It rained
like crazy here recently. Naturally, it
was on a day when there were a gazillion construction vehicles crammed into our
driveway, so I had no choice but to park my car on the street. I figured it was a fair exchange for all that
hammering, painting and nailing going on in my kitchen. Even if it was on Rosh Hashana.
Around 4pm,
they all disappeared, so I decided to pull my car back into the garage. After a quick sprint through the pouring rain,
I jumped into the car, revved up the engine and hit the switch for the
windshield wipers. Nothing happened.
WTF? I tried multiple times, all with the same
result. I managed to get the car back
into the garage and yelled for Henry. He
showed up immediately, no doubt thinking a roach was somewhere in the vicinity. (Hey,
isn’t that what husbands are for?)
Except that
he couldn’t make the wipers work either.
“Clearly, it’s some kind of
electrical problem,” he pronounced.
Crap. Since rain was in the
forecast for the next two days, I knew I had to do something, since I couldn’t
be without a car (the Chicken Bitch had to get to work) but
I also knew I couldn’t get it to the car dealer until the rain stopped.
I immediately jumped into damage control mode. Called
the dealership to get an appointment for three days down the road and found a
cheap rental car. Since it was now 4:30
and the rental folks closed at 5, we had no time to waste. We jumped into Henry’s car and headed
out. We got caught at the traffic light
at the bottom of our street.
It’s crucial
to mention here that Henry and I drive the same brand of vehicle. Mine is smaller than his, but the interiors
and dashboard configurations are basically the same. As we sat at that traffic light, my eyes fell
on his steering column, where the control for the windshield wiper was right
there … on the right.
A light bulb
exploded in my head. In the frenzy of
everything, we had been trying to activate the wipers using the (wrong)
controls on the left side of my
steering wheel. Oh, Liz. Oh, Henry.
What were we thinking?
Suffice it
to say, we turned the car around, skulked back into the garage, canceled the
rental car, canceled the repair appointment and looked at each other. “I can’t
wait to tell your kids about this,” said Henry. “I can’t
wait to tell them that you were just as stupid as me,” I retorted. Stalemate.
Just goes to
show you what stress and chaos can do to you.
We are about three weeks away from having a real kitchen (and the rest
of our house) again and it won’t be a moment too soon!
In the
meantime, I took solace in my temporary kitchen and baked up a batch of Caramel
Apple Bars. It seemed like the only way
to make sense of our ridiculous afternoon. And hey, it's autumn, right?
CARAMEL APPLE BARS
CARAMEL APPLE BARS
For the
crust:
2 cups
all-purpose, unbleached flour
2 cups
rolled oats
1 ½ cups
light brown sugar, packed
1 teaspoon
baking soda
½ teaspoon
salt (I used kosher)
1 ¼ cups
unsalted butter, melted
Preheat oven
to 350-degrees. Line a 9 x 13 x 2-inch
pan with heavy duty foil to overhang sides and grease well with cooking spray.
Combine the
flour, oats, brown sugar, baking soda and salt in a large bowl. Stir in the melted butter and mix until
well-blended. Place ½ of this mixture
into the prepared pan and press well into the bottom of the pan. Bake for 12 – 15 minutes until lightly
browned. Remove from oven and set aside
to cool.
For the
filling:
3 apples,
peeled, cored, halved and cut into thin slices
1 cup
chopped pecans
1 ½ cups
salted caramel sauce (see below)
½ cup
all-purpose, unbleached flour
Arrange the
apple slices evenly over the cooled crust.
Sprinkle the chopped pecans over the apples.
In a
nonstick pan, heat the caramel sauce over medium heat. Add the flour and stir well. Bring to a boil and cook for about 3 minutes,
stirring constantly. The mixture will
pull away from the sides of the pan.
Dollop the
cooked caramel over the apples/nuts in the prepared pan and use a small spatula
to spread it evenly. Then sprinkle the
remaining crust mixture over the top.
Bake for 25 – 30 minutes until the top is just golden. Cool on a baking rack, then remove from pan
and cut into squares.
Yield: 24 bars
This is not an original recipe. It's been around for years and most versions call for caramel sauce that you buy in a jar. You know I would never stoop to that, so instead I subbed the Sweet and Salty Caramel Sauce from Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito, those genius boys at Baked in Brooklyn. I highly recommend that you do the same. So worth it!
This is not an original recipe. It's been around for years and most versions call for caramel sauce that you buy in a jar. You know I would never stoop to that, so instead I subbed the Sweet and Salty Caramel Sauce from Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito, those genius boys at Baked in Brooklyn. I highly recommend that you do the same. So worth it!
SWEET AND SALTY CARAMEL SAUCE (from Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito)
1 cup
granulated sugar
2
tablespoons light corn syrup
½ cup heavy
cream
1 teaspoon
fleur de sel
¼ cup sour
cream
In a medium
saucepan, combine sugar and corn syrup with ¼ cup water, stirring them together
carefully so you don’t splash the sides of the pan. Cook over high heat until an instant-read
thermometer reads 350-degrees or mixture is dark amber in color. Keep a close eye as it can burn in an
instant. Remove from heat and slowly add
the cream. Be careful as it will bubble
up then add fleur de sel. Whisk in the
sour cream and set aside to cool.
I'm going to make up a batch of this caramel sauce and bury my face in it right now. Maybe when I surface, the kitchen will be finished and I can get back to baking and blogging as normal. Cheers!