Showing posts with label cinnamon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cinnamon. Show all posts

Spiced Challah French Toast Stuffed with Wild Huckleberries and Cream




Believe it or not, this recipe is actually perfect for a morning campfire breakfast (assuming you have a cooler while camping). Whodathunk you could make such a decadent breakfast while camping? You can mix the eggs ahead of time and cook the toast on a skillet right over an open flame. On your morning trek, pick a few wild huckleberries, bring them back to the campsite and prepare this delicious breakfast.


What You’ll Need:


  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon nutmeg
  • 1 teaspoon butter
  • 4 slices of day-old challah bread, 1” thick
  • ½ cup fresh huckleberries
  • ¼ cup cream cheese at room temperature
  • 2 pomegranate pluots, plums, or plumcots for garnish, cut into wedges
  • Confectioner's sugar for dusting
  • Maple syrup (optional, but highly recommended)



  1. Combine the eggs, cinnamon, and nutmeg in a bowl and whisk until the egg yolks and whites are thoroughly combined.
  2. Next, melt the butter in a skillet over medium heat. When the butter has melted, gently coat the challah slices in the egg mixture and lay flat on the skillet. You should hear a slight fizz when the challah touches the hot skillet. If you don’t, your skillet is not hot enough. Cook the toast until golden brown on both sides, about 4 to 5 minutes each side.
  3. Remove the toast from the skillet and gently spread the cream cheese on 1 side of 2 of the toasts. It is VERY important that the cheese is at room temperature - if it isn’t it will be too hard to spread and it will glob. Next, spread the huckleberries on top of the cream cheese. Place the undressed toasts on top of the cream cheese and huckleberries (you’re essentially making a sandwich).
  4. Finally, garnish with pomegranate pluots (my personal favorite), plums, or plumcots. Sprinkle confectioner’s sugar over top and drizzle with maple syrup.

Serves: 2

Cinnamon Plumcot and Wild Blueberry Hand Pies




Often I find my winter-self thanking my summer-self - I thank myself for the sewing and the watering and the weeding. For the foraging and the harvesting and, most of all, for the preserving. The moment I open a fresh can of cinnamon plumcot preserves, I am instantly taken back to that warm summer day when I plucked a ripe plumcot from that beautifully gnarled tree and took a big juicy bite. And when I pop a tiny frozen wild blueberry into my mouth, I remember swimming all day at the Pisgah and picking wild blueberries and huckleberries near the waterside. Suddenly, summertime seams not-so-distant, even though I’m covered in 2 feet of snow and ice.


What You'll Need


For the Crust:
2 1/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup unsalted butter, cold and cut into cubes
1/2 cup ice water


For the Filling:
1 cup cinnamon plumcot preserves, strained (or fresh plums or pluots, peeled and diced mixed with 1 tsp of cinnamon)
1 cup wild blueberries, fresh or thawed from frozen
juice of half lemon (omit if you are using plumcot preserves)
¼ cup brown sugar
3 tablespoons unbleached all purpose flour


1 egg for the wash
⅛ cup raw sugar


  1. To make the crust, combine the flour and salt in a large bowl or in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse or stir a few times to ensure the salt and flour are combined. Next, scatter the butter pieces over the flour. If you’re using a food processor, pulse until the mixture resembles cornmeal. If you are doing this the old fashioned way, use two knives or a pastry cutter and “cut-in” the butter until the mixture resembles cornmeal. Next, pour the ice water over the flour mixture and toss with a fork until the dough comes together in one ball. Divide the dough in half, place in a tupperware container and refrigerate for at least one hour or up to overnight.
  2. While the dough is resting, let’s make the filling. Combine the plumcots and blueberries and lemon juice (if you are using fresh plumcots, otherwise omit the lemon juice) in a large bowl and toss to combine. Sprinkle the brown sugar and flour on top and toss to coat the fruit. Set aside until you are ready to assemble your pies.
  3. Next, in a small bowl, beat the egg with a fork until the yolk and white are thoroughly combined.
  4. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees and line a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
  5. Now it’s time to assemble the pies. Remove the dough from the refrigerator and roll it out until it is about ¼” thick. Using a biscuit cutter, cookie cutter, or even the rim of a cup, press firmly into the dough and lift up the resulting shape. Be sure to make your cut-outs as close as possible. You only want to re-roll the dough one more time. If you roll out the dough more than twice, it will get gummy and the texture of your crust will suffer.
  6. To assemble the pies, place one shape in front of you. Dollop about a tablespoon of the filling on the cut-out. Place another cut-out on top of the filling and using the tines of a fork, gently fresh around the edges to seal the pie and pierce the top of the pie with the fork. Using a pastry brush, brush the egg wash over top and sprinkle with raw sugar.
  7. Place the pie on the prepared cookie sheet and repeat until you have used all your dough, or filling (whichever runs out first).
  8. Bake the pies for 30 minutes until golden brown on top. Let cool for 10 minutes and serve with French Vanilla or Bourbon Butterscotch Ice Cream.

Yield: sixteen 3” pies

Rustic Pear Tart


Let me start by saying Happy New Year! This year is sure to bring new flavors, tasty dishes and fun DIY projects, so let's dive in.

I was lucky enough to spend this past holiday with my husbands family in Montana. When I returned home, I couldn't get over how the food we ate during the trip was s so inspired by the beautifully stark landscape and harsh climate. We ate elk sausage and kale for breakfast most mornings, dried fruits for snacks and bison and potatoes for dinner. I loved the rustic simplicity of each dish we tasted especially in this rustic pear tart my mother-in-law made. When you sit down to eat this deliciously sweet and flaky tart, think of wild roaming bison, towering white mountains and wide open plains pouring into the slate blue sky.

What You'll Need
For the Crust
2 1/2 cup unbleached flour
1 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup unsalted butter, cold and cut into 1/2" cubes
1/2 cup ice water

For the Filling
8 sweet, ripe pears*
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/3 cup apple cider
1/4 cup brown sugar

Raw sugar for sprinkling

*Even though Bosc is the standard baking pear, I prefer Bartlett for this recipe.


To prepare the crust, whisk together the flour and salt in a medium-sized bowl (You can sift it together, but whisking works just as well and takes a fraction of the time). Scatter the butter pieces throughout the flour and toss to coat them. Using 2 knives or a pastry cutter, "cut" the butter into the flour. This can also be done in a food processor to speed up the process - just pulse the ingredients together a few times. Once the mixture is coarse and resembles corn meal, sprinkle the water over the dough and either pulse a few more times in the food processor or bring the dough together with a fork until the dough forms a ball. Flatten the dough into a disc, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or up to overnight.

To prepare the filling, peal each pear. Using a paring knife, cut strips of the pear as thinly as possible. They do not all have to be uniform - this is a rustic tart, after all.

Melt the butter in a large frying pan over medium-high heat. When the butter is melted, add the pears cinnamon. Cook the pears, stirring occasionally until just soft, about 2 minutes. Add the vanilla, cider and brown sugar. bring the mixture to a boil and cook until liquid is mostly evaporated, stirring constantly, about 5 to 7 minutes. Remove pan from heat and set aside

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees and line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. Remove the dough from the refrigerator and roll it out into a circle until it is about 1/8" thick. It is okay if the ends are rough and if the circle is not symmetrical. Transfer the rolled out dough to the baking sheet on top of the parchment paper.

Carefully spoon the pears into the center of the dough. Fold the edges up over the pears. If your dough cracks, just tear a piece off from the edge and patch it.Sprinkle the raw sugar over top.

Place the tart in the oven until the crust is golden brown, about 22 to 25 minutes. Remove from the oven and let cool slightly. Serve with warm ice cream. To reheat the tart, place in a 200 degree oven for 10 minutes.