christmas comfort drinks

I Am... Tini’s Hot Chocolate Recipe

It’s hot chocolate season! I love Tini’s mac and cheese, so when I saw Tini's hot chocolate recipe recently, I had to try it. Come winter, I love getting cozy on the couch, with a heated blanket over my lap and decadent mug of homemade hot chocolate in my hands. If you’ve only ever had instant packet hot chocolate, trust me, it’s not as good as homemade. The only real way to make hot chocolate is from scratch. It’s thick, it’s creamy, it’s full of chocolate-y goodness and after you top it with a dollop of softly whipped cream, all your worries will melt away.

Who is Tini and what is Tini’s hot chocolate?

Tini, aka from Tini’s mac and cheese fame, is Tineke Yonger, the presiding TikTok viral recipe creator that is an absolute beast at creating comfort food. Her mac and cheese is the ultimate comfort food and her hot chocolate follows suit. Her hot chocolate recipe is at 16 plus million views and countless people have been making it and singing its praises.

How to make Tini’s Hot Chocolate

  1. Prep - start by gathering all your ingredients and measuring them out. Chop the chocolate and have a mug on hand. If you’re going to make the peppermint whipped cream, I recommend you do that first so your hot chocolate doesn’t cool down while you’re making it.
  2. Warm - Add milk and heavy cream to a pot and warm it up gently over low heat. You want it warm but not hot, so just be patient. When it starts to warm a little bit of steam will start rising. Giving the milk and cream a stir every so often will help you make sure you don’t burn it.
  3. Stir - Once the milk and cream are warm, stir in the cocoa powder and sugar until they dissolve. You can use a whisk or a spoon, your choice.
  4. Melt - When the cocoa powder and sugar have dissolved, slowly add the chopped chocolate in batches, stirring or whisking so that it melts before you add more.
  5. Thicken - Once all the chopped chocolate melts, you want the hot chocolate to thicken slightly. Let it continue to warm on low heat, stirring occasionally, for about two minutes.
  6. Enjoy - When the hot chocolate is thick and velvety is time to enjoy! Pour it into your favorite mug, top with your homemade peppermint whipped cream (if you’re having that) and enjoy!

Tini’s hot chocolate ingredients

The beauty of Tini’s hot chocolate is that it has simple ingredients that you probably already have in your kitchen - if it’s well stocked. There’s nothing too fussy, all you need is:

Whole milk

Tini prefers whole milk, and I do too because if you’re making homemade hot chocolate, you might as well go all the way. You can substitute in your preferred milk fat type here, it won’t affect the taste, just the consistency. That being said, if you substitute for a milk alternative, the taste will definitely be different.

Heavy cream

Heavy cream also known as heavy whipping cream, whipping cream, full fat cream, or double cream, has the most milk fat of all the creams. It’s what you use to make whipping cream and you’ll find it in cartons, next to the milk. It will give your hot chocolate a thick and creamy velvety texture.

Cocoa powder

Cocoa powder plus chocolate is what makes this hot chocolate extra decadent. Make sure you’re using unsweetened cocoa powder, not sweetened cocoa powder or instant hot chocolate mix. The only ingredient your cocoa powder should have is cocoa powder. You’ll find it in the baking aisle and if you’re fond of baking brownies, you probably already have some in the pantry.

Sugar

Since we’re using unsweetened cocoa powder and a high percent cacao chocolate, you need sugar to sweeten everything and bring all the flavors together. Regular granulated sugar is what Tini uses, but if you have brown sugar at home, that will do too, it will just add a hint of molasses.

Chopped chocolate

You need a nice dark chocolate, at least 70% cacao. The easiest thing to do is buy a bar of dark chocolate - the bars of chocolate in the candy section at the supermarket are perfect for this. One you have the bar of chocolate, all you need to do is chop it up.

Vanilla

Tini uses vanilla bean paste, but if you only have vanilla extract on hand, that will do too! Vanilla paste is usually found in the baking aisle or online.

Homemade peppermint whipped cream

If you’re going to make Tini’s hot chocolate, please make her peppermint whipped cream to go on top. It’s the perfect minty, creamy counterpoint to warm, rich cocoa.

Peppermint whipped cream ingredients

heavy cream - good news, you can use the rest of your carton of heavy cream to make whipped cream! powdered sugar - powdered sugar dissolves really easily into cream, but if you don’t have any on had, just use a bit of granulated sugar. You won’t need as much, so start with 1/4 cup, taste and adjust as you go. vanilla extract - again, Tini uses vanilla bean paste but regular vanilla extract will do too. peppermint extract - you need the tiniest amount of peppermint extract because a little goes a long way.

How to make peppermint whipped cream

  1. Add 1 cup of heavy cream to a large bowl and whisk until soft peaks form.
  2. Sift in 1/2 cup of powdered sugar and whisk until all the powdered sugar dissolves.
  3. Stir in 1/8 tsp vanilla extract and 1/8 teaspoon peppermint extract.
  4. Dollop onto your hot chocolate!

Tips and tricks

  • If you don’t like thick hot chocolate, don’t use the heavy cream, just use 2 cups of milk.
  • Make the whipped cream - soft fluffy peppermint whipped cream is so good with hot chocolate.
  • If you don’t like peppermint, leave it out, but make some homemade whipped cream anyway because homemade whipped cream is amazing.
  • Add some chocolate shavings, festive sprinkles, or crushed candy canes on top.
That’s it! I’m really happy that Tini sparked a whole homemade hot chocolate renaissance. Homemade hot chocolate is way better than packaged and if you’ve never had it, you’ll be blown away. Homemade hot chocolate for life, I hope you give this a try! xoxo steph

Tini’s Hot Chocolate Recipe

Hot chocolate from scratch is the best thing and this recipe won't disappoint

  • 1.5 cup whole milk
  • 0.5 cup heavy cream
  • 3 tbsp cocoa powder
  • 3 tbsp sugar
  • 2 oz chopped chocolate (70% cocoa preferred)
  • 1/8 tsp vanilla
  1. Add the milk and cream to a heavy bottomed pot and heat it gently over low heat, just so you warm up the milk, making sure it doesn’t get too hot. When the milk and cream is warm, whisk in the cocoa powder and sugar until dissolved.



  2. Slowly add in the chopped chocolate in small batches, whisking and making sure it melts before adding more.



  3. Add a dash of vanilla and let gently heat for 2 more minutes while the hot chocolate thickens. Remove from the heat and pour into a mug. Enjoy as is or top with mint whipped cream or marshmallows.



Drinks
American
hot chocolate

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sides entertaining vegetables

I Am... Best Green Bean Casserole Recipe

Green bean casserole is a classic but it's so much better when you make it from scratch. This recipe is fast, easy, and delicious, and best of all, needs no processed foods.  This made-from-scratch version is more mushroom-y, more flavorful, and only 10 minutes. It's healthier while still scratching that nostalgic itch. It's so good you won't want to stop for turkey or mashed potatoes or anything else.

How to make green bean casserole

Green bean casserole is super easy to make. No matter what version or recipe, the process is the same:
  1. Prepare your mushroom soup, add fried onions and soy sauce.
  2. Blanch your fresh green beans.
  3. Assemble and bake until bubbling and toasty.
  4. Top with fried onions and bake a little longer until onions are warmed and extra crispy.
  5. Eat!

Soy sauce

Soy sauce was integral to this recipe when it was invented back in the 1950s. If you are shopping for a fresh bottle, check out mushroom dark soy sauce for extra mushroom flavor. It goes great with anything you’d ever want to use soy sauce for. If you already have a bottle of (any) soy sauce, that will work too.

Fried onions

Although everything else in this recipe is scratch made, unless you own tens of thousands of dollars of commercial dehydration and deep fry equipment, you likely can’t match the quality of commercially fried onions. In addition to regular grocery stores selling French's, almost all asian supermarkets sell fried onions or shallots. Believe it or not, IKEA sells the best fried onions in their grocery store after the checkouts. And of course, Amazon.

How long to bake green bean casserole

Green bean casserole is completely cooked before it ever goes into the oven. The reason it's baked at all is to meld all the flavors together and caramelize the mushrooms and onions in the soup. This can be done in as little as 15 minutes.

Make ahead green bean casserole

If you want zero stress and you’re making it within 24 hours, you can put the entire casserole together the night before, cover it, and store it in the fridge. When you are ready to cook,  add 10-20 minutes cooking time. If you are pre-prepping the morning of, the best way is to trim the green beans and make the mushroom stock, but don’t blanch the beans until you are ready to assemble.

An easy Christmas menu

More delicious sides

Green Bean Casserole Recipe

A super mushroom-y, freshly made update on classic green bean casserole

  • 4 tbsp butter (or olive oil, or mix of the two)
  • 4 cloves garlic (crushed)
  • 1/2 medium onion (sliced)
  • 1 lb mushrooms (pre-sliced cremini preferred)
  • 4-8 sprigs thyme (or other herbs)
  • 2 tbsp all purpose flour
  • 3/4 cup white wine (or beef/chicken/vegetable stock)
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 0.5-1 cup milk (optional, see notes)
  • 1 tbsp dark mushroom soy sauce (or regular soy sauce)
  • 1 tsp fish sauce (optional)
  • 1/2 cup french fried onions

Assembly

  • 1.5 lb green beans (ends trimmed)
  • 1/2 cup Parmigiano Reggiano cheese (or Cheddar)
  • 1 cup french fried onions (or more, to finish)
  1. Melt the butter over medium heat, being careful not to burn it. Sauté onions for 2-3 minutes, then add garlic and cook for about 1 minute. Add mushrooms and thyme. Cook, stirring occasionally, until mushrooms are toasty brown, about 7 minutes. Add flour, salt, and pepper, and stir for another 2 minutes until the flour is thoroughly incorporated.



  2. Add wine and reduce by half, about 3 minutes. Reduce heat to low, then add cream, soy sauce, fish sauce, milk (If using) and fried onions. Stir, season, and simmer for 10-15 minutes.



  3. While you are waiting for your sauce to thicken, blanch your green beans in boiling salted water for 3 minutes, then drain and cool. If you like your green beans on the squeaky crunchy side, use an ice bath. Preheat your oven to 375ºF too.



  4. To assemble: make a bed of green beans in a large oven proof dish. Ladle the mushroom sauce over top of that, and top with parmesan. Bake for 30 minutes at 375ºF.



  5. Remove from oven, carefully toss the green beans a little, then top with more onions. Return to the oven for another 5 minutes or until onions are crispy.



Add milk if you prefer your casserole on the saucier side, leave out if you prefer your casserole thicker. Pictured with no milk added.

Side Dish
American
green bean casserole

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basics beef recipes easy entertaining

I Am... How to Cook Prime Rib

There is nothing more impressive than a slow roasted and deeply crusted prime rib landing squarely in the center of a full dinner table. Prime rib might be the perfect cut of beef. It’s got a little something for everyone. Intense well-marbled fat forward hits for the fat-is-flavor stans (that’s me). Supple, rosy tender parts for the filet/tenderloin fans. Savory beefiness in bulk for the ribeye-is-king crowd. And, last but not least, a deep dark crust for those guys who need to insert Maillard reaction into any conversation involving beef.

What is prime rib

Prime rib is one of the largest cuts of beef you can buy as a normal home cook. You buy it as a roast made of a full rack of 7 ribs. These ribs are commonly spoken of as being from ribs #6-#12. The best way to think of a prime rib is a super high quality tomahawk or bone-in ribeye, stretched out to a foot thick. It’s true: the meat that comes in a prime rib roast is the same stuff you make ribeyes and tomahawks from.

How to cook prime rib

Here's how to cook a perfect prime rib, every time:
  1. Preheat your oven to 450ºF.
  2. Brown the two sides in a cast iron pan: optional, but highly recommended, especially when you have a smaller roast that's easier to handle. The smoke detector may possibly go off.
  3. Brush with butter or oil, then sear in the oven at 450ºF for 15 minutes.
  4. Set the oven to 200ºF and open the oven door for about 15 minutes, or until the oven temp drops to 200ºF if you have an oven thermometer. The smoke detector may possibly go off, again.
  5. Cook for 20 mins per pound for medium rare, or until your meat thermometer goes off. Temperatures are below.
  6. Rest for 30 mins, then slice and enjoy!

Prime rib temperatures

Prime rib, like all roasts, continues cooking after it leaves the oven while the thermal energy redistributes. For us, this seems to be a 6 degree rise, but your results may vary based on how warm your house is. Basically, 6 degrees is a pretty good estimate, however, so you want to take your roast out 6 degrees before your target temperature. For a quick reference, my target temps are below.
  • Rare: 125ºF - remove at 119ºF
  • Medium-rare: 130ºF - remove at 124ºF
  • Medium: 135ºF - remove at 129ºF
  • Medium-well: 140ºF - remove at 134ºF
  • Well done: 🥵

Prime rib cooking time

If you are cooking for a hungry house and want to know how to plan on timing such a large roast to be just ready for dinner, there’s a super easy formula based on the doneless you prefer. This isn’t one of those pro-chef-speed formulas that no one can realistically achieve, it’s pretty loose with the times so you can depend on it, even if you are relaxing, drinking wine, and consulting your phone every so often for the next step of the recipe. That said, using a meat thermometer is vitally important. And, so is planning on serving appetizers and drinks before the main course for anyone who is extra hungry. The formula is simple - assume:
  • 2 hours for temper
  • 30 mins for searing
  • 15-30 minutes per pound (in 5 minute increments - medium rare is 20 minutes/pound)
  • 30 minute rest
The prime rib that we made here was about 6 lbs, which means it was a 2 hour cook time plus 3 hours for everything else. It squarely hit the 5 hour mark from taking it out of the fridge to the first bite.

The importance of a meat thermometer

A meat thermometer is essential. That old adage about the feel of your ear or touching your thumbs to fingers? Not for important cuts of meat, in my opinion. I recommend an oven probe; one that beeps when the target temp is hit. They can be really cheap, extremely expensive wireless app driven, or something in between. If you have an instant read or thermocouple style, be sure to check often that the roast doesn’t get overcooked.

Trimming

How much fat you need to trim away depends on how much you love fat. If you trim all the fat away from the edges, you’ll get a much better sear, but that fat is super flavorful and tender - nothing like the tough chewy fat you might encounter from lesser cuts. My butcher left the fat cap on the spinalis, so I removed and froze that, but left the fat on the iliocostalis for extra flavor.

Parts of a prime rib

Prime rib looks like just one big homogenous hunk of meat, but it’s three delicious parts with their own taste and tenderness:
  1. Spinalis dorsi aka rib cap: This is considered a well kept chef’s secret: the greatest cut of steak, bar none. All the complexity of a flank steak, the fatty marbling of a ribeye, and the tenderness of a filet, in one steak. This cut is separated from the main body of the prime rib by a large layer of fat. Back when people vilified fat, spinalis dorsi used to be cut off and saved for the butcher or kitchen so that the ribeye steak could be presented “cleaner”. These days, especially if you order a bone-in ribeye, they just leave it on. It really is the best part.
  2. Ribeye: This is the main body of a slice of prime rib. It’s literally the same as a ribeye steak. It will be well marbled, tender, and complex tasting.
  3. Iliocostalis: Some people liken this to a long thin tenderloin. It’s also called the lip or nose of a prime rib. It doesn’t have a good reputation because it’s often smaller, fattier, and not very toothsome, but I think it’s an intensely beefy and tender cut because it sits right next to the bone. Iliocostalis used to be cut off and not served with the prime rib, as it wasn’t considered ‘prime’ enough, but these days, most butchers will leave it on for you to decide on.

Why make prime rib?

But why go to all this trouble instead of just getting seven steaks? Because, prime rib is insanely delicious. It’s basically the cheapest bone-in ribeye you can get at an extremely high quality for price ratio. Done right, it’s easy, forgiving, impressive, and satisfying. The best part is the leftovers can be reheated as some of the best steaks you’ll ever have.

Prime rib vs steaks

Why should you make prime rib instead of steak or some other cut? Because, it’s cheaper than steak by two- to three- times, it’s easier to make, and there’s nothing more impressive than a giant roast of beef landing squarely center on the dinner table. The advantage of steak is that you can cater to different doneness preferences, but there are so many disadvantages, such as steaks being more expensive, needing more pans (aka more dishwashing), and being so much messier, smokier, and splatterier. Besides, you can cut down a prime rib into steaks before or after cooking. You can't glue steaks together into a prime rib roast. Overall, if you can justify the initial outlay, prime rib beats steak every time.

A smaller prime rib

In fact, prime rib is such a good competitor to steak that I think it’s worth it to consider a smaller prime rib, even if its just for two of you, or even if you live alone. Ask your butcher to cut you 2-3 ribs worth. Where we live, it’s half the cost vs bone in ribeye, and my butcher sells even two ribs, which is just two bone in ribeyes stuck to each other. If you are buying by the rib at a really nice butcher shop, you may get choice of which rib bones you want. The “front” is rib number 12, which is very tender with a large ribeye steak, and the “back” is rib number 6, which is more marbled and complex.

Prime rib roast

A prime rib can actually be closer to 24 inches thick, although you don’t have to opt for the full rack. Any good butcher will cut you whatever thickness you need. If you can, you should go for broke and get the full rack because it’s way cheaper than individual steaks of the same quality. A prime rib roast can be split into steaks if you’re so inclined. Even if you are only cooking for 2 people, you can buy a whole rack for cheap and split it up into seven 2” thick steaks for much less than you’d pay if you'd just bought steaks. But, the whole point of a prime rib is to roast it to perfection, with a deep dark crust and tender, rosy pink insides, so I recommend you grab a 2-4 rib segment (or more if you want) and go to roasting town. Roasting is way easier than cooking 7 steaks and so much more impressive too. Even better, with the right tools, it's easy to do it perfectly, every time.

Bone in or boneless or tied back

When you ask for prime rib, you might be presented with one of three options: bone-in, boneless, or the bones cut off, but tied back on. Each has its pros and cons:
  • Bone in: The most flavor, but also the hardest to handle. Besides the weight, you can only cut slices between the bones. If you don’t intend to use the bones, these will also be more expensive, because while they cost less per pound, you still pay for the bones. They have the most flavor by far.
  • Boneless: The easiest to handle, the easiest to cook, but a little less impressive. Boneless is great if you’re a crust fan (who isn’t?) because you get maximum crust without any pesky bones getting in the way. You’re also able to slice it to any thickness you like. To me though, this option doesn’t really feel like prime rib, just fancy roast beef.
  • Bones cut off and tied back on: This might actually be the version you’re most likely to run into depending on where you live. This one seems to sells the best, and some internet sources say it’s great for seasoning the meat because you can get under the bone.

Where to buy prime rib

Because it’s not a super popular cut and because of how expensive it is, outside of Christmas and Thanksgiving, and maybe Easter, you may have a hard time finding prime rib. The best place to get a prime rib, by far, is your local butcher. Not only will they often have it because they have the whole cow in stock, they'll be more willing to cut you exactly as much as you need. Your other option is a special order from a grocery store’s meat department. I checked with whole foods and they said they were able to get a prime rib the next day. I went with the local butcher, but whole foods was actually cheaper. You can also get some awesome (and awesomely expensive) prime ribs from online meat purveyors like snake river farms or costco. If you’re lucky, you might find some prime rib locally at costco in its appropriately named prime beef department - just ask.

How to choose the best prime rib

Believe it or not, prime rib was named before the USDA settled on its grades. Depending on who you believe, prime rib is either called prime because it’s the best cut of beef, or because its a primal cut. Either way, prime rib is not always USDA prime. The difference between a USDA prime and a USDA choice (the second best) prime rib is between 25%-50% more money. Beyond that, if you go to a good butcher, you also have options for organic, dry aged, grass fed, wagyu, and more. So how do you choose a good prime rib? Decent marbling is usually a sign of a happy animal, and that means a good tasting cut of meat. Grass vs corn fed is a matter of opinion, and many people don’t like the extra floral and complex taste of grass fed beef, but I don't think there's anyone who doesn’t like tender, well marbled beef.

Do you really need to temper the meat?

Unfortunately, yes, you do really need to temper the meat. Tempering the meat – which is really just a fancy way of saying "leave it out on the counter to come to room temp" – equalizes the temperature of the meat so it cooks evenly, plus it lowers cooking times. You can also use this time to briefly dry-brine the meat (below). For a smaller 2-3 bone roast, you can get away with 2 hours of tempering. For a full rack, you'll want to temper at least 4 hours.

Dry brining

Dry brining is just liberally seasoning the meat and leaving it in the fridge for 12hrs to 4 days to let the salt penetrate the meat. This process is supposed to pull out the excess moisture from the beef for a more tender and tasty piece of meat. I'm not sure I personally agree with this. Salt never penetrates that much in a dry brine. But if you have a day or two before you want to cook the beef, it doesn’t hurt. Just lightly sprinkle some salt all around the roast, then place on something to catch the juices. Loosely cover and refrigerate until you are ready to use.

Sauces

I don't do a rub with my prime rib. Because it’s such a large piece of meat, most likely you will not get a lot of extra flavor into the inside – just its innate beefiness. For some people that’s more than fine. For others, steak sauces are always welcome. If you’re in that crowd, you should check out our steak sauce roundup.

How to reheat prime rib

You’ll probably likely have some leftover prime rib. You’ll also most likely hear that you should reheat the leftovers in a low oven. I disagree: by far the best way to reheat prime rib leftovers is to cut the remaining pieces into 2” thick steaks (if you can). Liberally season any cut sides, then sear 2 minutes per side in a cast iron pan. It makes for amazing steaks.

Smoke alarms

Depending on many factors – if your smoke alarm is close to your kitchen, if your oven is less clean, or if your hood fan is a little weaker – you should be prepared for your smoke detector to go off during the browning stages. Be sure to check if your smoke detector has a hush button. Or, have a helpful assistant standing by with a large towel ready to fan when you first drop the roast into the cast iron pan to brown and again when you open the 500ºF oven door. And that's it, perfect prime rib, every time. I hope you enjoyed this guide and you're inspired to make a giant, super satisfying chunk of meaty goodness soon! -Mike  

Prime Rib Recipe

Everything you ever wanted to know about prime rib: what it is, how to buy the best one, and how to cook a prime rib perfectly, every time.

  • Meat thermometer with probe
  • 6 lb prime rib (2 ribs, see notes)
  • 1 tbsp butter (melted, unsalted preferred)
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 1 tsp freshly ground pepper
  1. Liberally season your roast with kosher salt and let temper on the counter for 2-4 hours. Near the end of the temper time, preheat your oven to 450ºF



  2. Optional: Sear the sides in a cast iron pan with a generous amount of oil. Combine the butter and pepper together, then brush onto the roast. Roast for 15 mins at 450ºF.



  3. Set the oven to 200ºF. Allow oven to cool down with the door open for 15 minutes (or until the oven temp hits 200ºF, then close door and cook at 200ºF until the internal temp hits your target temp (119ºF for medium rare, see post), or approx 2 hours.



  4. Remove and rest for 30 minutes before slicing. Serve with sauces of choice, enjoy!



Bones are assumed to weigh 9oz

Main Course
American
beef, prime rib, roast, steak

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canada dining guide skiing travel

I Am... Best Food in Whistler

The best food and drink options in whistler. Mike and I are here in Whistler 2-3 months every year and we always take advantage of all the dining options just to see what's new and of course, to visit old favorites. The food options here in Whistler (we're here right now as I write this) are pretty world class, so if you're here for more than just the skiing, this is the best food in Whistler list for you. Whistler Blackcomb is one of the top rated ski resorts in North America, if not the world. With over 8000 acres of skiable terrain, the world’s longest gondola, and the cutest village ever, Whistler is a must visit. Whether or not you’re a skier or snowboarder doesn’t even matter - there’s so much to see and do in the town Whistler. The vibes, as the kids say, are immaculate. Even more so, the food scene eats and leaves no crumbs. Most of best food and beverage options lie in the main village of Whistler, which is at the base of both Whistler and Blackcomb mountains. It’s a completely walkable, pedestrian village that has super cute architecture with a combination of smaller chalets and castle-looking luxury hotels. There are so many places to eat and drink and because  the options seem endless, don’t waste your time on overpriced, bad food. Here’s what you should be eating while you’re in Whistler!

Do you need reservations in Whistler?

Whistler is busy. It’s the biggest resort in North American and it attracts a lot of people. That means, generally, you can’t just walk into a hot ticket place and expect to be seated. Reservations are a must in peak season, which is, obviously, winter, but summer as well. If you have a must-visit restaurant, make a reservation to avoid disappointment. That being said, some of the best food in Whistler are casual options that don’t need reservations, such as pretty much everything on the list below:

BeaverTails

Have you even gone skiing if you don’t end your ski day off with a beavertail? Beavertails are a decidedly Canadian treat: irresistibly warm and fresh from the fryer whole-wheat pastries that are a combination of chewy and crisp. Think of them like a giant flat donut, in the shape of - you got it - a beaver tail! My favorite is the classic cinnamon and sugar, but if you’re a toppings person, they have so many to choose from. Really, there’s nothing quite like standing in the snow while the village fairy lights are twinkling, eating a steamy hot and sweet beavertail after a day on the slopes. BeaverTails 4293 Mountain Square, Whistler, BC V0N 1B4 Open: 2pm - 8:45pm

Chubby Ducks Donair, Kebab & Poutine

If you’re staying in an airbnb or somewhere where you have kitchen but aren’t really looking to cook, but also don’t want to go out to eat, grab some take away from Chubby Ducks! They have THE best poutine in town, no questions asked. It’s not in the middle of the village, but it’s just a short hop through the main road, off to one side. They’re not an eat in place, so keep that in mind. Also, they make the fries to order, so there’s always a bit of a wait, but it’s worth it! You can also order in advance to make it a little more streamlined. Chubby Ducks Donair, Kebab & Poutine 4122 Village Green Unit 9, Whistler, BC V0N 1B4 Open: 11am - 2:30am

Provisions

This is a newer fast-casual cafe slash restaurant brought to Whistler by the Toptable group, who also behind Araxi and Bar Oso. It’s an all-day neighborhood cafe with 30 seats that seems perpetually busy. It’s a pretty cute scene, but with that comes the inevitable fight for table seats. I think they intended it to be more of a takeout store, but Whistler has been dying for a cozy, while away the day cafe and it looks like all of the people who don’t ski like to hang out here to peep the scene. That being said, they do great coffee and pastries, so hop in, grab some, and wander around the Village for the ultimate Whistler experience. Provisions 4222 Village Square Unit 120, Whistler, BC V0N 1B4 Open: M-Th 8 am-5 pm, F-S 7:30 am - 5 pm

% Arabica Whistler Village

If you’re looking for an aesthetic coffee shop AND good coffee, a stop at % Arabica is a must. Straight from Kyoto, the Whistler location is the first on this side of Canada, with the other two locations in Toronto. % Arabica is cult classic coffee shop in Japan and they’ve brought that success to the rest of the world. Their custom-made espresso machines combined with proprietary coffee blend that has notes of chocolate, nuts, caramel, and wine. The shop itself is sleek, white, and reminiscent of an ice cave, which is exactly what % Arabica was going for. Try their specialty lattes, each which mixes  a different coffee blend or single origin bean, amount of sweetness and condensed milk. % Arabica Whistler Village 4295 Blackcomb Way #123, Whistler, BC V0N 1B4 Open: 8 am - 6 pm

Portobello

Located in the Upper Village, inside the gorgeous Fairmont Whistler, Portobello is a hidden gem for daytime dining. They have a large cozy room with plenty of large tables for groups and corners to tuck away in. Breakfast and lunch are the times to hit up Portobello, they have a huge amount of freshly baked pastries and construct your own breakfast bowls or sandwiches. During high season, they also open at night with a Smokehouse dinner where they have juicy brisket and a variety of sides including mac and cheese. Portobello 4599 Chateau Blvd, Whistler, BC V0N 1B4 Open: S-Th 7 am - 3 pm, F-S 7 am - 3 pm; 5 - 8:30 pm

Splitz Grill

Splitz is a locals favorite and has been since what seems like forever. It’s near the main Whistler grocery store, Fresh Street Market, and while that seems like a long walk from the slopes, it really isn’t, unless you’re in your ski boots. I love it there. Just a classic, mountain burger joint, no fuss, no muss. They have TVs where you can request to watch your favorite team’s games as well as beer on tap. The burgers are juicy and made to order, with plenty of customization options and their fries are crispy and hot. Mike always gets a burger and I always get chicken strips because chicken strips and skiing just go hand in hand in my mind. Splitz Grill 4369 Main St, Whistler, BC V0N 1B4 Open: S-Th 11 am - 9 pm; F-S 11am - 10pm That's it for now! If you're interested in reading and/or eating more, check out our Five Best Restaurants in Whistler.

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dinner ground beef recipes ground pork recipes restaurant recipes

I Am... Swedish Meatballs

Real deal Swedish meatballs, just like in Sweden. A couple of years ago Mike and went to Sweden and the number one item on my Swedish bucket list was eating real Swedish meatballs. We went to a little place called Bakfickan, tucked into a corner of the Royal Swedish Opera House in Stockholm. The meatballs were unreal. They were and still are one of my all time favorite food memories. They were so good we went back the very next day. Super juicy and bursting with meaty flavor, served up with the creamiest mashed potatoes, a rich creamy gravy, lightly picked cucumbers, and freshly crushed lingonberries. Every bite was a revelation. If you like, you can read more about our trip to Sweden here.

How to make Swedish meatballs

  1. Sauté the onions - cook the onions until just soft in a bit of butter.
  2. Mix the meatballs - throughly mix together ground pork, ground beef, eggs, panko, salt, pepper, nutmeg, and the cooked onions.
  3. Make the meatballs - shape into 1 inch meatballs, tightly rolling so they are nice and round.
  4. Cook the meatballs - melt a bit of butter in a non-stick pan and add the meatballs, cooking in batches, making sure to shake the pan so the meatballs stay round.
  5. Make the sauce - in the same pan as you cooked the meatballs, melt a bit of butter and stir in some flour. Whisk in beef stock and cream and simmer until slightly thick. Season with a dash of soy sauce (it’s traditional!), salt and pepper.
  6. Enjoy! - make a meatball plate with the meatballs, gravy, mashed potatoes, thinly sliced cucumbers, and lingonberry sauce.

Ingredients

Swedish meatballs have some pretty standard ingredients: diced onions, ground pork, ground beef, eggs, panko, salt, and pepper, and nutmeg.
  • Onions - the finer you dice your onions, the more uniform and pretty your meatballs will be. If you have a food processor, feel free to pop them in and give them a whirl.
  • Eggs - eggs are the binder that help keep the meatballs together. Panko - I like using panko as the breadcrumbs because panko is larger and flakier than regular breadcrumbs. Meatballs made with panko are lighter than meatballs made with regular breadcrumbs.
  • Nutmeg - there’s just a tiny hint of nutmeg in these guys. They give the meatballs an authentic Swedish flavor with just a background hint of warmth.

Swedish meatball sauce

The creamy sauce makes these meatballs next level, but did you know that apparently (according to the internet anyway) Swedish people traditionally did not eat their meatballs with meatball sauce!??! Now, thanks to Ikea, everyone thinks Swedish meatballs come with a creamy brown sauce and to be honest, even the meatballs we had in Sweden did. The sauce is almost the best part?! Swedish meatball sauce is super simple, a butter and flour roux with beef stock and cream, finished off with a tiny bit of soy sauce for color and a touch of umami. I got the soy sauce trick from all the Swedish youtube cooking shows we watched. It’s a sauce game changer.

Tips and tricks

  • Shape hard. Don’t be gentle when shaping these meatballs. Unlike giant, super tender, fall apart meatballs you get in tomato sauce, the key to the roundness of Swedish meatballs is the fact that they’re compacted enough to be firm on the outside and tender on the inside. Use a cookie scoop to help you portion out the right amount, then roll the balls between the palms of your hand and toss the them back and forth so they come out perfectly round.
  • Use non-stick. Using a non-stick pan helps keep your meatballs nice and round. Non-stick gives you the freedom to shake and roll the meatballs while they’re still raw, before they form a crust. If you use a regular stick pan, you’ll have to brown the meatballs before they release and by the time they’re ready, they’ll have slumped down due to heat and gravity and be vaguely lopsided.
  • Fry in butter. Frying in butter gives you so much more flavor. I don’t typically fry things in just butter because it has the tendency to get too hot and scorch, but it’s they way they do it in Sweden and trust me when I say, it makes so much sense.

What are Swedish meatballs?

Swedish meatballs are, you guessed it, meatballs, from Sweden. They’re called köttbullar, which means meat buns, literally the cutest name ever. Swedish meatballs tend to be on the smaller side and are made with a mix of beef and pork, simply seasoned with salt and pepper and a touch of nutmeg.

Are Swedish meatballs Swedish?

Yes! Swedish meatballs are definitely Swedish and they’re eaten on the regular over in Sweden, both as an everyday meal and sometimes as a special one on holidays such as Christmas.

What's special about Swedish meatballs?

Everyone knows about Swedish meatballs from Ikea - Ikea meatballs are pretty famous. I mean, Mike and I used to go to Ikea just to eat the meatballs. And I admit, I’ve bought a frozen bag or three before. But now that I have this Swedish meatball recipe in my back pocket, no more!

Swedish meatballs are super savory and full of deliciousness. They’re crisp on the outside with a buttery-meaty crust and tender and soft on the inside. When you bite into them, the juices flood your mouth with flavor and everything is right with the world.

By the way, I’m pretty sure the secret to why Swedish meatballs are so good is the fact that they’re fried in butter. Mike and I watched hours of youtube cooking videos - in Swedish, with subtitles - and all of them stressed the importance of frying your meatballs in butter, in a non-stick pan (more on that later), as well as shaping the meatballs aggressively.

What to serve with Swedish meatballs

Swedish meatball plates usually come with creamy brown sauce, mashed potatoes, lightly pickled cucumbers, and lingonberry sauce. I hope you try this recipe. It’s truly one of my favorites. And if you do, please do like the Swedish do and get a little bit of everything in one bite: a meatball, a bit of mash, some gravy, cucumber, and lingonberry. It’ll be like that moment in Ratatouille when Remy gets the fireworks from combining flavors. Swedish meatballs and mashed potatoes forever, xoxo steph PS - If you want to read more about my love for Swedish meatballs, please visit this post!

Swedish Meatballs Recipe

Real deal Swedish meatballs, just like in Sweden.

  • 2-4 tbsp butter
  • 1/2 medium onion (finely diced, about 1/2 cup)
  • 1 lb ground pork
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 2 eggs (lightly beaten)
  • 1/2 cup panko
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp freshly ground pepper
  • 1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg

Cream Sauce

  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 tbsp flour
  • 1 cup beef stock
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1 tsp soy sauce
  • salt and freshly ground pepper
  1. Melt 1 tablespoon of butter in a large non-stick frying pan and sauté the onions. When the onions are soft and translucent, move the pan off the heat and allow the onions to cool.



  2. Combine pork, beef, eggs, panko, salt, pepper, and nutmeg in a large bowl. When the onions are slightly cooled, add to the mix then use your hands to mix everything throughly.



  3. Shape into 1 inch meatballs, being sure to tightly roll them around so they keep their round shape. Place meatballs on a plate or tray.



  4. Over medium heat, melt 1-2 tablespoons of butter in the same pan that you cooked the onions in. When hot, add meatballs to the pan, cooking in batches without overcrowding. Immediately shake the pan as you add a batch of meatballs to ensure the balls roll around and maintain their meatball shape.



  5. Fry, shaking the pan every so often, until meatballs are golden brown and cooked through. Remove the meatballs from the pan as they cook.



  6. When all the meatballs are cooked, make the sauce: Add 2 tablespoons of butter to the pan and melt over medium heat. Sprinkle on the flour, whisk and cook for 1-2 minutes. Slowly whisk in the beef stock and cream and cook, whisking constantly, until the sauce starts to thicken. Taste and season with salt, pepper, and soy sauce if using.



  7. Serve the meatballs with the cream sauce, cucumbers, and lingonberry jam.



adapted from Swedish Food and Say It in Swedish

If you don’t mind slightly flattened meatballs, just let the meatballs sear, no shaking needed.

Makes about 40 meatballs, roughly 10 per person.

Estimated nutrition is for meatballs and sauce only.

main
Swedish
meatballs, swedish meatballs

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30 minutes or less cakes sweets

I Am... Easy 2 Minute Chocolate Mug Cake

Do you love cake? Do you love mugs? If you answered yes to either question then you know in your heart that mug cake is for you. Mug cake is just so incredibly cozy! What could be better than curling up on the couch with a warm chocolate cake in a mug in your hands? It is the pinnacle of being. Food confession time: when I was a kid, I LOVED those frozen chocolate cakes you got at the grocery store. Deep‘n Delicious is the chocolate cake that has all my warm and fuzzy nostalgic childhood memories. I’m pretty sure it’s a Canadian thing, so if you have no idea what I’m talking about, I don’t blame you. Basically, DND (as it shall now be known) is a frozen chocolate cake with star shaped chocolate frosting piped on top. This is almost as easy as pulling a pre-made cake out of the freezer, but it has the bonus of being warm, so mug cake is my new favorite thing!

What is mug cake?

Mug cake is a cake that’s made in a mug! It bakes up in just a minute in the microwave and is a warm and chocolate-y treat that will satisfy any chocolate sweet tooth. Mug cake is perfect for when you just want a single serving of cake and don’t want to bust out all your baking equipment.

How to make mug cake:

  1. Whisk. Whisk together the milk and oil in a mug.
  2. Mix. In a bowl (or you can do this straight in the mug) mix the flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking powder, and salt.
  3. Stir. Stir everything together then add the chocolate.
  4. Microwave. Bake your mug cake in the microwave on a plate (in case of overflow), let cool slightly and dig in!

What does it taste like?

Heaven! Seriously, I’m not joking guys, this cake is SO GOOD. It’s moist, chocolatey, and light and fluffy. I love the melty chocolate parts that essentially make it like molten chocolate lava cake. I like it plain, with a little bit of powdered sugar, with whipped cream, with ice cream, oh my gosh, I feel like I need one right now. The best part is that it comes together so quickly. Bonus points for the fact that I almost always have everything right at home.

Mug cake ingredients

For this mug cake, you need:
  • Milk. I use whatever milk I have in the fridge, usually 2% or almond.
  • Oil. Try to use a neutral oil that doesn’t have any flavor like canola oil.
  • Flour.
  • Cocoa powder. For cocoa powder, we need the unsweetened kind, not hot chocolate milk.
  • Baking powder.
  • Sugar. You can adjust the sugar to you liking, or use a sugar alternative.
  • Chocolate chips. The chocolate gets melty and gooey and is the best part! I usually just chop up a bit of a chocolate bar/baking chocolate if I don’t have chocolate chips in the pantry.

No eggs in this mug cake?

Yep, that’s right. This recipe has been updated and there are now no eggs in this mug cake. Eggs tend to make mug cakes have a bit of a rubbery texture, so bye-bye eggs and hello tender, fluffy cake. As a bonus, it’s now vegetarian and can easily be made vegan too. I developed this recipe from wacky cake, a cake that has no eggs in it. I kept it pretty similar but switched out the water for milk.

Can I make vegan mug cake?

Yes! This can absolutely be made vegan. Just substitute a milk alternative for the milk: oat milk, almond milk, soy milk, coconut milk, rice milk, cashew milk, macadamia milk.

Can I make sugar free mug cake?

You can definitely make a sugar free mug cake by using sugar alternatives like honey, agave, maple syrup, coconut sugar, or even sweeteners. If you’re using sweeteners, don’t swap out the sugar one-to-one, adjust as per the sweetener.

Tips and tricks

Each microwave is different in strength so the very first time you make this recipe try experimenting a bit. I find that 1 minute plus 10 seconds in my microwave works best, but you might need a bit extra. Because this recipe doesn’t have any eggs in it, you can have it on the gooey side if you love cake batter. The kind of mug you use matters! One that has straight sides is best and bigger is better. Use a mug that holds at least 1 and 3/4 cups. If you use a smaller mug, you should put the mug on a plate so you can catch the overflow, which will make clean up easier.

Variations:

  • Cream cheese: add in a nugget of cream cheese when you add the chocolate.
  • Nutella: add a spoonful of nutella instead of the chocolate.
  • Peanut butter: add a spoonful of peanut butter instead of the chocolate.
  • Coconut: use coconut milk and and stir in a tablespoon or two of shredded coconut into the batter.
  • Biscoff: add a spoonful of biscoff cookie spread instead of the chocolate and top with crushed biscoff cookies.

Vanilla Mug Cake

If you’re looking for a two minute easy vanilla mug cake, I’ve got you. This is mug cake is fluffy, sweet, and full of vanilla. It’s like a little birthday cake in a mug. Bonus points if you add in sprinkles to make it a funfetti mug cake! Here’s how you make it:

In a microwave safe mug that holds at least 1.75 cups of liquid, whisk together:

2 tbsp milk 1 tbsp oil 1/4 tsp vanilla extract 1/8 tsp white vinegar

In a small bowl, mix together:

4 tbsp flour 2 tbsp sugar 1/8 tsp baking soda pinch of salt

Add the flour mix to the mug and whisk well, making sure there are no lumps. Add in sprinkles now if you want a funfetti cake.

Place on microwave safe plate and microwave for 1 minute and 10 seconds. If needed, continue to microwave in 10 second increments if it’s not cooked through.

Let cool slightly and enjoy!

Optional: Top with a quick frosting: mix together 2 tbsp room temp butter with 1/4 cup icing sugar and splash of vanilla extract or milk until smooth and fluffy.

If you want to bake a whole cake, here are some of my favorite cake recipes:

Mug Cake

Do you love cake? Do you love mugs? If you answered yes to either question then you know in your heart that mug cake is for you. 

  • microwave
  • 6 tbsp milk
  • 1 tbsp oil
  • 4 tbsp flour (1/4 cup)
  • 2 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 2 tbsp sugar
  • 1/4 tsp baking powder
  • 1 pinch salt
  • 1 tbsp chocolate chips (or chopped chocolate)
  1. In your mug (make sure it holds at least 1.75 cups of liquid), whisk together the milk and oil.



  2. In a small bowl, whisk together the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, baking powder, and salt.



  3. Add the flour mix to the mug and whisk well, making sure there are no lumps.



  4. Sprinkle on the chocolate.



  5. Place on a microwave safe plate and microwave for 1 minute and 10 seconds.



  6. Let cool slightly and enjoy!



You may want to microwave your cake for a bit longer depending on how gooey you like your cake. Microwave in 10 second increments after the first minute until it’s done to your liking.

Dessert
American
mug cake

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I Am... Coziest Homemade Hot Chocolate Bombs

It's hot chocolate bombs season! It’s super cute and fun and you can make SO many flavor variations! They sell hot chocolate bombs/hot chocolate balls at the store, but around here I haven’t seen any so I decided to make my own. You can too, but you need to get the right molds before it's too late.

What is a hot chocolate bomb?

Hot chocolate bombs or hot cocoa bombs are cute lil balls of chocolate that you put into a mug. When you pour hot milk into the mug, the chocolate melts and magically releases the marshmallows and cocoa hiding inside.

What you need to make homemade hot chocolate bombs

How to make homemade hot chocolate bombs

  1. Melt your chocolate. Use the microwave to melt the chocolate melts or chocolate stirring in between until everything is smooth and pourable.
  2. Fill the molds. Scoop some chocolate into the mold and use the back of a spoon or pastry brush to push the melted chocolate around the molds, making it thick enough along the sides and edges. Pop the molds into the freezer for 5-10 minutes to set.
  3. Remove the chocolate from the molds. Gently push the half spheres out of the silicone mold.
  4. Melt the edges. Microwave a microwave safe plate for a minute, you want the plate to be just hot enough to melt the chocolate. Pick up the empty half of the chocolate bomb and place it on the warm plate for a couple of seconds, just until it melts.
  5. Fill. Add 1 tablespoon hot cocoa powder and mini marshmallows (and any other add-ins you want) to half of the spheres. Pick up another half and melt the edge on the warm plate then push the two sides together to seal.
  6. Decorate. Drizzle on some extra chocolate, decorate with crushed cookies, candy, or sprinkles!
If you don’t have a mold, wrap two eggs in saran wrap and dip them in the melted chocolate. Place on a plate and let set. Dip them again (so the shell is slightly thick), then melt the edges, add the insides, and seal.

For snowman hot chocolate bombs:

  1. Melt some white chocolate.
  2. Make the spheres as outlined above.
  3. Fill with hot chocolate mix and marshmallows.
  4. Seal the hot chocolate bombs.
  5. Pipe on eyes and a mouth with melted chocolate.
  6. Pipe on an orange nose with orange candy melts and enjoy!

For peppermint hot chocolate bombs:

  1. Melt some white chocolate
  2. Make the spheres as outlined above.
  3. Fill with peppermint hot chocolate mix and marshmallows.
  4. Seal the hot chocolate bombs.
  5. Drizzle with extra white chocolate.
  6. Sprinkle on crushed candy canes and enjoy!

What if I don’t have a silicone mold?

Don’t worry, you can still make chocolate bombs without a mold! You can wrap eggs in plastic wrap dip them and let them set. They don’t end up completely round, but it still works.

Which mold should I get for hot chocolate bombs?

The best mold for is a half sphere silicone mold. You can easily push the mold to pop the chocolate out. Silicone molds are cheap (compared to professional acrylic molds) and easy to use. The molds I use are 2 inches, but you can use up to 2.5 inches.

What chocolate can I use for hot chocolate bombs?

I went the easy route and melted down chocolate chips, but you can also use candy melts which are easy to work with but don’t taste as good. There is also chocolate called couverture chocolate which is formulated to be easy to melt and set.

How can I tell if my chocolate is high quality?

Take a look at the ingredients. You’ll want a chocolate with 65% or more cocoa. The cocoa percentage that you see on chocolate packaging tells you how much of the chocolate is made from actual cocoa beans. Your chocolate should also have cocoa butter in it, which creates the melting quality of chocolate. Couverture chocolate (as I mentioned above) has a high percentage of cocoa butter, which is why it melts smoothly making it an excellent chocolate for making hot chocolate bombs.

Help! My hot chocolate spheres keep breaking!

If your spheres keep breaking, you want to double check three things:
  • How you melted your chocolate/chocolate tempering.
  • The edges.
  • How long you let it set.

How to temper chocolate

Tempering chocolate is a fancy way of saying melting chocolate, but it’s a bit more than just melting, it’s making sure that it doesn’t get too hot. If you don’t temper chocolate properly, it will melt at room temperature, it doesn’t really hold it’s shape, and it’s as shiny. Here’s how to temper chocolate.
  1. Chop your chocolate. Chopping up your chocolate with a knife makes sure all the pieces are small - smaller pieces means it melts more evenly. If you get couverture chocolate, it will come in wafers, you don’t need to chop this.
  2. Put the chocolate in a heat safe bowl and microwave for 30 seconds. It won’t look melted but don’t put it in for any longer! Use a rubber spatula to move the pieces of chocolate around. Some of the chocolate will be more melty and you’re going to use that heat to help melt the rest of the chocolate. Once you’ve stirred, it’s time to put it back in the microwave.
  3. Microwave the bowl again for 15 seconds, then remove and stir from the outside in. The outside pieces of chocolate will be more melted than the inside. Use the heat from the outside chocolate to help melt the pieces in the middle. If you have an instant read thermometer, check to see if your chocolate is between 88-90°F. That is the ideal range for tempering chocolate.
  4. If your chocolate isn’t smooth yet, microwave it again for 15 seconds and stir. Keep stirring until all the chocolate is melted and smooth. It’s best to underheat the chocolate because the residual heat from the bowl and the rest of the chocolate will help you will the melting.
  5. Spoon a bit of your smooth tempered chocolate onto a piece of parchment and put it in the fridge for 5 minutes. If it looks shiny and snaps when you break it in half, your chocolate has been tempered properly!

What if I heated up my chocolate too much?

If your chocolate is bendy and doesn’t snap when you do the test in the fridge, it’s okay! Just add some more chopped chocolate to the bowl with your melted chocolate and stir it until it melts. Aim for 90°F and then do the fridge and snap test again.

How to temper chocolate on the stove/How to temper chocolate without a microwave

To temper chocolate on the stove:
  1. Chop your chocolate into small pieces
  2. Make a double boiler by placing a heat proof bowl on top of a small pot. Fill the pot with just an inch or two of water, making sure the bowl does not touch the water. Turn the heat on to low.
  3. Add 2/3 of chopped chocolate to the bowl and stir, while the steam from the simmering water melts the chocolate.
  4. When the chocolate is smooth and melted, carefully remove it from the double boiler and stir in the remaining chocolate. This will help the melted chocolate cool down to the right temperature, 88-90°F.

How to fill the molds for hot chocolate bombs

If you’re having problems with your spheres breaking or not releasing, I have tips!
  • Clean your mold. Use a lint free-paper towel and make sure the inside of your silicone mold is nice and shiny. If there’s lint it in it or any residue it will come out on your chocolate.
  • Use a (clean) paint brush. I used the back of a spoon to push the chocolate around but if you use a paint brush you’ll have a lot more control. Paint the inside of the mold generously, let set for 5 minutes in the fridge, then apply a second coat being sure to paint extra along the edges so they edges are reinforced.
  • Make sure you let the chocolate set enough in the fridge. When the chocolate is set, it will be shiny and snappy and release easily from the molds.

Can I make hot chocolate bombs in advance?

Yes, you can absolutely make hot chocolate bombs in advance. If you temper the chocolate properly (read the chocolate tempering tricks), you can make hot chocolate bombs well in advance.

How long do hot chocolate bombs last for?

All the ingredients in hot chocolate bombs are shelf stable and they will keep, if tempered properly, on the countertop almost indefinitely, if they last that long. Think of them like a chocolate bar – chocolate bars last a really long time!

How to store hot chocolate bombs

The best way to store hot chocolate bombs, after they have been made is at room temp in an air tight container.

Hot chocolate bomb flavors

I love hot chocolate bombs because you can go wild with the flavors. Try these ones!
  • Oreo - place some crushed up oreos inside and on the outside for decoration.
  • S’mores - crush some graham crackers for inside the bomb and on top for decoration.
  • Peppermint - crush up some peppermint candies for inside the bomb and on top for decoration.
  • Pumpkin - put a teaspoon of pumpkin spice in with the hot chocolate mix and sprinkle some on top.
  • Coffee - add a teaspoon of instant coffee to the inside of the bomb.
  • Dark chocolate sea salt - sprinkle on some flaky sea salt.

Tips

  • Don’t overheat the chocolate! Take your time and microwave in 15 second intervals.
  • Make sure you have enough chocolate on the edges of your mold so the molds don’t break when you take them out.
  • If you need to, add more chocolate to the edges then let set again.
  • Use food safe gloves while you’re assembling so you don’t accidentally melt the outsides or leave fingerprints on your hot chocolate bombs.
  • Keep your place cold or run your hands under cold water for a while, the heat of your hands will make the chocolate melt.
  • Be gentle when sealing the bombs together, don’t push too hard.
  • Use your (gloved) finger to gently rub along the seam where the two halves come together to smooth it out.
  • To store the hot chocolate bombs, keep them in an air tight container in a cool spot in your kitchen or in the fridge

Even more tips!

If you’re having problems with your spheres breaking or not releasing, I have even more tips!
  • Clean your mold. Use a paper towel and make sure the inside of your silicone mold is nice and shiny. If there’s lint it in it or any residue it will come out on your chocolate.
  • Use a (clean) paint brush. I used the back of a spoon to push the chocolate around but if you use a paint brush you’ll have a lot more control. Paint the inside of the mold generously, let set for 5 minutes in the fridge, then apply a second coat being sure to paint extra along the edges so they edges are reinforced.
  • Make sure you let the chocolate set long enough in the fridge. When the chocolate is set, it will be shiny and snappy and release easily from the molds.

Will it be chocolate-y enough?

Some of you are worried that there won’t be enough hot chocolate mix inside the the hot chooclate bomb. The outside of the bomb melts down and adds a HUGE chocolate hit. You can also add hot chocolate instead of milk to melt your hot chocolate bomb if you want a double hot chocolate!

How to temper chocolate

Quick and easy tempered chocolate via the seeding method Tempered chocolate is what you want for hot chocolate bombs - it’s what will make them shelf stable with a shiny finish and a consistent snap. I’ve mentioned several other ways to temper chocolate in this post, but if you’re still having trouble, this is a foolproof way called “seeding” that doesn’t need a thermometer. First, melt two thirds of your chocolate, either in a heatproof bowl set over a pot of simmering water, or in the microwave for 30 seconds. Melt the chocolate completely but don’t burn it - the chocolate shouldn’t be hot on your fingertip. Stir the melted chocolate and add the remaining chocolate into the warm chocolate in three batches, stirring completely after each addition. Continue stirring until the chocolate is smooth and shiny. Test by swooshing a bit of chocolate on a piece of parchment paper - it should start to set immediately. If it doesn’t, add a bit more solid chocolate to your melted chocolate bowl until it sets when you test it.

My recommended chocolate for hot chocolate bombs

I like using Ghirardelli melting chocolate wafers. I find that they temper easily and set really well. xoxo -steph

Hot Chocolate Bombs

When you pour hot milk over these hot chocolate bombs, they melt and magically release the marshmallows and cocoa hiding inside.

  • half circle silicone mold
  • 1 cup chocolate chips (or melting chocolate wafers)
  • 4 tbsp hot cocoa mix
  • 4 tbsp mini marshmallows
  1. Melt the chocolate in a glass bowl in the microwave. Use 15 second bursts, stirring in between until everything is smooth and pourable. It will take about 1-2 minutes.



  2. Scoop some chocolate into the mold and use the back of a spoon or pastry brush to push the melted chocolate around the molds, making it thick enough along the sides and edges.



  3. Place the molds into the freezer for 5-10 minutes or in the fridge for 30 minutes to set. A couple of minutes into them setting, take them out and brush/spoon extra chocolate on the top edges to make it thicker. Let set completely, then carefully pop the chocolate dome out of the mold and set aside on a cold plate.



  4. Microwave an empty plate for 30 seconds to 1 minute, until warm, but not hot. Take one chocolate dome and place it on the plate for a couple of seconds to melt the edges. Working quickly, flip it around and add 1 tablespoon hot cocoa powder and mini marshmallows and any other add-ins you want.



  5. Take another dome and melt its edge on the warm plate. Join the two domes together into a sphere and hold until sealed. Let set in the fridge or freezer while you make the rest of your spheres.



  6. To serve: Put into a mug, pour on warm milk (or hot chocolate!) and watch the magic! Stir everything up and enjoy.



Drinks
American
hot chocolate

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chicken thigh recipes dinner one pot wonders recipes

I Am... Coconut Chicken Curry

Coconut chicken curry is one of my all time favorite comfort foods, especially this version: Malaysian-ish coconut curry chicken. The saucy, coconutty curry sauce spooned onto rice is so, so good. This is my ultimate chicken curry: flavorful and savory, with a hint of spice and a coconutty base; tender, large, juicy pieces of chicken; soft and tender potatoes that still hold their shape; and a sauce thick enough to coat a spoon but not so thick that it doesn’t flow over rice easily.

This chicken curry recipe is the best of all worlds

This curry is a mix of Malaysian, Singaporean, and Indonesian styles. It’s thickened with coconut milk, seasoned with fish sauce, and scented with lemongrass, star anise, and cinnamon. A flavor bomb of savory with just a hint of sweet and spice. It’s 100% a labor of love: hand pounded aromatics, a custom mix of spices, and a slow gentle simmer, long enough for the oils to separate out and float on top for those glorious pools of seasoned oil on top of the saucy yet thick coconut curry sauce.

How to make coconut chicken curry

  1. Make the curry paste. Crush all lemongrass, garlic, shallots, ginger, and Thai chilis together with a mortar and pestle. You can use a food processor too. Stir in the curry powder, turmeric, chili flakes, and a bit of oil.
  2. Marinate. Let the chicken absorb ALL the flavors. Longer is better, but at least 30 minutes.
  3. Sear. Give the chicken skin a nice golden sear. This also fries the curry paste a bit to bring out the flavors.
  4. Simmer. Simmer everything together until the chicken is juicy and cooked through and the potatoes are nice and tender, about 1 hour.

Chicken curry ingredients

It looks like you need a lot for this chicken curry, and I’m not going to lie, the ingredient list is on the longer side, but it’s well worth the shopping and time investment. Along with the standard chicken, potatoes, garlic, ginger, coconut milk, and chicken stock, you’re going to need the following:
  • Lemongrass – These days you can find lemongrass paste at the grocery store, but the flavor difference between chopping your own and store bought is intensely different. It’s better to stick with fresh lemongrass: just pull out your favorite knife and go to town.
  • Shallots – Shallots are going to add a bit of extra sweetness and onion flavor without onions. They’re sweet and mild and used extensively in Southeast Asian food.
  • Curry Powder – Try to buy a Malaysian curry powder mix from an Asian grocery store but if you can’t, regular curry powder will do.
  • Turmeric – A bit of turmeric goes a long way. It’s healthy, earthy, and adds a sunny orange hue to the curry. Turmeric is an absolute must for curry.
  • Cinnamon stick – A whole cinnamon stick adds a bit of warmth and a bit of sweetness.
  • Star anise – Use whole star anise when you’re simmering the curry, the slight licorice bitterness really compliments all the other flavors.
  • Fish sauce – Instead of salt, we’re going to be using fish sauce to season. It’s rich and full of umami and really enhances the chicken flavors.

Optional

  • Thai chilis – These little red peppers pack a punch. I love adding fresh chilis to curry because it brings the heat, but if you’re head adverse, you can leave these out or seed them.
  • Crushed Chinese chili flakes – Really you can use any crushed chili flakes, but Chinese crushed chili flakes have less seeds and are toasted in such a way that the smokiness and pepper flavor really shines through.
  • Lime leaves – These are optional because I know how difficult it can be to find fresh lime leaves. If you do find them, they will add a light citrus freshness.

The sign of a good curry

Those pools of oil on top are a sign of a really good curry, by the way, if you’re asking Malaysians or Singaporeans or Thai or Indians or anyone who knows curries. You want your coconut milk and spices to split into two: a flavorful infused oil and a rich, dense, coconut base. When your curry splits, it means that all of the excess water that was in the coconut milk has evaporated and your curry is now concentrated, leaving only the flavorful good stuff.

Is this chicken curry spicy?

A good chicken curry is adaptable – you should be able to make it spicier if you’re a spice fiend, and slightly milder and sweeter if you’re looking for a comforting easy curry. If you don’t want it spicy, leaving out the fresh and dried chilies will make this a family friendly affair.

Instant pot chicken curry

To make chicken curry in the instant pot instead: After the chicken has been marinated, heat up 2 tablespoons of oil in the Instant Pot insert over saute high. When the oil is hot, sear the chicken, skin side down, until golden. Flip the chicken skin side up and add the coconut milk, chicken stock, cinnamon stick, star anise, and lime leaves. Cook on high pressure for 10 minutes. Quick release when the cooking time is done and reduce the liquid on sauté high if desired.

Crockpot chicken curry

To make chicken curry in a crockpot instead: After the chicken has been marinated, heat up 2 tablespoons of oil in a frying pan. When the oil is hot, sear the chicken, skin side down, until golden. Remove the chicken from the pan and add to the slow cooker. Stir in the coconut milk, chicken stock, cinnamon stick, star anise, and lime leaves. Cook on low for for 4 to 5 hours.

Curry powder

If you’re feeling ambitious, you can make your own curry powder at home. You’ll need:
  • 2 tablespoons coriander seeds
  • 1 tablespoon cumin seeds
  • 2 whole cloves
  • 1 tablespoon fennel seeds
  • 1 tablespoon whole black pepper
  • 2 inch cinnamon stick, broken into pieces
  • 1 tablespoon crushed Chinese chili flakes
  • 1-2 whole cardamom pods
  • 5-6 dried Chinese chilis
  • 3 tablespoons ground turmeric
Toast all of the spices minus the turmeric in a dry pan over low heat, stirring occasionally until fragrant. Let cool completely then grind in to a powder. Stir in the turmeric. If you can find dried curry leaves, add to the mix when you’re grinding everything into a powder.

What to serve with chicken curry

Sometimes I like to have some lime on the side to squeeze some freshness on and serving up cucumbers with this is a pro move, the fresh juicy crunchiness of a good cucumber plays nice with the spice. I hope you give this curry chicken a try. It’s near and dear to my heart. kari ayam and roti prata forever! xoxo steph

Coconut Chicken Curry

Slightly spicy, coconutty and comforting Malaysian curry chicken.

Curry Paste

  • 2 stalks lemongrass (sliced)
  • 4 cloves garlic (minced)
  • 2 shallots (peeled and chopped)
  • 1 tbsp ginger (minced)
  • 2 tbsp curry powder (Malaysian/SE Asian preferred)
  • 1/2 tsp ground turmeric
  • 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes (Chinese preferred)
  • 1 Thai bird’s eye chili (sliced, optional (or more, you monster))
  • 2 tbsp oil

For the Curry

  • 2 tbsp oil
  • 8 chicken thighs (bone-in, skin-on)
  • 3-4 potatoes (small, peeled and quartered)
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 2 star anise pods
  • 5 lime leaves (optional)
  • 1.5 cups coconut milk
  • 1/2 cup chicken stock
  • 1 tbsp fish sauce
  • 2 tsp brown sugar
  1. Crush lemongrass, garlic, shallots, ginger, and Thai chilis in a mortar and pestle (or a food processor but it'll be less tasty) until it resembles a paste. Stir in curry powder, turmeric, crushed chili flakes, and 2 tablespoons oil. Coat chicken throughly with the curry paste and let marinate for 30 minutes.



  2. In a large dutch oven, heat up another 2 tablespoons of oil and fry the chicken, skin side down, until golden. Flip the chicken skin side up and add the potatoes. Stir in coconut milk, chicken stock, cinnamon stick, star anise, and lime leaves.



  3. Bring to a gentle simmer and cook for 1 hour, or until chicken is soft and tender. Season with fish sauce and brown sugar and enjoy!



Main Course
asian
curry

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entertaining pork recipes thanksgiving

I Am... Bump up your Holidays with Char Siu Honey Baked Ham

This year, instead of making the same old same old, make this own mind-blowing char siu honey baked ham instead. If you’ve never glazed your own ham before or if you’ve only ever eaten dry ham, you’re probably wondering why I think ham is so delicious. Trust me when I say this perfectly glazed char siu ham is just the right amount of salty balanced with sweet, with full hammy flavor.

What's a char siu ham?

Classic honey baked hams are delicious but if you’re going to take the time glaze your own ham, then it’s your chance to shine and get creative. If you've ever had any Chinese BBQ, or even fried rice, you know char siu: smoky sweet Chinese BBQ pork.  Originally I was going to make a brown sugar bourbon apricot glaze but Mike made a comment about how he thought I was going to char siu the ham and this is the beauty we came up with! Honey baked char siu ham is a perfect balance of sweetness and umami thanks to a combination of brown sugar and honey, a splash of soy sauce, hoisin sauce, and a hint of five spice. Seriously so good.

How to make honey baked ham:

  1. Buy a ham: Hams come fully cooked at the store making this the simplest meat dish you’ll ever prepare. Get a bone-in spiral cut ham, more on that below.
  2. Let the ham temper: Take your ham out of the fridge and let it come to room temp for 2-3 hours, which will help your ham heat through evenly without drying it out.
  3. Make a glaze: combine all the glaze ingredients together in a saucepan and bring to a gentle simmer.
  4. Prep your pan: add 1 cup of water and a rack to a roasting pan. The water will steam the ham, making it nice and juicy.
  5. Bake the ham: Place the ham cut side down and bake in a low oven, glazing every 20 minutes, until the ham is warmed through.
  6. Caramelize: For the last little bit, brush on extra glaze and turn the heat up to caramelize. Let rest and enjoy!

Char siu honey baked ham ingredients

If you love the sweet and smoky flavors of Chinese char siu, you’re going to love this char siu inspired ham. You’ll need: brown sugar, honey, hosin sauce, soy sauce, Shaoxing wine, five spice, white pepper, garlic, ginger, and a spiral cut bone in ham. The glaze is so addictive and full of umami you’re going to want to save the extra (there will be extra) to serve alongside the ham!

Brown sugar and honey

We’re going with a combination of brown sugar and honey so the brown sugar can add dark caramel notes while the honey adds light golden notes.

Hoisin sauce

Hoisin sauce is a thick, sweet brown Chinese sauce that’s used in marinades and as a dipping sauce. It’s super flavorful: sweet and savory, tangy, and full of umami. They pretty much sell hoisin everywhere now, from Target to your basic grocery store.

Shaoxing wine

This is the secret ingredient that all your Chinese food needs to taste like restaurant style Chinese food. Shaoxing wine is a rice wine  that’s lightly sweet, nutty, earthy and complex. It’s optional for this recipe, but it’ll be 10 thousand times better if you get it. They sell it online and in Asian grocery stores.

Five spice

If you want a savory char siu, don’t forget the five spice. Five spice is Chinese spice mix made up of star anise, cloves, cinnamon, Sichuan peppercorns, and fennel. It’s full of warming spices that are super reminiscent of classic ham spices like cloves and cinnamon.

White pepper

If you don’t have white pepper, don’t sweat it, but if you do, use it here. It’s more fragrant, delicate, and floral. It adds pepperiness without overwhelming.

Frequently asked ham questions

How to make copycat Honey Baked Ham

Did you know that there’s a company that sells fully cooked and glazed honey baked hams? If you want to make a copy cat ham, just make a glaze, cover with foil and bake at 325°F until warm, then add a sugar rub and torch it so it brûlées.
  1. To make the glaze, stir together 2 tbsp melted butter with 1 tbsp dijon, and 1/3 cup honey. Rub this all over your spiral cut ham and bake as per the recipe below. When the ham is warm, remove it from the oven.
  2. Make a dry rub with 1 1/2 cups sugar, 1/2 tsp each of nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon, and 1/4 tsp each of paprika, ginger, and allspice. Place half of the dry rub in a small sauce pan and set aside.
  3. Use the remaining rub and carefully pat it on to the warm ham. Use a kitchen torch to brûlée and crisp up the sugar until it’s bubbly and shiny. It will cool into a crispy shell.
  4. Add the ham drippings to the reserved dry rub and bring to a boil over medium heat until it thickens into a glaze. Serve alongside the ham.

How long to bake honey baked ham

12-15 mins per pound at 250°F, then blast up the heat to 450 for 5-10 minutes to caramelize the glaze.

Bone-in ham vs boneless ham

  • Boneless ham, just like the name implies, doesn’t have a bone in it. The bone is remove before the ham is processed, cooked, and sealed up. Boneless ham has that classic ham shape but isn’t as flavorful or juicy as bone-in ham.
  • Bone in ham is ham that has its bone. The bone makes the ham tastier by maintaining and imparting flavors as well as helping it stay moist.

Is bone-in ham better than boneless ham?

No question about it: bone-in ham has more flavor and is much more juicy than boneless. Generally, both bone-in ham and boneless hams are sold fully cooked. Just take a look at the package and make sure it says fully cooked or ready to serve.

Spiral cut vs regular ham

If you’ve never bought ham before, you might be wondering, what is spiral cut ham?! Spiral cut ham are hams that have been cut in a spiral shape making it super easy to carve off the bone. They’re really pretty because the slices fan out nicely. Spiral hams can be both bone-in and boneless. Go for bone-in be cause it’s super juicy. If you want to go super super juicy or are confident in your carving skills, get a non spiral-cut ham, which retain moisture better.

What is honey baked ham?

Simply put, honey baked ham is a ham baked with a honey glaze. A juicy, fully cooked ham is glazed with honey and spices and baked through until warm and cozy and lacquered with sweet honey goodness. It’s the perfect easy show-stopping centerpiece for any dinner celebration. Honey baked ham also happens to be the name of a super popular ham purveyor that sells honey baked hams, but you can easily make your own at home without shelling out the big bucks.

How much ham per person

If you’re buying a bone-in spiral cut ham, you want to have 3/4-1 pound of ham per person. They sell bone-in spiral cut hams in quarter legs, half legs, and whole legs.
  • Bone in quarter hams are 3-4 pounds and serve 6-8
  • Bone in half hams are 5-10 pounds and serve 8-22
  • Whole hams (bone-in as well, of course) are 10-17 pounds and serve 22-40

How to reheat honey ham in the oven

The best way to reheat honey ham without drying it out is to bake it at a very low temperature. Place your ham in an oven safe dish and give it a couple of spritzes of water or add 1 tbsp to the dish. Cover with foil and bake at 275° until warmed through.

How to reheat honey ham on the stove

Heat a skillet over low heat and a bit of oil or butter. Add a slice of ham and a teaspoon or two of water and warm over low until heated through, flipping once.

What to serve with honey baked ham

What to do with leftover honey baked ham

I love leftover ham! Try it in: Happy hamming I really hope you try this ham because it’s honestly the best ham I’ve ever made! sticky saucy ham forever, xoxo steph  

Honey Baked Ham

This char siu inspired honey baked ham is a perfect balance of sweetness and umami thanks to a combination of brown sugar and honey, a splash of soy sauce, hoisin sauce, and a hint of five spice. Seriously SO GOOD.

  • 1/2 cup brown sugar (firmly packed)
  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 2 tbsp hoisin
  • 1 tbsp soy sauce (low sodium preferred)
  • 1.5 tbsp Shaoxing wine
  • 1 tsp five spice (optional)
  • 1 tsp white pepper (optional)
  • 4 cloves garlic (lightly smashed)
  • 4 slices ginger
  • 3 lb bone-in spiral sliced ham (at room temp, see notes for scaling)
  1. Heat the oven to 250°F and make the glaze: mix the brown sugar, honey, hoisin, soy sauce, Shaoxing wine, five spice, white pepper, garlic, and ginger in a small pot and heat over medium until it starts to bubble. Set aside.



  2. Grab a roasting pan and fit it with a wire rack. Place 1 cup water in the roasting pan. Put the ham on the wire rack, cut side down, and brush the first coat of glaze on.



  3. Bake, with a piece of foil on top, for 12-15 minutes per pound of ham until the ham is heated through to 130°F. While the ham is baking, brush the glaze on, every 20 minutes, until the ham is heated through. Our ham was 5 lbs and took about 1 hour.



  4. When the inside of the ham is warmed through, turn the oven up to 450°F and brush on more glaze and continue to bake for 5-10 minutes, brushing with glaze every 2-3 minutes until deeply caramelized. Remove from the oven, let rest for 10-15 minutes and enjoy!



While our recipe app can scale your ham to fit the number of people you're serving, you'll most likely be stuck buying quarter, half, or whole hams, which serve the following:

Bone in quarter hams are 3-4 pounds and serve 6-8

Bone in half hams are 5-10 pounds and serve 8-22

Bone in whole hams are 10-17 pounds and serve 22-40

Main Course
American, Chinese
chinese bbq, ham

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buying guide

I Am... Burr Baskets

Burr baskets are a cute little winter gift basket with cozy cute things for your loved ones! It’s coming up on December - where did the year go!? - and it’s time for Burr Baskets. I know, I know, the world is a horrible consumerist place and we’re all slaves to corporate. But, it’s the holiday season and a little cheer this year isn’t remiss, so why not make someone you love happy with a Burr Basket?

What is a burr basket?

A burr basket is a cute little winter themed gift basket, kind of like an Easter basket or a boo basket. It’s called a burr basket because, brr, it’s cold out there! To be honest, I don’t know why it’s “burr” and not “brr,” but I’m here for it. If you are on TikTok, you’ve seen them, I’m sure. And if you’re clueless on just what the heck a burr basket is, I’ve got you!

What do you put in a burr basket?

Anything and everything with a cozy winter theme! Really, anything goes, but here’s a loose “recipe” just to make life easy:

Basket

You’ll need a container/basket for your burr basket. You don’t need the basket to be giant, just keep in mind that everything you get should be able to fit inside. Also, you don’t need to be restricted to a basket either, you can choose a reusable tote bag too. There are a lot of cute winter themed baskets and bags out there but if you get something neutral, the basket can hang out all year round.

Cozy item

Moving on to the things in the burr basket, I’d say the number one thing is something warm and cozy that is something that is both functional and cute. Something that will make the recipient of your burr basket think of you every time they use it. A quirky hoodie, a fuzzy blanket, a scarf, mittens, maybe slippers? Just make sure it’s warm and cozy.

Mug

A cute holiday mug is perfect for burr baskets. Heck, you can even make a mini burr basket where the mug is the basket! There are so many winter and Christmas-y themed mugs out there. Or you can go classy and get a hand thrown ceramic mug. If your special someone isn’t a hot drinks kind of person, you can get a really like cocktail glass or even a Stanley so they can stay hydrated.

Drinks

Seasonal winter tea mixes, hot chocolate mixes, coffee, or matcha all make great items to tuck into your burr basket. Maybe they’ll even share with you!

Snackies/Treats

Um, wintertime is the time for ALL the holiday snackies and treats! Peppermint bark, festive holiday oreos, Christmas cereal, popcorn, all the Christmas flavored things! Just hop into the grocery store, there usually have a giant seasonal section where all the fun winter treats will be.

Plushie

A cute little snuggle buddy is just the thing to tuck into your burr basket. There are so many super cute Christmas Jellycats out there, you’re sure to find one that is perfect for your loved one.

Candle

Winter is the time for candlelight and scented candles. There are a bunch of quirky seasonal candles out there but just be careful because candles are a love it or hate it kind of thing. If you’re going for a candle and want to go all out, there are some candle companies out there that are considered delicious: Diptyque, Le Labo, P.F. Candle Co., Voluspa, and Mala the Brand. Scented candles are on the pricier side, but they really set the vibes.

Card

Don’t forget a handwritten note in a card because that’s the true gift. Let your loved one know what you love about them, what your favorite things to do with them are, and what kind of fun things you see the two of you doing during the winter season.  

Homemade treat

Nothing beats a homemade treat and nothing says love like spending time in the kitchen baking up something sweet. Add in some homemade brown butter chocolate chip cookies, soft and chewy gingerbread cookies, or cinnamon sugary snickerdoodles.

How to make your burr basket extra cute

  1. Get a big enough basket (or bag) so that everything fits inside neatly without too much extra space. Place the biggest item in the bottom of the basket - ie line the basket with the blanket or scarf.
  2. Remove any extraneous packaging. Take things out of the box if the box isn’t cute, peel off any price tags, take off the plastic wrap if there is any. Don’t cut off any of the tags though, just in case they might want to exchange or return something.
  3. Arrange. Larger items go in the back slash near the bottom and smaller items go on top and in front. Try to make it so that everything in the basket is visible from first glance.
  4. Bonus: grab a string of battery operated fairy lights, put the batteries in, turn them on, and arrange them around all items to make the basket look extra magical.
  5. Tuck the card/note in the top or at the front so it’s the first thing they open!

Amazon burr basket items to buy:

Burr baskets

Cozy winter burr basket items

Burr basket mugs and cups

Burr basket drinks and snacks

Burr basket plushies

There are so many cute Christmas plushies out there from mini to big!

Burr basket cards

A burr basket is nothing without a handwritten note. Pick up a super sweet card and don’t forget to write a personalized message inside :) That’s it for now. I hope you’re having a great start to the holiday season!

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round up

I Am... The Best Part of Thanksgiving is Leftovers

There are two types of people in the world: those whole live for Thanksgiving dinner and those who live for the leftovers. I always waffle between the two but I think I’m a leftovers person. I just love having food in the fridge that can easily heated up for when I’m in those hangry moods. And when I’m in the mood to make leftovers into something even better like bestovers...oh man, that’s where I like to shine. Give me all your roast turkey carcass because here I come turkey congee and turkey noodle soups! I think we all know that the best part of Thanksgiving is leftovers, right?

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buying guide

I Am... Best Black Friday Kitchen Deals

It’s time to unbutton your jeans and finally buy all the things you’ve been saving in your cart with these Black Friday kitchen deals. Black friday is the best time to stock up on basic kitchen deals and treat yourself to kitchen steals. Why not do a little early holiday shopping and treat yourself! Here are some of the best things to get for your kitchen on Black Friday/Cyber Monday:

Best Black Friday deals for home and kitchen stuff

KitchenAid Stand Mixer

The classic, classy 4.5 quart KitchenAid stand mixer is on a massive sale right now. It’s the #1 best selling in stand mixers on Amazon for a reason: it’s incredibly strong, versatile, and long lasting. If you’ve had your eye on a stand mixer, definitely take advantage!

Vitamix Blenders

The gold standard in blenders is Vitamix. We love and use ours every 2 days or so and we’re not even smoothie drinkers. There are so many things blenders can do in the kitchen to make your life easier, from blending sauces to making soups. If I were to choose a new Vitamix, the 64 oz low-profile A2500 would be on my wishlist. It’s deeply discounted right now and like all Vitamix blenders, is highly rated and built to last. Check here for other Vitamix black friday deals.

Instant Read Thermometer

Every home cook and kitchen NEEDS and instant read thermometer and this ThermaPro is 40% off (plus a little extra). We’ve used this exact model recently while at a friend’s house and were impressed buy the speed and accuracy. We did a side by side with a Thermapen because we’re nerdy like that. At under $15 we’re definitely grabbing one to add to our camp/travel kitchen.

Staub Cast Iron Braiser

I LOVE braisers. If you’re going to have only one cast-iron pan/pot/casserole in your kitchen, it should be this one. The high sides are perfect for searing, it’s deep enough to deep-fry in, you can use it on the stove top and in the oven, and it’s beautiful enough to bring right to the table. The glass lid is just the chef’s kiss on top, allowing you to peek at what you’re cooking without opening the lid. We have this exact braiser and I reach for it all the time. I prefer the insides of Staubs compared to Le Creuset because the insides are a smooth black enamel that doesn’t stain and is easy to clean. It’s 33% off right now, run, don’t walk.

COSORI Air Fryer

We love our air fryer so much that sometimes we joke about getting a fleet of air fryers that we’d keep out the countertop so we could air fry all the things at the same time. We updated to a COSORI air fryer recently and are seriously impressed with how air fryer technology has improved. Our current guy is this one which we are in love with. If you’re looking for something a little smaller, this one looks like the perfect size for a couple.

Nespresso

Addicted to iced coffee? Hot coffee? Any coffee!? Yup, me too. The Nespresso Vertuo POP is 25% off right now and it makes iced coffees and espressos so you can unleash your inner barista. The POP is cute and compact and will add a splash of color to your kitchen and caffeine to your life.

CAROTE Non-Stick Pots and Pans Set

Full disclosure, I haven’t tried these pans, but I’m always looking at the covetously because I love how sleek and aesthetic they are. This set is 54% off so maybe now is the time I convince Mike to get a set? They’re highly rated, non-stick, stackable, and have removable handles for ease of storage. They look like a great starter set for the kitchen or amazing for anyone who’s looking to update their non-stick cookware.

KitchenAid Oven Mitts

I find one of the many things people overlook in their kitchen are oven mitts. We’re guilty of it too - our oven mitts are old. These soft silicone mitts are 47% off, wipe clean, and are rated up to 500 degrees F. Plus they come with both mittens. Did you know that sometimes you only get one?! Treat yourself to some new oven mitts. You and your hands deserve it.

Peelers

Have you ever used a vegetable peeler that just isn’t sharp anymore? Is it the vegetable peeler that’s in your kitchen drawer right now? Vegetable peelers are the forgotten stepchild of kitchen tools. The joy of peeling through vegetable skins with ease is 37% off. They come with carbon steel blades and are the superior Y-shape of peelers.

Kitchen Towels

If there’s one thing I absolutely loathe, it’s a lack of fresh, clean kitchen towels. They’re the workhorse of the kitchen and having a huge, clean stack is a life saver. Really, any 100% cotton dish towels will do, but this set of 6 is deeply discounted and is highly rated, so they will do nicely. Truly the best savings are on items that you would regularly purchase anyway, but now as a bonus, they’re on sale! We have a giant stack of towels (I'm talking over 30) in the kitchen and it's so nice to just be able to grab a new one when you need it without interrupting your kitchen flow. xoxo steph we may earn a smol commission from these links

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