Biscotti with Dark Chocolate, Hazelnuts, and Clementine

Crunchy, Italian-style biscotti studded with puddles of dark chocolate, toasted hazelnuts, and bright winter clementines. This simple biscotti recipe will make a perfect addition to your holiday cookie baking.

Making friends as an adult is hard. Moving to a new city and then making friends as an adult is even harder. Moving to a new city, running your own business completely from your home and then making friends as an adult is really really hard. So many of our relationships are built on shared experiences—there are friends you went to high school with, those you went to college with, and co-workers turned friends—but how do you find your people in an entirely new place when there aren’t many other people around to connect with?

This past six months in Minneapolis has been so much fun. We’ve gotten to explore a brand new city, eaten at so many new restaurants, enjoyed beautiful summer and fall weather, and so much more. But it’s also been really lonely at times. Since I work entirely from home as a freelancer and run a business that I built by myself, I’ve found it’s been a bit tricky to meet new people. I’ve made a few local internet-turned-real-life friends which has been really neat. In fact, in having coffee with Amanda from HeartBeet Kitchen, I met the very first person to have the same job as me and that was a super fun experience.

I’ve also been very blessed to have a husband with a job that involves people. His co-workers and their families have been so generous in helping us create a little home here in the North. Sometimes, it’s easy for me to give into to feeling sorry for myself. To break down and cry because I miss my people who now live thousands of miles away and because I feel like I can count all of my Minneapolis friends on one hand. But when I step back and think about it, I realize how lucky I am to have these few new friends because in the span of just a few months, they’ve turned into family.

It’s only a few times in your life where you meet someone and it’s instantly easy. It was easy when I met my best friend back on the first week of 10th grade and when I met my sorority sister turned real life sister-in-law in college. It was easy when I met my very best teacher friend on the first day of new teacher orientation my first year in Nashville and when we moved to Seattle where we found friends who we could make curry chicken tacos with on a Sunday afternoon in our pajamas. And lucky me, I found it again here in Minneapolis.

I’ve decided, as I get older, that I would way rather have a handful of friends that I can call no matter what, who can hang out on our couch and watch the Bachelorette or make biscotti with than a million acquaintances.

homemade Italian-style biscotti

My Minneapolis BFF and I had a cookie baking day last week where we used a ridiculous amount of butter and made a giant mess in my kitchen. Oh, and we made these biscotti.

These are a traditional Italian-style biscotti (adapted from Emiko Davies’ most recent book Torte Della Nonna), studded with toasted hazelnuts, clementine juice and zest, and big hunks of dark chocolate. They are super easy to adapt with whatever nut + citrus + chocolate combination you prefer and make a great Christmas cookie since they only get better as the days go by.

Like all Italian biscotti, these cookies are twice-baked. After mixing all of our wet and dry ingredients together into a fairly dense dough, we turn it out on a floured work surface and knead it a bit to make sure all of the flour bits are incorporated. Then we’ll sprinkle in our add-ins and knead it a bit more to ensure even distribution. The dough is then shaped into two rectangular logs, brushed with egg wash and baked until deeply golden brown. The logs cool for a few minutes and then we’ll use a sharp serrated knife to cut individual cookies. The long cookies are then baked again to ensure maximum crunchiness.

tips and substitutions

Maybe it’s the little Florida baby in me, but I love citrus season so much. There’s something about how in the darkest, coldest, parts of winter we get to reap the brightest bits of produce that just makes me giddy. I started seeing blood oranges and mandarins pop up in my grocery stores a few weeks ago, so you can bet that when I found a big bag of beautiful clementines, I jumped on it. You can easily substitute whatever citrus juice and zest looks the most exciting to you if you can’t find clementines.

I do have a small disclaimer about this recipe—slicing the biscotti will cause your chocolate to smear a bit. (This is why many biscotti recipes only incorporate nuts or dried fruits and then dip the cookies in chocolate after baking, but I really really wanted the chocolate scattered throughout). It’s inevitable that slicing the warm cookie log will cause the hot chocolate puddles to smear. I think it’s a small price to pay for having little pockets of chocolate studded throughout the final cookie, but if that really bothers you, you can absolutely omit the chocolate in the cookie dough and then melt your chocolate and dip your cooled cookies in it post-bake.

Apple Cider Affogato

A spin on the classic Italian dessert, this simple, fall affogato is perfect for the holiday season. It comes together quickly, and features caramel gelato drowned in mulled apple cider and topped with whipped crème fraîche and a crunchy hazelnut streusel.

Happy Thanksgiving week to all!

I am very hot and cold when it comes to Thanksgiving celebrations. I love that Thanksgiving is essentially a holiday with celebrations that revolve completely around food. But, I tend to get fairly frustrated at the traditional fare (not surprising at all) and often feel like I’m straddling a line of trying to please everyone with all of Turkey Day classic dishes that, if I’m being completely honest, I don’t really like. On top of that, with a career in food media, I’ve already made at least three Thanksgiving feasts by the time the fourth Thursday in November actually arrives.

In case you haven’t figured it out through a glance of my recipe index, I like to buck tradition when it comes to food. This year, it’s our first Thanksgiving in Minneapolis and will just be me and the boys (Martin and Tahini) since all of our family is thousands of miles away in the regions of the country where there is still a touch of warmth. We’ll be staying in and watching movies with a big batch of bolognese simmering in the background. There will be caesar salad, garlic bread, tiramisu, and sparkling negronis and I cannot wait.

I wrote this recipe for those of you interested in spicing up your Thanksgiving table a bit. If you’re looking for a dessert closer to the classics, check out my pumpkin ricotta tart. This apple cider affogato recipe is for wow-ing your guest with a table-side dessert that takes almost no effort at all. Be a little bit fancy this year.

an italian affogato recipe

Affogato is an Italian dessert traditionally made by pouring hot espresso over gelato—the word affogato means “drowned” in Italian.

For this recipe, we’ll use whatever store-bought caramel gelato you like best. I really love Talenti and Dolcezza brands, but pick your favorite! Then we’ll mull some apple cider with a handful of spices just until its hot and spiced and your house smells like a holiday dream. A little whipped crème fraîche and hazelnut streusel round everything out with a little tang and a bit of crunch.

The only thing you’re baking here is the hazelnut streusel and you can make this in advance. It takes about 5 minutes to mix together the cookie dough and then you’re just going to clump it in a granola-like layer on a baking sheet and bake it until it’s golden. After the streusel has cooled, break it into chunks and transfer it a container. It will keep at room temperature for 4-5 days and you can just pop any leftovers in the freezer and keep it for sprinkling on ice cream or pies anytime.

Apple Cider Affogato
Yield
4
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Cook time
15 Min
Inactive time
15 Min
Total time
45 Min

Apple Cider Affogato

A spin on the classic Italian dessert, this simple, fall affogato is perfect for the holiday season. It comes together quickly, and features caramel gelato drowned in mulled apple cider and topped with whipped crème fraîche and a crunchy hazelnut streusel.

Ingredients

for the hazelnut streusel
  • 1/2 cup (113 g) unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • 1/4 cup (50 g) brown sugar
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground cardamom
  • 1/2 tsp kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup (63 g) all purpose flour
  • 1 cup (89 g) rolled oats
  • 1/2 cup (70 g) chopped hazelnuts
for the mulled cider
  • 4 cups apple cider
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 2 cardamom pods
  • 1 tsp whole cloves
for the whipped crème fraîche
  • 8 oz crème fraîche
  • 4 oz heavy cream
  • 50 g powdered sugar
  • 1 pint caramel gelato of choice (I like Dolcezza or Talenti)

Instructions

to make the hazelnut streusel
  1. Preheat the oven to 350° and line a quarter sheet tray with parchment paper.
  2. In the bowl of a stand mixer, combine butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, cardamom, and salt. Beat for 1-2 minutes until light and sandy.
  3. Add the flour and oats and mix again for about 30 seconds, until just combined. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and fold in the hazelnuts.
  4. Scatter the streusel dough in clumps on the prepared baking sheet and bake for 15 minutes, until the edges are just beginning to brown.
  5. Let the streusel cool completely and then break it up into pieces. Store in a sealed container for up to a week or for about 3 months in the freezer.
to make the mulled cider
  1. Combine all cider ingredients in a large pot and bring to a boil. Let the mixture boil for about 5 minutes, then remove it from the heat and cover it with a lid.
  2. Let the cider steep for 15-20 minutes and then strain out the spices. Serve warm.
to make the whipped crème fraîche and assemble
  1. Combine crème fraîche, heavy cream, and powdered sugar in a large mixing bowl and whisk vigorously until the mixture has thickened and soft peaks form.
  2. To assemble the affogatos: Place two scoops of gelato in a bowl or glass. Pour 5 oz of hot cider over top of the ice cream, dollop a spoonful of whipped crème fraîche on top followed by a handful of hazelnut streusel and serve immediately.
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Butterscotch Oatmeal Cookies with Hazelnuts and Espresso

These chewy butterscotch oatmeal cookies are filled with toasted hazelnuts and strong espresso. A quick and easy recipe, they make great freezer cookies--perfect for baking off at a moment's notice.

oatmeal cookies with butterscotch-1.jpg

Us recipe developers work weird food schedules. For the blog, I try to create and plan content a month ahead, but for client work, it’s often farther in advance. This is how I found myself making Thanksgiving dinner at the end of September this year. I had a client project for a full Thanksgiving feast—turkey, stuffing, mac and cheese…the works, due at the beginning of October. For the weeks leading up to the shoot, I spent quite a bit of time on the phone with grocery stores trying to locate a turkey (fun fact, most grocery stores won’t get turkeys in stock until “closer to the holiday”, though they won’t tell you when exactly that will be and lots of meat managers are really not huge fans of people calling and asking about them). After finally securing myself an out-of-season turkey, I began to work on my full Thanksgiving dinner, a project that would leave me with somewhere close to a million pounds of leftovers that I really didn’t want.

So we threw a party. We celebrated Thanksgiving in early October with a group of friends who brought bonus sides and desserts pot-luck style. It was the first party we’ve hosted since moving to Minnesota and it was such a fun night, though I am officially turkey-ed out for the year. I’ll be eating spicy noodles or something completely different this year on actual Thanksgiving and I’ll be giving thanks for not having to cook a turkey twice in two months.

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oatmeal cookies with butterscotch, hazelnuts, and espresso

I had this flavor idea swimming around in my head for a few weeks and decided to make a batch to go with our Thanksgiving party food so I could test them out on a group and they were a real hit. Think of them as classic oatmeal cookies with a bit of a grown-up twist.

I have three nonnegotiables when it comes to oatmeal cookies: 1) they should have crunchy edges 2) they should have soft, pillowy middles and 3) they should have a deep brown sugar flavor. These cookies hit all three and more.

I love steeping flavors into the butter for my cookies so this time we added instant espresso to our melted butter as the base of flavor. It’s then mixed with lots of brown sugar and sugar, eggs, vanilla, and dry ingredients (flour, oats, leavening agents, and salt). So easy. A bunch of toasted hazelnuts and butterscotch chips round it out and then they are chilled slightly before baking. Side note: this cookie dough smells AMAZING. My whole kitchen smelled like a tiny little coffee shop or the smell of the hazelnut coffee from Panera Bread.

When baking these cookies, take extra care not to over-bake so you don’t lose your soft, pillowy centers. I found that 8 minutes, tapping the tray on the counter, and then another 2-3 minutes worked perfectly in my oven. The centers will look underdone, but let the cookies cool completely on the pan and they will set up. Like most cookie recipes, this cookie dough freezes beautifully so that you can bake some off and have warm oatmeal cookies within 15 minutes.

oatmeal cookies with butterscotch-2.jpg
Butterscotch Oatmeal Cookies with Hazelnuts and Espresso
Yield
22-24 cookies
Author
Prep time
15 Min
Cook time
10 Min
Inactive time
30 Min
Total time
55 Min

Butterscotch Oatmeal Cookies with Hazelnuts and Espresso

These chewy butterscotch oatmeal cookies are filled with toasted hazelnuts and strong espresso. A quick and easy recipe, they make great freezer cookies--perfect for baking off at a moment's notice.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (226 g) unsalted butter
  • 2 tbsp instant espresso
  • 3 cups (270 g) rolled oats
  • 1 1/2 cup (190 g) all purpose flour
  • 3/4 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 1 cup (200 g) brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla powder (or 1 tsp vanilla extract)
  • 11 oz butterscotch chips
  • 1 cup toasted hazelnuts, roughly chopped

Instructions

  1. Place butter and espresso in a medium saucepan and cook over medium heat until butter is melted and espresso is dissolved. Set aside to cool.
  2. In a large bowl, stir together oats, flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
  3. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat together brown sugar, granulated sugar, and espresso butter until smooth and homogenized and the mixture is room temperature.
  4. Add the eggs and vanilla and continue mixing for 1-2 minutes, until very smooth and completely combined.
  5. Gradually add the dry ingredients, mixing on low speed just until combined, followed by the butterscotch chips and the toasted hazelnuts.
  6. Using a large cookie scoop, scoop dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet and chill for at least 30 minutes, preferably overnight.
  7. When you are ready to bake, preheat the oven to 350° F. Place cookies on another parchment-lined baking sheet, leaving about 2” space between cookies. Bake for 10-12 minutes, until the edges are golden and the centers are just set. Sprinkle with flaky salt and let cool on the pan.
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