Sweet tooth 100 desserts to save room for

Sarah Fennel

Book - 2024

"Stunning, delicious, minimal effort: Meet your new favorite go-to baking book for all things sweet and nostalgic by social media star and viral baker Sarah Fennel of Broma Bakery. When Sarah Fennel launched her website Broma Bakery in 2010, little did she know that 10 years later her brown butter chocolate chip cookie recipe would have more than 2.5 million views across social media! Fans flock to her blog and feeds for easy and ultra-bakeable recipes like Sugar Cookie Bars, Cinnamon Bun Cake, and Hot Chocolate Cookies that spin nostalgic trends and favorites into totally updated and beyond delicious treats. In her first cookbook, she divides 100 recipes for easy bakes into chapters like Elevated Nostalgia (Peanut Butter + Jelly Swirl...ed Blondies), Inventive Sweets (Espresso Martini Cake), Brunch Bakes (Raspberry Croissant Bread Pudding), Almost Too Pretty (Salted Caramel Pot de Cremes), and Holiday Baking (Coconut Cake Snowballs). Her fans also love single-serve sweets, so in Sweet Tooth, they get a whole chapter of them-like Molten Lava Cakes for Two and Small-Batch Blueberry Muffins. Tips and key intel abound, including a baker's pantry (ofc!), a whole section devoted to never overbaking again, storage strategies, and pan prep. Useful, playful, and with often-times 'I can't believe it was so easy!' instructions, these recipes suit beginners, pros, and anyone who has a sweet tooth"--

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+1 Hold
Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
cookbooks
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Sarah Fennel (author)
Other Authors
Sofi Llanso (contributor), Bettina Bogar (photographer), Meghan Kreger (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
287 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780593581995
9780593582008
  • Intro
  • What to Bake in
  • What to Bake With
  • How to Be a Better Baker
  • 10 Lessons to Live and Bake By
  • Weeknight Treats
  • Double Chocolate Banana Bread
  • Chewy Peanut Butter-Chocolate Chip Cookies
  • Jam Jam Bars
  • Weeknight Chocolate Snacking Cake
  • Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies
  • Red Wine Brownies
  • Unbirthday Cake Cookies
  • Nutella-Swirled Chocolate Chip Blondies
  • Blueberry Almond Cake
  • Crackle-Top Brownies
  • Mixed Berry Skillet Crisp
  • Dark Chocolate, Date, and Oatmeal Bars
  • Strawberries and Cream Crispy Treats
  • Lemon-Olive Oil Cake
  • Peanut Butter-Mocha Crunch Bars
  • Elevated Nostalgia
  • The Best Chocolate Chip Cookies in the World
  • Matilda's Chocolate Cake
  • Grocery Store Frosted Sugar Cookies
  • Peanut Butter and Jelly-Swirled Blondies
  • Yellow Sheet Cake with Chocolate Frosting
  • Giant Brown Sugar Not-a-Pop-Tart
  • Cosmic Cookies
  • Rebe's Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
  • Chocolate Sandwich Cookies
  • Jammy Cherry Pie
  • Sugar Cookie Bars
  • Giant Peanut Butter Cup
  • Oatmeal Cream Cookies
  • Everybody Loves an Ice Cream Cake
  • Lunch Lady Brownies
  • Inventive Sweets
  • Espresso Martini Cake
  • Coffee Cake Cookies
  • Lemon Meringue Pie Macarons
  • Banoffee Cake
  • Strawberry Cheesecake Muffins
  • Tiramisu Icebox Cake
  • White Chocolate Brownies
  • Blueberry Pie Cookies
  • No-Churn Peach Crumble Ice Cream
  • Cinnamon Roll Cookies
  • Coconut Caramel Thumbprint Cookies
  • Strawberry Shortcake Cake
  • Crème Brûlée Cheesecake Bars
  • Cherry Danish Cake
  • Brunch Bakes
  • Vanilla Bean-Blackberry Scones
  • Lemon-Poppy Seed Sweet Rolls
  • Sunday Waffles
  • Funfetti Crumb Cake
  • Ginger Apricot Muffins
  • Old-Fashioned Chocolate Cake Donuts
  • Lemon Blueberry Dutch Baby
  • Pistachio Croissants
  • London Fog Loaf
  • Raspberry Croissant Bread Pudding
  • Blueberry Pancakes
  • Zebra Bundt Cake
  • Bumbleberry Tart
  • Orange Pull-Apart Bread
  • Almost Too Pretty to Eat
  • S'mores Tart
  • Baklava Cheesecake
  • Nutella Smith Island Cake
  • Coffee, Caramel, Cookies and Cream Ice Cream
  • Pistachio Layer Cake with White Chocolate Frosting
  • Salted Caramel Pots-de-Crème
  • Apple Rose Tart
  • Chocolate Tiramisu
  • Dulce de Leche Cheesecake Brownies
  • Cinnamon Roll Bread
  • Black Forest Pavlova
  • Triple Chocolate Cheesecake
  • Rhubarb and Almond Galette
  • Lamingtons
  • Holiday Baking
  • Gingerbread Crinkle Cookies
  • Caramel Pumpkin Layer Cake
  • Peppermint Chocolate Mousse
  • Brown Sugar-Walnut Dutch Apple Pie
  • Caramel Pecan Sticky Buns
  • Oatmeal Fudge Bars
  • Flourless Ginger Chocolate Cake
  • Spiced Pumpkin Snickerdoodles
  • Maple-Glazed Apple Blondies
  • Cranberry Pie Bars
  • Hot Chocolate Cookies
  • Jelly Donuts
  • Brûléed Pumpkin Pie
  • Coconut Cake Snowballs
  • Dessert for One
  • Single-Serve Double Chocolate Chip Cookies
  • Single Lady Apple Crisp
  • Chocolate Cupcakes for Two
  • A Single Peanut Butter-Fluff Crispy Treat
  • Just Two Snickerdoodles
  • A Handful of Chocolate-Covered-Pretzel Muddy Buddies
  • Cinnamon Swirl-Banana Bread Mug Cake
  • Molten Lava Cakes for Two
  • Individual Chocolate Chip Cookies
  • Une Creme Brûlée
  • Personal Edible Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough
  • Small-Batch Blueberry Muffins
  • Small-Batch Blondies
  • A Scoop of Double-Chocolate Cookies and Cream Ice Cream
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"My goal is to encourage you to bake more, and bake often," writes Broma Bakery blogger Fennel in her winning debut. Chewy peanut butter--chocolate chip cookies, strawberries and cream crispy treats, and blueberry almond cake are a few of the many recipes that can be made in an hour or less. There's also an extensive selection of inventive sweets, ranging from red wine brownies and raspberry croissant bread pudding to baklava cheesecake and ginger apricot muffins. For readers who want to present dinner guests with a show-stopping finale, Fennel offers black forest pavlova, pistachio layer cake with white chocolate frosting, and a gorgeous s'mores tart. An impressive section of desserts for one, including single-serve recipes for double chocolate chip cookies and apple crisp, will satisfy sweet cravings without dirtying too much baking equipment. Among the dozens of valuable tips, Fennel explains that only filling every other cup in a muffin pan will make them rise significantly higher. In conjunction with easy instructions, Fennel provides step-by-step photos for some of the more involved creations, showing, for example, the process of shaping apple slices into roses for the apple rose tart. This will become a go-to for dessert lovers of all baking levels. (Oct.)

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Introduction Some things in life are unnecessary to our survival. Often, these are the best things. Baked goods, for example. I don't need them to survive, but I can't survive without them. And maybe, because you opened this book, you can't either. Whether you bake brownies for a movie night with friends or Sunday dinner with your family, everybody leaves happy. Baking is an act of love, plain and simple. The process of folding the batter, cleaning the bowl (with your finger, obviously), and experiencing that luxurious brownie perfume as they bake--also extremely enjoyable. And yet a lot of people fear baking, because there's science involved, and that oven's hot! In a dream world, we'd all have a person on call as we bake, giving us tips on how to measure flour correctly, test when a cake's done, and microwave butter without exploding it. Let me be that person. In Sweet Tooth , my goal is to encourage you to bake more, and bake often. Oh, and help you steer clear of most of the mistakes I made. (I mean, we're human.) The secret, I learned, is: just start. When I began baking in college, using a binder of printed recipes in 24-point font my mom had made for me, I'm pretty sure I was using baking powder and baking soda interchangeably (oops). I baked like a bull in a china shop, getting flour all over my dorm kitchen and burning my fingertips removing cookies from sheet pans. But after a few years, I got good enough at baking that I decided to start a blog, Broma Bakery , to document my favorite recipes. I picked the name almost at random, "Broma" because a site with plain HTML text and a magenta background told me it was Latin for "that which is eaten." (Nope. It's definitely Spanish, and it might be ancient Greek, but the jury's out on that one.) Mostly, I wanted to satisfy my sweet tooth and practice photography, another side passion, while I worked on majoring in something more responsible--anthropology. But no disrespect to Darwin, it became pretty apparent pretty quickly that I wanted to make my blog a way of living. Because as much as humans have evolved, we still can't resist a warm chocolate chip cookie. As the blog (and my baking skills) grew, it became my full-time job, and I feel absurdly lucky to say that. Now I have an invaluable second-incommand, Sofi Llanso, who helps me develop and test recipes, and so much more. Our mission is to consistently deliver desserts that offer home bakers maximum deliciousness. The recipes are predominantly rooted in Americana classics (fudgy brownies, fruit pies, and frosted sheet cakes), but are often updated and/or refined for today's palates. What I'm saying is, don't worry, they're not too sweet, and yes, you really do still want an Oatmeal Cream Cookie (page 105). When I bake, I'm trying to reconnect to a time, place, and even to people. The homemade Coffee, Caramel, Cookies and Cream Ice Cream (page 191) reminds me of scooping endless cones for customers (and myself ) at my first job. The Maple-Glazed Apple Blondies (page 240) bring me back to New England falls, apple picking with my mom and sister. When I make a whole tray of fudgy Crackle-Top Brownies (page 63), I no longer have to break one brownie into tiny pieces to share with my entire cafeteria table, because this time, there's enough to go around. It's crazy and beautiful to me that sweets can make us feel this warm, wonderful contentment deep in our souls. Is it . . . love? Anthropologists should study that. To me, baking is and should be an everyday thing. That's why I keep my processes uncomplicated; I want everyone invited to the party. No fancy bread machine, lame knife (don't even ask), or cheesecloth is required. This cookbook includes easy and crowd-pleasing treats in every chapter, as well as a few higher-skill recipes for anyone who wants to strengthen their pastry muscles. Like any hobby, you'll get better the more you do it, which is a win-win, because it means there will always--I hope!--be something sweet on your counter. Whether you're baking for comfort, to spread happiness, to feel full-blown nostalgia, or to make a single damn cookie whenever you feel like it, Sweet Tooth has recipes for you. After all, we don't bake out of necessity. We bake for the love of dessert. It's joyful, rewarding, and just plain fun. This book celebrates dessert for dessert's sake. And there's always room for it. Excerpted from Sweet Tooth: 100 Desserts to Save Room for (a Baking Book) by Sarah Fennel 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.