What's for dessert Simple recipes for dessert people

Claire Saffitz, 1986-

Book - 2022

Filled with decadent delights to satisfy any sweet tooth, this all-new collection of straightforward and simple recipes for dessert people is filled with loads of troubleshooting advice that readers have come to count on.

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2nd Floor 641.86/Saffitz Due Nov 29, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Claire Saffitz, 1986- (author)
Other Authors
Jenny (Photographer) Huang (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
367 pages : color illustrations ; 29 cm
ISBN
9781984826985
  • Recipe Matrix
  • Introduction
  • About the Recipes
  • How to Bake with Less Anxiety ... and Less Waste
  • Equipment
  • Ingredients
  • Chilled & Frozen Desserts
  • Roasted Red Plum & Biscoff Icebox Cake
  • French 75 Jelly with Grapefruit
  • Pineapple & Coconut-Rum Sundaes
  • Melon Parfaits
  • Persimmon Panna Cotta
  • Goat Milk Panna Cotta with Guava Sauce
  • Classic Sundae Bombe
  • Salty Brownie Ice Cream Sandwiches
  • No-Bake Lime-Coconut Custards with Coconut Crumble
  • Tiramisu-y Icebox Cake
  • No-Bake Strawberry Ricotta Cheesecake
  • Grape Semifreddo
  • No-Bake Grapefruit Bars
  • Marbled Mint Chocolate Mousse
  • Coffee Stracciatello Semifreddo
  • Mango-Yogurt Mousse
  • Stovetop Desserts
  • Puddings, Crepes, Fried & Flambéed Things & More
  • Hot Chocolate with Marshmallows
  • Coconut-Jasmine Rice Pudding with Lychee
  • Tapioca Pudding with Saffron & Pomegranate
  • Creamy Rice Pudding with Candied Kumquats
  • Toasted Farro Pudding with Red Wine Cherries
  • Banoffee Pudding
  • Burnt Maple Pain Perdu
  • Chocolate Coupes
  • Old-Fashioned Cherries Jubilee
  • Bananas Flambé
  • Floating Islands
  • Sweet Cheese Blintzes with Lemony Apricot Compote
  • Malted & Salted Caramel Pudding
  • Frosted Sour Cream Cake Donuts
  • Buckwheat & Lemon Crepes Suzette
  • Pillowy Beignets
  • Easy Cakes
  • Fennel & Olive Oil Cake with Blackberries
  • Rhubarb & Oat Crumb Cakes
  • Honey-Roasted Apple Cake
  • Blueberry Buckle with Cornflake Streusel
  • Crunchy Almond Cake
  • Peach, Bourbon & Pecan Cake
  • Morning Glorious Loaf Cake
  • Cranberry Anadama Cake
  • Molten Chocolate Olive Oil Cakes
  • Sticky Pumpkin-Chestnut Gingerbread
  • Crystallized Meyer Lemon Bundt Cake
  • Polenta Pistachio Pound Cake
  • Flourless Chocolate Meringue Cake
  • Malted Banana Upside-Down Cake with Malted Cream
  • Whipped Cream Tres Leches Cake with Hazelnuts
  • Marbled Sheet Cake
  • Bars, Cookies & Candied Things
  • Raspberry Almond Thumbprints
  • Phyllo Cardamom Pinwheels
  • Seedy Whole Wheat Chocolate Chip Skillet Cookie
  • Cocoa-Chestnut Brownies
  • Honey & Tahini Toffee Matzo
  • Salty Cashew Blondies
  • Glazed Spelt Graham Crackers
  • Toasted Rice Sablés
  • Lime Squiggles
  • All-In Shortbreads
  • Coconut Macaroon Bars
  • Caramel Peanut Popcorn Bars
  • Free-Form Hazelnut Florentines
  • Sugar Cookies
  • Blue & White Cookies
  • Prune & Almond Rugelach
  • Pies, Tarts, Cobblers & Crisps
  • Cherry & Brown Butter Buckwheat Crisp
  • Pastry Bianco with Slow-Roasted Plums
  • Berry Crisp with Seedy Granola Topping
  • Easy Apple Galette
  • Apricot & Strawberry Galette
  • Honeyed Nut & Phyllo Pie
  • Banana-Sesame Cream Tart
  • Peach Drop Biscuit Cobbler
  • Rhubarb & Raspberry Shortcakes with Poppy Seeds
  • Roasted Lemon Tart
  • S'mores Tart
  • Caramelized Pear Turnover with Sage
  • Quince & Pineapple Jam Tart
  • Cinnamon-&-Sugar Apple Pie
  • Fried Sour Cherry Pies
  • Walnut & Oat Slab Pie
  • More Desserts from the Oven
  • Baked Custards & Puddings, Soufflés & Meringue Desserts
  • Cajeta Pots de Crème
  • Baked Semolina Pudding with Clementines & Bay Leaves
  • Baked Frangipane Apples
  • Spiced Pear Charlotte with Brioche
  • Choose-Your-Own-Ending Custards: Crème Brûlée or Crème Caramel
  • Inverted Affogatos
  • Blood Orange Pudding Cake
  • Grand Marnier Soufflés
  • Chocolate Soufflés
  • Rye Bread Pudding with Rye Whiskey Caramel Sauce
  • Cherry Pavlova with Hibiscus
  • Profiterole Bar with Berry, Hot Fudge, and Salted Caramel Sauces
  • Kabocha & Ginger Soufflés
  • Eton Mess Two Ways
  • Black Sesame Merveilleux
  • Souffléed Lemon Bread Pudding
  • Essential Recipes & Techniques
  • All-Purpose Flaky Pastry Dough
  • Essential Technique: Rolling Out Chilled Pastry Dough
  • All-Purpose Drop Biscuit or Shortcake Dough
  • Essential Technique: Stacking Shortcake Dough
  • Visual Guide: Egg Whites and Sugar Beaten to Various Stages
  • Easy Marshmallows
  • Essential Technique: Softening Gelatin
  • Essential Technique: Setting Up a Double Boiler
  • Essential Technique: Filling a Pastry Bag
  • All-Purpose Meringue
  • Essential Technique: Beating Egg Whites and Sugar
  • Salted Caramel Sauce
  • Essential Technique: Cooking a Wet Caramel
  • Crème Anglaise
  • Essential Technique: Blanching and Tempering Eggs
  • Other Essential Techniques
  • Folding a Mixture
  • Creaming Butter and Sugar
  • Forming Logs of Cookie Dough
  • Browning Butter
  • Whipping Cream (and Rescuing Overwhipped Cream)
  • Macerating Fruit
  • Cutting Citrus
  • Poaching Fruit
  • Baking in a Water Bath (Bain-Marie)
  • Chilling in an Ice Bath
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Fans of Saffitz's award-winning first cookbook, Dessert Person (2020), will be thrilled to see round two of her matrix, a grid plotting the level of difficulty and time required for every recipe within. This time around, though, the lower-left quadrant containing recipes requiring few special skills, and a couple hours, max, is heavy: a giant, healthy-ish chocolate-chip cookie made in a skillet, a very almondy almond cake (for "true almond lovers only!"). Following this spread and Saffitz's ample guidance for stocking the kitchen and navigating the book, recipes flow from frozen desserts (ice cream bombe, no-bake grapefruit bars) to stovetop sweets (puddings, crepes, and donuts), rustic "easy cakes" made in loaf and bundt pans; bars and cookies (hello, caramel peanut popcorn bars), fruit-heavy pies and cobblers, and a catch-all "other" section (frangipane baked apples). "Can I?" sidebars throughout offer guidance on making ahead and substitutions. Devoted followers of the cheerfully instructive Saffitz and her popular YouTube series will be relieved that her font of inventive, refined recipes, on full display here, shows no signs of stopping.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"Asking 'what's for dessert?' is more than a nightly routine, it's a personal exercise," writes YouTube culinary star Saffitz (Dessert Person: Recipes and Guidance for Baking with Confidence) in this scrumptious dessert collection. The mouthwatering options--easy apple galette, classic sundae bombe, and cocoa-chestnut brownies among them--are beginner friendly, and Saffitz is mindful of bakers' time, space, and budget limitations; none of the recipes require a stand mixer, and many have a considerable shelf life (the crystallized Meyer lemon bundt cake, if well wrapped and stored at room temperature, keeps for up to one week and will "improve in flavor and texture over the first couple of days"). Many of the chilled and frozen desserts incorporate coffee or fruit, as with a tiramisu-inspired icebox cake that calls for instant coffee granules, and a panna cotta that includes Fuyu persimmons. Pastry offerings provide unique takes on familiar treats, notably with doughnuts made of sour cream cake and finished with chocolate, strawberry, or vanilla frosting. Helpful tips include how to bake with "less anxiety" (visualize the process from start to finish before attempting a recipe), and the step-by-step instructions with photos will be a boon for novices. This is a no-brainer for home bakers in need of reliable and delicious go-tos. Agent: David Black, David Black Agency. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In her sequel to Dessert Person, Saffitz delivers a new round of delights. Fans will love that her time vs. difficulty matrix is back, along with the equipment lists and serving and time information that accompanies each recipe, there so bakers of all skills don't bite off more than they can chew. Chapters go beyond cakes, pies, cookies, and bars and also include frozen and stovetop desserts, as well as an eclectic mix of oven desserts such as pavlovas and meringues. The final chapter offers a primer that helps bakers create building blocks for the desserts, while also teaching essential techniques such as using a double boiler, creaming butter and sugar, and using a piping bag. "Can I?" sidebars answer questions readers may have about changing pan sizes, making sweets ahead, and creating variations. The colorful design and photography are a nod to vintage cookbooks and match the fun the recipes inspire. VERDICT Saffitz continues to convert cooks to bakers and wow the experienced with her charm, fun recipes, and excellent instruction in a book that is sure to become a classic. A must-buy.--Sarah Tansley

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

"What's for dessert?" It's a nightly refrain in our house. Without fail, as soon as dinner is done and before the plates are cleared, I turn and ask my husband, Harris, this question with a mix of eagerness and excitement. When I'm deep in recipe-testing mode, there's a certain tongue-in-cheekiness to the question, since we might already have a cake or pastry sitting on the countertop. But on other nights, the answer is open-ended. Dessert could be a piece of cookie dough pulled from the freezer and baked, or a spoonful of hot fudge or caramel sauce scooped from a jar in the fridge. Absent any of these options, we get creative. Harris might schmear a little chocolate-hazelnut spread over a graham cracker or whip up a glass of chocolate milk. Or, we simply dip out to our corner bodega for an ice cream bar. Whatever dessert is, I have to have it, and savoring it is a ritual Harris and I always look forward to sharing. Asking "what's for dessert?" is more than a nightly routine, it's a personal exercise. It prompts me to imagine all the ways I can bestow myself and those around me with (edible) pleasures and comforts. Conceiving an answer and bringing it to life are acts of self-care and care for others. During the pandemic, when many of our normal sources of enjoyment disappeared, the question took on new import. I found myself at home thinking of new and creative ways I could add a little sweetness to daily life--literally. Historically, dessert to me has always meant something baked, but this book expands that definition. Here I embrace a wide variety of desserts, from those cooked on the stovetop to those chilled in the freezer or refrigerator, as well as those served largeformat and individually, free-form and composed. Whether you're into flambés, soufflés, or simple loaf cakes, there's a happiness-inducing dessert here for everyone. In celebrating this vast and beautiful spectrum, this book offers over 100 different answers to that all-important question: What's for dessert? I hope that the breadth of recipes in this book inspires you to discover new ways of being a dessert person (or to become one, if you're not already), but I know this won't happen unless you actually want to prepare the recipes at home in your own kitchen. With that in mind, I take into account home bakers' time, space, and budget limitations in an effort to make each recipe as approachable as possible. None requires a stand mixer and only about half require a hand mixer, meaning a great number are makeable entirely by hand. Like many people, I experienced a degree of burnout in the kitchen after preparing so many meals at home in the early months of the pandemic. This diminished ambition became an asset while I was developing the recipes for this book. It drove me to employ store-bought ingredients both thoughtfully and strategically, and to focus on simple, make-ahead recipes with wide margins of error--what Harris calls "cook's desserts." Not only can every person find a dessert here to suit their tastes, they can find one to match the time and energy they want to invest as well (see Recipe Matrix on pages 8-9). Though none of the recipes in this book rises to the occasion of a project, they range in difficulty level from 1 (Very Easy) to 3 (Moderate). The very easy ones, like my HoneyRoasted Apple Cake (page 138) and French 75 Jelly with Grapefruit (page 42), don't require a lot of time, focus, or technique and could be made while also putting dinner on the table, doing laundry, or emptying the dishwasher (believe me, I've done all). The moderate ones, like the Souffléed Lemon Bread Pudding (page 325) and Walnut & Oat Slab Pie (page 273), are a bit more involved but provide learning and entertainment in the kitchen without being all-day affairs. No matter the difficulty level or time commitment, each recipe is streamlined so it comes together as efficiently as possible. (See About the Recipes, page 15, for more on this approach and a more detailed breakdown of the difficulty ratings.) If you're a beginner, rest assured: No dessert in this book is out of your reach. For inspiration and to broaden my dessert horizons, I turned to cookbooks by lauded pastry chefs and authors such as Claudia Fleming, Gale Gand, Gina DePalma, Emily Luchetti, Karen DeMasco, Dorie Greenspan, and Flo Braker. These works helped me get to know the canons of classic American and European desserts and planted the seeds that became many of the retro-leaning recipes here, like Banana-Sesame Cream Tart (page 245) and Marbled Sheet Cake (page 176). I also explored the charming and homespun world of community cookbooks, including ones my mom has had on her shelf for years, to learn more about the history of home desserts (these spiral-bound recipe collections, written and compiled by local organizations like church groups and rotary clubs, are gems--look for them in used bookstores and on eBay and Etsy). These sources inspired me to create recipes that feel at times humble and homey and at other times a little fancy, but always fun, joyful, and a touch whimsical. While this book features many different kinds of desserts, there's a timeless quality to how a great number of them look and taste. In many cases, I don't mess with beloved classics that need no updating, so I provide faithful versions of Crème Brûlée (page 291) and Eton Mess (page 319). In other cases, I tweak the flavor, format, or scale of an old favorite, as I do in Old-Fashioned Cherries Jubilee (page 105) and Tiramisu-y Icebox Cake (page 63). And sometimes I incorporate familiar elements into more original creations, like Roasted Lemon Tart (page 253) and Phyllo Cardamom Pinwheels (page 186). No matter the specific recipe, you'll find the clear imprint of my style throughout: lots of fruit, no fussy decoration, clear flavors, and multiple textures. This collection of desserts feels classic to me. That sense is a reflection of my family history, my childhood growing up in the Midwest, my culinary education in Paris, and my time living in New York City. Though what constitutes a "classic" differs for everyone according to age, geography, and life experience, I think you'll find desserts in these chapters that give you a taste of the comforting and familiar, too. I've organized the recipes into chapters according to where and how they come together: inside the oven, on the stovetop, or in the refrigerator and freezer. The idea is to provide a certain user-friendliness. If, say, you're a college student living in a dorm, you can make no-oven-needed Persimmon Panna Cotta (page 51) from the Chilled & Frozen Desserts chapter, or Malted & Salted Caramel Pudding (page 119) from the Stovetop Desserts chapter. Or, if it's cold outside and you're in the mood to bake, select something cozy-sounding from one of the oven-focused chapters, like the Cranberry Anadama Cake (page 153) in Easy Cakes. Thinking about dessert along these lines revealed fascinating patterns. About half of the recipes in the book--the ones that fall into the chapters titled Easy Cakes; Bars, Cookies & Candied Things; and Pies, Tarts, Cobblers & Crisps--get their structure from flour. The other half--the ones falling into Chilled & Frozen Desserts, Stovetop Desserts, and More Desserts from the Oven--get their structure from eggs. The wide variety of custards, puddings, and other egg-based desserts in the book means that gluten-free options abound. You'll also find a couple of vegan recipes. While the categories indicate something essential about the recipes, they're also somewhat subjective. Fried Sour Cherry Pies (page 271) could be classified in both the Stovetop Desserts chapter and the Pies, Tarts, Cobblers & Crisps chapter, but, because I think of them as pies first and foremost, I decided to put them in the latter. Blood Orange Pudding Cake (page 297), though cakelike, is made much like a custard or soufflé, so I filed it in the More Desserts from the Oven chapter. This fluidity between categories demonstrates that, really, all desserts are related! I've been practicing the baking and pastry arts long enough to know instinctively when to stop whipping cream for soft peaks or when curd is about to thicken. At the same time, I remember the uncertainty I felt toward these and other techniques as I was learning in the kitchen. That's why the final chapter, Essential Recipes & Techniques, focuses on the preparations and processes--both major and minor--that form the foundations of dessert, from All-Purpose Meringue (page 344) to Cutting Citrus (page 357). You'll find step-by-step photos and detailed instructions to guide and reassure you at every turn. This book is my love letter to dessert. Writing it taught me more than I imagined possible about the fascinating and delicious realm of sweet flavors and deepened my appreciation and admiration for the process of creating them. Though I originally embarked on writing this cookbook to expand my own horizons and become a more well-rounded dessert person, it quickly became a vehicle for providing my fellow dessert people with a wide variety of approachable recipes. As dessert people, we share the recognition that food is about pleasure rather than guilt, sociability rather than snobbery, and inclusivity rather than exclusivity. Whether you're a fruit dessert person or a chocolate dessert person, a frozen dessert person or a baked dessert person, this book answers your burning question: What's for dessert? Excerpted from What's for Dessert: Simple Recipes for Dessert People: a Baking Book by Claire Saffitz All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.