Boozy Brownies for My Newly Old Brother

Last week my little brother turned 21.  So obviously, I had to send him alcohol related things.  Because 21 is your last important birthday.  And by important, I think I probably mean fun, as I imagine your 50th birthday feels pretty important but not necessarily that fun.  Or maybe it’s actually a blast.  I wouldn’t know – I’m just gearing up for 23.  But the point is, 21 is a big one.  And it’s a big one because of the boozing.  Although I don’t think I personally know anyone who didn’t drink before turning 21, it doesn’t make it any less exciting when it becomes official.  You can walk into a bar and order a beer, or a kamikaze, or a shot of tequila, and no one can stop you.  It’s kinda cool.  At least, it’s really cool at first, and then it just becomes a sorta nice extra freedom – like, I can buy a bottle of wine whenever I want, or order a beer with a hamburger, and it’s no big deal.  Really, I don’t know why the drinking age is so high to begin with, but I think I’ll avoid getting into that just now…

Anyway.  Back to Ryan.  Ryan and I are only a year and a half apart, and we’re buds.  Our buddiness goes through phases – we were totally buds at ages 1 and 3, when I slapped my mother for making him cry while changing his diapers.  We were OK buds from ages 4-9, when we shared a room with pink, flowery wallpaper and I drew imaginary lines to demarcate whose side was whose – mine was the side with the door, obviously.  We were not such good buds when I was trying to be cool in middle school and he was just a 5th grade baby, although I secretly loved playing pokemon with him once I got home.  No shame.   And we became really good buds once I got my license and I drove us to school every day – 20 minutes of uninhibited, unchaperoned conversation every day for 2 and 1/2 years can make people pretty close.   Now it’s harder to stay tight – he’s at Cornell, and busy playing frisbee and programming computers and being a little bit fratty, and I’m here, busy working and blogging and trying to stay balanced.  But I’m not worried that we’ll ever be those awkward, estranged siblings who never quite figure out how to interact as adults – we get along too well when we actually are together.

Although I haven’t actually heard how his birthday went, due to our extremely poor communication skills when we’re not in the same room (for which I’m giving you 70% of the blame, Ryan), I know he survived, I’m assuming he had a good time, and I know he got my package.  Which contained, among other things, Dark and Stormy brownies.  Lately I find myself drinking a lot of Dark and Stormies – a combination of Gosling’s dark rum, Gosling’s ginger beer, and lime juice.  They’re spicy, flavorful, and moody – they somehow seem very appropriate for this time of year (or maybe I just think that because of the name).  Either way, I have had a recipe from Ideas in Food for these brownies bookmarked for a long time.  If you’ve never checked out Ideas in Food, I’d definitely recommend it.  They are a husband and wife team that generates some of the most interesting and creative material on food I’ve seen, anywhere.  Sometimes I’m sort of turned off by some of their suggestions, as they really push the boundaries of traditional uses for ingredients, and sometimes I wonder how on earth no one else came up with some brilliant idea of theirs earlier, but I’m always totally intrigued by their work.  Part of the fascination for me is the techniques they use – a lot of them are high tech and inaccessible to the casual chef, but a handful of them are totally doable as well as great ideas.  They also have a cookbook, which I haven’t checked out yet but it’s high on my list.  Anyway, these brownies were the first actual recipe of theirs that I tried.  The flavor of the brownies was amazing.  Perfect.  So powerful.  However, the texture was decidedly weird.  They were moist and dense, both pluses, but also very crumbly.  They barely stayed together when I took them out of the pan, and they had a dense, cocoa-y mouthfeel.  Not totally unpleasant, but not very transportable, and not the brownie I was looking for.  The incredible flavor of the brownies came from simply pulsing fresh ginger and lime peel (they suggest lime oil, but I couldn’t find any) with the sugars in a food processor, and of course, adding a bit of rum.  Pretty transferrable techniques, so I decided to apply them to a brownie recipe with a better texture to get the flavor-texture combo I was looking for.  I bet you could even use these tricks to doctor up a batch of boxed brownies, sacrilegious as it may sound.  If you try it, definitely let me know the results.  And Ryan, I hope they stayed in one piece for you and that you enjoyed them – if not, I’ll make you some new ones when you get home.  Happy 21st!

Dark and Stormy Brownies

Inspired by Ideas in Food.  Brownie recipe adapted from Crustabakes.

  • 7 oz semisweet baking chocolate
  • 1 stick salted butter
  • 3 TBS cocoa
  • 3 eggs
  • 3/4 c. sugar
  • 1/2 c. brown sugar
  • zest/peel of 1 lime
  • 3 inches fresh ginger, peeled and cut into large chunks
  • 2 TBS Gosling’s dark rum
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 c. flour
  1. Preheat oven to 350°F.  Grease a 9×13 inch baking pan.  Set aside
  2. In a small saucepan, gently melt the chocolate and butter together over low heat, stirring all the while.  Alternatively, you can do this in a bain-marie or double boiler – the point is to keep the chocolate from burning or overheating while you melt it, but you can do this carefully without using a double boiler.  Whisk the cocoa powder into the melted chocolate and stir until smooth.  Remove from heat and set aside.
  3. Place sugars, peeled ginger, and lime peel/zest into a food processor, and pulse until the ginger and lime are cut very fine and evenly dispersed throughout the sugar.  In a large bowl, whisk together eggs, ginger-lime-sugar, rum, and salt until combined.  Whisk in warm chocolate mixture and stir to combine.  Finally, fold in flour, stirring gently until just incorporated.  Spoon the batter out over the prepared pan.  Bake for 25-30 minutes, then check for doneness – a toothpick inserted into the center should have a few moist crumbs attached to it.  PLEASE NOTE:  I previously made these brownies in an 8×8 pan and thought they were overdone at 37 minutes, as well as too thick.  I think they would be better in a 9×13 for a shorter cooking time, but 25-30 minutes is really my best guess at cooking time.  It may be worth it to start checking them at 20 minutes, although I doubt they’ll be done that quickly.

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  1. Both you kids are getting old! Let me know how that 50th birthday thing goes . . . I’m sure Ryan will send you a nice long hand-written letter thanking you for these goodies!