresistible and Unexpected Recipes to Make in a Waffle Iron. Seriously. A dude puts every type of food in a waffle maker with one question above all others as motivation: will it waffle? You'd be surprised how often the answer is yes.
be sure to listen to me live on Sunday! Here are the deets:
Not cake. Still sweet.
I want to tell you about my friend Krystina Castella's new class, Tipsy Cakes, on Craftsy. Actually, I'll let her tell you about it. Seriously--it's such a fun class! Booze and cake, what could be wrong? Read on to learn more, directly from Krystina:
I just launched a new class Tipsy Cakes for Craftsy.com (note: you can check out the class trailer here!). The class paired with my and Terry Lee Stone’s Booze Cakes book (Quirk Books) is now the most comprehensive assemblage of technique and tested recipes on baking with alcohol out there.
I had been noticing ads for craftsy.com popping up in my browser over the past several months due to my 3yearold sons obsession with watching sewing videos. So when a food anthropologist friend of mine who currently works for the company called me and said they have launched into cakes and asked me to develop a course based on the Booze Cake book for them I jumped at the chance. I was excited to have the opportunity to give Booze Cakes book fans more and something different. So what I decided to focus on is adding the collection of already creative and tasty recipes in the book with a behind the scenes focus on technique.
There are so many uncommon and interesting flavors that you can’t get with the typical vanilla and chocolate flavorings. When I started baking with alcohol it opened up a whole new world of ingredients and flavor profiles to experiment with and a whole set of recipes.
I worked out the curriculum and tested new recipes for months to get the techniques down. In the dead of winter I left the 87degree temperature of Los Angeles for a week of the beautiful snowy streets of downtown Denver. The space where we baked and shot the class was great old cooking school. The support team from Craftsy that I was provided for the class was top notch.
Although I have written 8 cookbooks (7 on baking) and have worked as a professor teaching in front of people for over 20 years, shooting an online cooking class was something new for me. When on a photo shoot for a cookbook I am the producer the behind the scenes person and the food is in front of the camera not me and I was a bit nervous. Although after a day of practicing my jitters faded away and I got the hang of it and loved every minute of it.
My goals in Tipsy Cakes is to:
In order to help student create their own recipes I created a flavor profile chart for the class. On it I mention suggestions of flavors to try out for your own recipes.
The course consists of 7 classes, each focusing on what to consider when baking, soaking or adding to frostings and making garnishes. In each class students learn how to get the most flavor in their cake from specific classifications of alcohol.
In the Rum Lesson students learn how to make a soak.
In the Fruit and Nut Liqueurs Lesson students learn to add sweetened fruit and nutflavored liqueurs into fillings and frostings. In the Coffee and Cream Liqueurs lesson students learn how to retain alcohol in baking while still giving the cake enough time to bake through.
In the Hard Alcohol lesson students learn to exercise moderation, and incorporate small amounts of hard liquor to create surprisingly subtle flavors.
In the Beer Lesson I discuss different types of craft beer and explore some exciting flavor combinations that work with each.
In the Wine Lesson students learn the benefits of reduction and how to create powerful and complex flavors.
Finally in Cocktail Cakes, the most fun lesson, I pull together the techniques demonstrated throughout the class and show a collection of cakes based on favorite mixed drinks.
Along the way students learn about flambé sauces, how to make a poke cake, an ice cream cake, and edible cocktail garnishes including chocolate and strawberry shot glasses. Also on craftsy.com you can ask me any questions you have about baking with booze and post your creations. I hope to hear from and see what you make there – Happy baking and good eating.
Note: if you think Krystina is cool (she is!), you can follow her (and the class) on Facebook.
So, I recently went to Vermont. As a guest of Ben and Jerry. You might know them from the ice cream in your supermarket. Let me guide you through the experience in PICTURES.
Vermont! I didn't know who else would be there for the event, and I was a little nervous. But I felt a bit better after I found an awesome goodie back including all sorts of made-in-Vermont treats and a fleece jacket emblazoned with the Ben & Jerry's logo in just my size, and after I had turned on Law and Order, of course.
The next morning, I took a yoga class at a nearby studio before the Ben & Jerry's events started. Om nom namaste!
Afterward, I returned to the hotel, got ready and headed down to the lobby, where I found who else but BAKERELLA! I did kind of tackle her. That part is factual.
We all went to the Penny Cluse Cafe, which used to be one of the first Ben & Jerry's scoop shop locations. Perhaps most importantly: we ate in the room where chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream was invented.
We headed to the corporate offices of Ben & Jerry's, where we split into teams. Mine included Bakerella (my darling!) and Nick from On Second Scoop. We got to invent an ice cream flavor with a flavor specialist who looked just like Alan Arkin. You can't really see it in ice cream form, but trust me on this one.
We got to see the faux scoop shop in their HQ where they train franchisees. We also got to eat ice cream.
After our flavor adventure, we had a nice dinner out. Most importantly of ALL: it was on this fateful evening that I was exposed to some cultural phenomena I had not been previously: first, the term "lumbersexual"; second, the term "throwing shade". I now strive to use these terms in at least every other sentence.
The next morning, we got to visit one of Ben & Jerry's dairies. As long as you have absolutely no follow up questions, this is exactly what it was like.
After that, we got to go to their factory and see the ice cream made. For no particular reason, men wearing nets in over their hair hack ice cream for a job there!
Oh, I'm kidding. They slice the pints at random to make sure the fillings are evenly distributed. It does look like a Damien hirst ice cream art installation when they do it, though.
Since we were in Vermont, it was the law that we go snowshoeing. Since we were at Ben & Jerry's, our journey ended at the Flavor Graveyard, where they pay homage to flavors no longer in circulation.
WE GOT TO MEET BEN. As in, Ben & Jerry's. He was a really nice guy and he gave us each a stamp so that we could stamp dollar bills with political statements. I'm not kidding.
When it was time to go, I didn't want to leave.
But I did. I missed Porkchop and my sweetie too much to stay in Vermont, so I took a plane back home.
I get excited about ice cream. And I know, especially in the safe place of this website, I am not alone.
So when I was hired to write an article about ice cream for New Mexico magazine, I was super excited about the part of the article where I would be writing about the ice cream establishments of the state. Being a very hands-on person, I took it upon myself to try as many in person as I could.
One establishment that impressed me in particular? Cloud 9 Creamery.
Talking to someone in yoga class about how I was going there after class (I really like to brag), another student chimed in and implied that I was in for a real treat.
Dramatization:
So what makes Cloud 9 so special? Let me give you the 411.
Cloud 9 Creamery shares retail space with another purveyor of tasty sweets, Cocopelli, in a large strip mall near the movie theatre.
When they first started, Cloud 9 Creamery was making ice cream in single servings using liquid nitrogen to make the ice cream. I don't know how it works exactly, but I know that when I tried the ice cream at Smitten in San Francisco, it amounted to pricey ice cream that took a long time to make. It was very, very smooth and creamy, yes. I was very glad I'd gone. But it took a long time to make, and I was hungry. I still remember that part.
Apparently, this was the reaction at Cloud 9, so they switched to more traditional methods of making ice cream--and gelato and sorbet, too.
Well, I don't have the benefit of being able to compare the different methods side by side, but what I tasted at Cloud 9 Creamery seriously knocked my socks off.
Made in fairly small batches, owner Nicole uses local ingredients whenever possible, and will follow whimsy or special produce finds to make limited edition flavors (a great score on strawberries in the produce market? There's gonna be strawberry ice cream or sorbet today). This is to say that on the day you visit, there might be something special to try--do yourself a favor and try it, because it might not be there next time.
On the day of our visit, since I was focusing on the New Mexico aspect, we stuck to local flavors: for me, the honey-lavender, for my companion, the toasted almond and Sante Fe Pinon. We also tried the salted caramel (awesome), pistachio, and strawberry in little sample spoon sizes.
How can I explain this ice cream to you?
Well, at the risk of sounding like I've lived in Santa Fe too long: this ice cream tasted happy.
I'm a big believer that the maker can impart a flavor on their finished result--no, not by spitting in it or anything, but just by transferring their good vibes. And there were plenty of good vibes in this ice cream. It felt like a place that you could bring your kids, but as adults, you'd love it, too. This is totally in line with the owner's goal to create a family-friendly establishment--and to bring awesome ice cream to Santa Fe.
The flavors were well-balanced, interesting, and very creamy. Crave-worthy.
We strolled along a sidewalk near the store that had spring blossoms in bloom, and we could almost ignore the commercial hardware store and general mall generic-ness in the sweet bliss of our ice cream moment.
We both agreed: this ice cream was a keeper. I know I'll be back, and if it's accessible to you, I suggest you check out Cloud 9 Creamery.
Cloud 9 Creamery, 3482 Zafarano Drive, Santa Fe. On Facebook.