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Here's My Favorite Brownie Recipe—What's Yours?

brownie.jpg

Julia Moskin's brownie article in yesterday's New York Times reminded me of something French pastry chef Francois Payard said to me at a friend's wedding many years ago.

When he found out that Sarabeth Levine of Sarabeth's in New York City had won the James Beard Award for Best Pastry Chef in the U.S., Payard said, in his inimitable French-dipped English, "I cannot believe that. She makes brownies and cookies and pies. She's not a pastry chef, she's a 'bakeur.' And a 'bakeur' is not a pastry chef."

Me, I happen to like brownies and cookies and pies more than I like fancy-pants French confections made of spun sugar and marzipan. That's why I was glad to see Moskin elevating brownie discourse in her story.

She loves Nick Malgieri's Supernatural Brownies recipe, which calls for brown sugar. I've never made Malgieri's brownies, though I'm sure they're good. My favorite brownie recipe is from renowned L.A. baker Nancy Silverton. They're intensely chocolaty, chewy, and fudgey in a vastly superior way to any fudge I've ever tasted.

pastries-from-la-brea-bakery.jpgBrownies
- yields fifteen 3-by-4-inch brownies -

Adapted from Nancy Silverton's Pastries from the La Brea Bakery.

Ingredients
3 cups (12 ounces) walnut halves

3 sticks (12 ounces) unsalted butter

1 pound bittersweet chocolate

3 1/2 cups granulated sugar

6 extra large eggs

1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract

3/4 teaspoon kosher salt

3 1/4 cups unbleached pastry flour or unbleached all-purpose flour

Unsweetened cocoa powder for dusting, optional

Procedure
1. Lightly coat 11-by-17-inch jelly-roll pan with melted butter.

2. With rack in middle position, preheat oven to 325°F.

3. Spread the walnuts on a second baking sheet, and toast in oven until lightly browned, 10 to 12 minutes. Shake pan halfway through baking to ensure the nuts toast evenly.

4. In a stainless-steel mixing bowl set over a pot of gently simmering water, melt the butter and chocolate together.

5. Raise oven temperature to 350°F.

6. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, beat the sugar, eggs, vanilla extract, and salt on medium-high until thick and mousselike, 3 to 5 minutes.

7.Add the flour in 3 batches, turning mixer off before each addition and mixing on low speed until combined.

8. Remove bowl from mixer, and stir in melted chocolate mixture and nuts.

9. Pour batter into prepared jelly-roll pan; spread to an even thickness.

10. Bake for 40 minutes, until brownies are firm to the touch.

11. Before serving, slice into 3-by-four-inch squares. If desired, sift a fine layer of cocoa powder over the surface, brushing off excess cocoa for a velvety finish.

Photograph from Belgianchocolate on Flickr

7 Comments:

i have several brownie recipes that i use, some more decadent than others (one with chocolate base, milk chocolate and white chocolate chips - but those are so totally rich they're only made about once a year). my latest favorite recipe is the turtle brownie from the cook's illustrated best of 2006 book (i think that's the name of it). i think they also have the recipe on their website.

I'm with you Ed, bring me the brownies, cookies and pies anyday!

I'll have to give these ones a try, but Nicole Rees had a great one in Fine Cooking last year. It's won me several friendly office bake-offs since, here's the recipe.

But walnuts, really? Great brownies have no need for walnuts.

I make the chocolate fudge brownies as described in Peter Reinhart's book, "Brother Juniper's Bread Book". Before sharing the recipe he introduces the topic by stating his goal is to serve the world's best brownie. He watches his customers reactions to their first bite and calls it the 'Aha!' moment.

A ha hahaha, a "bakeur!" My favorite recipe is "Michael's Brownies" from Alice Medrich's Chocolate and the Art of Low-Fat Desserts. Doesn't taste low-fat at all. They are really chewy and crusty.

Ed I have never been more proud of you. I WORSHIP Nick Malgieri, I made his coconut cake for easter to the raves of the people fighting over every last lovely crumb. I also love Nancy and all things La Brea.
For total brownie domination I always use Ina Garten's ultimate brownies. People just devour them.
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_32314,00.html?rsrc=search
CAUTION: My regular half sheet pans did not compensate this recipe, something I had heard from others and Ina posts on her barefootcontessa.com website.(overflowing batter warning) Instead I used a Wilton 12 x 18 in. Performance Pans™ Sheet Pan which is almost 3 inches deep.
They are fudgy.

What is this piece of chocolate cake with nuts and powdered sugar that you are running under the word "brownie"? Surely the picture is not meant to represent brownie-kind?
Where is the fudgyness? The darkness? The pure unadultered chocolate richness?

I' m a pure chocolate brownie girl, check out rkhooks brownies I'll have to try out these nutty versions.

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