Saturday, December 22, 2012

The Jar of Cookies


A few months ago when brainstorming ideas for our second issue, we came across the topic of food in jars, one of the latest hot food fads floating about the internet. We wanted to explore a way that having food in a jar would be actually pragmatic, and this is one of our favorite ideas: gifting jars of cookie ingredients! Just collect the dry ingredients of the recipe into one or two jars, print out the instructions, wrap with a bow, and you're good to go. Below are three recipes from our "The Jar of Cookies" feature for your last minute Christmas presents. Finally, hoarding all those jars in my kitchen throughout the year has paid off. :)

Happy Holidays to you and yours from the sated team!

x, Stephanie


Speculaas
makes about 3½ dozen cookies

½ cup (48 g) almond meal or ground blanched almonds
1½ cups (188 g) all-purpose flour
½ tspn baking soda
1½ tspn cinnamon
½ tspn ground ginger
¼ tspn ground cardamom
¼ tspn ground nutmeg
⅛ tspn ground cloves
¼ tspn salt
½ cup (113 g) unsalted butter, room temperature
½ cup (110 g) light brown sugar
½ cup (100 g) sugar
1 large egg

Combine almond meal, flour, baking soda, spices, and salt in a bowl and set aside. Cream butter and sugars together in a stand mixer with the paddle attachment on medium-high speed until light and fluffy. Add egg and beat until combined. Reduce mixer speed to low, add in the flour mixture and mix until just combined. Flatten the dough into a disk, wrap with plastic, and refrigerate at least two hours, or overnight.

Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line a few cookie sheets with parchment paper. Roll out dough to about ¼-inch thick on a lightly floured surface. Cut out cookies and place on sheets about 1 inch apart. You can also press the dough into a springerle mold if you want molded cookies instead.

Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, rotating sheets halfway through, until firm and lightly golden around the edges. Cool sheets on wire racks for a couple minutes before transferring cookies directly onto wire racks with a spatula to finish cooling.


Gran's Scottish Shortbread (with rice flour)
recipe by Jennifer Altman
makes about 6 dozen 1 x 2-inch bars

3½ cups (450 g) all-purpose flour
½ cup (70 g) rice flour
2 cups (450 g) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 cup (115 g) confectioners’ sugar
sugar, for sprinkling

Preheat oven to 300°F. Line a 15 x 10-inch sheet pan or two 9-inch square pans with parchment paper.

Sift the flours together. Set aside. Beat the butter until smooth and cream in the sugar. Mix in the flours until everything is well blended. Do not overmix. The mixture may look dry, which is okay. Press evenly into the prepared pans. Prick all over with a fork and bake for about 45 minutes, depending on the thickness. To ensure a crispy cookie that stores well, they should be baked all the way through to the middle. Remove from oven and immediately sprinkle lightly with granulated sugar and cut into 1"x 2" biscuits while still soft and warm.

(Note: the rice flour makes these rich, buttery cookies nice and crisp.)


Hazelnut brown butter thumbprints
makes about 2 dozen cookies

1 cup (226 g) unsalted butter, room temperature
2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour
½ tspn salt
½ cup (100 g) sugar
2 large egg yolks
1 tspn vanilla extract
½ cup (58 g) hazelnuts, skinned, toasted, and finely chopped
½ cup (130 g) Nutella

Melt butter in a small saucepan over medium heat until it begins to brown and smell nutty. Pour butter into a small bowl and refrigerate until butter resolidifies.

Preheat oven to 350°F. Line several baking sheets with parchment paper.

In a small bowl, whisk together flour and salt. Using a stand mixer, cream the browned butter at medium speed until light and creamy. Add sugar and beat until the mixture is light and fluffy. Add egg yolks and vanilla and mix until just incorporated. Reduce speed to low and gradually add the flour and salt, mixing just until combined.

Roll the dough into ¾-inch balls. Roll in the hazelnuts. Press your thumb into the center of each, making a depression large enough to fit 1 teaspoon of filling. Place the cookies on baking sheets and bake for 12 to 15 minutes, rotating halfway through.

Remove cookies from oven and let cool on wire rack. Drop rounded teaspoonfuls of Nutella into the center of each cookie.

(Note: these hazelnut brown butter cookies--whether filled with Nutella or jam--are one of my absolute favorite baked goods that Anita makes! They're so incredibly nutty and melt-in-your-mouth powdery. I was immediately infatuated with them when I had one at a Christmas cookie exchange two years ago, and I still beg Anita to make them all the time. Suffice it to say, I'm thrilled she's finally sharing the recipe with the world via sated.)


(recipes by Anita Chu, unless otherwise specified; photos by Stephanie Shih)

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Deck the tables! Flowers for the holidays


Dear sated fans and readers,

We know that you've all been so patiently waiting for our second issue to finish, so thank you so much for your patience and continued enthusiasm! We were planning to push out the issue in time for the holidays this year, but with our small staff size, set-backs, though often avoidable, are unfortunately inevitable. As Creative Director, I'd like to personally apologize for the delays. To make up for it, over the next few weeks, we'll be publishing some holiday-related articles and features from the issue here online! Then, our issue should appear in January, in time to provide some color to an otherwise grey month. Who says you can't have a longer holiday season, anyways!

For the first holiday feature, I'm so pleased to introduce our collaboration with Farmgirl Flowers, a San Francisco-based flower company that focuses on arrangements made with entirely local-grown flowers (and then delivers them via bicycle messenger around the city!). Christina Stembel, the founder and master flower arranger of Farmgirl, put together six bouquet arrangements that are perfect for holiday tablescapes, focusing entirely on using what's available locally, in flower marts, in our own kitchens, and our backyards. Here are the arrangements, and tips from Christina on making your own at home.

(Acknowledgements also to Kate Shaughnessy, for interviewing Christina and passing on these tips!)

in the above arrangements: kale, adonis, eucalyptus, pomegranate, scabiosa stellata, dahlia,
rosemary, echinacea, fig branches, broccoli hydrangea, amaranth, rose hips, scabiosa atropurpurea

Christina's tip #1: When seasonal flowers are limited, keep it simple! Pick one or two flower types and pair with fun foliage: in autumn, reddening foliage adds color, and for winter pine branches add unexpected pizzaz.

sunflower, adonis, 'backyardia' leaves

Christina's tip #2: Think beyond flowers. Herbs like rosemary and mint, greens like kale, and seasonal fruit add surprise and fun to your favorite stems.

lisianthus, belladonna, rose, dusty miller

Christina's tip #3: Go in your backyard and see what you have out there. When I run out of greens, I go back to our yard, and I use the magnolia tree foliage! Anybody who has access to any foliage at all can make it work.

rose, hypericum berry, dahlia, eucalyptus, pine, kale, broccoli hydrangea, lisianthus.

Make sure to watch for our interview and feature with Christina in the second issue. Farmgirl Flowers is one of my personal favorite SF start-ups, so I was really excited to work with them for this feature! For more information about Farmgirl Flowers, including ordering information and the availability of seasonal flowers, give their website a visit.

x, Stephanie

(P.S. In the meantime, our first issue is still available! Make sure to order it in time for Christmas!)

(photos by Stephanie Shih; arrangements by Christina Stembel; writing contribution by Kate Shaughnessy)

Friday, September 21, 2012

First look: Issue 2


It's almost officially Fall, and the second issue of sated is right around the corner! We're so excited about what we've been working on, and can't wait to share it all with you.... soon. Stay tuned in the next few weeks as we ramp up to the launch with exciting news, sneak peeks, and pre-ordering information so that you can be one of the first to get your hands on a copy. For now, here's a first look at some amazing croissants that will be in the issue!

x, Stephanie