Peppermint Brownies

Yes yes, long time. I know, okay? Gimme a break.

This past weekend I had to make some baked goods for work. Thankfully, this should be my last time for awhile, as we’ve recently promoted several people, so now they can bake for the ingrates in my department. Anyhoodle, I wanted to make something different, so I looked up recipes for some sort of minty brownie. I’m not a big chocolate fan, so when I make it, I want it to be something different than the norm. [The exception to this is boxed brownie mix on poker night, because those people don't pay me enough of a rake to get fancy.]

I stumbled across the recipe for this on the Hershey website. And before you think I’m starting to shill for companies, I’m not; there were no Hershey products used during the dubious recreation of this recipe. [But hey, if anyone wants to send me free crap, feel free.] The recipe looked good because the work involved was minimal but it would still taste like something special when I brought to it work. And when I taste-tested it at home the night before.

Peppermint Brownies, adapted from Hershey’s Sensational Peppermint Pattie Brownies

24 small (1.5 inch) chocolate covered peppermint patty candy
3/4 cup butter, melted
3/4 cup oil
3 cups sugar
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
5 eggs
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup cocoa powder [I prefer Dutch-processed, but that's up to you and your conscience.]
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt

Heat oven to 350 F [or 325 F if using a glass pan as I did].

Mix together butter, oil, sugar and vanilla. Add eggs and beat until blended. Slowly stir in dry ingredients. Reserve two cups of batter, and spread remaining batter in greased/lined pan. Place peppermint patties on top of batter, roughly 1/2 inch apart. Spread remaining batter over the patties.

Bake for about 50 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out mostly dry or the brownies start to pull away from the pan.

Now, my end product looks quite different than the one on the original recipe; I assume if I had used the Hershey’s candy recommended, it would have looked more similar. Regardless, these were really tasty, if a bit sticky on the bottom from the melted candy.

Zucchini … brownies?!

Okay, so not maybe brownies – more like a cake, I think. Either way, I was really pleasantly surprised with how good it turned out. When my mother-in-law’s friend told me about it at the annual family cookout, I was dubious but wanted to try it anyway. So I came home and looked up a few different recipes, finally deciding on this one from allrecipes.com. I actually didn’t change anything, because I honestly had no idea what to expect.

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When I started putting together all the ingredients, my dubiousness [I was really waiting for my spell check to tell me "dubiousness" isn't a word, and apparently it is, and now I feel silly] grew when the batter resembled something the husband cleans out of the rat cage, and not something that would make for a delicious baked good. However, once I put the zucchini in there, it moistened right up and looked fairly normal. That’s when I stopped being nervous about the taste – the carrot cake I make is similar in that the batter is just on this side of dry until I put in the grated carrots, and it suddenly becomes a thick and luscious batter. Also, I’ll have you know that I’ve never used the word luscious in conversation, but now that I have a blog, this is apparently how I talk about food. Weird.

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The original recipe included a recipe for frosting, but I didn’t make that. Why, you ask? Because I don’t like frosting. I know, I know, it’s like I’m a Communist. But fear not, comrade; you can refer back to the original recipe, or read Julia’s post about frosting and go from there. The recipe for the brownies can be found below:

1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 1/2 cups white sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups shredded zucchini

Preheat oven to 350. Mix oil, sugar, and vanilla [I actually forgot the vanilla, and it was fine without it]. In a separate bowl, add all the dry ingredients and then add to the sugar mixture. Mixture will be really dry and crumbly at this point. Add zucchini and mix, the batter will loosen up and become glossy. Cook in a 9×13 pan for 20 – 25 minutes, or until the brownies spring back when you touch them.

Now, those directions look nice and reasonable; easy to follow, some might say. Some, however, don’t have my lack of attention to detail. I just kind of tossed everything into my mixing bowl, mixed the zucchini in pretty vigorously, and then baked it in a 7×11 pan. Mine came out really cake-like, which according to the reviews of the recipe happened to almost everyone if they didn’t undercook it.

All in all, a good recipe to try, but I don’t really see the added health benefit to it, unless I’m going to replace some of the oil with zucchini in the future. I mean, sure, you’re eating more vegetables but it’s still covered in sugar and cocoa powder.

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