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Small-Batch Baking for Chocolate Lovers Paperback – Bargain Price, February 15, 2011

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 54 ratings

“In this age of singles, couples and otherwise smaller households, Small-Batch Baking is an idea that’s in step with the times.”—The Dallas Morning News

No one can resist the allure of home-made chocolate desserts—but when recipes yield a full dozen or more, we often eat more than our serving size. In Small-Batch Baking for Chocolate Lovers, acclaimed food writer Debby Maugans solves the problem by crafting irresistible chocolate recipes perfectly suited for two.

Featuring more than 120 cookie, cake, pie, tart, muffin, and scone recipes, over-the-top and lavishly loaded with chocolate of all kinds, nuts, candy bars, and flavors. Ideal for the single guy or gal, small family, retiree, or bride-to-be.

There’s a dessert in this book for every occasion: a fool-proof birthday chocolate cake recipe, a chocolate orange tart for Valentine’s Day, or when you’re in the mood for a little self-indulgence, a chocolate soufflé sized for one. Your sweetheart (and your waistline) will thank you!

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Scones for two? A batch of eight cookies? Three brownies hot out of the oven? These tiny yields are the norm for recipes in Maugans's second Small-Batch Baking title. "Scaled back to manageable proportions," recipes produce handfuls of baked goods, ideal for the single person, those counting calories, or must-eat-fresh-out-of-the-oven die-hard bakers. The self-proclaimed "chocoholic" uses the cacao bean in various forms including unsweetened cocoa powder, milk chocolate bars, bittersweet chocolate chips, and even chocolate milk in her recipes for cakes, pies and tarts, and more. Clever ideas include baking "baby-layer" cakes in cans and making soufflés in eight-inch ramekins. Classic desserts such as red velvet cake and chocolate chip cookies are alongside less-than-traditional combinations including chocolate lime bread and java choco-banana muffins. A lack of photography may prevent gift buyers scanning the shelves from noticing, but chocolate lovers and those who want small yields will appreciate this straightforward title. (Feb.)
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From Booklist

With more and more American households consisting of just one or two people, it�s often difficult to find recipes that don�t end up wasting food with quantities that are meant to fill four, six, or more mouths. Maugans comes to the rescue of such challenged bakers with a collection of chocolate desserts that serve just two. Pastry dough can be cut back to yield bases for just a couple of tarts. She suggests a number of cookie recipes, such as a dark chocolate pistachio shortbread or oatmeal chocolate raisin cookies. Desserts can be simple or as elaborate as layered turtle cheesecake. Even bread pudding can be reduced to a pair of small portions. In some cases, special small pans are required, but often it�s a matter of using just a couple of the holes in a standard muffin tin or improvising with some recycled tin cans. --Mark Knoblauch

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B006Z2VS94
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ St. Martin's Griffin (February 15, 2011)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 352 pages
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.4 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.47 x 0.93 x 9.14 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 54 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
54 global ratings
A great cookbook for small indulgences
4 Stars
A great cookbook for small indulgences
I love cooking and baking but...neither do I need to tempt the family with dozens of cookies or bars or a huge cake. No, this book isn't about "healthy desserts" - it is about small indulgences that one will savor and enjoy! The Double Chocolate Macadamia-Oatmeal Cookies on page 142 are soft, chewy and will fix nearly any choco craving you might get!Easy to read and follow, I have enjoyed the authors previous small batch book as well, and find I like this one even more.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2014
I bought this book along with her other baking for 2 cookbook. This one... is my favorite of the two. Chocolate recipes that come out toothsome! I love the velvety textures of the cakes! They come out amazing every, single, time. The Kahlua Chocolate Cake is by far my favorite so far. The Ghirardelli's Bittersweet chocolate is a must for the ganache. Don't go cheap on the chocolate! And a note to those who are going through these reviews. If you buy this book, do yourself a favor and go to your local favorite box store i.e. Target, Wal-mart, ect and buy the mini pans. They work well and you don't have to worry about baking in cans, unless you are set on it. Again Debby, thank you for these amazing recipes! Quantity and quality all in one delicious package if you take the time to make them.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2011
I love this book!!! It manages to help you create amazing yummy desserts but not in huge quantities. Sometimes I only want a baby chocolate cake or a few cookies...not an enormous quantity. The chocolate cake on the cover can be made in washed out clean as a whistle tuna cans...or soup cans!!! The best thing about this book for me is that my mom saved all of my toy bakeware and I am using them for some of these recipes. It is a wonderful book for a small family or when you just want a teeny little taste of something!!!
12 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 10, 2021
Nice selection but I was hoping for recipes for 6” cakes. Most of these are meant for using empty cans as baking tins. I can convert them tho!
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2013
So nice not to have to make huge batches. Because these recipes are small batches, they are not only perfect for just 1 or 2 people, but they are a great timesaver.......quick to fix, quick to bake, & there isn't a mega-quantity left to tempt you into porking-out on what's left. Anything chocolate is sooooo tempting..........to dieters and non-dieters. Also, these recipes can easily be modified into other really cool small batch baking creations. Thanks Debby, for 'Small-Batch Baking for Chocolate Lovers."!
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2020
Good recipes perfectly portioned for small batches. A must have for those students moving out on their own.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2014
I purchased this book for my wife for Christmas, and I have already benefitted from some really delicious sweets! I can't wait for more! I know my wife appreciates not have to reduce the measurements as she often has to do since our family of 3 doesn't consumer major quantities of goodies each week! Very handy, concise recipes!
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2013
I already made some mini cakes for my boyfriend and I while he was working one night. They were deliciously chocolatey and so quick & easy! We both have sweet tooths but are health minded enough that we don't want to overdo it. Can't wait to try out more recipes!
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2011
The one objection I have to this book is, unfortunately, a VERY big one. The author advocates saving cans (from canned veggies, fruits, beans, etc) to bake in, and many of her recipes specify their use. On page 8 where she discusses the use of cans she even mentions "tomato cans" specifically. Although she cautions against using cans that are dented or nicked, and that they must be thoroughly clean, she entirely ignores the fact that 98% of cans used today have BPA (bisphenol-A) linings. Especially tomato product cans which almost always have BPA in the lining because tomatoes are so acidic and will otherwise react negatively with the can metal.

Anyone can google "BPA in can linings" to read reams of information about the problem of BPA in can linings and how it is not only released into the canned food but also by heating which is precisely what the author is advocating in her book.

To not mention one single word about the presence of BPA in the cans she is recommending be used as baking containers is absolutely reprehensible IMHO. At the very least she could have included a comment about the POSSIBILITY (even though it is virtually a certainty) that this chemical could be part of the can so that the baker can make his or her own decision.

The responsible thing would have been to give an alternate container for each recipe that specifies the use of a can, thereby allowing a completely toxin-free alternative baking method for those who do not wish to expose themselves to this chemical which has already been banned in Europe, Canada and some US states; but our ever efficient government has yet to act on a 2009 bill which would ban its use in containers nationwide. It is interesting to note that many of the existing bans specify baby bottles which are ... you guessed it.. exposed to heat. It is already banned in reusable water bottles (Nalgene).

Unfortunately the author of this book has chosen to include a possible health hazard in her recipe methods without offering a safe alternative. If I could give this book zero stars for that reason, I would. Totally irresponsible.
29 people found this helpful
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