by Sheila Connolly
Last month I went to the mystery mega-conference Bouchercon
in Long Beach, California, which is at the coast opposite the one I live on. I
will state up front that all my flights were on time, I made all connections,
and my luggage followed me all the way. I just want to go on the record to say
that it does happen occasionally.
Anyway, between the two legs on my return trip (in some time
zone that made no sense to my bewildered biorhythms), I stopped for a meal that
was either lunch or dinner or both. The sandwich was not memorable, but I treated
myself to a toffee crunch blondie and was blown away: it was the perfect bar
cookie for that time and place.
Chocolate and toffee chunks--yum! |
This magnificent buttery, sugary creation combined small
chunks of both dark and white chocolate and some kind of toffee. I know this can be made with chips of all of
the above, but the one I bought had nice, large, randomly distributed globs of
goodness, nestled in the blondie in a series of happy surprises. I wanted more.
I was surprised to find only a few recipes online, but I
kind of combined them. (As an aside, when I was a child I used to hate it when
my mother tinkered with recipes. Silly me!)
Toffee Crunch
Blondies
1 cup brown sugar, packed
2 eggs, at room temperature
1 tsp vanilla
2 Tblsp milk
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup toffee bits or chunks (at my market they had one
brand, but the chunks were tiny. Instead I bought a package of Heath Bites and
chopped them roughly)
1 cup chocolate chunks (I used a semi-sweet candy bar)
1 cup white chocolate chunks (candy bar again)
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9x13” pan (the
inspirational blondie I had in the airport was about 1” thick, so I used a 9x9”
pan instead—just remember to cook a little longer for the thicker version. Note
that you’d get more bars with the bigger plan.)
Don't you love the ratio of chocolate to dough? |
Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and
salt. Then stir it into the batter along with the milk.
By hand, stir in the chocolate chunks and the toffee chunks.
Ready for the oven |
Baked! |
They didn't last very long at my house. |
The next in the County Cork Mystery Series, coming February 2015.
Have I mentioned here that books make wonderful gifts? If you have any Irish blood, or would like to, or have visited Ireland, or are planning to, or really want to--this series will give you a small taste of the place.
Yum!!!
ReplyDeleteDaryl/Avery
That first bite, in the humongous Minneapolis airport, was amazing. This recipe goes into my keeper pile!
ReplyDeleteOh now this recipe is going to have to be hidden until time to make. The boys will drive me crazy wanting these made. I might surprise them this weekend. Now if I can keep hubby out of them that is the question. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteOh My Goodness!
ReplyDeleteThat is fabulous!
They look delicious!
ReplyDeleteYummy
ReplyDeleteToffee and chocolate, how can you go wrong? These blondies look so good I could reach out and snatch one off the photo.
ReplyDelete~ Cleo