Sunday, February 2, 2020

Guide to Essential Baking Tools

Chowhound guide to essential baking tools

From Christmas cookies and birthday cakes to bake sale brownies and Sunday morning muffins, there’s almost always an occasion (or a good excuse) to bake. Whether you’re ready for your spot on “The Great British Baking Show” or more suited to an episode of “Nailed It,” having the right equipment can only make your baking better. So we’ve rounded up the best baking tools to have in your arsenal.

Sure, you can get by with the bare minimum—for decades, my mom used a heavy silver fork for everything from creaming butter to beating eggs and was the official birthday cake baker in the family (and at work) because her desserts were amazing, but even she’s upgraded to a KitchenAid in the past few years. Speaking of stand mixers, some of these baking tools are definitely more nice-to-have than must-own, but all are certain to improve your baking game.

Related Reading: The Best Baking Books for a Cozy Kitchen

Stand Mixer

We Like: KitchenAid Artisan Series 5-Quart Tilt-Head Stand Mixer, $299 on Amazon

KitchenAid stand mixer

KitchenAid

A stand mixer is a bit of a splurge, but it’s well worth the investment. It makes whipping cream and egg whites, mixing doughs and batters, and even kneading bread a breeze, but it does a lot more than that, too. Another bonus: you can leave them running while you attend to other tasks (just don’t forget and overwork your dough). Depending on your budget and your space, you can buy smaller models, like the KitchenAid Mini, or ones with a bowl-lift design (great when you don’t have a lot of clearance under your cabinets)—and they all come in a rainbow of gorgeous colors to match any décor. See how to choose which KitchenAid mixer is right for you.Buy Now

Hand Mixer

We Like: KitchenAid 9-Speed Hand Mixer, $79.99 on Amazon

KitchenAid 9-speed hand mixer

KitchenAid

If a stand mixer isn’t in your budget, a hand mixer is the next best thing (and it couldn’t hurt to have both, so you can break out the latter for smaller jobs). In any case, a hand-held electric mixer sure beats, well, beating eggs and whipping cream with a whisk—or a fork, as my mom can attest. This 9-speed model comes with the usual egg beater attachments, as well as 2 dough hooks and a pro whisk. Like your stand mixer, you can put it to work doing odd jobs like shredding cooked meat too.Buy Now

Oven Thermometer

We Like: Rubbermaid Stainless Steel Oven Thermometer, $7 on Amazon

Rubbermaid oven thermometer for accurate baking temp

Rubbermaid/Amazon

You might think this is pointless—after all, your oven has temperature settings already. But you might be surprised by how inaccurate those controls really are; an oven thermometer will tell you exactly how hot your oven actually is, and allow you to adjust accordingly, for precisely baked cakes, cookies, breads, and more.Buy Now

Nonstick Silicone Mats

We Like: AmazonBasics Silicone Baking Mats, 3 for $14.99

non-stick silicone baking mats

Amazon

Nonstick silicone mats are perfect for rolling out dough, cooling sticky candy or chocolate-coated confections, and for lining baking pans so cookies and other baked goods don’t stick (without the need for any extra fat, or wrestling with parchment paper—plus, you can reuse them for years). You can get an extra-large silicone mat with circular guidelines for rolling out pie crusts, which is helpful if you’re not great at free-handing it, but you’ll probably want to stock up on several baking mats anyway—and these are a great price. One downside is that they do develop an oily film after a while, but with a little know-how and basic kitchen items, you can clean silicone baking mats to get that greasy coating off.Buy Now

Digital Scale

We Like: Greater Goods Digital Kitchen Scale, $9.95 on Amazon

digital kitchen scale

Greater Goods/Amazon

Serious bakers need a scale. It’s the surest way to measure the precise amount of each ingredient—which matters quite a lot in baking—and it lets you cook from metric recipes without having to do any conversions. Another bonus: you can just keep adding same-step ingredients to the same bowl, so you dirty fewer dishes. These days, digital scales are incredibly affordable, and small enough that they barely impose on your storage space. Really, they deserve a place in every kitchen. Buy Now

Pastry Bags and Piping Tips

We Like: Kootek Frosting Tools Set with Piping Tips and Bags, 42 pieces for $10.99 on Amazon

professional cake decorating set with silicone piping bagsand frosting tips

Kootek/Amazon

If you’re going to be making frosted cakes, cupcakes, and cookies, a professional-grade decorating set will help your goodies look their absolute best. But they’re also handy for other tasks, like piping meringue, forming and filling macarons, and squeezing out pâte à choux pastry for protfiteroles and éclairs. This set comes with two reusable silicone pastry bags, 36 different icing tips, and two flower nails for building beautiful roses—even if you need to work up to that. Bonus: They also make your deviled egg filling look extra fancy.Buy Now

Heavy Wooden Rolling Pin

We Like: J.K. Adams 12-Inch Gourmet Rolling Pin, $18 at Sur La Table

JK Adams wooden rolling pin

J.K. Adams

A good solid rolling pin is essential for homemade pies, tarts, and cut-out cookies. The tapered French rolling pin is preferred by many professional bakers; the dowel style allows for more control and maneuverability, yet can be harder for more casual bakers to wield than a the handled style. Whichever type you go with, a longer length rolls out more dough at once, and a heavy weight means you take fewer passes over the dough—but marble can be too heavy. Wood is ideal; just be sure not to soak it in water, lest it split and warp. Adding removable bands can help you get an even thickness across your crust as well.Buy Now

Bench Scraper

We Like: OXO Good Grips Stainless Steel Bench Scraper, $9.99 on Amazon

OXO Good Grips bench scraper and pastry cutter

OXO/Amazon

Bench scrapers may seem unnecessary, but they’re great (and inexpensive) little tools for cutting butter, scraping up sticky dough from your counters, and portioning out scones, balls of pie dough, and even roughly chopping mix-ins (or vegetables). If you don’t have one, remember this tip from The Faux Martha: A stiff metal spatula can serve the same purpose.Buy Now

Half Sheet Pans

We Like: Nordic Ware Natural Aluminum Half Sheet Baking Pans, 2 for $21.99 on Amazon

Nordic Ware Natural Aluminum Hallf Sheet Pan

Nordic Ware

If you want to bake a variety of things, you’ll need a lot of pans: cupcake pans; loaf pans for banana bread and pound cake; round cake pans for lovely layers; 8- or 9-inch square pans for brownies, blondies, and bars; springform pans for cheesecakes; removable-bottom fluted tart pans; maybe a nice Bundt pan too—and nonstick versions of all are tempting, but if they’re dark, they’ll make your baked goods brown more quickly. A lighter colored aluminum is especially great for sheet pans, which are probably the most versatile ones you’ll invest in; they’re great for baking cookies, sheet cakes, and slab pies, as well as toasting nuts, coconut, and granola, and roasting veggies and meat. These heavy-duty, natural aluminum pans are rust-proof and have a rim to help roly-poly items stay put (a cookie sheet, by contrast, won’t have a raised edge all around).Buy Now

Cooling Racks

We Like: Betty Crocker 3-Tier Cooling Rack, $14.21 on Amazon

three tier cooling rack

Betty Crocker/Amazon

Cooling racks are another item you might think you don’t really need, but they help air circulate beneath your pan so your baked goods cool down more quickly and retain the texture you were aiming for. A three-tier cooling rack is nice because it frees up valuable counter space, so you can efficiently cool several pies, cake tiers, and batches of cookies at once.Buy Now

Balloon Whisk

We Like: OXO Good Grips 11-Inch Better Balloon Whisk, $9.99 on Amazon

OXO balloon whisk

OXO/Amazon

If you’re intent on whipping your eggs or cream under your own power, a balloon whisk is your best bet, and this one has a comfy silicone handle. It’s also good to keep on hand for quick and easy jobs when you don’t want to plug in a mixer—and you’ll use it for lots of savory applications too, from sauces to scrambled eggs. A silicone whisk might be tempting, but uncoated metal tines work better for whipping and clean up just as easily if you rinse them right away. On the subject of whisks, if you want to bake bread and aren’t investing in a stand mixer, you might want to check out this Danish dough whisk, which helps blend thicker batters and doughs without making your hands sticky.Buy Now

Liquid Measuring Cups

We Like: Pyrex Glass Measuring Cups, 4 for $25.88 on Amazon

Pyrex glass measuring cups

Pyrex

While we know digital scales are superior for accurately portioning out ingredients, we also know that lots of people will continue to use measuring cups (and honestly, we still do too…a lot of the time). So it’s essential to have high-quality measuring cups. These durable Pyrex glass measuring cups let you clearly see the level of your ingredients from the outside; the spout makes pouring liquids a neater prospect; they can be microwaved (handy for melting butter) or placed in the freezer (great for chilling cream); and they’re dishwasher-safe.Buy Now

Cookie Scoop

We Like: OXO Good Grips Medium Cookie Scoop, $14.99 on Amazon

OXO Good Grips Cookie Scoops

OXO

These spring-loaded scoops ensure uniformly sized cookies—and unlike using tablespoons to form the balls of dough, the cookie scoops keep your hands clean. Plus, you can use them for portioning out liquid cupcake batters, making truffles, and carving spheres from soft fruits and veggies too.Buy Now

Mesh Sieve or Sifter

We Like: Chef’n Sift ’n Sieve, $17.95 at Sur La Table

flour sifter or mesh sieve

Sur La Table

A crank-handle flour sifter is one of those old-fashioned gadgets that’s actually useful—but a sieve or mesh strainer can do the same job, as well as many others, from straining fruit juice to standing in for a colander when you want to rinse berries. This one includes a scraper for pressing soft fruits through the sieve while leaving the seeds behind, but several smaller sizes of sieves with handles will prove useful too, since they’ll fit into smaller pots and bowls.Buy Now

KitchenAid Scale and Sifter Attachment, $99.99 on Amazon (normally $169.99)

If you already have a KitchenAid stand mixer, this handy attachment combines a scale and sifter for even easier baking.
Buy Now

Mixing Bowls

We Like: Pyrex Smart Essentials Mixing Bowl Set with Locking Lids, 4 for $16.99 at Target

Pyrex mixing bowls with lids

Pyrex

Full disclosure: At my house, we have a lot of mismatched mixing bowls, many vintage (and mostly ceramic, with a couple stainless steel bowls for making ganache and whipping cream). But if you’re in the market for new bowls or could use some extras, this nesting set of Pyrex mixing bowls is a great option—they can go into the freezer, the microwave, and the dishwasher, and they come with lids, so you can store your finished dough or ice cream base in the fridge until you’re ready to finish the recipe.Buy Now

Pastry Blender

We Like: OXO Pastry Blender, $12 at Sur La Table

OXO Good Grips pastry blender

Sur La Table

Incorporating small pieces of cold butter into your dough is the key to flaky pie crust, biscuits, and tart doughs. You can keep cutting that butter into your biscuit and pie dough with two forks if you really want to…or you can get yourself a pastry blender and make it much easier. This is also useful for chopping other things besides butter (I used mine the other day for mashing avocados; worked like a charm).Buy Now

Silicone Spatula

We Like: Di Oro Silicone Spatula Set, 3 for $25.96 on Amazon

best silicone spatulas (Di Oro)

Di Oro

Silicone spatulas are flexible, heat-resistant, easy to clean, and soft so they won’t scratch your bowls and pans, making them great for folding flour into batters, gently mixing in dough additions, stirring melting chocolate, and more. Look for a comfortable-to-grip handle, a one-piece design (so the head won’t come off and water won’t get trapped between it and the handle), a blade that bends but not too much, and a good size. Cook’s Illustrated named Di Oro their favorite spatula of 2017, and this set includes a spoontula and a mini spatula (perfect for getting every last bit of peanut butter out of the jar, among other things) in addition to your standard size spatula.Buy Now

Offset Spatula

We Like: OXO Good Grips Offset Icing Spatula, $9.99 on Amazon

If you’re ready to graduate from frosting cakes with a butter knife, an offset spatula is just the thing for neatly spreading icing and filling onto baked goods without making a mess. It helps level off bar cookies and brownies so they rise evenly, as well.Buy Now

Round Cutters

We Like: Stainless Steel Round Biscuit Cutters, 5 for $14.95 at Sur La Table

stainless steel round biscuit cutter set

Sur La Table

Fancifully shaped cookie cutters are great, but even if you don’t plan on making gingerbread men, ninjabread men, sugar cookies in the shapes of trees and stars, or, uh, dinosaurs, a set of various sizes of round cutters are great for lots of things, from making simple cut-out cookies and biscuits to making perfect polka dots from fondant.Buy Now

Grater-Zester

We Like: Microplane 12-Inch Premium Stainless Steel Zester Grater with Soft-Touch Handle-Black, $11.32 on Amazon

Microplane zester and grater

Microplane

A sharp, fine grater like the classic Microplane is fantastic not just for zesting citrus, but for grating fresh nutmeg, cinnamon, ginger, and even chocolate (and, of course, making fluffy mounds of hard cheese).Buy Now

Once you’re all geared up, all that’s left to do is decide what to bake—so check out some of our favorite baking books, and our baking recipes archive for breads, cakes, cookies, pies, tarts, and tons more sweet (and savory) treats.

Related Video: See Some of Dorie Greenspan’s Favorite Tools on a Tour of Her Connecticut Kitchen

This post was originally published by Sara Lime on January 8, 2007 and has been updated by Jen Wheeler with new links, images, and text.

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The Best Cookbooks for Bakers

Need a gift for a big-time baker, or just looking for inspiration (and/or help) when it comes to making the most of the cozy winter baking season? These baking cookbooks are great gifts for friends and family, or for yourself!

Lots of people find baking totally therapeutic—and obviously we completely agree. Eating the results is just a bonus, and sharing them with friends and family is even better (if only because it saves you some calories).

We’ve rounded up new and classic baking cookbooks that include some of the most tasty cakes, pies, and sweets around to keep you and your friends’ content all season—and all year, for that matter. And they happen to make perfect gifts for any fellow bakers too.

“Baking at République: Masterful Techniques and Recipes” by Margarita Manzke and Betty Hallock, $21.64 on Amazon

Amazon

If you haven’t had the chance to make it out to the Los Angeles hotspot République, this cookbook by their executive pastry chef is the next best thing. It has over 100 recipes and tons of gorgeous pictures that will have your mouth watering—and your friends telling you you should open a bakery once they try your homemade versions of these treats. (Or vice versa.)Buy Now

“Tartine: A Classic Revisited” by Elisabeth Prueitt and Chad Robertson, $24.99 on Amazon

Amazon

Elisabeth Prueitt and Chad Robertson of San Francisco’s Tartine are known for some of the most delicious treats (including the bakery’s famous Morning Bun)—and now they’ve updated their iconic cookbook with 68 new recipes, like a sweet potato cake with meringue topping, and a creamy cheesecake with a digestive biscuit crust (and, yes, that Morning Bun). They’ve even included some gluten-free options. It is 2019, after all.Buy Now

“Pastry Love: A Baker’s Journal of Favorite Recipes” by Joanne Chang, $25.99 on Amazon

Amazon

In another beautiful new book, Joanne Chang, a James Beard award-winning baker, shares her love for pastries. Chang has eight super successful bakeries called Flour in Boston, but this book includes many items that wouldn’t make the cut there and are best baked and enjoyed at home instead (with bakery-ready treats also in the mix, of course). She shares personal anecdotes, expert tips, and 125 delicious dessert recipes like strawberry slab pie, mocha chip cookies, and malted chocolate cake. Get a Homemade Nutella Babka recipe from the book for a first taste.Buy Now

“All About Cake: A Milk Bar Cookbook” by Christina Tosi, $23.49 on Amazon

Amazon

If you haven’t tried a cake from Milk Bar, you’re seriously missing out. They are the most moist, melt-in-your-mouth cakes I’ve ever tasted. They also include little cake balls in the icing. This cookbook includes not only Christina Tosi’s famous naked layer cakes, cake truffles, and Bundt cakes, but recipes for two-minute mug cakes, slow cooker banana chocolate peanut butter cake, and tips for inventing your own creative desserts worthy of a cult following.Buy Now

“The Baking Bible” by Rose Levy Beranbaum, $25.36 on Amazon

The Baking Bible

Amazon

Rose Levy Beranbaum, also known as the diva of desserts, released her very own version of a religious experience in 2014: “The Baking Bible.” The book includes simple recipes with foolproof instructions and expert tips, as well as show-stoppers that will stun your guests during parties. It’s a book that’s sure to inspire complete devotion in the kitchen.Buy Now

“Easy Baking From Scratch” by Eileen Gray, $12.99 on Amazon

Amazon

There are just times when you need a super simple recipe to satisfy your sweet tooth (or your bread tooth), and Eileen Gray has answered that call. This book contains over 100 recipes for baked goods made with very basic ingredients that you probably already have in your kitchen. It’s a great title for beginning bakers or any perpetually busy baked good lovers on your list.Buy Now

“Mary Berry’s Baking Bible” by Mary Berry, $26.49 on Amazon

Amazon

We all know that Mary Berry knows her way around a kitchen, and we’re lucky that she chose to share her wisdom through this book, another bible for bakers. It contains over 250 recipes, as well as tips to make your baking life a breeze. This is a must for any “Great British Baking Show” fan who still misses Mary—or anyone who simply wants to bake like a pro.Buy Now

“The Last Course: The Desserts of Gramercy Tavern” by Claudia Fleming and Melissa Clark, $25.97 on Amazon

Amazon

New York City’s Gramercy Tavern is known for its iconic, James Beard award-winning desserts. Luckily, pastry chef Claudia Fleming was gracious enough to share her recipes with the world (with the help of Melissa Clark). Fleming is passionate about using fresh, seasonal ingredients and includes 175 recipes that will inspire you to make the most of produce (and perennial ingredients like chocolate and cream, of course) all year long. Buy Now

“The Cake Bible” by Rose Levy Beranbaum, $22.49 on Amazon

The Cake Bible

Amazon

This classic cookbook by aforementioned baking goddess Rose Levy Beranbaum makes baking a total cakewalk—pun definitely intended. This book is known for making complex recipes and techniques super simple and covers every type of cake, from pancakes to multi-tiered wedding and birthday cakes. Buy Now

“The Bread Bible” by Rose Levy Beranbaum, $23.45 on Amazon

“The Bread Bible” by Rose Levy Beranbaum

Amazon

Calling all bread lovers! In addition to “The Cake Bible” and “The Baking Bible,” Rose Levy Beranbaum also has all of the most important tips for aspiring bread bakers collected in one tome. She includes delicious recipes for flatbread, brioche, crumpets, rye bread, and many more, and helpful background for understanding how and why things work in the world of bread baking.Buy Now

“Simple Cake: All You Need to Keep Your Friends and Family in Cake” by Odette Williams, $13.29 on Amazon

Amazon

You can never have too much cake! And no matter what kind of cake you love, Odette Williams has a perfect recipe for it. This book covers a range of flavors from fresh and citrusy to decadent and chocolate-laden—something for every occasion. Williams also includes cool decorating ideas and toppings so your cakes will look as great as they taste. See a Milk and Honey Cake recipe from the book. Buy Now



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A Comprehensive Guide to Baking Brownies

Brownies are like perfect vacations; they mean different things to different people—and, as with destinations, there are countless variations on the brownie theme.

Brownie adherents have their favorites: fudgy, gooey, dense, cakey, all edge, with nuts, never in the same room as nuts, made with cocoa, made with couverture chocolate, frosted, crisp, chewy. To get what you want, you have to know how to get there. See? Just like vacations.

There is a starting point: what all brownies have in common. Chocolate, fat, sweetener, and flour. Eggs? Not necessarily. These days, there are vegan brownies with winsome texture and flavor.

Texture’s a great starting point. Fitting their name, fudgy brownies are moist, with full-frontal chocolate and a texture somewhere between fudge and cake. Gooey ones all but melt away, leaving a fabulously fatty chocolate memory in the mouth. Dense and chocolatey, chewy brownies bring resistance to the conversation. Cakey brownies are fluffy, and they sometimes come with frosting—a horror to some brownie aficionados, and a source of sweet delight to others.

An asset to frosting: because it isn’t baked, you can add booze to it, turning your batch of brownies into an adults-only affair.

You know what you want. How do you get there?

First, Chill Out

Chill your batter. This isn’t only summertime advice. In “Bittersweet: Recipes and Tales from a Life in Chocolate,” Alice Medrich advocates setting your batter-filled pan in the refrigerator for a few days. This will improve the texture–the same way it does when you chill dough for scones–and give flavors time to blend (as with stews, so with brownies).

Bittersweet: Recipes and Tales from a Life in Chocolate, $27 on Amazon

More of Medrich's best advice (and recipes).
Buy Now

Chocolate vs Cocoa Powder + Flour and Eggs

“Using chocolate will give you a melt-in-your mouth, fudgier brownies,” says Miro Uskokovic of Gramercy Tavern, “while cocoa powder will give you a chewier, cakier brownie.” Uskokovic likes his brownies crisp on the outside and gooey in the middle. For him, “less flour is better. Use a cake flour, because that gives you a denser, gooier middle.” His final tip: “slightly underbake it.” If you bake it fully, then that gooiness in the middle will go away.

Kansas City pastry chef Nick Wesemann is another one for playing with textures. “A cakey brownie has a higher portion of eggs,” Wesemann says, “which extends the protein network.”

Mixing Method

To hone your skills at changing recipes, Wesemann suggests finding a recipe you like and changing the mixing method. “For a fudgy brownie, melt your butter and chocolate together and add that to the whipped eggs and sugar. For a cakey brownie, cream the butter and sugar with a paddle for five to ten minutes, slowly add the eggs, and then finally add melted sugar and cooled chocolate.”

KitchenAid Artisan Tilt-Head 5-Quart Stand Mixer, $299 on Amazon

A classic in any kitchen.
Buy Now

Either way, you’ll add the flour and other remaining ingredients at the end–but these changes in method, Wesemann says, “will allow you to create two types of brownie without the stress of wondering whether a newly created formula is going to fail.” In short, it’s a recipe for success—two ways.

Make It Fudgier

To build a fudgier brownie, Wesemann suggests increasing the sugar. Both Wesemann and Uskokovic say that you can get a gooier brownie by changing from white sugar to brown. Remember, you don’t need to change everything. A shift in ratio—subbing brown sugar for some of the white—may deliver the results you crave.

Another easy way to  bump up fudginess is to add an egg yolk. That will make the brownie richer, without adding oil. Don’t go overboard. Brownies should have some give. Keep it to one added yolk, and you’ll get a more substantial bite without making brownies as hard as overtime.

Related Reading: 5 Tips for Perfectly Fudgy Brownies Every Time

Make It Cakier

If you like your brownies on the dry side, then you can move that way and elevate your cocoa game with one ingredient change: black cocoa. Very low in fat, it has none of mass-market cocoa’s bitterness. Because it’s acid-free, it won’t react to baking soda. Look for recipes with baking powder instead–or sub just a little bit of black cocoa in a recipe. Your brownies will be darker and richer, with a warm, vanilla-like note.

The Cocoa Trader Black Cocoa Powder, $12.99 on Amazon

Replace some of the Dutch-process cocoa in any recipe with this decadent black cocoa for true chocolate lovers.
Buy Now

Mix-Ins

Brownies are great for mix-ins. Uskokovic is a fan of chocolate chips. Ashley Dickson, pastry chef at Pondicheri in New York City, likes nuts. Dickson also adds cinnamon to her brownies—not enough to turn them into cinnamon brownies, but enough to brighten the flavors and make that next bite harder to resist.

Related Reading: 11 Ingredients to Make Your Baking Better

Don’t Overbake

Start testing for done-ness well before the recipe’s end time. Check again every five minutes. When you push the brownie with the flats of your fingers, it should feel set, and not wobbly. To make sure, test the batter. If you always have toothpicks around, you have the tool you need. If not, then buy a cake-tester. OXO makes one that won’t slip from your hand and land on the hot oven door—not that that’s ever happened to a baker. It’s under $10 at Amazon, which is a bargain for something that will help you to achieve brownie perfection. You don’t want to see damp batter, but it doesn’t need to be bone-dry. When the pick comes out with a few moist crumbs, your brownies are done.

OXO Good Grips Non-Slip Cake Tester, $8.38 on Amazon

Upgrade from your old wooden toothpicks.
Buy Now

Use the Right Pan

Pan size matters. This may look obvious, but it’s a rookie mistake plenty of experienced home bakers make. If a recipe calls for an eight-inch pan, and you reach for a pan that’s thirteen-by-nine, then you’re going to have thinner, crisper brownies. That isn’t necessarily a bad thing. If you love the ingredients in a recipe, but want a different texture, then changing the size of the pan may bring exactly the results you desire. Flatten your brownies, add edges, maximize thickness…Just know that you’re changing the recipe, and how.

On the subject of pans, don’t bake your brownies in glass. The heat-absorbing properties of glass increase the likelihood that your brownies will burn. That’s never good news.

Related Reading: Glass vs Metal Baking Pans

Fact of life: Baked goods get sticky, especially when and where you don’t want them to–and chocolate chips seem to delight in adhering to pans. Make brownie removal smoother with parchment paper. It’s in every pastry kitchen. One try, and you’ll understand exactly why that’s so.

For Chewy Edge Fanatics

For those who like eating on the edge, Amazon offers not one, but two, edgy brownie pans. The Baker’s Edge turns back and forth like a Friday night queue for a trendy nightclub. For easy carrying to parties, you can get it with a silicone lid (that also comes with wedges, for making smaller recipes. But who’d want to make a smaller batch? Freeze the extras, share them with family members, or use them to make new friends.)

Baker's Edge Nonstick Edge Brownie Pan, $35.95 on Amazon

No need to snatch your edges—they're everywhere with this pan.
Buy Now

Your other option is the Bakelicious:

Bakelicious Crispy Corner Non-Stick Brownie Pan, $19.50 on Amazon

With holes and bends galore, this turns out brownies with edges everywhere.
Buy Now

But if you’re a fan of chewier edges and gooier middles, just use a regular square pan. Now, get baking.

Brownie Recipes for Everyone

Besides our own fantastic brownie recipes, here are some more to try (you can never have too many!):

Best Cocoa Brownies

classic chocolate brownie recipe

Chowhound

Alice Medrich’s chewy, crisp-topped brownies make the most of cocoa powder. Smitten Kitchen’s adaptation is made with seven ingredients you’re likely to have in your kitchen (there go the excuses), with walnuts and pecans as options. Get the Best Cocoa Brownies recipe.

Fudgy Vegan Turtle Brownies


Not all brownies are square. These vegan rounds have crusty edges, gooey tops. and tender, almost melt-away centers. To up that ante, eat the brownies while they’re warm. Flax stands in for eggs—no weird, unpronounceable ingredients required. But there is a surprising secret ingredient: black beans. Get the Fudgy Vegan Turtle Brownies recipe.

Kir Jensen’s Ultimate Brownies

gooey chocolate brownie recipe

Chowhound

More brownies baked in a muffin pan—and topped with ooey-gooey extras. The key to the deep chocolate flavor is to use Dutch process cocoa powder, but the chocolate ganache topping doesn’t hurt. Get Kir Jensen’s Ultimate Brownie recipe.

Buttermilk Brownies


These fudgy buttermilk brownies have a hint of tartness in the batter and frosting. They pack enough richness to induce a very happy chocolate coma. Get the Buttermilk Brownies recipe.

Salty Deep-Dark Chocolate Brownies

Chowhound

David Lebovitz’s deep chocolate brownies get their density from black cocoa and dark brown sugar, and sophistication from espresso and flaky sea salt. These are brownies you could bring to the most elegant dinner party—or cheerfully keep to yourself for an offline weekend at home. Get the Salty Deep-Dark Chocolate Brownies recipe.

Caramel-Filled Brownies


Move from gooey to oozy, and add a complementary flavor. These brownies have a horizontal layer of creamy caramel. You’ll get crisp, rich, and delightfully messy in every bite. Get the Caramel-Filled Brownies recipe.

Grain-Free Tahini Brownies


Going grain-free doesn’t mean missing out. Drizzled with dark chocolate, these tahini-based brownies taste like decadence. Your biggest problem will be keeping the grain-eating omnivores from stealing all of your brownies. Get the Grain-Free Tahini Brownies recipe.

Best Ever Chewy Brownies


These brownies bring crackle on top and chew in the middle, with a smattering of chocolate chunks to keep things darkly interesting. Get the Best Ever Chewy Brownies recipe.

Related Video: How to Make Vegan Brownies Chewy



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