Ribbon Candy Bars

Do you remember those old Reese’s commercials where people collide and someone’s chocolate ends up in someone else’s peanut butter?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJLDF6qZUX0

This is kind of the way it is with people sometimes.  We know people that love peanut butter and they love chocolate, but they hate them together.  We also know people that love peanut butter and chocolate combined, but hate them separately.  My husband finds this endlessly fascinating.  I find it more interesting when applied to people.

I know people that are nuts…er..um…peanut butter.  There are times I want to relive my childhood and I want to just relish the weird lumpy, pasty goodness of plain peanut butter.  (Always crunchy.  Creamy peanut butter is like eating paste.)  But after a while, I get to the point where I remember that childhood is over and I have stuff that I have to get done and I don’t really have time to be cleaning up a goopy mess on my fingers and unsticking my mouth.  And I really hate the smell of wet peanut butter.  I know that there are people out there that subsist on nothing but peanut butter, but I am not one of them any longer.

Then there are those people that are chocolate.  Some people like them, some people don’t.  Some prefer them darker, richer, sweeter, or more bitter.  Each of them are great in their own way.  They can be nuanced and interesting, but even if you want to, you can’t really eat nothing but chocolate without getting a stomachache.

Together they create something special.  And not just in the sense of peanut butter cups.  You may add peanuts and chocolate to your mole sauce and I can even see adding them to your chili. In savory dishes, they add depth and interest to the other ingredients.  They harmoniously blend to enhance the flavor of whatever is being prepared.

However, unless perfectly balanced, either of these two ingredients can take over a sweet dish, especially the peanut butter.  I’ve had a few chocolate peanut butter pies where I’ve lost all sense of the chocolate because I just can’t get past the overwhelming peanut butter flavor.  Sometimes I eat chocolate and wonder where the peanut butter is.  If something is supposed to have peanut flavor and chocolate flavor, I want to experience and enjoy both.  I like them both equally and want them to play nicely together in certain situations.  It doesn’t mean that I always need them together, but sometimes it’s exactly what I need.

Chocolate and peanuts balance each other perfectly in these Ribbon Candy Bars.  I originally made these for our friend’s 41st birthday party.  I knew I had to make something special that wasn’t cake.  Ribbon Candy Bars looked like an interesting recipe to try out.  I  read a book about making your own candy bars a few years ago and didn’t have time to practice the skills I’d learned.  To be honest, nothing in the book helped with the preparation of these candy bars.  This recipe is amazingly simple, although a bit time consuming.  And when we say “candy bar” think more bar cookies and less Snickers.

Adding butterscotch chips as the third party to the peanut butter and chocolate chips allows them to harmonize more perfectly than if left to their own devices.  Filling the chocolate mixture with a salty sweet layer means every bite is a little different.  Some nibbles are a little crunchy and hard to bite into as the salt from the peanuts hits your tongue.  Other bites melt in your mouth so quickly, you almost wish the moment would last longer.  Our overall impression was that these candy bars are best in small doses, but are completely addictive.

Regardless of how you feel about chocolate or peanut butter or the combination of the two, this is a recipe worth trying.

The Recipe:

*Recipe should say spread half of the chip and peanut butter mixture in pan, but make sure it’s a decently thick layer.

If you like this recipe you should check out Darned Good Candy, Peanut Brittle, and Seaside Candy Rolls.

Easy Bars

I am going to apologize upfront for my pictures with this recipe.  They are very yellow.  I took them a while back before I had figured some things out about my camera.  We have Edison bulbs in the light fixture above our stove and I didn’t make the proper adjustments to compensate for that.  DSCN2621My husband is a chocolate peanut butter freak.  When we go out for milkshakes, it is almost certain that his will be chocolate peanut butter.  I used to be crazy about peanut butter, but hate the smell of wet peanut butter, so I hesitate to ever use it because I don’t want to smell the peanut butter as the dishes are being cleaned. When I saw the recipe for Easy Bars, I knew that making these bars would make up for some of my past cooking missteps.  DSCN2636First of all, I substituted wheat flakes for oats because I am allergic to oats, however Easy Bars should be made with oats.  Wheat flakes are a sub par substitute.  It’s not that the recipe failed or that they were bad or anything, but the wheat flakes I had were thicker than oats would’ve been, so they didn’t hold their shape as well as I would’ve liked.  I am sure that I could figure out some adjustments if I were to make these again, but since the recipe calls for oats, use those.  If someone knows of a great substitution, let me know.  DSCN2637Easy bars are easy.  They require very little work and yield delicious results. Easy Bars

Easy Bar

4 cups oatmeal
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup oleo (margarine) melted

Mix together and bake at 425 for 10 minutes.
Melt 6 oz chocolate chips and 1/2 cup peanut butter and spread over baked mixture.

 

 

 

 

Unbaked Cookies

For a long time I sucked at making Rice Krispie Treats.

It wasn’t that I couldn’t melt the marshmallows and butter. It wasn’t that I couldn’t stir everything together. Putting those suckers in the pan defeated me.  I felt incompetent in a way that was ridiculous.  I could make gorgeous loaves of bread, I could cook gourmet meals, but the humble Rice Krispie Treat defeated me.

Of course, I could go buy a box of them, but they just don’t really taste the same, do they?  And then the variations, the Scotcheroos, the cornflake treats that we would get on our platters of Christmas cookies…I loved them all, but I sucked at making them.DSCN2797I finally figured a few things out and got better at making them, but the stupid green cornflake wreaths still defeat me. Usually I just make those into bars and then add a ton of sprinkles.  They are delicious, even if they aren’t what I originally intended to make.

Anyway, all of this is to say that when approaching a recipe involving Rice Krispies, even these Unbaked Cookies, I get still get a bit of the old anxiety.  It’s stupid and I know it.  DSCN2799

The recipe for Unbaked Cookies is vague as to how to form these cookies after everything is mixed together.  I decided to make balls, it wasn’t a great choice because when they were cold, they were hard to bite into.  I think we all had damage to the roofs of our mouths because of them.  That didn’t deter us from eating them or even making a variation of the recipe soon after.  The variation just got pressed into a pan and cut into squares.  DSCN2803Ah, so now you are wondering what sort of variation I did.  Of course.  I used pretzels instead of the cereal.  I added toffee pieces.  It was exactly the sort of snack I needed. I may not have done a lot of sharing.  DSCN2802

Because this recipe just looks like a ball of beige, I decided to take some outdoor pictures featuring some of my garden art.  Enjoy.

The Recipe:  Unbaked Cookies

Unbaked Cookies

Boil 1/2 cup of corn syrup and 1/2 cup of sugar together.  Remove from heat when it comes to a boil.  Add 1/2 cup peanut butter, 1/2 tsp maple flavoring, 3/4 salted peanuts and 3 cups Rice Krispies.  Mix together and pat into an 8×8 square pan.

Mystery Recipe?

This recipe looks delicious, or would if I had any idea how to make it.  Normally, the recipes that are lists of ingredients don’t bother me.  I know how to make a cake, I know how to make cookies.  These?  I don’t know if I am supposed to combine the peanut butter and condensed milk?  Do I make balls and dip them in the chocolate?  Do I combine all of the ingredients and it’s supposed to be like fudge?  Anyone?  Bueller?Scan_0073 (3)