There’s one common ingredient running through the pages of Sarah Kieffer’s fifth cookbook, “100 Afternoon Sweets,” but you won’t find it in any recipes.
It simultaneously fills your soul and satisfies your appetite, whether you’re baking Blueberry Muffin Cake and Banana Bread Brownies or Scotcharoo Blondies and Peanut Butter and Jelly Cake. It’s nostalgia, and it’s not in short supply.
The recipes will conjure memories of childhood afternoons, whether those afternoons were bursting through the door following the aroma of mom’s fresh-baked brownies or were more self-sufficient, with toaster pastries always ready with a warm welcome.
“This book is geared toward afternoon sweets, which to me are all the baked goods that I would normally crave in the afternoon hours, complete with a cup of tea or coffee,” Kieffer wrote in the book’s introduction. “When I learned to bake, it was always in the afternoon hours that I did so: after school with my mom, or the late-afternoon shift at the Blue Heron,” the Winona coffeeshop where she worked while in college.
Kieffer’s latest is divided into eight chapters: one-bowl bakes; brownies, blondies and bars; pie bakes; no bakes; for a crowd; weekend projects; beginnings and ends, which handles what you need to start or finish recipes, like crusts and buttercreams; and extras (think creams, curds and streusel).
What you won’t find? Cookies (there’s “100 Cookies” for that). We caught up with Kieffer, who in addition to writing cookbooks and the Vanilla Bean Blog, is the Minnesota Star Tribune’s baking columnist, about her most important baking tip and the recipe everyone should have in their culinary arsenal.
Thinking about afternoon treats reminds me of after-school snacks in the best way. What inspired you to write this book?
The afternoon holds a sweet spot for me in many ways: For many years I worked from midday to close as both a barista and baker at various coffeehouses, and I often set up camp in those same places, studying while sipping lattes and nibbling on treats. The afternoon can also hold a short space of solitude and stillness, and while I can’t find it every day, the days I can, I cherish. This book is a celebration of those stolen moments, alone, or shared; the brief minute (or two) of taking a breath, drinking that last cup of coffee and enjoying something sweet.