Electric Mixer
Giant Chocolate Cake with Bittersweet Chocolate Ganache and Edible Flowers
Baking the cake in one 12-inch round pan creates a dessert with presence. Assorted edible flowers make an easy, great-looking garnish.
By Lori Longbotham
Mixed-Berry Tiramisù with Lime Curd
This luxurious treat is somewhere between a trifle, a tiramisù, and a summer pudding. The lime gives it a wonderful brightness.
By Lori Longbotham
Mini Whoopie Pies
These wee sandwich cakes, also known as Moon Pies, got their start in Pennsylvania Dutch country. They are known as whoopee pies because children exclaim, "Whoopee!" when the cakes are ready. Whole Foods sells Tiny Trapeze brand marshmallow cream, made with "no junkie stuff," as the container states.
By Tracey Seaman and Tanya Wenman Steel
Chocolate Chip Flying Saucers
These flat, chewy, half whole-wheat cookies are for the chocolate chip purist: no nuts, no frills—pure bliss. They will fly out of the kitchen mysteriously. Use a 1-ounce (2-tablespoon-capacity) ice-cream scoop for easy measuring.
By Tanya Wenman Steel and Tracey Seaman
Coconut Cupcakes with White Chocolate Frosting
Editor's note: The recipe below is from Kimberly Kennedy's The Art and Craft of Entertaining. For Kennedy's baby shower tips click here.
By Kimberly Kennedy
Chocolate Chip Pie
Here's our slightly simpler version of Bud's fantastic pie (which you should mail-order if you love gooey chocolate chip cookies). Chocolate chip whipped cream is a pretty good substitute for the ice cream Bud insists you eat with it.
By Jamie Deen , Bobby Deen , and Melissa Clark
Chocolate-Chocolate Chip Cookie and Strawberry Gelato Sandwiches
By Gabe Soria and Amanda Zug-Moore
Peanut Butter Banana Cream Pie
This pie was almost my obsession. I desperately wanted a banana cream pie that wasn't too sweet, and I couldn't find one with the right consistency or the right banana flavor. I think this is pretty close to perfect, and the flavors marry well with the Elvis-inspired peanut butter layer.
By Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito
Caramel-Apple Tartlets with Cinnamon-Rum Ice Cream
This tartlet is complex, but well worth the effort. It sprang from the mind of our bakery's apple-obsessed chef, Eric Wolitzky (he is from the apple heartland of upstate New York), who was attempting to wring more flavor from the traditional apple pie. Were still huge fans of the classic, but this version—with its perfect ratio of caramel to apple to buttery crust and crunchy topping—is now our must have apple dessert. At the bakery, we put the tartlets out at noon, and they are gone by 12:30 p.m., so we feel fairly confident that people share our new obsession.
By Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito
Pint-Size Lemon-Poppy Seed Muffins
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Sachertorte
In the past few years, bakers have been upping the ante with chocolate desserts (think of your local American bistro's "warm chocolate cakes with gooey chocolate centers").
By Rick Rodgers
Dutch Baby with Lemon Sugar
A Dutch Baby—basically a cross between a pancake and a popover—is tremendously popular in Seattle; according to local lore, it originated at a restaurant there called Manca's. Serve it with fresh berries or nothing more than jam or a lavish sprinkling of lemon sugar.
By Andrea Albin
Lillet Marshmallows
Why should kids have all the fun? A lovely way to keep the conversation going long after dessert, these soft, aromatic little confections are like Peeps for adults. Lillet perfumes the marshmallows with orange and honey notes and gives them a haunting buzz.
By Maggie Ruggiero
Lemon Snow Pudding with Basil Custard Sauce
Judging by the incredulous, delighted looks on the food editors faces when they swallowed their first spoonful of what is essentially cold, airy, whipped lemonade, this 19th-century dessert deserves a renaissance. The warm, sunny sweetness of basil infuses the accompanying custard sauce.
By Andrea Albin
Eggy Grits Soufflé
By Sheila Lukins
Meyer Lemon Cake with Lavender Cream
The floral notes of Meyer lemons meld with lavender in the most heavenly way in this light, golden cake. The secret to the moistness of the tender layers is olive oil—a common ingredient in Provençal cakes—and they take well to the bright lemon curd and loose billows of lavender-honey cream.
By Paul Grimes
Double-Ginger Sour Cream and Bundt Cake with Ginger-Infused Strawberries
Ground ginger and crystallized ginger amp up the flavor of the cake; fresh ginger adds a spicy hit to the fresh strawberries. The Bundt pan is coated with raw sugar before the batter is added, giving the cake a sparkly crust.
By Abby Dodge
Mini Crab Cakes
By Betty Rosbottom
Vanilla Bean-Coconut Cupcakes with Coconut Frosting
The secret to these moist cupcakes? Reduced coconut milk.
By Abby Dodge
Orange Angel Food Cake with Caramel Sauce and Tropical-Fruit Compote
This cake is light as air— and infused with flavor, thanks to a little grated orange peel. A deep, dark caramel sauce and a stunning fruit compote make the dessert dinner-party-worthy. Be sure not to use a pan with a nonstick coating. Because this cake is cooled upside down in the pan, you want the cake to stick to the sides a bit.
By Abby Dodge