Cakey vs Fudgy Brownies

May 4th, 2009

It seems there are three camps of brownies Cakey, Chewy, or Fudgy

Found this article at:

http://www.finecooking.com/articles/how-to/brownies-chewy-cakey-fudgy.aspx

Baking Brownies Just Right: Cakey, Chewy, or Fudgy

Change the proportions of ingredients to bake the style you like best

Like this article?

Make them how you like them. Whether a brownie ends up dense and fudgy, moist and chewy, or light and cakey depends on the amounts of chocolate, butter, sugar, and flour.

 

Brownies come in all guises—with nuts, without, butterscotch, swirled with cream cheese, shot through with mint or fruit filling, sprinkled with chips, spiked with espresso or booze, or just plain chocolate in a million variations. But the most important aspect of a brownie, for anyone who loves brownies, is texture. Initially, I thought there were just two camps, cakey versus fudgy, and I was firmly planted in the cakey camp. But after testing, tasting, and canvassing friends and colleagues about what they prize most in a brownie, I began to see that there's a third style to consider: chewy, which is definitely different from its cakey and fudgy siblings.

I'll say right off that I could never claim to write the Bible on brownies—there are so many recipes, and everyone has a favorite. But as I'll show you, there are definitely guidelines to follow so that you can make the style of brownie that suits your taste, whether it's cakey, fudgy, or chewy. I've also thrown in a butterscotch blondie, as well as chocolate brownie cookies, a huge favorite at my bakery, Grace Baking, and the happy result of a measuring mistake.

 

Similar ingredients, different proportions

Start your brownies with melted chocolate. Whether you melt it with butter or not, use the gentle heat of a double boiler—there's no remedy for scorched chocolate.

All of these brownie recipes have enough chocolate flavor to satisfy a chocolate yearning, and they all have similar ingredients. But because of the varying amounts of chocolate, butter, sugar, and flour, the texture of each brownie is quite different. To keep things simple, I've left nuts out of the three chocolate variations, but feel free to add them, 3/4 cup or so. I especially love chopped toasted walnuts in the cakey version.

A fudgy brownie is dense, with a moist, intensely chocolatey interior. I think of it as somewhere between a rich truffle torte and a piece of fudge. You'll see that I've included both bittersweet and unsweetened chocolate: I love the deep, intense chocolate flavor they pack when used together. I've added an egg yolk to contribute fudgy richness without greasiness. Because the batter is quite dense, I suggest beating it vigorously with a wooden spoon to ensure a smooth, even texture.

A chewy brownie is moist, but not quite as gooey as a fudgy one. The chewiness seems to come from a couple of different factors: more all-purpose flour, whose proteins provide "bite" (I find that cake flour, which is lower in protein, results in a light, crumbly texture that's too delicate for brownies); and whole eggs, whose whites give structure and "set."

Cakey brownies need cake-baking technique. Cindy Mitchell uses a whisk to aerate the batter.

A cakey brownie has a moist crumb and a slightly fluffy interior. The batter contains less butter than the other recipes, and I include milk and a little corn syrup for moistness (the milk and corn syrup are also great ways to extend a brownie's shelf life). I don't use much flour (even less than for most cakes), and while brownies don't usually use chemical leavens, I add some baking powder to keep this cakey brownie light.

When I mix cakey brownies, I use a bit of cake-baking technique, too: creaming the butter and sugar first (rather than melting the butter) and then whisking the batter to aerate the mixture and get a light crumb. I think this brownie improves on sitting at least one and even two days after you bake it.

Killer brownies don't need expensive chocolate

With high-quality chocolate—both domestic and imported—more readily available these days, I've noticed that many bakers have opted to get fancy with brownies. I'm a stickler for good ingredients, but I also believe that brownies are best when you keep them simple. While I encourage you to experiment with different chocolates, I got delicious results in all these recipes with supermarket-handy unsweetened and bittersweet chocolate.

Test for doneness before the recipe tells you to

In addition to ingredient proportions, baking time greatly affects the consistency of a brownie, so it's important to be attentive. Fudgy brownies baked three minutes too short can be unpleasantly gooey; chewy brownies baked three minutes too long become tough and dry. I encourage you to invest in an oven thermometer (about $6), a valuable help in ensuring consistent results.

Brownies will cook more quickly in metal pans than in glass, which is what accounts for the wide time windows in the recipes. If you're using metal, cooking times will be on the short side; with Pyrex, they'll be longer. For all these recipes, and regardless of the pan you're using, start testing for doneness after 20 minutes of baking. First, press your fingers gently into the center of the pan. If the brownie feels like it's just setting, insert a toothpick near the center. The pick will probably be wet, but this early testing is good for comparison's sake. Continue baking for 5 to 8 minutes and then insert the toothpick again near the center. Brownies are done when the toothpick comes out with a few moist crumbs still clinging. It's okay for the pick to look moist, but if you see wet batter, keep baking.

For uniform squares, flip the cooled, whole brownie out of the pan. You'll have a much easier time cutting neat squares, with the option of cutting off the edges if you want to. Lining the pan bottoms with parchment makes it much easier to get the brownie out of the pan. If you don't have any on hand, waxed paper works, too.

One last word: although it's awfully tempting to cut into a pan of just-baked brownies, hold off. The flavor and texture of each type of brownie will be at its best—and definitely worth waiting for—when completely cool.

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Fudge-Topped Brownies

May 2nd, 2009

 

Emmiril

Emeril

 

  

Fudge-Topped Brownies
Recipe courtesy Emeril Lagasse, 2002.
Emeril Live : Episode FLEML-147F 

 



 

1 tablespoon unsalted butter, plus 12 tablespoons (3/4 cup) 
1 tablespoon flour, plus 3/4 cup, sifted 
3 (1-ounce) squares unsweetened baking chocolate 
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar 
3 large eggs 
1 cup chopped pecans, lightly toasted 
1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

Fudge Topping

1 stick unsalted butter 
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder 
6 tablespoons buttermilk 
1 pound confectioners' sugar 
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a 9 by 13-inch baking dish with 1 tablespoon of the butter. Sprinkle 1 tablespoon of flour into the pan to coat the sides and bottom, knocking out any excess. Set aside.

In the top of a double boiler or in a bowl set over simmering water, combine the remaining 12 tablespoons butter and the chocolate. Cook, stirring, until smooth, about 3 minutes. Add the granulated sugar and whisk until smooth. Add 1/4 cup of the flour and whisk to combine. Alternate adding the remaining flour and eggs, whisking well after each addition. Stir in the toasted nuts and vanilla.

Pour into the prepared pan, shifting the pan to create an even layer. Bake until risen and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, about 30 minutes.

For the Fudge Topping

While the brownies are in the oven, in a medium saucepan, combine the butter, cocoa powder and buttermilk over medium heat. Cook until the butter melts and mixture just comes together. Remove from the heat and whisk until smooth. Sift the confectioners' sugar into a medium bowl. Add the chocolate mixture and vanilla and whisk until smooth.

Remove the brownies from the oven and, with the handle of a wooden spoon, poke holes into the brownies every 1 to 2 inches. Pour the Fudge Topping over the brownies and smooth with a rubber spatula. Let cool on a wire rack for at least 1 hour before cutting.

Cut into 2-inch brownies and serve.

Yield: 2 dozen brownies 

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New York Brownies

May 2nd, 2009

(2.5/5)

New York Brownies were OK.   Not my favorite.   But good.   

http://www.newyorkbrownies.com/flavors.html

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Exceptional Brownies not all that exceptional

May 2nd, 2009

(2/5)

http://www.exceptionalbrownie.com/

I have been in the search for Brownies for the past 5 years and I just tried the Exceptional Brownies brownie and I must admit I was a little disappointed.    It was not really that exceptional, but more average.   You can find a similar quality brownie and most coffee shops or cafeterias.    Not bad but not exceptional. 

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Best Bakeries in New York City

May 2nd, 2009

OK in our search for the best brownie in NY we are going to need to at least give the best bakeries in NY a shot.   I found this article on another page and I figured I would start using it as a guide to places we need to try.   I am not sure they all have brownies so I may call ahead OR just risk it. 

Best Bakeries in New York City

Here's a baker's dozen plus two of my favorite bakeries in New York. Are they the best fifteen in Gotham? You tell me.

As the northeast weather turns colder and Thanksgiving approaches this man's attention turns to baked goods. Of course it doesn't take much to get me thinking about pies, cakes, cookies, and any other food item containing the holy trinity of butter, sugar, and flour. That smell, that wondrous, incredibly alluring bakery smell, is what I live for. If I'm feeling blue, that smell transports me to a better, happier place.

New York City happens to be home to more great bakeries per square block than any other city in the country. Why? A couple of reasons. New York has long been the first stop in America for an incredibly diverse ethnic groups. Many of those ethnic groups, the Germans, the Russian and Polish Jews, the Hungarians, the Austrians, the southern Italians, and even in smaller number the French settled here at different points starting at the turn of the twentieth century. Many of these folks brought incredibly rich baking traditions with them.

During the eighties, however, as ethnic enclaves began to break down and disperse, many of the great ethnic bakeries of New York closed. French bakeries like Dumas, Bonte, and Colette shut their doors. So did the great Hungarian bakeries Riga andMrs. Herbst's. Ditto for great Jewish-style bakeries like Litchtman's andGrossinger's.

As I've written before, supermarkets took over as our principal places to buy baked goods. For baked goods in New York, the eighties were dark days indeed. All that was left were Italian bakeries in Italian neighborhoods in all five boroughs and a few neighborhood bakeries like Glaser's (amazingly, still open) and Kramer's(unfortunately closed) that hung on by their flour-coated fingernails.

Then two things happened that explain the bakery boom today in New York. Maury Rubin, a young television producer turned French-trained baker, opened the first City Bakery. He brought serious baking skills and a finely honed personal baked good aesthetic (think Mondrian mixed with Lenotre) to Gotham and in so doing created a community of baked-good lovers who could go to City Bakery, hang out, chew the fat, and have one of Rubin's amazing tarts washed down with a hot chocolate.

Rubin's success, though significant, could not singlehandedly create the conditions for New York's bakery boom. The boom needed another catalyst, and it got one with the exploding New York restaurant scene. New York's restaurant boom that began with the Jams, the Union Square Cafe, Montrachet, created an entire community of freshly trained young pastry chefs who combined French baking techniques with a love for high quality homey American-style baked goods. Brownies and cookies shared centerstage on pastry menus with warm apple tarts and and tarte tatins. The burgeoning pastry chef scene created an army of young pastry entrepreneurs who longed to call their own shots (or should I say cookies) in their own bakeries.

Today the New York bakery scene has never been healthier. Classic ethnic bakeries in East Harlem and Bensonhurst are still beloved by their communities, and new high-quality bakeries seem to be opening every week in both new and established gentrified neighborhoods.

Here's a baker's dozen plus two of my favorite bakeries in New York. Are they the best fifteen in Gotham? You tell me. My criteria is that they make at least three transcendently delicious items. It also helps, though it's not essential, if the owner can be spotted hanging around presiding over his or her baked goods.

Have I missed any? Let me know. Next week I will cut it down to my top ten, the week after that, my top five, and finally my top three the week after that. But don't wait for a post on my single best bakery in New York. I could never choose. It would just be too hard.

Two Little Red Hens (Upper East Side): Cheesecake, Pies, Birthday Cakes
Trois Pommes Patisserie (Park Slope): Sticky Bun, Chocolate Chip Scone, Pumpkin Cheesecake 
Sweet Melissa's (Park Slope, Carroll Gardens): Butterscotch Pudding, Pie, Tarts
Yura (Upper East Side): Angel Food Cake, Apple Crisp, Pie
City Bakery (Flatiron): Tarts, Cookies, Hot Chocolate
Bouchon Bakery (Midtown West): Chocolate Bouchons, Peanut Butter Cookie, Autumn Harvest Danish
Soutine (Upper West Side): Chocolate Concorde Cake, Muffins, Birthday Cakes 
Duane Park Patisserie (Tribeca): Turnovers, Brownies, Birthday Cakes
Andre's Hungarian (Upper East Side, Rego Park, Queens): Strudel, Rugelach, Kugelhof
Payard (Upper East Side): New York, New York Cake, Manhattan Tower, Lemon Pound Cake
Amy's (Chelsea Market, Hell's Kitchen, Greenwich Village): Layer Cake, Scones, 
Mitchel London (Upper East Side) : Rustic Apple Tarts, Cupcakes, Tarte Tatin
Once Upon A Tart (Soho): Fruit Tarts, Biscotti, Brownies
Margaret Palca Bakes (Carroll Gardens/Red Hook): Rugelach, Apple Squares, Decorated Butter Cookies
E.A.T. (Upper East Side): Marble Cake, Carrot Cake, Pie

Also worth noting:
Almondine (Dumbo)
Baked (Red Hook)
Marquet Patissierie (East Village) 
Patisserie Margot (Upper West Side)
Sarabeth's (Upper West Side and Chelsea Market):
Little Pie Company (Hell's Kitchen, Grand Central Station):
Black Hound (East Village)

 

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Belgian Raspberry Brownies with Truffle Ganache

May 2nd, 2009

Found this recipe at: 

http://www.visionsofsugarplum.com/2008/02/belgian-raspberry-brownies-with-truffle.html

 

Brownies in Beer?

Brownies in Beer?

 

 

Belgian Raspberry Brownies with Truffle Ganache (Recipe By Emiline)

Ingredients:
1/2 cup unsalted butter
1/2 cup raspberry beer OR framboise
1/4 cup seedless raspberry preserves
5 ounces coarsely chopped bittersweet chocolate
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/3 cup dark cocoa powder (such as Hershey's Special Dark)
1/4 teaspoon salt
2/3 cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup firmly packed brown sugar
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Ganache:
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
2 tablespoons heavy whipping cream
5 ounces coarsely chopped dark chocolate truffles (Lindt)

Directions:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Line an 11x8-inch baking dish with foil; coat with cooking spray.

Melt 1/2 cup butter in a small saucepan over medium heat; stir in beer and raspberry preserves. When mixture is hot, and starts to bubble, turn heat off, and stir in bittersweet chocolate, until melted, and well combined; set aside.

In a medium sized mixing bowl, sift together flour, cocoa powder, and salt.
In a large mixing bowl, using an electric mixer on high speed, beat together granulated sugar, brown sugar, eggs, and vanilla, for 3 minutes. Reduce mixer speed to low, and beat in melted chocolate mixture, until well combined. Stir in flour mixture, until just combined. 
Scrape batter into prepared dish; bake at 375 degrees F, for 20-25 minutes, or until set. Plunge dish into a larger baking dish, filled with ice water, until brownies are cool. 

To make the ganache, melt 1 tablespoon butter, in a small saucepan set over medium heat; stir in cream. When mixture starts to bubble, reduce heat to low, and stir in chopped truffles, until melted, and smooth. Pour ganache over brownies, and smooth the surface, using a rubber spatula.
Freeze the brownies until ganache is set, about 15 minutes. Lift the foil-lined brownies out of dish, and slice into bars, using a sharp knife.

Yield: 14 brownies

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Vermont Brownie Company

May 2nd, 2009

(4/5)

The Vermont Brownie Company has awesome brownies that you can order online.   Athough technically not in NY it is worth the mention.  

 http://www.vermontbrowniecompany.com/    

brownies

brownies

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Supernatural Brownies

May 2nd, 2009
I found this recipe at: 
Supernatural Brownies
This recipe is based on Nick Malgieri's Supernatural Brownies.

Ingredients: 
2 sticks sweet butter 
8 ounces bittersweet chocolate (I love to use Ghirardelli) 
4 large eggs 
1/2 teaspoon salt 
1 cup granulated sugar 
1 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar (make sure there are no lumps--use a freshly opened box)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract 
1 cup all-purpose flour 
2 cups walnut or pecan pieces, optional (as I am allergic, I do not often use them)

Directions. 
Grease a 13-by 9-by 2-inch pan with extra butter than the recipe calls for, then line the pan with buttered parchment. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. You will be placing these brownies to bake in the middle of your oven so adjust your rack accordingly.
Melt the butter and chocolate together being careful not to burn the chocolate. This can be done in a double boiler. Set aside.
In a large mixing bowl, whisk the four eggs together. Then, whisk in the salt, the granulalted sugar, the brown sugar and the vanilla extract. It is very important that there are no sugar lumps at this point. Stir in the melted butter and chocolate, and then lightly fold in flour. You do not want to create gluten here, these are a rich, moist fudgy brownie and are not cakelike. You just want to ensure that there are no lumps of flour in your batter. If you are using the nuts, fold those in last.
Spread the brownie mixture evenly into the pan. Bake the brownies for roughly 45 minutes. The brownie top will create a shiny crust and the batter will be moist but firm. Cool the brownies in the pan on a rack. When cool, you can wrap them in platic and keep them at room temperature or refrigerate them until the next day. Chocolate desserts always taste better after they have aged a day. 
Remove the brownies from the pan and have them right side up. Trim the hard edges and reserve for another purpose. Cut them into 24 equal sized squares. I like to dust them before serving with powdered sugar if I am not serving them a la mode with hot fudge sauce.

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Blondies Recipe

May 2nd, 2009


Fast Tube by Casper

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Le Parker Meridien

May 2nd, 2009

(3.5/5)

The burger joint at  Le Parker Meridien has a great brownie.     A bit more cakey than fudgy but not dry by any standards.   Very good.   Also one of the best burgers in NY BTW.

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