I don't type out recipes in my blog (I mean, I'm an attorney, so there is that whole copyright thing), but I do try to link to websites that have reprinted recipes with the author's permission. Sometimes the recipes are reprinted in very random places. When I made Benjamina Ebuehi's Lemon, Ricotta, and Thyme Mini-Loaves, I found a copy of the recipe printed in the Minneapolis Star Tribune. But that find included a real bonus, because the Star Tribune printed several other recipes alongside it, including one for "Black Tea Blondies with Caramel Swirl" from from Tartine: A Classic Revisited. I still had some Earl Grey tea leftover after making Yossy Arefi's Chewy Earl Grey Sugar Cookies and the idea of combining tea and caramel seemed so intriguing, so I had to give the recipe a try. (And while I own the first Tartine cookbook, I don't own the Revisited one, so I wouldn't have come across this recipe otherwise.)
First I made the caramel sauce. You cook sugar, water, corn syrup, and salt until the mixture is amber; add a mixture of warm cream and vanilla bean seeds; whisk until smooth; add lemon juice; let the caramel cool briefly; and add butter. The blondie batter is simple. You combine melted butter with brown sugar, vanilla, and salt; add eggs one at a time; and mix in flour and ground Earl Grey tea leaves. The recipe says you should pour the blondie batter into a buttered glass baking dish, but I never bake in glass, so I used a parchment-lined 9-inch by 13-inch metal pan instead.
As I drizzled the caramel sauce on top of the batter I started to wonder if something was going terribly wrong. There is a photo of these bars in Imbibe magazine, and you can see small swirls of caramel neatly marbled into the blondie batter. I seemed to have way too much caramel. I debated what to do. The recipe doesn't say anything about reserving any of the caramel sauce to use later, so I assumed that I should use all of it. I used it all, but then I ended up with what was essentially a thin layer of caramel covering the entire top surface of the blondie batter. I tried to marble the caramel and batter together with a knife, but I still ended up with mostly just caramel on top. I crossed my fingers and put the pan in the oven.
When I took the bars out of the oven, they looked absolutely nothing like the Imbibe magazine photo. There was caramel bubbling up all around the edges and when the blondies were cooled and I took them out of the pan, I discovered that a good amount of caramel had migrated to the bottom (see photo below of the the underside of a slice). Thank goodness I had lined the pan with parchment, or I never would have been able to get the bars out intact. I think I definitely screwed something up somewhere, but regardless, the end result was absolutely delicious.
A colleague (who loved the bars but had guessed that the bars were made with ginger, not black tea) asked me for the recipe so that she could make it for a cookie exchange. She had some trouble with the recipe and sent me a message afterwards that said in part: "I believe this recipe was developed by the big guy. Meaning Satan." (Emphasis in original.) On a more upbeat note, my friend's aunt (who had stashed her bars in the freezer) wrote a very kind note after I told her that the bars she was raving about were made with Earl Grey: "Earl Grey and caramel, genius, in 80 years on this earth I have never tasted the like. I will limit myself to one bite per day until it's gone."
Recipe: "Black Tea Blondies with Caramel Swirl" from Tartine: A Classic Revisited, by Elisabeth
Prueitt and and Chad Robertson, recipe available here from Imbibe magazine (without ingredient weights) or here from the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Previous Posts:
- "Like a Citrus Snickerdoodle: Chewy Earl Grey Sugar Cookies," December 18, 2021.
- "If I Did Something Wrong, Do I Want to Be Right?: Espresso Carmelitas," August 27, 2021.
Comments
Another recipe caught my eye -- "Lemon Angel Pie" from "Midwest Made", by Shauna Sever.
https://books.google.com/books?id=bwuiDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA255&lpg=PA255&dq=tartine+black+tea+blondies+with+caramel+swirl&source=bl&ots=1NKHrR74Bm&sig=ACfU3U2nwtT5y8jXwoCWz_CxfnP6nYh2_Q&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi3vOL3r7n1AhVOZN8KHRqrCBsQ6AF6BAgsEAM#v=onepage&q=tartine%20black%20tea%20blondies%20with%20caramel%20swirl&f=false