Baking
Bittersweet Chocolate Cakes with Espresso Cream
There's enough espresso cream to top 6 cakes for a quick, elegant dessert. The leftover 6 are great to keep for snacks.
All-Occasion Downy Yellow Butter Cake
If I had to choose among all my cakes, this one would win first place because it is delicious by itself yet versatile enough to accommodate a wide range of buttercreams. The cake combines the soft texture of white cake with the buttery flavor of yellow cake. Using all the yolks instead of whole eggs produces a rich yellow color, fine texture and delicious flavor.
By Rose Levy Beranbaum
Cream Cheese Pie Topped with Peaches and Blackberries
Blended in the processor, the no-bake cream cheese filling is ultra-smooth.
Five-Spice Apple Pie
By the time Crisco came out in 1911, apple pies had long been an American classic. But Crisco, the first hydrogenated vegetable shortening, gave cooks a boost. Here was a shelf-stable alternative to perishable butter and lard. While a lot of consumers were skeptical of Crisco, many early sales were generated by Orthodox Jews, who bought the shortening after a recipe booklet was published in Yiddish showing how Crisco could be used without breaking kosher dietary laws. Its success was assured when rationing made lard scarce during World War I.
Apricot Coffee Cake
Marillenfleck
This is one of the most popular of all coffee-house treats, and almost every baker has the recipe in his or her head. (The proportions are 200 grams each of flour, sugar and butter, but these don't translate as easily in the American volume method of measuring.) This version comes from my friend Gerda Hofer, who related it by heart. Don't be put off by the use of canned fruit, which is consistently flavorful and sometimes preferable to the bland fresh fruit we get too often these days; but you can use fresh fruit if you are sure it is at its peak of flavor. If using fresh apricots, sprinkle them with 2 tablespoons additional sugar before baking.
By Rick Rodgers
Tuna Empanaditas
Active time: 1 hr Start to finish: 1 1/2 hr
Don't use water-packed tuna for this recipe — it's too bland for the filling. Tuna packed in olive oil, however, will make for empanaditas that taste genuine. Especially with a glass of Fino Sherry.
Chocolate Brownies
"The Farm of Beverly Hills has the most incredible, delectable giant brownies!" says Cindy Grand of San Francisco, CA. "They taste more like fudge with a light, crunchy surface. Would you help me get the recipe?"
These are probably the fudgiest brownies we've ever tried—in fact, they seemed too rich to serve in giant squares, so we've cut them smaller. They taste even better the day after they're baked.
Blue Cheese Shortbread Leaves with Cream Cheese-Chutney Roulade
You can start making these savory cookies up to three days ahead. Even easier: Serve the cheese roll with store-bought crackers. (We especially liked this roulade made with a spiced cranberry-apple chutney, but any thick chutney will work.)
Five-Spice Fortune Cookies
You might want to begin by baking one cookie to get the hang of folding before trying two at a time.
Active time: 1 hr Start to finish: 1 hr
By Sara Moulton
Coffee-Molasses Shoofly Pie
As the pie bakes, the filling separates into a soft pudding-like bottom and a cakey top.
By Karen Barker
Brownie Puddle (with Caramel Variation)
This brownie, baked in a tart pan, gets its moistness from cream cheese and its fudginess from the best-quality cocoa and chocolate. Little puddles of ganache are poured into holes made in the brownie, after it has baked, with a the handle of a wooden spoon. Chocolate doesn't get better than this.
By Rose Levy Beranbaum
Apple-Cranberry Shortcakes with Cinnamon Cream
By Jayne Cohen
Parma Braids
Don't be put off by what might look like a complicated technique. It takes more time to describe how to make Parma braids than it does to actually assemble them. Slightly salty and very buttery, these savory croissants are hard to resist.
Active time: 2 hr Start to finish: 18 hr
Italian Nut-Filled "Sticks" (Sfratti)
Sfratti means "sticks" in Italian, as well as "evicted," for at one time landlords were allowed to persuade unwanted and delinquent tenants to leave by force of a rod. A similar practice was employed to chase away Jews during all-too-frequent periods of expulsion. This nut-filled cookie, a popular Italian Rosh Hashannah treat, got its name from its resemblance to a stick, the Jewish sense of humor transforming an object of persecution into a sweet symbol.
By Gil Marks