{"id":1687,"date":"2006-01-26T07:10:00","date_gmt":"2006-01-26T07:10:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elitemporaryblog.wordpress.com\/2006\/01\/26\/when-disappointment-comes-to-dinner"},"modified":"2015-09-24T03:54:10","modified_gmt":"2015-09-24T03:54:10","slug":"when-disappointment-comes-to-dinner","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2006\/01\/when-disappointment-comes-to-dinner\/","title":{"rendered":"When disappointment comes to dinner"},"content":{"rendered":"
With the possible exceptions of war, loss, loneliness, homelessness, natural disasters, incurable diseases, hunger, heartbreak, income taxes, yeast infections, and the horrifyingly botched haircut I got last October, there is nothing worse than a bad recipe<\/strong>. Nothing<\/em>. That\u2019s a strong statement, I know, but test it for yourself\u2014or sit back and wait, because a bad one is bound to find you\u2014and you\u2019ll no doubt agree. There is nothing worse than a recipe that goes all wrong, or that never quite makes it to right. Disappointment, dear reader, is a total dud of a dinner companion<\/strong>.<\/p>\n For the most part, I try to forget about the flops, the bummers, and the busts. They\u2019re pretty few and far between, anyway, and often easy to sniff out. And when a bad recipe does manage to sneak past the guards, in most cases no permanent damage is done\u2014unless, of course, the culprit calls for caviar, truffles, or gold leaf. By dint of willful memory loss or welcome amnesia, I return to the kitchen largely unscarred, day after day.<\/p>\n But the few calamities that do linger, however, tend to involve baking, a strict science in which the simplest mistake or misdirection is magnified exponentially by the oven\u2019s heat and a hungry sweet tooth<\/strong>. Take, for example, the towering lemon meringue tart that wept\u2014nay, sobbed<\/em>\u2014onto my kitchen counter so aggressively that I had to position it atop a protective layer of newspaper as though potty-training a puppy. Or the Bundt cake that called for combining melted chocolate with cold milk, a recipe that I followed with no small degree of skepticism and which rewarded my efforts with an oddly freckled, strangely greasy crumb. Or, say, the chocolate red velvet cake with chocolate icing that I made for a recent dinner with friends, touting a confidence-inspiring cup of buttermilk, two sticks of butter, and plenty of bittersweet cocoa. Baked, frosted, and plated, it could be called red only if eaten while wearing rose-tinted lenses, and it was tragically short on icing, its bare sides gaping, parched, pathetic. It\u2019s bad enough that my date lives on the opposite side of the country<\/a>; taking disappointment to a dinner party doesn\u2019t make things any better.<\/p>\n But every bad recipe brings to mind a good one<\/span>, and if you\u2019re anything like me, you maintain a small arsenal, carefully collected in an accordion folder, for just such occasions. This week, that failed chocolate cake calls for a foolproof chocolate cookie, a recipe that I stumbled upon a few years ago, repeated religiously for a month or two, and then tucked away for safekeeping, sufficiently convinced of its success.<\/p>\n<\/a>
Crisp, crackly, and feather-light, these cookies call to mind the shiny, shattery topcoat of a good brownie, conveniently baked in individual portions.<\/strong> Thin and delicate, they conceal a chewy center, rich with cocoa but surprisingly subtle in sweetness. Each bite brings a meaty walnut under the tooth, and amongst the nooks and crannies, cocoa nibs sound a quiet note of bitterness, a contribution that brings complexity without stealing center stage.<\/p>\n