millionaire’s shortbread bars

millionaire bar

Hello everyone! Did you miss me terribly? I’m on a plane back to AZ as we speak, and decided you all deserved a new recipe in case you were in the baking mood this weekend. I had to look through my recipe drafts, since I obviously haven’t been around to bake.These seem like a popular one, and I think with a few tweaks they could really live up to their full potential 🙂

Millionaire Shortbread recipes have been invading the internet for a few years now. Once BAKED bakery released their first cookbook, this recipe was the first one to explode. Actually, probably BAKED brownie was first, followed by this wildly popular bar. It’s remniscent of one of my favorite candy bars: Twix.

Laziness prevented me from finally getting around to making these, I mean, layers and stuff. Effort. Ugh. Wow I’m whiny… anyway if you follow the recipe in the actual book it’s not so bad. They actually do more of what I guess is technically a “dulce de leche” caramel layer. You just boil the sweetened condensed milk until it turns into “caramel”. That being said, I didn’t care for it. I found the bars lacking in a few ways, but since the recipe is so wildly popular, I figured I should let you guys decide for yourselves.

In MY opinion, the flavor was a little flat. So my recommendations are: add a 1/2 tsp vanilla to the shortbread layer. MAKE YOUR OWN REAL CARAMEL, not the “caramel-del-can”.  Oh, and a sprinkle of fleur de sel never hurt anyone…Since I’m on an airplane, I don’t have access to a ‘go-to’ caramel recipe, so I’ll put this $13 in-flight internet to use and find one to link you to.

MILLIONAIRE SHORTBREAD BARS

[ Printable Recipe ]

Shortbread (for better shortbread recipe, see my Tagalong bars)

  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1 1/4 cups (2 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
  • 2 /12 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 large egg yolk, slightly beaten

Caramel filling

  • 28 ounces sweetened condensed milk (two 14-ounce cans)

Chocolate glaze

  • 6 oz dark chocolate (60% cacao), coarsely chopped
  • 1 teaspoon light corn syrup
  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened, cut into cubes

For the shortbread:

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. butter (or line with parchment) the bottom and sides of a 9-by-13-inch baking pan.
  2. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the sugar and butter together until blended
  3. Add 2 cups of the flour and beat until well combined. Add the egg yolk and beat for a few seconds, or until just combined.
  4. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Dust the top of the dough and your hands with a little flour. Use your hands to gently work the dough into a 6-by-6-inch square. You will have to turn the dough and sprinkle the top with flour as you go. Sprinkle the remaining 1/2 cup flour on the surface of the dough. Fold the dough over and knead until incorporated, then flatten the dough into a rectangle. Transfer the rectangle to the prepared pan and press it into the pan.
  5. Prick the dough all over with a fork and bake in the center of the oven for 20 to 22 minutes, until golden brown. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool completely.

For the caramel filling:

  1. Put the sweetened condensed milk in a large microwave-safe bowl. Cook on 50 percent power (medium) for 4 minutes, stirring briskly halfway through, until smooth. Continue cooking on 30 percent power (medium-low) for 12 to 18 minutes, until very thick and caramel colored, stirring briskly every 2 minutes, until smooth.
  2. Pour the caramel filling over the cooled shortbread and place the pan in the refrigerator until cool, about two hours.

For the chocolate glaze:

  1. In a large nonreactive metal bowl, combine the chocolate, corn syrup, and butter. Set the bowl over a saucepan of simmering water and cook, stirring with a rubber spatula, until the mixture is completely smooth. *Alternatively, you can melt it in a microwave-safe bowl at 30 second intervals until melted
  2. Remove the bowl from the pan and stir for 30 seconds to cool slightly. Pour the mixture over the chilled caramel layer and use an offset spatula to spread it into an even layer. Put in the refrigerator for 1 hour, or until the glaze hardens.
  3. Remove the pan from the refrigerator 30 minutes before serving so as not to crack the chocolate glaze. Cut into squares and serve.

The bars can be stored in the refrigerator, tightly covered, for up to 4 days.

BETTER Milli Shortbread recipe…

Alternate Cookie Recipe

For the cookie layer

  • 1 cup (2 sticks) butter, room temperature
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • ÂĽ teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 tablespoons milk
  1. Whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
  2. Beat butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in vanilla extract and milk. Add flour and mix on low until just incorporated. It will be on the dry side.
  3. Pour out onto parchment paper and form into general rectangle shape. Roll close to 9 x 13” and transfer into 9 x 13 baking pan. Press into bottom of pan until it reaches the edges, leaving a slight lip on the edges.
  4. Poke holes in shortbread with a fork and bake at 350F for about 20 minutes, until lightly golden on top. Cool completely on wire rack before topping.

BFF recommends this caramel recipe instead, I think it looks a little over the top but this one’s “tested and BFF approved” so it’ll do 🙂

Alternate Caramel Recipe

  • 2 cups sugar
  • 3/4 cup Lyle’s Golden Syrup
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1 teaspoon lemon juice
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1 cup sweetened condensed milk
  1. In a large saucepan, stir together the sugar, syrup, water and lemon juice.  Wet the sides of the pan with a little water if any of the ingredients have crept up.  Cover the saucepan and cook it over medium heat for 4 minutes.
  2. Remove the lid, increase the heat and bring the mixture to a boil.  Do not stir.  The mixture will bubble, and if sugar appears on the sides of the pan, brush them back down with a wet pastry brush.  The bubbles will continue to get larger.
  3. In the meantime, bring the heavy cream to a boil in a small saucepan.   Remove from the heat and set aside.
  4. Return to the sugar mixture, which will turn golden brown after 5 or 6 minutes.  With a candy thermometer, make sure the mixture has reached 300, then remove the pan from the heat and let it rest for 1 minutes, until the bubbles subside.  Whisk in the heavy cream off the heat and whisk in the condensed milk.  Continue to whisk until the mixture is smooth
  5. Return the saucepan to medium heat and stir constantly until the caramel reaches 240. Pour over the shortbread and allow to set.

[ Original recipe adapted from Baked ]

[ caramel recipe borrowed from here ]

girl scout fake out

Tagalong Bars

Everyone loves girl scout cookies. I think part of their allure is that you can only have them one time out of the year. You spend the whole year building them up in your head, even resorting to stalking little girls… Apparently stalking children is OK, so long as they’re the ones using the treats to lure you to their vans… “Come over here, I have a van full of cookies”… I’m onto you, girl scouts…

No matter how much you love girl scout cookies, there’s no way you can look past their insane price tags. Well you can, but I had to limit myself to two boxes last year. TWO BOXES!!! I mean, they’re usually parked right outside the grocery store, which sells similar cookies at half the price. I get that we’re helping their cause, but really? Four to five dollars a box? And there’s only like twelve cookies in there… that’s going to last me what, six minutes? Maybe seven if I slow down to savor them…

Some time last week I made the millionaire shortbread recipe from my Baked cookbook, but was completely underwhelmed. I may post the recipe, since tons of people rave about it, but it was just too… monotone. It didn’t have enough flavor, and the flavor it did have just kinda melded together into one basic flavor: sugar. I tried sprinkling some sea salt on top which helped, but not enough to make me eat them. I had however been planning to try my hand at Tagalongs for some time, and the millionaire shortbread motivated me to finally make them, being that they are similar in that they are layered shortbread bars.

No way I’m rolling and cutting 43824239430 shortbread cookies, pressing a little indent into each one, filling it with peanut butter and then covering it in chocolate. Just typing that made me tired. Bar form? Now that’s what I’m talking about. I knew what not to do with the shortbread from the millionaire bars, so I found a new shortbread recipe and set myself on the path to girl scout cookie heaven. If you like Tagalongs, you’ll love these – they’re so good. You must make them. Must.

Home Made “Tagalong” Bars

[ Printable Recipe ]

For the cookie layer

  • 1 cup (2 sticks) butter, room temperature
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 2 cups all purpose flour
  • ÂĽ teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 tablespoons milk

For the peanut butter layer

  • 1 2/3 cups creamy peanut butter
  • 2/3 cup confectioners’ sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

For the chocolate layer*

  • 6 ounces semi sweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
  • 1 teaspoon light corn syrup
  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened, cut into cubes

For the cookies:

  1. Whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
  2. Beat butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in vanilla extract and milk. Add flour and mix on low until just incorporated. It will be on the dry side.
  3. Pour out onto parchment paper and form into general rectangle shape. Roll close to 9 x 13” and transfer into 9 x 13 baking pan. Press into bottom of pan until it reaches the edges, leaving a slight lip on the edges.
  4. Poke holes in shortbread with a fork and bake at 350F for about 20 minutes, until lightly golden on top. Cool completely on wire rack before topping.

For the filling:

  1. Beat the peanut butter, powdered sugar, and vanilla until mixed. Spread over shortbread layer. It will be thick and difficult to spread, an offset spatula worked best for me J

For the topping:

  1. Melt chocolate, butter, and corn syrup in a double boiler*. Pour over peanut butter layer and place in fridge to harden.

Notes:

*If you’re lazy you can use just melted chocolate, about 7 or 8 ounces will cover it.

*Melt in a double boiler, a non-reactive bowl over simmering water, or a microwave in 30 sec intervals @ 50% power

*Cut with a knife, wiping with a warm, damp cloth in between. They may get a little messy…

[ shorbread adapted from here ]

[ chocolate layer adapted from Baked ]

snickerdoodle blondies

snickerdoodle blondie stackDespite snickerdoodles being one of my favorite cookies, I usually only make them for the holiday season. They are just so labor intensive (for me). I’m far too lazy for all the rolling and the sugar-coating… ugh. No thanks.

These blondies differ from traditional snickerdoodles in a number of ways, which make them both easier and more delicious than your usual snickerdoodle. First off, where a normal snickerdoodle is just a sugar cookie rolled in cinnamon sugar, these have the cinnamon flavor throughout the entire base PLUS the cinnamon-sugar coating. Second, they are bars. That means you don’t have to chill, scoop, or roll them. Just smoosh them into a 9×13 pan and you’re good to go.

snickerdoodle blondie

These snickerdoodle blondies have been in my Christmas Cookie care packages the past two years running, but BF complains that I should make them all year long. It’s just not fair that I only break them out for Christmas. So when BF’s cute little niece came over the other weekend requesting snickerdoodles, I took that as an opportunity to break this recipe out. I don’t think Boyfriend ate a single one, poor thing.

You can see by the slightly cakey texture that these ended up with a bit too much flour in them. It’s amazing what a difference just a little extra flour makes, but these things happen when you have a young apprentice in your kitchen. Luckily, the blondies still tasted great – and that’s the important part. So if you worried that adding too much flour would be the end of the world, don’t be. But if you want the more dense blondie texture for your snickerdoodles, be sure to “scoop and sweep” your flour. 🙂

 

 

< — The texture is usually more dense, like this
Pardon the poor picture quality as it was taken during christmas baking with a cell phone… 2  years ago…  🙂

Perhaps I can add new pictures next time I make this recipe (in December…)

 

 

Snickerdoodle Blondies

[ Printable Recipe ]

For Blondies:

  • 2 2/3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon grated or ground nutmeg
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 cups packed brown sugar
  • 1 cup butter, room temperature
  • 2 eggs, at room temperature
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract

For Topping:

  • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • a pinch nutmeg
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line a 9Ă—13 inch pan with foil or parchment – this will make cutting and removing your blondies inifinity easier.
  2. In a medium bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt; set aside. In a small bowl, mix the remaining cinnamon, sugar and nutmeg; set aside.
  3. In large bowl, beat together butter and brown sugar for 3-5 minutes. Add in the eggs one at a time, then the vanilla, and beat until smooth.
  4. Stir in the flour mixture until well blended.
  5. Spread evenly in prepared pan* and sprinkle cinnamon sugar mixture over the top of the batter.
  6. Bake 25-30 minutes or until surface springs back when gently pressed. Cool before cutting.

[ Adapted from MBA ]

in the kitchen with zoe

cake krispy treats

My family is by no means a small one – from my one sister alone I have 2 nieces and 2 nephews. However, they are all 2,000 miles away. Despite my best efforts, it’s hard to be a good aunt from the opposite side of the continent. I miss the times when I used to spend hours or even days with my nieces and nephews. So, naturally, I was really excited when the BF’s niece, Zoe, asked when she could come over and bake with me.

Of course I told her that she was welcome to come over any time, and since Saturdays are my usual baking day anyway, we set a date for that Saturday. Zoe is an amazingly energetic, beautiful, smart, and quirky 10 year old. She talks a million miles a minute and is super excited about pretty much everything in the whole world. 

When Saturday morning finally arrived, Zoe showed up at 10:45 am with a candy-striped apron and a big smile. I set up a couple quick and easy things to make, as well as stuff for snickerdoodles (per her request) and we got straight to work, stopping only for a short break to refuel with some lunch.

It was actually really nice to have someone else in the kitchen with me, since usually I’m just toiling away in the kitchen alone on the weekends. It’s nice to have someone else around – both to chat with and to do a good amount of the work (she even offered to help clean up!). It was like having a really excited, mini sous chef around. We had some good chats, too – about school, movies, and her birthday (she wants a pet rat – I’m sure her parents are thrilled).

When all was said and done we had made snickerdoodle blondies, Puppy Chow (aka “muddy buddies”), and birthday cake rice krispy treats . The krispies must have been really good, because they prompted her to have the genius idea of having a “rice krispy birthday cake”. I had a blast and I can only assume she did too, since she asked to if we could do it again next weekend. 🙂

Birthday Cake Rice Krispy Treats

Printable Recipe

  • 3 Tbsp butter
  • 1 10-ounce(ish) bag of mini marshmallows
  • 1/4 cup yellow cake mix
  • 6 C rice krispies cereal
  • 1 1.75-ounce container of sprinkles
  1. Melt butter in a large saucepan over low heat and add marshmallows. Stir until they begin to melt, adding in cake mix one spoonful at a time so its combined.
  2. Stir in cereal so it is completely coated with marshmallow mixture. Sprinkle in half of the sprinkles and mix.
  3. Press into a greased baking dish (9 x 13 for thinner treats, smaller for thicker) and top with remaining sprinkles. Let sit for about 30 minutes before cutting.

Tips

* The ¼ C cake mix lends a subtle birthday cake flavor, I’ve seen recipes for this that go up to ¾ C cake mix, but this recipe is the “original” one from the rice krispies box.

* Sometimes I find using the whole 6 cups of krispies make them dryer than I’d like, so we filled up my 4 C measuring cup almost to the top (making it close to 5 cups total) and called it a day.

* If you add the sprinkles too soon (like I may have), they will get a bit melty and not look as pretty.

Puppy Chow (aka Muddy Buddies)

Printable Recipe

  • 9 C Chex cereal
  • 1 C semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • ½ C peanut butter
  • ÂĽ C butter
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 1 ½ – 2 C powdered sugar1. Measure cereal and set aside
    2. Melt chocolate, peanut butter, butter, and vanilla in the microwave or in a pan over low/medium low heat.
    3. Add chex and stir until completely coated.
    4. Pour ½ of powdered sugar into a bag, add cereal mix, and top with remaining powdered sugar. Seal bag and shake shake shake until it’s thoroughly coated. Spread on baking sheet to cool.

Tips

* I’ve made this with rice chex, corn chex, and even chocolate chex – all are delicious.

* Just like rice krispies – I feel like they end up a little dry if you use all of the cereal called for in the recipe, so I usually cut back by about a cup.

* The best way that I’ve found to shake these (maybe it’s because it’s how I’ve been doing it since junior high) is to dump it all in a paper bag, fold over the top, and go outside to give it a good shake. You may end up covered in a bit of powdered sugar yourself, though. 🙂

[Original recipes available here & here ]