Monday, April 21, 2014

Shortcut Rigatoni Parma Rosa

Day 68

This year’s Easter Sunday lunch was the fastest I’ve ever prepared, and I used some unconventional pre-packaged ingredients to create an almost-homemade result. Our Easter weekend involved some travel plans to visit with my father, then a drive back with him to Maryland to spend Easter Sunday with my husband who had stayed behind. That left very little time in the kitchen.

I opted for a pasta dish that included two ingredients I associate with Easter dinner: ham and green peas. I don’t know why these two foods are what I expect to have on the holiday
table, but they are. I also like cream sauces, so I decided on a Parma Rosa sauce with ham, onions, peas, and rigatoni. As a side, I served rustically dressed Romaine lettuce leaves with Caesar dressing, shaved Parmesan, and croutons. In my next blog entry, I’ll share my almost homemade dessert for Easter Sunday, shortcut Nutella crepes with strawberries, à la mode. 

Because I used some pre-made and pre-chopped ingredients, I thought that this meal would be a good one to share here. The entire cooking process took no longer than 25 minutes, and the finished product was deceivingly gourmet, and who doesn’t like that kind of result? This would be perfect for a casual Friday night dinner with friends or for a weeknight pasta dinner for your family. 

I really do hope your Easter was stupendous! Now, armed with the good news of Jesus’ empty tomb and His resurrection, may your spring and summer bring you a wealth of God’s love and His blessings. 

Shortcut Rigatoni Parma Rosa

Ingredients: 
2 – 8 oz. boxes ribbed Rigatoni (ribs hold sauce better)
4 packets Knorr Parma Rosa sauce mix (1.3 oz each)
4 cups whole milk
1 cup heavy cream
4 tbs. butter

2 – 8oz. packages fully cooked, diced ham ( Smithfield or Farmland brands are popular)
2 – 16oz. bags frozen peas
1 large Vidalia onion, chopped 
1 clove garlic, minced
Salt and pepper to taste
Olive oil for sauté pan

Directions: 
Boil pasta until al dente and have ready for sauce. Time accordingly. (I usually get the water to boiling, then add pasta when sauce is almost done.)

In a sauté pan, heat olive oil and sauté onions until translucent. Add garlic and ham and continue heating until ham is lightly browned.

In a Dutch oven, mix the milk, heavy cream, and 4 packets of Parma Rosa sauce with a whisk until blended. Add butter and continue stirring until just boiling. Reduce heat and simmer four minutes or until sauce begins to thicken. Add cooked ham, peas, onions, and garlic to the sauce and fold-in gently. Salt and pepper additionally to taste if desired. 

Pour sauce over each serving of pasta and garnish with grated or shaved Parmesan cheese. Serve immediately. 

Yield- 6-8 servings

*For Caesar salad, I simply washed 20 small Romaine leaves and drizzled Caesar dressing on each. Then, I placed shaved Parmesan and croutons on each leaf and fanned 2-4 leaves on each guest’s pasta plate. I made my own Caesar dressing but a store bought variety would work well too. I got my recipe from a chef and fellow blogger who chose to alter the traditional Caesar dressing to omit raw eggs. Honestly, I prefer the raw egg recipe, but this one is faster and very, very good. Find it at this link: http://www.onceuponachef.com/2010/08/caesar-salad-dressing.html


Thursday, April 17, 2014

Mocha Icebox Cake

Day 67

Stop the presses! This recipe is today’s top story, to be sure. And, it’s just in time for Easter if you’re searching for a quick, no-fail, no-bake dessert that looks like you spent hours slaving in the kitchen. 

I have to give complete credit to Ina Garten right away, as the Mocha Icebox Cake is all hers. I watched a re-run of Barefoot Contessa yesterday, and I had to try it. Honestly, I was a skeptic when I saw the ingredients and directions because it looked too easy to work, if that makes sense.
Copyright, Doug Kapustin Photography, 2014
I figured there was something I was missing and that mine wouldn’t look anything like hers. I don’t know if that frequently happens to you, but all too often, I see a recipe video and I attempt it, only to hit some major roadblock that must have been cut from the video. Thankfully, Ina Garten’s recipes are generally “easy gourmet”, designed to work for both the at-home cook and the advanced chef. 


The Mocha Icebox Cake is no exception; this recipe is the easiest I’ve ever made. What’s even better is that the presentation is reminiscent of desserts you’d see in the finest restaurants. Because there is no baking required, all you need is a good mixer. 

Ina recommends using the thin and crispy cookies from a company like Tate’s Bakeshop, which are delicious all by themselves.  I’ll also suggest that if you’re in Maryland and you like to support a local business, you should substitute Tate’s chocolate chip cookies for the Baltimore company, Otterbein’s, in this recipe. Whichever you use, you must find thin and crispy cookies; thicker cookies do not produce optimum results. 

I researched icebox cakes and learned that they fall in the same category as trifles and charlottes because they require overnight refrigeration to properly soften and blend. Their initial popularity
Copyright, Doug Kapustin Photography, 2014
grew during World War I when American housewives were looking for shortcut recipes to save resources. When you decide to make yours, don’t forget that it really does need overnight in the fridge before you try to serve it. 


I hope you’ll try this recipe over the holiday. Happy Easter to you and yours, and may you spend more time enjoying the company of loved ones than in the kitchen, but with even more impressive results. 

Mocha Icebox Cake

Ingredients:
2 cups cold heavy cream
12 ounces Italian mascarpone cheese
½ cup sugar
¼ cup coffee liqueur, such as Kahlua
2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
1 teaspoon instant espresso powder
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
3 (7-ounce) packages chocolate chip cookies, such as Tate's Bake Shop
Shaved semisweet chocolate, for garnish

Directions:
In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine the heavy cream, mascarpone, sugar, coffee liqueur, cocoa powder, espresso powder, and vanilla. Mix on low speed to combine and then slowly raise the speed, until it forms firm peaks.

To assemble the cake, arrange chocolate chip cookies flat in an 8-inch springform pan, covering the bottom as much as possible. (I break some cookies to fill in the spaces.) Spread a fifth of the mocha whipped cream evenly over the cookies. Place another layer of cookies on top, lying flat and touching, followed by another fifth of the cream. Continue layering cookies and cream until there are 5 layers of each, ending with a layer of cream. Smooth the top, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate overnight.

Run a small sharp knife around the outside of the cake and remove the sides of the pan. Sprinkle the top with the chocolate, cut in wedges, and serve cold.

Recipe from Ina Garten’s The Barefoot Contessa. See link to recipe and video here:


Sunday, April 6, 2014

Personal Chicken Pot Pies

Day 66

I wish I were more diligent about Sunday family dinners. Even as a child, I don’t remember that we practiced them quite as often as I would have liked, but we certainly shared them more than most families do today. My mother’s parents would frequently invite us over on Sunday afternoons for Southern fried chicken, buttermilk biscuits, vegetables slow cooked with pork, German chocolate cake, and tea so sweet it would make our teeth ache.
Copyright, Doug Kapustin Photography, 2014
Although we didn’t get together for these meals every Sunday, we probably did it at least once a month.


In the hustle and bustle of our busy lives today, I have not insisted on Sunday dinners with my family and friends, and that’s something that makes me disappointed in myself, to be honest. I really need to make more of an effort because some of my best food memories revolve around Nanny and Pawpaw’s old kitchen table. 
They lived in a house that was built in the late 1700s, finished around 1800, if you can believe that.  (The house is called Little Cherrystone and is located in southern Virginia, if you ever want to do an Internet search.) A Revolutionary War officer, Colonel Wooding, and his family were the original owners. My grandparents became tenants when my mother was a small child, so it was the only home I ever knew them to have when I was growing up. Today, the house is in the registry of historical homes in Virginia, and it has been purchased and somewhat restored by its current owner. It’s really a sight to behold, and I can’t even begin to imagine what those walls might say if they could talk. Seeing it in history books is a bit surreal for me, since my family lived there and I spent so much of my childhood visiting the old home. 

As a little girl who had a love-hate relationship with all things supernatural (I loved the goose-bump inducing stories but regretted and hated them later, once I was alone), I heard my fair share of ghost stories about Little Cherrystone from my mother, her brothers, and my father. As a result, the house
Copyright, Doug Kapustin Photography, 2014
has held a sort of magic and mystique in my memory bank all these years.  I passed untold hours and days exploring the grounds and trying to get the courage to walk through the crumbling, unchartered rooms of the house, so many in fact, that I feel like the old place is a part of me. I really need to ask permission to walk through it again with my daughter the next time we go home to visit; even she has memories there before Pawpaw died. 


The kitchen of the house, where we shared our meals, was actually an addition that has long since been torn-down. There was a cooking stove and an old gas heater in the kitchen, so it was always a swelteringly hot room. Nanny and Pawpaw never failed to have a side of fried fatback meat on the counter for sandwiches, instant coffee, and some sort of dessert for company. The fact that they cooked in a similar fashion to all of the previous inhabitants, dating back to the 1700s, is not lost on me today. I really like the fact that those food traditions never died as long as the house served as a home to families. Empty today, Little Cherrystone is personified in my mind as nostalgic, longing for heat and laughter and food. 

My mother, father, and I would arrive in Daddy’s pick-up truck on Sundays, usually greeted by Pawpaw sitting on the front porch. Pawpaw would start talking before we even got out of the truck, telling us about who had driven by, about his garden plans, and he would give us his ever-exaggerated weather forecast. Our arrival was always the same—predictable and comforting. By the time I landed on the top step, I could smell simmering pork, the fried chicken, and the yeasty biscuits straight from the oven. Once the meal began, I was silent, eating until I could not hold another bite. 

After dessert, I’d take my scraps outside to share with Dinky, their sweet Beagle, whom I adored. Life was good on Sunday afternoons, free of stress and weekly responsibilities. I want to have more of those traditions for my family, and what better place to start than with chicken pot pie? 

Today’s recipe can be made individually or as two large pies, and you’ll love the creaminess of the pot pie filling, accompanied by the flaky crispness of a perfectly baked piecrust. It’s an ideal way to begin a tradition of Sunday dinners, if you are so inclined. I hope you like it. 

(As an aside, I’ll share that my go-to chef is almost always Ina Garten; you’ve surely noticed this if you’re a regular blog follower. This recipe is no exception. I have used her filling and instructions, with only one ingredient addition (celery), and I’ll admit that I sometimes add a clove or two of garlic to the onions and celery when I sauté them, in case you are interested in that too. For many reasons, I’m very partial to garlic. The original recipe also includes baking bone-in chicken breasts with skin to use for the pot pies. Don’t change this step. Bone-in baked or roasted chicken is so much more flavorful and moist than boneless, hands down. It really does make a huge difference. Garten’s recipe includes instructions for making a puff pastry top for the pot pie filling, whereas I have chosen to purchase actual refrigerated pie crusts, simply for convenience. Of course, you could make your own crusts or use the puff pastry instructions in the original recipe. If you would like to make your own crust, here’s the link for Garten’s foolproof recipe: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/perfect-pie-crust-recipe.html. I’ve used it over and over, and it turns out beautifully every single time.  Bottom line, you have lots of options here, depending on your experience level and available time in the kitchen. You’ll find Ina Garten’s Chicken Pot Pie recipe link here too, just under the instructions for the dish. Look for it and happy cooking!)


Personal Chicken Pot Pies

Ingredients:
For crusts:
10 5-inch mini pie shells (and 10 tops)
OR
2  9-inch pie shells with tops

For chicken:
3 whole (6 split) chicken breasts, bone-in, skin-on
3 tablespoons olive oil
Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper

For pot pie filling:
5 cups chicken stock
2 chicken bouillon cubes
12 tablespoons (1½ sticks) unsalted butter
2 cups yellow onions, chopped (2 onions)
¾ cup all-purpose flour
¼ cup heavy cream
4 cups frozen peas and carrots, thawed at room temperature
2 celery stalks, diced 
1½ cups frozen small pearl onions
½ cup minced fresh parsley leaves

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Place the chicken breasts on a baking sheet and rub them with olive oil. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper. Roast for 35 to 40 minutes, or until cooked through. Set aside until cool enough to handle, then remove the meat from the bones and discard the skin. Cut the chicken into large dice. You will have 4 to 6 cups of cubed chicken.

In a small saucepan, heat the chicken stock and dissolve the bouillon cubes in the stock. In a large pot or Dutch oven, melt the butter and sauté the onions and celery over medium-low heat for 10 to 15 minutes, until translucent. Add the flour and cook over low heat, stirring constantly, for 2 minutes. Add the hot chicken stock to the sauce. Simmer over low heat for 1 more minute, stirring, until thick. Add 2 teaspoons salt, ½ teaspoon pepper, and heavy cream. Add the cubed chicken, carrots, peas, onions and parsley. Mix well.

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.

Pour into prepared piecrusts and cover with crust tops, using a fork to seal edges. Brush tops with raw, beaten egg wash (1 egg and 1 tsp. water, beaten together), make several slits to vent, and sprinkle lightly with sea salt. Place on baking pan, and bake at 375 degrees for 1 hour, or until the top is golden brown and the filling is bubbling hot. Allow to cool for 5-10 minutes before serving. 


Note: original recipe before changes, courtesy of Ina Garten- http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/chicken-pot-pie-recipe.html

Monday, March 31, 2014

Chocolate Caramel Tartlets

Day 65

Who doesn’t enjoy an individual dessert? By individual, I don’t mean your own slice of cake or pie, but a whole dessert that is a miniature representation of the standard larger version, thereby giving you all the textures you might not otherwise encounter, from edges to center. Maybe it’s just me, but sometimes, if offered a brownie or slice of sheet cake, I can’t decide if I want the all gooey, moist
Photo by Ali Kapustin
center piece or if I’d prefer an edge with more crispness. Honestly, I’d like one of each, but that doesn’t seem very polite…


With tartlets, everyone wins. We can each enjoy a full crust and complete center, but in a manageable miniature version to make us feel less guilty. You’ll love this chocolate caramel pie for your next family meal or dessert with friends. It’s rich, creamy, and very decadent. Served with coffee, it provides a nice balance to a lighter meal or an indulgent finish to an already rich, heavy meal. That part is up to you! 

I decided to search for and to explore this type of recipe after a visit to our nearest Fresh Market, where I purchased an individual chocolate caramel tart with sea salt. It was good, to be sure, but the price was high. When I got home, I began to search cookbooks and old recipes to see if I had something I could modify.  After several Internet searches, some tweaking of my old recipes, and a few attempts to make a pie that’s faster to prepare, I settled on a modification that uses caramel and chocolate, but that adds peanuts. 


Chocolate Caramel Tartlets

Ingredients: 
4- 6-inch individual tart shells, pre-baked and cooled (see directions below if necessary)

8 oz. soft caramels (individually wrapped candies)
1/3 cup salted peanuts
1 1/3 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup plus 3 tbs. heavy cream
2 tbs. butter

For caramel filling: 
Unwrap caramels and combine with 2 tbs. butter and 3 tbs. heavy cream in a mixing bowl. Microwave in 30 second intervals until caramels are melted and mixture is smooth. Use a whisk if needed. Add the peanuts and stir to coat. Divide into the four pie shells. Refrigerate.

For chocolate ganache layer: 
Place the chocolate chips in a medium mixing bowl, and pour 1 cup of heavy cream into a small saucepan. Heat cream until it simmers. Pour hot cream over chocolate and allow to rest for a minute to soften the chocolate. Whisk chocolate and cream together until shiny and smooth. Pour chocolate evenly over four caramel pies. Refrigerate at least 3 hours to firm. 

Sprinkle with sea salt and add a dollop of whipped cream or more salted peanuts before serving. 


To pre-bake an empty pie shell: 

Line the insides of piecrusts with aluminum foil and pour dry (uncooked) kidney beans into each foil-lined pie shell. (The weight of the beans will keep the pie from bubbling up while pre-baking.) Bake in preheated 400-degree oven for 8-10 minutes. Remove from oven and remove foil lining and beans. Allow to cool before filling. 

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Garlic Clam Chowder with Herbes de Provence

Day 64

New England style clam chowder is the perfect compliment to a cold winter day. Since we’re (hopefully) getting closer and closer to beautiful spring weather, the clock is ticking on hearty and creamy winter soups. Here’s my twist on clam chowder, filled with the flavors of France. An entire bulb of garlic creates a pleasing sweetness while the Herbes de Provence add incredible layers of flavor. I think you’ll really enjoy it. I served mine with focaccia bread toasted with cheddar cheese and bacon. It was a nice touch, but this soup can also be served solo or with crackers.

Copyright, Doug Kapustin Photography, 2014


Happy spring!

Garlic Clam Chowder with Herbes de Provence

Ingredients: 
4 strips bacon
1 large Vidalia onion, chopped
1 bulb garlic (10-12 cloves), minced
4 large potatoes, peeled and cubed
2 cups vegetable broth
2 -10 oz. cans whole baby clams with juice reserved
2 tsp. white pepper
3 tsp. sea salt
2 cups heavy cream
2 tbs. Herbes de Provence (see recipe below if not available for purchase at your local market)

Directions: 
Crisply fry bacon in Dutch oven and place on paper towel to drain. In bacon grease, sauté chopped onion, adding garlic after onion is translucent and slightly caramelized. Add  broth, potatoes, and juice from two cans of clams. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until potatoes are tender. Use a potato masher to mash about half of the potatoes to thicken the soup. Add salt, pepper, Herbes de Provence, and the heavy cream. On low heat, simmer until flavors blend. Add clams to heat through. Ladle in bowls, and sprinkle each with crumbled bacon. Serve immediately. 

Herbes de Provence
2 tablespoons dried savory
2 tablespoons dried rosemary
2 tablespoons dried thyme
2 tablespoons dried oregano
2 tablespoons dried basil
2 tablespoons dried marjoram
2 tablespoons dried fennel seed


Mix together and store in airtight container until ready to use. 

(Note: the Focaccia bread I made was simply from the freezer section of the grocery store, prepared according to package directions EXCEPT that I removed it from the oven 10 minutes early, added cheddar and bacon crumbles, and returned to finish baking for the remaining 10 minutes. Broiling for 1 minute at the end makes for a crunchier top, which is optional.)

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Cake Bomb

Day 63

As a housewarming treat for my stepdaughter, Ali, and her roommate, Megan, I decided to create a dessert in their honor. In the planning stages, I had visions of some of Ali’s favorite dessert ingredients finding their way into one dish. The question of the day quickly became how to incorporate lots of really yummy stuff into just one dish, with a very necessary favorite of Ali’s: Nutella. She loves Nutella more than anyone I know, but to be fair, we ALL love Nutella, right? Trifles and dump cakes crossed my mind, and I even considered an ice cream cake. Then, it hit me.
Copyright, Doug Kapustin Photography, 2014


One of Doug’s and my favorite restaurants near home is Hickory Ridge Grill in Columbia, Maryland. The dishes there include a mostly Mediterranean influence with a healthy smattering of American added for good measure. If you’re ever in our area, looking for a good meal in a friendly and casual atmosphere, visit Hickory Ridge Grill for sure. Our favorite dinner is the Yeeroo Platter (yes, that’s how they playfully spell it!), filled with gyro meat, feta cheese, warm pita bread, and delicious tzatziki sauce. I can’t get enough of it. Here’s the link if you’re interested, hickoryridgegrill.com .

At any rate, Hickory Ridge Grill also has a decadent dessert called a Brownie Bomb that’s nothing short of incredible. The name is fitting since it arrives at the table looking like a brownie exploded all over a thousand other deliciously sweet ingredients, including whipped cream. 

I knew I had to make my own version of this dessert, with different ingredients, for Ali and Megan’s housewarming. And so it was that the Cake Bomb was born. There’s a long list of ingredients in the dessert, but it’s very easy to make, and it’s ideal for gifts or parties since it travels well and potentially serves many guests. 

After I made it, Doug delivered it to the girls while I cleaned the kitchen. The verdict came after about an hour when Ali called to tell me they were eating it right out of the bowl. Success! 

And, to make the victory even sweeter, I’ll add that Ali and Megan’s new house is lovely. Built in the mid-1800s, it’s filled with history and character and so much charm. They’ve decorated it in an eclectic distressed chic style that suits the house very well. We love it, and we can’t wait to be invited for dinner in the very near future. Hint, hint…I might bring a Cake Bomb

Congrats, Ali and Megan, on your first home!  

Cake Bomb

Ingredients:
1 box Pillsbury white cake mix (with “pudding in the mix”)
4 eggs
½ cup sugar
¾ cup softened butter
1 tsp. vanilla
1 8oz. container Breakstone sour cream

1 small (~13 oz.) jar Nutella
½ cup graham cracker crumbs 
1 cup honey or brown sugar glazed pecan pieces
1 cup each, milk chocolate and caramel (or butterscotch) chips
1 cup Heath bar or toffee crumbles 
2 boxes (3.56 oz. each) Hershey’s white chocolate instant pudding mix, prepared according to package directions
2 cups Cool Whip 

Directions:
For the cake-
Preheat oven to 350 degrees and grease and flour a Bundt pan. 

In a mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat together the butter and sugar until smooth and creamy. Add sour cream and beat until smooth. Add eggs one at a time, until mixture is fluffy. Add cake mix and vanilla and beat until thoroughly incorporated. 

Pour into Bundt pan and bake at 350 degrees for 40-45 minutes, or until knife inserted in center comes out clean. Invert on wire rack after 5 minutes and allow to cool completely. (I sometimes put the cake in the freezer for a few minutes to speed up this process if I’m in a hurry.)

For the pudding-
Prepare the instant pudding according to the package directions and place in refrigerator to set. Once it is completely set and thickened, gently fold in Cool Whip and return to refrigerator until ready to use. 

To assemble the Cake Bomb-
In a large glass bowl (I used a glass salad bowl because it had a flat bottom and was fairly deep, but almost any clear glass bowl could work), crumble half of the cake along the bottom, making sure to cover the entire surface.  Drizzle ½ of Nutella over cake (I warmed it in the microwave for just a few seconds to make it pourable) and sprinkle with caramel OR butterscotch chips and ½ cup of Heath Bar crumbles. Spread ½ of pudding mixture over this. For the next layer, crumble the remaining ½ of the cake, drizzle the rest of the Nutella, and sprinkle all of the milk chocolate chips and the rest of the Heath Bar crumbles. Spread the final layer of pudding, then sprinkle with graham cracker crumbles and glazed pecan pieces to garnish the top of The Bomb

Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to serve. Preferably, serve within 4-5 hours. 



Saturday, March 8, 2014

Monkey Bread

Day 62

Homemade breads and sweet rolls are such a treat for breakfast, especially on the weekends. This morning, I got up really, really (!!) early to spend some quality time with my favorite pup, Miss Emmylou, and to make Monkey Bread for my family. I used a from-scratch recipe from the Food Network. It was delicious, but time-consuming. A friend had recommended the recipe to me, so I gave it a try. 

Since the results were definitely worth it but the labor a bit more than some might like, I went to the market later in the day to fetch the ingredients for a shortcut recipe that I also found on Food Network. Although the Monkey Bread pictured 
Photo by Maggie Kapustin
is the from-scratch version (I dropped off the shortcut bread, uncut, to surprise a friend and her family), the other one turned out very nicely—albeit a bit bready— AND it was so much faster. 


Consider making either one for your next weekend family breakfast. Oh, and please pardon the poor photography; I had to take the picture myself since the bread was a surprise for when my hubby, the actual photographer, awoke. If you’ve noticed, he hasn’t had to take some of my more recent pictures for one reason or another; I think I’ll need to nudge him back to work soon.:)

Monkey Bread
Shortcut Recipe:
Ingredients:
*Recipe may be doubled depending on the Bundt pan:
Baking spray with flour, for pan
½ cup sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
30 buttermilk canned refrigerator biscuits
1 stick butter, plus more for pan
½  cup brown sugar
1 cup pecans

Directions:

Coat Bundt pan with cooking spray with flour and set aside. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Combine sugar and cinnamon. Cut refrigerator biscuits in half and toss in cinnamon and sugar mixture. Melt the 1 stick of butter in a saucepan and add brown sugar and bring to a boil; then add nuts. Line the bundt pan with biscuits and pour butter mixture over them.

Bake for about 30 minutes. Remove from the pan when it's still hot to avoid sticking.
Monkey Bread
From Scratch recipe: 
Ingredients:
1 cup chopped pecans
1 ½  sticks (12 tablespoons) unsalted butter
1 cup packed light brown sugar
¾  cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
2 tablespoons dark rum
1/8  teaspoon kosher salt
½ cup granulated sugar
1 batch Basic Sweet-Roll Dough* (see below)

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Spread the pecans on a baking sheet and bake until lightly toasted, about 8 minutes; set aside.

Melt 1 stick butter in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add the brown sugar and heavy cream; boil until slightly thickened, about 4 minutes. Stir in the vanilla, vinegar, rum, salt and the toasted pecans. Pour all but 1/2 cup of the pecan mixture into an 8-inch-round, 3-inch-deep cake pan or a standard Bundt pan. Refrigerate until almost set, about 15 minutes. Set the remaining pecan mixture aside at room temperature.

Put the remaining 1/2 stick butter in a microwave-safe bowl; microwave until melted. Put the granulated sugar in another bowl. Pinch off pieces of dough and roll into 1-inch balls. Dip the balls in the melted butter, letting the excess drip off, then roll in the granulated sugar; arrange in the prepared cake pan in 2 layers, leaving a bit of space between the balls. Let rise, uncovered, in a warm place until doubled in size, about 1 hour, 30 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Bake the bread until puffed and golden brown (a thermometer inserted into the center should register 175 degrees F), about 55 minutes; tent with aluminum foil if the top is getting too dark. Remove the bread from the oven and spread the reserved 1/2 cup pecan mixture on top. Transfer to a rack and let cool 10 minutes in the pan, then invert onto a plate. Pull off pieces to serve.

*Basic Sweet Roll Dough
Ingredients:
1/2 cup whole milk
1 1/4 -ounce packet active dry yeast (2 1/4 teaspoons)
1/4 cup sugar
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled, plus more for brushing
1 large egg yolk
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 3/4 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
3/4 teaspoon salt

Directions:
Warm 1/2 cup water and the milk in a saucepan over low heat until a thermometer registers 100 degrees F to 110 degrees F. Remove from the heat and sprinkle the yeast on top, then sprinkle with a pinch of the sugar; set aside, undisturbed, until foamy, about 5 minutes.

Whisk the melted butter, egg yolk and vanilla into the yeast mixture until combined. In a large bowl, whisk the flour, the remaining sugar, and the salt. Make a well in the center, then add the yeast mixture and stir with a wooden spoon to make a thick and slightly sticky dough. Turn out onto a floured surface and knead until soft and elastic, about 6 minutes. Shape into a ball.

Brush a large bowl with butter. Add the dough, turning to coat lightly with the butter. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise at room temperature until the dough is doubled in size, about 1 hour, 15 minutes.

Turn the dough out of the bowl and knead briefly to release excess air; re-form into a ball and return to the bowl. Lightly butter a large piece of plastic wrap and lay it directly on the surface of the dough. Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate at least 4 hours or overnight.

Food Network recipe links: 
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/monkey-and-gorilla-bread-recipe.html

http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/food-network-kitchens/sticky-monkey-bread-recipe.html