Considering I was practically brought up on brownies (the gooey chocolate slice, not the group for girls with brown and yellow uniform and Tawny Owls!), I am a new convert to
Blondies.
For years I stuck true to Brownies. Dark, deep chocolate. Sometimes plain, sometimes with chopped walnuts running through them but that's as far as I've ever deviated. Growing up, they were the cut-and-come-again cake of choice in our kitchen and they were my Dad's (and our dear late dog's!) favourite and well, why fix what isn't broken? But a few months ago, and I really don't know why, I decided to try making some B
londies...perhaps just to see what the point was, as how could a good old brownie possibly ever be beaten?...and all I can say is that is was a revelation and I'm hooked.
Go on, try them and you'll see (or rather taste) why. Just as
squidgy and chewy as a good Brownie should be, but somehow the lack of chocolate only highlights whatever you throw into them. The gorgeous butterscotch flavour base is the perfect foil for nuts, chocolate chunks or chips (my personal favourite is simply very good dark chocolate chopped into chunks), but peanut butter swirls or even a slug or two of bourbon or run would be divine too. And to make them even more
enticing a prospect, you can whip up these babies from
store cupboard ingredients with just one pan and a spoon in the time it takes to melt some butter. So you're only 25 minutes away from the most amazing baking wafts filling your home and a treat to calm the most frazzled of souls.
Best Ever Blondies*Preheat oven to 170 degrees (fan) and roughly line an 8x8cm metal pan with silicone liner or baking parchment.1/2 cup butter1 cup soft brown sugar1 tsp vanilla extract1 egg1 cup plain (all-purpose) flour1tsp baking powder50-100g (I use 50g, but tweak to your own taste) of chopped plain, milk or white chocolate, nuts etc. Melt butter in a medium pan over low heat. When melted, add the sugar, stirring all the time until sugar has dissolved. Take off the heat and add the vanilla and the egg, beat well (work quickly now) and add the flour and baking powder. Stir well and quickly to prevent the egg from scrambling. Then stir in whatever flavourings you wish. Pour into your prepared tin and bake for about 25 minutes at 170 degrees.Just as with brownies, these will firm up as they cool down but you're after a cake that has a nice
shiny surface (maybe cracked) and seems a little crusty around the edges (the best bits, in my opinion); however the inserted skewer, toothpick or dry spaghetti test does not work for brownies or
blondies as you want some
gooeyness - as that's what will make for a deliciously chewy cooled cake.
Also sometimes I let the mix sit a few minutes before stirring in my chocolate of choice (to stop it melting before cooking or you may get ribbons of
chocolatey Blondie along with your chocolate chunks or chips), but really, do what you like as it's no deal breaker either way.
They'll keep for a couple of days (who am I kidding?) in an airtight tin, though I'd wrap or line it with greaseproof paper and these are best cooled in the tin before cutting if you intend to eat cold just to make serving easier. Serve either warm or cold and obviously vanilla ice cream will be the perfect partner if you feel you need one. I prefer my Blondies naked (no adornment needed), with a mug of tea but understand you may want to dress these up to show off smugly, and why not. Make a batch of these to take into work and wait for the Ooohs and Aaahs that will follow...