Table of Contents
Acknowledgments - xi
Breakfast Eats, Muffins, and Scones - 6
Jailhouse Potato-Cinnamon Rolls - 8
Fresh Ginger-Pear Quick Bread - 11
Eddie's Autumn Pumpkin Bread with Pecan Streusel Topping - 12
Jonnie's Breakfast Granola - 13
Kolaches - 15
Mother's Day Pancakes - 18
Individual Baked Omelets - 19
Crème Brûlée French Toast - 20
Banana Bran Muffins - 21
Peach Jam Scones - 22
Chocolate Chip Scones - 23
Apple-Smoked Bacon and Cheddar Scones - 24
Essence of Orange Muffins - 27
Whole Lemon Muffins - 28
Pies and Tarts - 30
Texas Big Hairs Lemon-Lime Meringue Tarts - 32
Texas Big Hairs Chocolate-Hazelnut Meringue Tarts - 36
Bourbon Pumpkin Tart with Struesel Topping - 38
Fredericksburg Peach Cream Cheese Tart - 40
Frangelico-Hazelnut Fruit Tart - 42
Black-and-White Cranberry Tarts - 43
Buttermilk Pecan Pie - 45
Fourth of July Fried Pies - 47
Aunt Mollie's Coconut Cream Pie - 50
Chef Mark's Southern Comfort Apple Pie - 53
Silken Chocolate-Walnut Tart - 55
Grasshopper Pie - 56
Everyday Desserts and Candies - 58
Emergency Fruit Crostatas - 61
Petite Pavlovas with Lemon Cream and Fresh Fruit - 64
Hill Country Peach Cobbler - 65
Individual Pear-Maple Cobblers - 66
Mexican Chocolate Fudge-Pecan Cake - 67
Mahogany Cake - 70
Orange-Date Bundt Cake - 72
Totally Rummy Pound Cake - 74
Glazed Lemon-Cranberry Loaf Cake - 76
Oatmeal Crisps - 77
Cappuccino Cheesecakes - 78
Mrs. Chisholm's Divinity - 79
Coconut Cream Flan - 80
Texas Pralines - 81
Desserts for Special Occasions and Holidays - 82
American Beauty Cake -84
Tuxedo Cake - 86
Larger-than-Life Praline Cheesecake - 89
Bananas Foster Shortcakes - 90
Strawberry Ricotta Cake - 92
Peach Queen Cake with Dulce de Leche Buttercream Frosting - 94
Cream-Filled Pumpkin Roll - 97
Mini Apple-Cinnamon Loaves with Calvados Glaze - 99
Espresso Crème Brûlée - 100
Toffee Bar Brownie Torte - 102
Tiramisù with Homemade Ladyfingers - 104
Dulce de Leche–Arborio Rice Pudding - 106
Muchas Leches Cake with Sugared Almonds - 109
Almond Bliss German Chocolate Cake - 112
Seventh Heaven Chocolate Truffle Cake - 114
White Chocolate–Snickers Mousse - 118
White-on-White Buttermilk Cake with Jack Daniel's Buttercream - 120
Tropical Carrot Cake with Coconut–Cream Cheese Frosting - 122
Cookies, Brownies, and Bars - 124
My Favorite Chocolate Chip Cookies - 127
Triple-Threat Chocolate Chip Cookies - 128
Sugar Saucers - 130
Chock-Full-of-Nuts Cookies - 132
Café Chocolate-Cherry Bites - 133
Caramel-Filled Brownies - 135
Turbo-Charged Brownies with Praline Topping - 137
Double-Ginger Chews - 140
Ruby-Flecked Florentines - 141
Dulce de Leche Macaroons - 142
Snow-Tipped Sand Tarts - 143
Texas Pecan Pie Bars - 145
Blackberry Pie Bars - 146
Lemon-Champagne Bars with Strawberry Brûlée Topping - 147
Bunches of Biscotti - 148
Lunches and Light Dinners - 150
Beer Bread - 153
Rocket Rolls - 154
Nuevo Texas Waldorf Salad - 156
Rather Rich Corn Muffins - 157
Apple-Almond Chicken Salad with Homemade Mayonnaise - 158
Field Greens with Spiced Pecans, Goat Cheese, and Balsamic Vinaigrette - 160
Chicken Satay with Yogurt-Cucumber Dipping Sauce - 162
Caesar Salad Pizzas - 163
Wild Rice and Chickpea Salad - 167
Wild Mushroom Soup - 168
Curried Butternut Squash Soup - 169
Texas Tortilla Soup - 170
Gulf Coast Shrimp Quesadillas - 172
Brie and Brisket Quesadillas - 174
Rather Sweet Bread and Cheese Board - 177
Green Chile Crab Cakes with Tomatillo Salsa - 178
All-Sold-Out Chicken Pot Pies - 180
Prosciutto Tostadas with Shrimp and Parsley - 183
King Ranch Casserole - 184
Ground Beef Gorditas - 186
Savory Crab and Shrimp Cheesecake - 188
Treats Kids Love - 190
Sticky-Fingers Bars - 193
Ginger People - 194
Franny's Fave Peanut Butter–Banana Cream Pie with Hot Fudge Sauce - 196
Peanut Buttercups with Peanut-Penuche Icing - 200
PB&J Cookies with Honey-Roasted Peanuts - 203
Mars Pies - 204
Pretty-in-Pink Shortbread Pigs - 206
Maple-Glazed Oatmeal Cookies - 209
Jubilation Granola Chews - 210
Pumpkin Yumkins - 211
Drinks - 212
Watermelon Lemonade - 214
Frothy Vanilla Milk - 215
Tommye Wood's Milk (Sure Packs a) Punch - 216
Rather Sweet Sangria - 217
Hill Country Guanabana Margaritas - 218
No Bull Bloody Marys - 219
Index - 220
Read an Excerpt
Breakfast Eats, Muffins, and Scones
Breakfast at Rather Sweet belongs to our regulars. Many gather in groups, and each has a distinct character.
The men's group shows up at 8:00 a.m. There's Rand, a chocolate importer; Bob, owner of a nearby outfitting company; and Bruce, owner of the local feed store. Rand orders kolaches, our fluffy, fruit- or meat-filled rolls, and heads back to my kitchen for a handful of bittersweet chocolate disks to drop into his coffee. Bruce eats a bran muffin and orders a few to take home. And Bob, who is on a low-carb diet, orders bacon and eggs. (He'salready lost thirty pounds.) They sit outside by the front door and talk about everything from turkeys—Bruce raises them—to teenagers. I'm sure they discuss everyone who comes in and out of the bak-ery. They're big gossips.
Joanie, Meagan, and Pam, once a group of four, are mourning the loss of their friend Emily, who recently passed away. They drink green tea, munch on Peach Jam Scones, and eat breakfast tacos. They have intense conversations. I don't like to interrupt.
One of my regulars, Jim, owns a top bed-and-breakfast here. He pops in through the back door to grab a box of baked goodies. His guests find our pastries outside their bedroom doors each morning.
My longtime customers know where everything is. Half of them know how to work the cash register. If things get busy, they'll ring up their food and continue helping anyone else standing in line. If they're short on cash, they sign IOUs. They always pay us back.
I like it that people feel comfortable here. The setting is so beautiful. Outdoor seating in theflower-filled courtyard is open year-round, except in the dead of winter.
I change the breakfast menu seasonally. With fall's approach, I'll make Fresh Ginger-Pear Quick Bread and pumpkin bread again. Spring brings Whole Lemon Muffins. But some things never will leave our menu. I'd be burned at the stake if I stopped making kolaches. Apple-Smoked Bacon and Cheddar Scones are a must-have. Once, when I didn't get around to making cinnamon rolls for two days running, one of my customers bitterly complained that he was losing weight.
Without regulars, Rather Sweet would be out of business. A scary thought, because it's not just a business anymore, it's a community—one that I and everyone who works here have grown to love beyond measure.
Jailhouse Potato-Cinnamon Rolls
Years ago, a close relative sent me a newspaper recipe clipping for potato dinner rolls that were popular with the inmates at Jefferson County Jail. I transformed the recipe into these potato-cinnamon rolls and named them accordingly.
Yield: 24 large rolls
Cinnamon Rolls
2 medium russet potatoes
1 ounce active dry yeast (4 packets)
3/4 cup plus 1 teaspoon sugar
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, melted
3 large eggs
2 teaspoons salt
9 cups unbleached flour
Filling
4 cups pecans
4 cups firmly packed golden brown sugar
2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, melted
Icing
21/2 cups powdered sugar
1/4 cup milk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
To make the rolls: Fill a large saucepan three-quarters full with water and set on high heat to boil. Peel and quarter the potatoes. Add the potatoes to the water and bring to a second boil. Decrease the heat to medium until the potatoes are simmering. Cook the potatoes until tender when pierced with a fork, about 10 to 15 minutes. Remove the potatoes, reserving 3 cups of the cooking water. Set the potato water aside to cool, until it registers 110° to 115°F on a candy thermometer.
In a large bowl, mash the potatoes—you will have 1½ to 2 cups worth—by hand or using a mixer on medium speed.
In a medium bowl, mix the reserved cooled potato water, yeast, and the 1 teaspoon of sugar. Stir until the yeast has dissolved. Let the mixture rest until foamy, about 5 minutes. In a large bowl, whisk together the potatoes, I cup sugar, melted butter, eggs, salt, and yeast–potato water. Add the flour in 3-cup increments and stir with a spoon until the flour is incorporated. Place the dough in a large greased bowl. Cover with a damp cloth and leave in a warm place until the dough doubles in size, about 1 to 1½ hours.
Leaving the dough in the bowl, punch it down until it deflates (1 or 2 punches with your fist will do). Cover the bowl with plastic wrap. At this point the dough can be refrigerated until the next day.
To make the filling: Preheat the oven to 350°F. Arrange the pecans on a baking sheet in a single layer and toast them in the oven for 7 to 9 minutes, until golden brown and aromatic. Coarsely chop the pecans.
Combine the brown sugar and cinnamon in a medium bowl.
Remove the dough from the bowl and divide it in half. On a clean, floured surface, roll each half into a G-inch-thick rectangle. Spread each rectangle with half of the melted butter. Cover each buttered rectangle with half of the brown sugar mixture. Sprinkle the dough with an even layer of pecans.
Generously grease two 9 by 13-inch disposable pans with butter. Carefully roll up each rectangle, starting on 1 long side of the dough. Using a very sharp serrated knife, cut each roll crosswise in 2-inch slices. Place the slices, cut side down, in the pans, spacing the rolls about 1 inch apart so they have room to expand. Make sure the end flap of each roll is set snugly against a side of the pan, so it does not unravel while rising. Put 8 rolls in each pan. (At this point the rolls can be tightly covered in a layer of plastic wrap and a layer of foil and frozen up to 3 weeks. Defrost the rolls in the refrigerator overnight or for 1 hour at room temperature and continue following the directions from this point.) Set the rolls in a warm, draft-free place and let them rise until they get puffy, 45 minutes to 1 hour.
Preheat the oven to 375°F. Bake the rolls for 20 to 25 minutes, or until light brown.
To make the icing: Combine the powdered sugar, milk, and vanilla in a medium bowl. Spread the icing on top of the rolls while they are still warm. Serve warm or at room temperature.
Rather Sweet Variation
For orange-potato rolls, prepare the dough as directed. For the filling, substitute 4 cups granulated sugar for the brown sugar, omit the cinnamon, and stir in 2 tablespoons grated orange zest. For the icing, substitute G cup freshly squeezed orange juice for the milk, and substitute 1 tablespoon grated orange zest for the vanilla.
Tip: Is it dead or alive? Mixing the yeast with water and sugar and waiting a few minutes to see if it will foam tells you whether the yeast is viable. If it doesn't foam, the yeast is dead and your rolls won't rise. Throw the mixture away and start again with a new batch of yeast. By "proofing," or testing, the yeast's viability, you avoid wasting a whole batch of dough and a whole lot of time.