Sunday, September 12, 2010

Rocky Road Brownies



The popular kids ice-cream flavor has been turned into a bar cookie! These flavors appeal to my inner child while the use of almonds instead of peanuts makes them more of a 'grown up' bar.

They are also very attractive, showing off their chunky contrast of textures and colors from the nuts, chocolate chips and marshmallows. The brownie part holding all these goodies together is fudgy and moist. The recipe comes from The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion.

Note: In the printed version of this recipe the baking time is wrong. It says 15 minutes but online it says 22 minutes. I ended up baking mine for 24 minutes and they were perfect. Use your own discretion and just bake them until they are almost done but not quite. All you are doing after you add the marshmallows/chips is browning the marshmallows and melting the chips slightly. The actual brownie part should be basically done by that point or you risk burning the topping before the base is ready.



Rocky Road Brownies
9 x 13 pan | King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion

1 cup (2 sticks, 8 ounces) butter
1/2 cup (3 3/4 ounces) brown sugar
1/2 cup (3 1/2 ounces) granulated sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large eggs
1 2/3 cups (7 ounces) All-Purpose Flour
1/3 cup (1 ounce) Dutch-process cocoa
3 cups (18 ounces) chocolate chips
1 cup (4 ounces) roasted salted almonds, coarsely chopped (or peanuts)
1 cup (2 ounces) miniature marshmallows

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Lightly grease a 9 x 13-inch pan.

Cream together the butter, sugars, baking powder, salt, and vanilla. Beat in the eggs. Stir in the flour, cocoa, 2 cups of the chocolate chips, and the almonds.

Pat the dough into the prepared pan. Bake the bars for 22-25 minutes, till they're set around the edge but still soft in the center. Sprinkle with the remaining chocolate chips and the marshmallows, and bake till they soften, about 3 minutes more. Remove from the oven and cool completely before cutting into bars. (Using a plastic knife to cut these is the neatest way I have found to do this).

7 comments:

Unknown said...

A v ery sweet treat, they look fab

Anonymous said...

They look wonderful Tia!!! King Arthur does it again. I swear they can do no wrong. Thanks for participating again this week in Cookbook Sundays and enjoy the rest of your day!

Debbie said...

Mmmmmmm....they look so good.

cocoa and coconut said...

Oh gosh, so moist and chocolate filled! That is the beauty of home-cooking right there :D

Missy said...

Hey TIA! Guess What! You are the winner ! Please send me your info at M.duque319@gmail.com so I can send you the prize!!!!

BTW those desserts look soooo yummy!


<3
Missy

http://throughanindielens.blogspot.com/

scrambledhenfruit said...

These look so chunky and delicious- I love KA recipes!

Anonymous said...

Your cookies look terrific! I love the white chocolate ganache idea--