Authors: Christie Matheson
I can't be left alone with good cornbreadâI might devour it all. To me it feels like a decadent treat, with a texture similar to cake but a little less sweet and a little more buttery. To add to the richness of it all, serve this cornbread with soft honey butter flecked with coarse salt. Use great-quality local honey and organic butterâyou will taste the difference.
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MAKES ABOUT
16
PIECES
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1 | cup all-purpose flour |
1 | cup cornmeal |
¼ | cup packed light brown sugar |
1 | tablespoon baking powder |
1 | teaspoon fine sea salt |
2 | large eggs, lightly beaten |
1 | cup milk |
¼ | cup (½ stick) melted and slightly cooled unsalted butter |
Honey Butter (recipe follows) |
MAKES ABOUT
â
CUP
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½ | cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened |
2 | tablespoons light honey |
½ | teaspoon grinder sea salt |
Pinch of coarse sea salt |
Make a "brownie sundae" with cornbread by topping a square of warm Sweet Cornbread with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or Nantucket Sea Salt Ice Cream (
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), adding some sliced fresh peaches, and drizzling with Snappy Butterscotch Sauce (
[>]
) or Drunken Sauce (
[>]
).
Granola is one of my favorite things to make. Once you know a basic recipe, you can vary it in countless ways. Use different kinds of dried fruits, add different nuts, and play around with the ratio of sweeteners. This is a delicious version of my go-to recipe, which has no oil and just 3 tablespoons of butter. The butter, with the addition of sea salt, gives it a rich and satisfying flavor. Cocoa nibs are the essence of deep, intense chocolatenessâthey are roasted cacao beans separated from their husks, and they're great with dried cherries. I love this take on the chocolate-cherry combo.
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MAKES ABOUT
7
CUPS
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½ | cup honey |
½ | cup pure maple syrup |
¼ | cup packed light brown sugar |
3 | tablespoons unsalted butter |
1 | teaspoon pure vanilla extract |
4 | cups old-fashioned or quick-cooking rolled oats (not instant) |
¾ | cup unsweetened shredded coconut |
1 | teaspoon fine sea salt |
1 | cup dried cherries |
¼ | cup cocoa nibs |
[>]
Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies
[>]
Nantucket Cookies
[>]
Peanut Butter Cookies
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Lemon Sugar Cookies with Zesty Lime Salt
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Lavender
Fleur de Sel
Shortbread
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Snickerdoodles
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Butterscotch Brownies
[>]
Toffee Cookies with Dark Chocolate Glaze
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Raspberry Squares
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Pecan squares
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White Chocolate-Apricot Squares
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Citrus Bars
I've made a lot of chocolate chip cookies.
A lot.
And I thought I had tweaked and refined my basic recipe to mouthwatering perfection. Then I tried sprinkling the cookies with grinder sea salt, and I realized that I'd been missing out. You don't need much salt to put your cookies over the edge, but if you make them like this your friends will start begging you to make them all the time. When I make cookies I like to use a small ice cream scoop or two spoons to drop the dough onto the baking sheets. It minimizes mess and ensures your cookies will be of uniform size, making for better baking results.
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MAKES
30
TO
40
COOKIES
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2¼ | cups all-purpose flour |
1 | teaspoon baking soda |
1 | teaspoon fine sea salt |
¾ | cup (1½ sticks) unsalted butter, softened |
½ | cup granulated sugar |
1 | cup packed light brown sugar |
1½ | teaspoons pure vanilla extract |
2 | large eggs |
2 | cups bittersweet chocolate chips or chunks |
Grinder sea salt |
I didn't think I could like any kind of cookie better than chocolate chip. Then I stumbled upon samples of thick, rustic-looking chocolate-oatmeal cookies dusted with sea salt at a gourmet shop in Boston called South End Formaggio. The cookies are called Salty Oats and are made by a Cape Cod bakery called Kayak Cookies. One bite and I was hookedâtotally, completely addicted. This is my interpretation of those cookies. Whenever I make them, they are gone in a flash.
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MAKES
30
TO
40
COOKIES
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2 | cups all-purpose flour |
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| cup unsweetened cocoa powder |
1 | teaspoon baking soda |
1 | teaspoon fine sea salt |
¾ | cup (1½ sticks) unsalted butter, softened |
½ | cup granulated sugar |
1 | cup packed light brown sugar |
1 | teaspoon pure vanilla extract |
2 | large eggs |
1 | cup old-fashioned or quick-cooking rolled oats (not instant) |
1 | cup semisweet or bittersweet chocolate chips |
½ | cup unsweetened shredded coconut |
Grinder sea salt |
As far as I know, this isn't the official cookie of Nantucket, but maybe it should be. It features cranberries (a crop that has been grown on Nantucket since 1857), white chocolate (to contrast with the tartness of the cranberries), and a sprinkling of sea salt (Nantucket is an island 30 miles off the coast ... salty sea breezes blow every day ... you get it). Since Nantucket is one of my favorite places on the planet, I hereby dedicate this cookie to it.