Monday, October 26, 2015

Brown Butter Caramelized Apple Crisp


After an unusually humid, gray October Saturday in the midwest, Sunday was sunny and crisp. One of those perfect fall days. The leaves on the trees are almost at peak. The rich tapestry of colors in the landscape are so beautiful I could almost cry. If it weren't for the running path's autumnal views on Saturday morning, the short three mile run would have felt more like a marathon, one with rolling hills and steep elevations. In just two weeks, I will be running my second 5k race this year. It has been five months since I ran the first one, the amount of time it has taken me to recover from a stress fracture in my leg. Ten weeks ago when I returned to my running group I was walking as much as I was running. Gradually, my running time increased while my walking time decreased. While I may never run at the same speed (which wasn't really fast) or the same distances (not sure I have another marathon left in me) as I did years ago, I am getting closer to again considering myself a 'runner'. Of the many decisions I have regretted over the years, giving up running ranks pretty high up on the list. Fortunately though, I have been able to reverse that 'bad' decision.


My plan this week was to post the recipes for a Sweet and Spicy Ragu and a Brown Butter Pumpkin Spice Cake. But after making this Brown Butter Caramelized Apple Crisp (twice in the past week), I changed my plan. Decided it would be a much better decision to make this pre-Halloween week a 'dessert' and 'brown butter' blog posting one. As excited as I am to share this crisp recipe with you (and I am pretty gosh darn excited), I can hardly wait to share the pumpkin spice cake recipe. 


The first time the Brown Butter Caramelized Apple Crisp I added oatmeal to the topping, the second time I had inadvertently left it out. As much as I really liked both versions, going forward I will definitely leave out the oatmeal as it was a distraction to the flavors of the toasted walnuts and english toffee bits in the topping. In the words of my apple crisp aficionado friend, the crisp without the oatmeal was declared 'crisp perfection'. After hearing such high praise, I secretly hoped the taste of the crisp would be enough to override or at least help to minimize the memory of the crisp making chaos I had caused in her kitchen a couple hours earlier.


I will go out on a limb and say there doesn't seem to be one apple unanimously declared as perfect for a crisp. Flavor, texture, and personal preference seem to influence which apple is recommended. I love using an apple having an intense sweet-tart flavor and the ability to hold its' shape when baked. In other words I am not big fan of apples that turn to mush. At the moment, my current hands down favorite is the Granny Smith.


The rich, nutty taste of brown butter significantly enhances the flavor of pretty much everything. It's transformational, almost magical quality begins when you start melting the butter over medium heat. To ensure the butter browns evenly, swirl the pan often. The butter will begin to foam as it melts while its' color will progress from a 'lemony-yellow to golden-tan to a toasty brown'. Once you begin to smell a nutty aroma, remove the pan from the heat and/or transfer to a heat-proof bowl. 


The thickly cut apple slices are first tossed with the brown butter and fresh lemon juice your baking pan/dish. The coated apples are then tossed with a cinnamon-sugar-flour mixture before being covered in the toasted walnut-english toffee bit topping.


The Brown Butter Caramelized Apple Crisp is placed in a preheated 350 degree (F) oven. Baking time ranges from 45-55 minutes. Baking time is affected by where you place the crisp in the oven (longer baking time if baked in the center of the oven, shorter if baked in the bottom) as well as how your oven bakes.


The crisp is done when the topping is a deep golden brown, the apples are tender when pierced with a knife, and the cooking liquid is thickened and bubbling. If serving immediately, allow the crisp to set for 10-20 minutes. If serving within 2-3 hours of baking, lightly cover with aluminum foil and a heavy towel. 

Slightly softened vanilla ice cream is the proverbial 'icing on the cake'. In other words, it is not optional.  However, lightly dusting the baked crisp with confectionary sugar is. If you have not yet made a baked apple dessert this season, make this one. It really is 'crisp perfection'. It's definitely my new favorite way to eat a baked apple. Another reason to keep running. And for those of you with pie making phobias, the Brown Butter Caramelized Apple Crisp may keep you from ever having to deal with them.

Recipe
Brown Butter Caramelized Apple Crisp (more than a slight change to the Caramelized Apple Toffee Crisp recipe printed in the Chicago Tribune, December 2005)

Ingredients
Base of Crisp
3 - 3 1/2 pounds Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored and cut into 3/8"-1/2" slices (approximately 6 to 7 large apples)
5 Tablespoons unsalted butter, melted, browned and cooled slightly
2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 Tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
pinch of sea salt

Topping
1 cup walnut halves, toasted in oven, then chopped
8 Tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature
2/3 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup light brown sugar, firmly packed
1 cup english toffee bits (recommend Heath Bits'O Brickle Toffee Bits)
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
pinch of sea salt

Vanilla Ice Cream
Optional Garnish: Sifted confectionary sugar

Directions
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees (F).
2. In a medium sized bowl, mix together chopped walnuts, butter, flour, light brown sugar, toffee bits, cinnamon and salt until mixture resembles coarse meal. Set aside.
2. Mix apple slices, browned butter and lemon juice in a deep 9"x12" baking dish or cast iron pan until apples are coated. In a small bowl, mix together sugar, all-purpose flour, cinnamon and sea sat until blended. Add sugar mixture and toss to coat apples.
3. Top buttered/sugared apples with walnut/toffee bit mixture.
4. Bake for 45-55 minutes until apples are tender, topping has browned, and juices are thickened/bubbling. 
5. Remove from oven. Allow to set 10-20 minutes before serving with vanilla ice cream.
Optional finish: Sprinkle with sifted confectionary sugar.

Notes: Crisp can be prepared 2 hours ahead. Cover loosely with aluminum foil and a heavy towel to keep warm. If crisp sits out longer than 2 hours, can rewarm in a 350 degree (F) preheated oven for 15 minutes.

Horses grazing in a northern Illinois pasture.


Thursday, October 22, 2015

Double Dipped Peanut Butter Balls


Feelings of nostalgia seem to intensify once October arrives and remain until shortly after the Thanksgiving holiday. No longer can I tell you how long it has been since my father has passed, as it simultaneously feels like a life time ago and only yesterday. Had fate not intervened, he would have turned 85 this month. In retrospect he was the first and quite possibly the most favorite, heroic figure in my life. To this day, his character, kindness, unconditional (and mostly unspoken) love, and work ethic remain the standards to which I have often compared the other men who have or have had a place of significance in my life. I have sought to internalize his best qualities as a way of ensuring he remains a presence in my life. As I may have shared before, he was the one who cooked all of the Sunday and holiday dinners. Because he had a bit of a sweet tooth, there would often be dessert. Sometimes cookies, sometimes cake. Sometimes store-bought, sometimes homemade.


Sometimes there was a discernible visual difference between the store-bought and homemade desserts. But there was always another, more signification distinction between the two. Growing up I didn't really understand why I preferred the homemade poppy seed cake (the one with not enough frosting) to the store-bought chocolate cake with chocolate frosting (and I loved chocolate). As I got older I realized there was an intangible quality I tasted in the first bite. Love is felt in many ways, but almost nothing compares to the taste of homemade love. And I have my father to thank for helping me to learn early on that there is a nuance to food that cannot be bought. 


In an effort to try to bring some order to the two large bins filled with recipes, I re-discovered the Peanut Butter Balls handwritten recipe card. One given to me more than thirty years ago and one I probably haven't made in about the same amount of time. There was a time, believe it or not, when candies dipped in chocolate called for the use of paraffin. Yes, paraffin, otherwise known as candle wax. I haven't quite figured out why this particular recipe card caught my attention, but it immediately went into the 'must make, with revisions' pile. And as if you hadn't guessed already, this time they would made without any paraffin.

Other than using some of my favorite melting chocolates (the ones from a local chocolatier as well from Ghiradelli), I made only two other ingredient changes. The addition of some sea salt and sprinkles. Who knows, maybe thirty years from now sprinkles will be considered passé. But I hope not!


Maybe thirty years ago stand mixers weren't as common of a kitchen tool as they are these days. But for thick dough confections, like these Double Dipped Peanut Butter Balls, they are lifesavers.


There may have been some ahead of their time home cooks out there using ice cream scoops to get uniform balls of dough, but early on in my 'cooking life' I wasn't one of them. Next to my kitchen aid, I think I couldn't live without them. 


The original recipe did not call for chilling the balls of dough or double dipping them. This version does. Chilling the dough allows the chocolate to set up faster in the first dip, making it easy to do the second dip while the bowl of melted chocolate remains tempered enough. 


Once I made the decision to add sprinkles to these Double Dipped Peanut Butter Balls, I realized it would have been easier if their were four hands instead of two making them. But I managed.


After the second dipping, I like to dip a fork into the remaining melted chocolate and swipe over the dipped chocolates to create what I call that 'candy store' finish. This is optional, but it is the step that enabled me to get the sprinkles to stick.


Once the chocolate sets, remove the Double Dipped Peanut Butter Balls from the parchment paper and place in paper cups.


I brought them to my running group last Saturday. While I was certainly hoping everyone was going to like them, they received higher rave reviews than I anticipated. And they weren't just being nice!


Yes, these are way better than those peanut butter and chocolate store bought confections you find in the candy aisle. I could give you a list of reasons why, but I think I will give you only one. They have that added intangible quality of containing that essential ingredient called 'homemade' love. And really, could it possibly get any better than that? 

Recipe
Double Dipped Peanut Butter Balls (inspired by Barb Wayne's Peanut Butter Ball recipe)
Makes approximately 52-56 one inch sized candies

Ingredients
2 1/2 cups confectionary sugar
3 cups Rice Krispie cereal
16 ounces chunky or extra crunchy peanut butter (recommend JIF)
8 Tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
1 1/2 - 1 3/4 pounds of chocolate (milk, dark or mixture of milk and dark)
Optional: An assortment of sprinkles

Directions
1. Line a large baking pan with parchment paper. Set aside.
2. In a standing mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, mix together confectionary sugar, salt, and peanut butter until you can no longer see the confectionary sugar.
3. Add slightly cooled butter and Rice Krispie Cereal. Mix until well blended.
4. Form peanut butter balls using a 1" in diameter ice cream scoop. Alternately use a tablespoon and roll into a ball shape. Place peanut butter balls on prepared baking sheet. Chill peanut butter balls for 15 minutes in the refrigerator.
5. Melt chocolate in either a double boiler or in the microwave.
6. Remove peanut balls from the refrigerator and dip (one at a time) into the melted chocolate using a fork. Note: The chocolate will harden relatively quickly if the balls are chilled.
7. After first dipping, turn peanut butter balls upside down and dip again, this time using your hands.
8. If using sprinkles, sprinkle on lightly before chocolate dries. 
9. Allow peanut butter balls to set completely.
10. Place in small paper cups and serve. Store in a sealed box or container.


Fish in the ponds at the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Gardens.


Monday, October 19, 2015

Bucatini and Meatballs


"You don't have to cook fancy or complicated masterpieces-just good food from fresh ingredients." Julia Child There is much to be said for simplicity in all things, especially in food. As much as I love being able to master a complicated recipe, I am finding myself experiencing greater pleasure in making 'simpler' food taste and look wondrously jaw-dropping. Who does not want to serve their family and friends a simple memorable meal? The kind that lingers on their palates and memories for days, weeks, or even years; where the anticipation causes almost unbearable heart-racing excitement, and never ever fails to disappoint. Don't we all?

Yet, often when we find that 'perfect' meal, we (or more to the point when I) are reluctant to make it with a high degree of frequency. Are we trying too hard not to be characterized as being 'set in our ways'? Do we have one set of predictability values for 'life' and another for 'food'? Or do we believe there can be 'too much of a good thing'? Maybe, maybe, and definitely not. Ironically, it is almost heart breaking when our favorite restaurants is out of that one special we never seem to tire of. 


With life pulling us all in a million different directions, there is often only one day of the week where everyone can sit down together as a family, immediate or extended. Where everyone lingers at the table because both the food and conversation are that good. In my world that day would be Sunday. While I am not quite ready to commit to making the same weekly meal, I think I finally have come around to the idea that a 'monthly' meal tradition (aka 'the house special) would be a good thing. And for me this would something satisfying like a large platter of pasta and meatballs tossed in homemade tomato sauce (or gravy depending on your frame of reference). 

The pasta sauce used in this Bucatini and Meatballs is slightly different than the ones used in the Three Cheese Baked Rigatoni with Spinach, Salsa Marinara aka Marinara SaucePenne Pasta with Fresh Tomato Sauce or Roasted Eggplant Parmesan. With the exception of the fresh tomato sauce, there are some similarities between all of these sauces. I jumped on the canned San Marzano tomatoes bandwagon awhile ago and don't anticipate jumping off anytime in the foreseeable future. To give more texture to a sauce I prefer to use a 2:1 crushed to diced tomatoes ratio. Whether she intended to or not, chef, television personality, and cookbook author Alex Guarnaschelli convinced me to use Aleppo pepper instead of red pepper flakes in my tomato sauces. Onions, garlic, kosher salt, pepper, and fresh basil remain as key ingredients. The one significant change in this sauce was the addition of two tablespoons of butter at the end to give it a velvety finish. I have now officially become 'there must be butter in the tomato sauce' convert. 


The savoriness of these meatballs comes from the use of beef, pork and veal. Some will say adding veal  to meatballs may be a 'waste' as beef and pork will overpower the delicate flavor of veal. But I prefer not to listen to them. 


Baked or fried? The answer is 'it depends on whose meatballs you loved eating during your formative years, which chefs you hold up on your culinary pedestal, or how much of your discretionary time you like using for cleaning up the kitchen.' Regardless whether your choice is made based upon preference, heritage, taste, flavor, and/or food chemistry, most of us belong to one meatball making mafia or the other. Although there are always a few outliers who refuse to take a strong stance (aka those who believe meatballs aren't eligible to be put to the black/white decision making matrix). While watching a food show one day, one of my childhood friends, who happens to be Italian, was aghast when the chef used the baking method for the meatballs. The limits of a friendship stemming back to elementary school may have been tested had she been in my kitchen while I was making these meatballs. 


Whether it's because there is no detectable trace of Italian heritage in my DNA, I decided to ignore the meatball making advice of both my childhood friend and favorite chefs. I decided to go with the baking method. And after baking them, I had to ask myself 'would I bake them again?'. And the answer is...drum roll please.... 'it depends'. 

On the advice of the chef creating this particular meatball recipe, I baked the meatballs at 350 degrees but for 12 instead of 10 minutes. When braised in the sauce, they were tender, moist and had really good flavor. However, if I baked them again (and I might), I would increase the oven temperature to 400 degrees to get an even darker, oven browned sear to them (and still bake them for somewhere between 10-12 minutes). But I am also open to frying them briefly before finishing them in the sauce. If the amount of their flavor exceeds that of the baked meatballs, then I will seek to become an official member of the first fry, then braise meatball mafia. That is, if I will be allowed to join.


With the stove set to simmer, the baked meatballs were braised in the sauce for almost 45 minutes. While this length of time may seem 'too long', these meatballs remained moist and the release of their juices deepened the flavor of the sauce.


There are a number of pasta options for this dish. I happen to love the texture and look of bucatini. But linguini, spaghetti, spaghettini, fettuccine, tagliatelle, or even penne would pair well with the tomato sauce and meatballs. 


Whenever given the choice between using fresh basil and dried basil, my preference is go with the fresh basil. Yes I know, I have a strong basil bias yet I can't make a meatball making decision.

Before tossing the pasta into the sauce, I removed the meatballs to ensure the pasta would be coated as well as to avoid breaking up any of those 'baked' meatballs. What I should have done (but didn't) was remove about a cup of the sauce before adding in the pasta in order to have a bowl of extra sauce at the table. Next time. In addition to bringing that bowl of extra sauce, don't forget the freshly grated parmigiano-reggiano.


After tossing and plating the pasta, I drizzled it with some extra-virgin olive oil and some additional julienned basil.


A platter of Bucatini and Meatballs, a loaf of bread, a large tossed salad, some really good wine, and a great dessert may just be the perfect, satisfying, regularly served Sunday dinner. I am pretty sure this meal would never get boring. Buon appetito! 

Recipe
Bucatini and Meatballs (slight adaptation to Daniel Bellino Zwicke's Spaghetti and Meatballs recipe in his cookbook Sunday Sauce: When Italian Americans Cook)

Ingredients
Tomato Sauce
2 - 28 ounce cans of San Marzano crushed tomatoes
1 - 28 ounce can of San Marzano diced tomatoes
7 cloves garlic, minced
1 small onion, minced
1/2 teaspoon Aleppo pepper (or crushed red pepper)
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 cup fresh chopped basil
1 teaspoon Kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
2 Tablespoons unsalted butter

Meatballs
1 pound ground beef (ground sirloin or ground chuck)
1/2 pound ground veal
1/2 pound ground pork
4 Tablespoons fresh Italian parsley, finely chopped
1 onion, finely minced
2 cloves garlic, minced
4 Tablespoons plain bread crumbs
2 large eggs
1/4 cup whole milk
1 - 2 teaspoons kosher salt (to taste)
1/2 - 1 teaspoon black pepper
2 ounces Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese, grated

One pound package of bucatini, linguini, fettuccine, or spaghetti
Extra-virgin olive oil for finishing

Directions
Tomato Sauce
1. In a large saucepan, heat extra-virgin olive oil. Add onions and sauté over a low flame for 3-4 minutes (or until they begin to soften). Add chopped garlic and cook for an additional 3-4 minutes, stirring frequently to prevent sticking and/or burning.
2. Add crushed and diced tomatoes. Turn up heat to medium.When sauce begins to bubble, turn heat back down to simmer. Continue cooking for approximately 45 minutes. Note: Stir occasionally.
3. Add salt, pepper and fresh basil. Stir in two tablespoons of butter. 
Notes: If not adding meatballs, remove from heat and remove one cup of sauce. In pan, toss remaining sauce with drained pasta. Transfer to a platter and drizzle with extra-virgin olive oil.

Meatballs
1. In a small bowl, combine milk, eggs and breadcrumbs. Let mixture sit for 10 minutes.
2. In a large bowl, add beef, pork, veal, chopped parsley, finely minced onion, grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese, salt and pepper.
3. Add egg/milk/bread crumb mixture and mxi well with your hands.
4. Shape meatballs into 1 1/2 inch balls. For uniformity use an ice cream scoop.
5. If baking the meatballs, coat the bottom of a baking sheet with olive oil. Preheat oven to 400 degrees and bake for 10-12 minutes (meatballs should be lightly browned).
6. If frying, fry meatballs in olive oil only to a get a browned crust on the entire meatball. Cook meatballs in batches. 
7. Add meatballs to sauce and simmer over low heat for approximately 45 minutes.

Assembly
1. Remove meatballs from sauce, placing temporarily in a bowl.
2. Remove one cup of sauce from pan. Set aside.
3. Cook pasta slightly al dente. Drain pasta (reserve pasta liquid) and toss in tomato sauce. If pasta is not well coated, add pasta liquid (1/4 cup at a time until desired consistency).
4. Transfer pasta to platter and arrange meatballs on top/sides of pasta.
5. Finish dish by drizzling extra-virgin olive oil and additional julienned basil over top. 
6. Serve immediately with side of sauce and freshly grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese.


The mid-October landscape at Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois.



Thursday, October 15, 2015

Fruity Pebbles Treats


Posting recipes from Thomas Keller and a highly modified, over the top version of rice krispie treats in the same week was an unintentional juxtaposition. Or was it? Maybe I was subliminally revealing my sometimes going from one extreme to the other nature. Here's just a glimpse at what I mean. Is it possible one could justify living without a washer and dryer for more than eighteen years while at the same time not being able to resist buying a painted antique cupboard? Yes, it is quite possible. Is it reasonable one could be responsible for having a strong grasp, tight hold on an organizational budget of more than a hundred and twenty million dollars a year and be rather loose with personal discretionary funds. Yes, it more than reasonable. Is it logical for one to maintain a fierce loyalty to their no longer in existence college team's mascot (Chief Illiniwick) yet embark on the risky venture of changing the 'face' of a team's mascot held dear to a school community? No, it wasn't logical. Welcome to my world. One sometimes highly predictable and other times slightly unforeseeable.

Regardless of whether or not I have any culinary credibility in the extremely crowded food blogging world, I wanted you to have the recipe for these almost effortless to make, certain to appeal to the inner child in all of us (or most of us), lucky Fruity Pebbles Treats. It just so happens they fall into the 'How easy is that?' category, a phrase coined by the iconic, never pretentious, food goddess, Ina Garten. And would anyone ever question Ina's credibility? Highly unlikely.

Even more important than how easy peasy or how addictively scrumptious they are, I discovered they are lucky, really lucky. Skeptical of this discovery? Would you put your skepticism aside if I told you they set off the Cubs historic three post-season game winning streak, clinching a division series on their home field? Something that hasn't happened in like forever. Think it may be a bit reckless to make the not so subtle claim that bringing Fruity Pebbles Treats to a Cubs viewing party on Saturday played a role in this Division series winning streak? Would that be more or less risky than Stephen Colbert proclaiming the Cubs will win the World Series? Maybe, maybe not. Depends on whether or not you really believe in possibility, luck, or subscribe to the belief life is too short to not take a few risks.

"Go big or go home. Because it's true. What do you have to lose?" (Eliza Dushku) There is no room in either the Rice Krispie or Fruity Pebble Treats world for thin, flat, on the dry side bars. Especially when you have the option of creating big, thick, chewy ones. And now you do! Hey, it's already your lucky day and you haven't even made them yet.

Three pounds of miniature marshmallows give these Fruity Pebbles Treats volume, flavor, and the most perfect chewy texture. Note: You will melt 2 2/3 pounds of the marshmallows and stir in the remaining 1/3 pound into the treat mixture.


Due to the volume of marshmallows, butter and Fruity Pebbles in this recipe, a large heavy bottomed round Dutch pan (at least 5 1/2 quarts) will help to ensure the marshmallows do not burn as well as enable you to stir all of ingredients in one pan. However, I can be a bit messy at times, so some Fruity Pebbles found there way onto the stove and floor, in spite of using an even larger cast-iron pan. If you don't happen to have one, use your deepest, heaviest pan to avoid scorching the marshmallows as they melt.

The use of a 9"x12"x2" inch metal pan will give these Fruity Pebbles Treats their wow factor thickness. To prepare the pan, lined with parchment paper, lightly butter the paper and sides and finish with a thin layer of Fruity Pebbles. The 'dry' layer of the cereal makes the removal of the paper much easier and reduces any possible stickiness.

After cutting the treats into whatever size you like, dip the cut sides in a bowl filled with some crushed cereal. This helps to creates a finished treat, one you can stack on a platter or package in cellophane bags without the worry of any 'sticking'. 


Like the Chicago Cubs, these Fruity Pebbles Treats are 'winners'! No one in your family or circle of friends should have to wait forever to have them (just ask any long time, loyal Cubs fan what is feels like to wait). And hey, don't forget they just may have a luck factor associated with them. Possibly not unlike the luck eating grapes, pork, or hoppin' john at the start of a new year has been known to bring to those who believe they have the power of good fortune. Cub fans dared to believe 'again' this year. Whether or not you think they put too much faith in possibility, just look where it got them. 

Recipe
Fruity Pebbles Treats (slight modification to the Over the Top Rice Krispie Treats)
Makes 18 large bars
Updated July 2022

Ingredients
3 pounds (1,358g) miniature marshmallows, divided
1 pound 11.5 oz/779g) Fruity Pebbles cereal, plus additional for lining pan and topping, divided (remove 2 cups for preparing the bottom of the pan and for topping the Fruity Pebbles Treats
14-15 (198-212g) Tablespoons unsalted butter
Very generous pinch of flaky sea salt

Directions
1. Line a 9"x12" metal pan with parchment paper. Lightly butter the parchment paper and sides of pan. Using some of the reserved 2 cups of Fruity Pebbles cereal, sprinkle a thin later on the bottom of the pan. Set aside.
2. In a large, heavy bottomed (preferably cast iron) Dutch oven, melt the butter. 
3. Add 2 2/3 pounds marshmallows and stirring continuously until melted.
4. Remove from heat and immediately add all of the Fruity Pebbles (except what had been reserved). Using a spatula, stir until cereal is fully coated. Stir in remaining 1/3 pound of miniature marshmallows.
5. Transfer mixture to prepared pan. 
6. Sprinkle a thin layer of the Fruity Pebbles cereal on top. Spray or butter a sheet of parchment paper. Lay on top of the pan and press the Fruity Pebbles Treats down firmly.
7. Cover with plastic wrap and allow to cool (at least 4 hours or overnight).
8. In a small bowl, crush 1 cup of Fruity Pebbles cereal, slightly crushed
9. Cut treats into squares or bars. Dip cut sides into the crushed cereal.
10. Serve and enjoy!
11. If not serving immediately, wrap treats individually in cellophane bags or in plastic wrap.

Notes: (1) I used the Mega Size (27.5 ounce box of Fruity Pebbles to make the treats.


Images of the historic cotton mill in McKinney, Texas. Built in 1910, it ultimately became the largest denim manufacturer in the world. The now abandoned mill closed its doors in 1969.