A simple treat with simple ingredients that lets you feel decadent – a pan of these tasty things was perfect for this week when we had so many afternoons with constant thunder. The way to deal with that kind of weather is to kick back with a book, a warm drink, and an oatmeal fudge bar.
Read on for your
chance to win an advance reading copy of There’ll Be Shell to Pay, book
2 in the Haunted Shell Shop Mysteries.
Oatmeal
Fudge Bars
Adapted from Sweet Tooth by Sarah Fennel
Ingredients
for the oat layer
1/2 cup (1 stick)
unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/2 cup white sugar
1/4 cup packed
brown sugar
1 egg, at room
temperature
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 cup all-purpose
flour
1 cup old-fashioned
oats
1/2 teaspoon baking
soda
1/4 teaspoon baking
powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
Ingredients
for the fudge layer
1/2 cup sweetened
condensed milk
1/2 cup semisweet
or bittersweet chocolate chips
1 tablespoon
unsalted butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 teaspoon salt
Directions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line and 8 x 8-inch baking pan with parchment paper on all sides. Clipping the parchment in place helps a lot when spreading the bottom oat layer. I took the clips off before baking.
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In a large bowl, combine butter and both sugars and cream together until light and fluffy.
Add egg and vanilla
and beat until combined. Add flour, oats, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.
Mix until just combined and no streaks of flour remain.
To make
the fudge layer:
In a small saucepan
over medium-low heat, combine sweetened condensed milk, chocolate chips, and
butter. Stir frequently, as mixture cooks, until chocolate is melted and
mixture is smooth. Mixture will be glossy and thick. Remove from heat and stir
in vanilla and salt.
Press half of the
oat mixture evenly into a thin layer in the bottom of the prepared pan.
Pour the fudge over
the oat layer, spreading evenly with a spatula. With your fingers, crumble the
remaining oat mixture over the fudge layer, leaving some areas of fudge
uncovered.
Bake until the bars
are lightly golden brown and a butter knife inserted into the center comes out
clean, 25 to 30 minutes. Let bars cool completely in the pan on a rack. Use the
parchment to lift the bars from the pan onto a cutting board. Cut into 16
pieces.
What’s your favorite treat when you curl up and read?
Let me know in the comments and you might win
an advance reading copy of There’ll Be Shell to Pay. The winner will be chosen,
at random, at noon on 5/27/25.
Coming in June 2025!
There’ll be Shell to Pay
Haunted Shell Shop book 2
When she’s not selling
seashells by the North Carolina seashore from her shell shop, Maureen Nash is a
crime-solving sleuth with a ghost pirate for a supernatural sidekick . . .
Maureen is still getting used to life on Ocracoke Island, learning how to play
the “shell game” of her business—and ghost whispering with the spirit of Emrys
Lloyd, the eighteenth-century Welsh pirate who haunts her shop, The Moon Shell.
The spectral buccaneer has unburied a treasure hidden in the shop’s attic that
turns out to be antique shell art stolen from Maureen’s late husband’s family
years ago.
Victor “Shelly” Sullivan and his wife Lenrose visit the shop and specifically
inquire about these rare items. Not only is it suspicious that this shell
collector should arrive around the time Maureen found the art, but Emrys
insists that Sullivan’s wife is an imposter because Lenrose is dead. A woman’s
corpse the police have been unable to identify was discovered by the Fig
Ladies, a group who formed an online fig appreciation society. They’re meeting
on Ocracoke for the first time in person and count Lenrose among their number,
so the woman can’t possibly be dead.
But Lenrose’s behavior doesn’t quite match the person the Fig Ladies interacted
with online. Now, Maureen and Emrys—with assistance from the Fig Ladies—must
prove the real Lenrose is dead and unmask her mysterious pretender before a
desperate murderer strikes again . . .
The
Boston Globe says Molly MacRae writes “murder with a dose of drollery.” She’s the author of
the award-winning, national bestselling Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries and the
Highland Bookshop Mysteries. As Margaret Welch, she writes books for Annie’s
Fiction. Her short stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery
Magazine and she’s a winner of the Sherwood Anderson Award for Short
Fiction. Visit Molly on Facebook and Pinterest and connect with her on Instagram or Bluesky.
I like to have Ghiradelli Dark Chocolate with Caramel and Sea Salt or mixed nuts and trail mix. Deborah
ReplyDeleteMMmmm. Love those things!
DeleteI want these right now! I love making cookie bars instead of individual ones - so much easier - but these take the craft up a notch.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Edith. They were delish!
DeleteThanks for this easy-peasy recipe, dear Molly! I usually only drink tea or water while enjoying a cozy mystery, but these bars look "deelishious", so I will make them for dessert. Thank you again for your neverending gifts of fun books and yummy recipes!! Joy! Luis at ole dot travel
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, dear Luis!
DeleteThank you for the recipe AND the chance to win! These bars would be great for a church potluck dinner. I bet peanut butter chips or butterscotch chips would make a great "fudge" layer. I typically only stick with a beverage - hot tea or water - when reading.
ReplyDeletemadamhawk at gmail dot com
Those variations sound good! I might add chopped nuts to the oatmeal mixture next time.
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness, these look decadent! I have an event I need to take a dessert to next week. I think this will be it! I am a coffee or water drinker while reading. Thanks! makennedyinaz at hotmail dot com
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a wicked good version of blondies!
ReplyDeleteAm I missing it? I don't see where you say how much of the oat mixture goes in as the bottom and how much becomes the topping.
libbydodd at comcast dot net
Must admit. When I read. All else goes out the window. I don't snack. Don't drink. And only pet the cat and dog when they push. The recipe is a winner. We love anything oat and chocolate. Nuts will be a great addition. And the suggestion of other chip flavors instead of the chocolate is great to. We have altered some recipes to use other flavor of chips in the past with, mostly, success. deepotter at centurylink dot net
ReplyDeleteI like something sweet to snack on while reading, like a cookie or a piece of dark chocolate. Your recipe looks amazing and I would definitely snack on that while reading.
ReplyDeletediannekc8(at)gmail(dot)com
Thanks for sharing the yummy recipe. Since I usually don't read until the evening, I only snack occasionally. When I do, it is Reese's Pieces or popcorn. Drink is usually tea or water.
ReplyDeleteFudge and crunchy oatmeal, what could be better?? A cup of hot tea, and I am open to the fruity herbals, Earl Grey, my Nana's Red Rose tea... With all the rain recently, any of the above & a haunting mystery = perfection.
ReplyDeleteThat looks so good, Molly! I tend more to salty than sweet for reading snacks. Tortilla chips make me happy! patdupuy@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteThose bars sound delicious. I like to snack on Peanut M&Ms
ReplyDeleteI love to snack on cheese and grapes.
ReplyDeleteThe bars look good. I like chips, chocolate, or cookies
ReplyDelete