If we can cook it, you can cook it!

JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER’S DAY, THE BEST BROWNIE OF THEM ALL!

JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER’S DAY,  THE BEST BROWNIE OF THEM ALL!

The legendary “Baked” brownie becomes the perfect kitchen project for Dad, the kids… and one very lucky mother

The Sweetest Gifts Rarely Come in Boxes

Some gifts arrive in velvet boxes. Some come wrapped in tissue paper from department stores where nobody remembers your name. And then there are the gifts that emerge from a slightly flour-dusted kitchen, carried to the table on a scratched cutting board, still warm from the oven, with just enough chocolate on a small hand—or perhaps Dad’s shirt—to prove somebody cared enough to make them. If you ask me, Mother’s Day was always meant for that sort of gift.

 

The Surprisingly Personal History of Mother’s Day

Anna Jarvis, Creator of Mother’s Day. To read a more complete biography go to https://www.britannica.com/biography/Anna-Jarvis

That may come as a surprise, because Mother’s Day in America has become a multi-billion-dollar celebration of flowers, perfume, jewelry, restaurant reservations, and enough greeting cards to wallpaper half of Manhattan. But when Anna Jarvis first organized the event in 1908 in Grafton, West Virginia, in memory of her mother, she had something far simpler—and far more personal—in mind.

Six years later President Woodrow Wilson signed Mother’s Day into law as a national observance, and Jarvis, in one of history’s more delicious ironies, would spend much of the rest of her life railing against the very commercialization she had helped unleash.

 

Why Chocolate and Women Have Always Made Sense

Which brings us, naturally enough, to chocolate. Americans consume staggering amounts of it every year, and surveys from the National Confectioners Association and consumer researchers consistently show what most of us suspected long ago: women remain among chocolate’s most devoted buyers, gifters, and—quite rightly—self-indulgers. Chocolate has become the universal language of comfort, celebration, apology, romance, survival, and on certain weeks in my household, diplomacy.

So if a group of children—and perhaps one slightly nervous father—are going to march into the kitchen this Mother’s Day and make something memorable, chocolate feels less like a choice than destiny.

Brooklyn’s Brownie Kings Still Rule

Two men in dress shirts and ties in a wood-paneled room, one seated with a cup and slices of cake on plates, the other standing and carrying a tray of stacked desserts.And if you’re going to bake brownies for Mom, you might as well bake the brownie.

The one created by Brooklyn bakers Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito, two former advertising men who walked away from agency life in 2005 and opened Baked in the once-gritty, now thoroughly discovered neighborhood of Red Hook, building an entire bakery—and eventually an empire of cookbooks—around one gloriously simple, deeply chocolate, slightly fudgy brownie.

It wasn’t long before America’s Test Kitchen crowned it among America’s very best, the Today show agreed, and home bakers from Brooklyn to Boise started pulling pans of these beauties from their ovens.

Nearly twenty years later, I’m here to tell you something rather comforting. They still hold up.

Why Dad and the Kids Can Actually Pull This Off

Part of the magic, of course, is that these brownies are almost absurdly easy to make.No candy thermometer. No stand mixer. No buttercream roses requiring the hand of a Swiss watchmaker. Just excellent chocolate, a mixing bowl, a baking pan, and about an hour from start to finish—which means even younger children can whisk, measure, pour, and, when nobody is looking, sample enough chocolate to make quality control feel like a serious culinary discipline.

Woven basket filled with brown eggs and one pale blue egg on a weathered wooden deck surface.Three Secrets from the Baked Boys

Matt and Renato always insisted that great brownies aren’t complicated, but they are precise.

  1. Use a dark, unsweetened cocoa powder—something with real backbone, not the pale supermarket stuff that tastes as though chocolate merely passed through the neighborhood.
  2. Bring your eggs to room temperature before they ever meet the batter, and whatever you do, don’t whip them into submission. Brownies should be dense, rich, and just this side of scandalous.
  3.  And above all, watch the oven carefully, because an overbaked brownie may still be chocolate… but it is no longer a Baked brownie.

 

Click on the cover to buy the book….

One Cookbook Worth Owning—One Memory Worth Making

Over the years Matt and Renato turned that single brownie into bestselling cookbooks, including Baked: New Frontiers in Baking, a volume every serious home baker should own, though I suspect this weekend most fathers will be far less concerned with building a cookbook collection than building a memory.

And frankly, that’s exactly as it should be.

Because years from now, Mom may not remember the flowers. She may not remember the brunch reservation. She may not even remember the scarf. But a warm brownie, baked with small hands, a little supervision, and a lot of love? That tends to stick.

 

Here’s today’s recipe…

BAKED BROWNIES

May 7, 2026
: 1 9 X 13 INCH PAN OF BROWNIES
: 15 min
: 30 min
: 45 min
: Child's Play!

Simply the Best Brownie we've ever made--or tasted!

By:

Ingredients
  • 1-1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 tablespoons dark unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 11 ounces dark chocolate (60 to 72 percent cacao), coarsely chopped
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, cut into 1-inch pieces
  • 1 teaspoon instant espresso powder
  • 1-1/2 cups granulated sugar
  • 1/2 cup firmly packed light brown sugar
  • 5 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
Directions
  • Step 1 Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter the sides and bottom of a 9-by-13-inch glass or light-colored metal baking pan.
  • Step 2 In a medium bowl, whisk the flour, salt, and cocoa powder together.
  • Step 3 Put the chocolate, butter, and instant espresso powder in a large bowl and set it over a saucepan of simmering water, stirring occasionally, until the chocolate and butter are completely melted and smooth. Turn off the heat, but keep the bowl over the water and add the sugars. Whisk until completely combined, then remove the bowl from the pan. The mixture should be at room temperature.
  • Step 4 Add 3 eggs to the chocolate mixture and whisk until combined. Add the remaining eggs and whisk until combined. Add the vanilla and stir until combined. Do not overbeat the batter at this stage or your brownies will be cakey.
  • Step 5 Sprinkle the flour mixture over the chocolate mixture. Using a spatula (not a whisk), fold the flour mixture into the chocolate until just a bit of the flour mixture is visible.
  • Step 6 Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Bake in the center of the oven for 30 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through the baking time, until a toothpick inserted into the center of the brownies comes out with a few moist crumbs sticking to it. Let the brownies cool completely, then cut them into squares and serve.
  • Step 7 Tightly covered with plastic wrap, the brownies keep at room temperature for up to 3 days.

JUST IN CASE, MOM HAS A PROBLEM WITH GLUTEN, MAKE YOUR BROWNIES GLUTEN-FREE WITH THIS RECIPE:

Fudgy Walnut Brownies that just happen to be Gluten-Free



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