The Province

Toffee bars with an edge

You can swap the nuts and chocolate, but don’t forget the bourbon

- ELIZABETH KARMEL

These bar cookies are everything! They are loaded with texture, flavour and just enough salt to make them addictive.

They are packed full of pecans, toffee bits, chopped white chocolate and dried coconut but the sprinkling of bourbon is what really takes them over the edge.

The flavours come together and deepen with the bourbon accenting and accentuati­ng the buttery vanilla and caramel notes. This is a brownie for people who don’t like chocolate and that is how I came to make it.

My friend, David, was coming to dinner and I wanted to make a homemade sweet to go with his favourite store-bought dulce de leche ice cream. Ordinarily, brownies of some sort might come to mind, but David is not a fan of chocolate so I thought about a blond brownie filled with coconut — his favourite sweet ingredient and pecans.

I added the toffee bits because I have had great success with them. They melt into the batter as it bakes, leaving behind a more complex sweet caramel flavour that elevates a simple butter, flour and sugar cookie.

Finally, I chopped up a bar of good white chocolate to add more texture and another flavour to the bar.

The beauty of these bars is that you can add a different nut (toasted hazelnuts or walnuts would be great) and different chocolate (a combinatio­n of chocolates or even butterscot­ch morsels would work well).

I like to chop a high-quality chocolate bar into pieces instead of using morsels because the flavour melds into the bar seamlessly where the morsels are sometimes too much — too sweet and too large — which upsets the ratio of batter to add-ins.

The only add-ins that I wouldn’t change would be the toffee bits and the sweetened shredded coconut. The coconut makes the texture of the bar cookie so much moister and chewier while adding to the complex flavour.

And don’t omit the bourbon. That addition makes all the difference in the world. In the same way that a splash of bourbon or wine enhances savory foods, these bar cookies are so much better for the bourbon.

Tipsy Toffee Bars

Makes: 20-22 bars

Start to finish: 60 minutes, plus additional cooling time

2 cups (500 mL) all-purpose flour 1 tsp (5 mL) baking powder

1/2 scant tsp (2.5 mL) fine-grain sea

salt

1 generous cup (250mL) pecan halves

1/2 lb. (226 g) unsalted butter, melted

1 cup (250 mL) packed light brown sugar

1 cup (250 mL) packed dark brown sugar

2 large eggs, mixed together 2 tsp (10 mL) vanilla extract 2 tbsp. (30 mL) of your favourite bourbon

2/3 cup (160 mL) toffee bits 1 generous cup (250mL) sweetened dried coconut

1/2 of 4-oz. (114-g) bar of white chocolate, chopped

Chef’s Note: Use a 9-by-11-by-2inch (22.5-by-28-by-5-cm) baking pan. I think the usual 9-by-13-inch (22.5-by-33-cm) pan makes a bar cookie that is too thin, but if you use

it, note that your cooking time will be shorter.

Preheat the oven to 350 F (175 C). Whisk together flour, baking powder and salt. Set aside. Toast pecans in a preheated oven for 10-15 minutes at 250 F (120 C). When cool, chop the pecans and set aside.

Melt butter and pour into a bowl. Add sugar, eggs and vanilla and mix well. Add bourbon and mix again. Stir in the flour mixture and mix well, turning the batter several times to make sure that all the flour is incorporat­ed.

Add the chopped pecans, the toffee bits, coconut and white chocolate. Stir together with a blending fork to make sure that the add-ins are equally incorporat­ed.

Prepare your baking pan with nonstick cooking spray. Spread batter into the pan by dropping equal spoonfuls all over the pan and joining

them together by spreading the surface with an offset spatula.

Bake for 20 minutes and check the bars. In my oven, the bars took a full 35 minutes, but every oven is different.

I tested them at 20 minutes and every 5 minutes thereafter and they were perfect after baking for 35 minutes. The sides will be crisp and browned and pulling away and the top with be shiny and dry. You want the centre to still be soft but not runny.

Let cool completely. I usually make these the night before or in the morning, so they are completely cool.

Remove the entire block of bar cookies and cut into squares with a dough scraper or serrated knife. Once the bar cookies are cut, they can be wrapped in foil and placed in a re-closeable plastic bag and frozen for up to a month. Thaw before serving.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tipsy toffee bars are packed full of sweet and salty flavours, but it’s a couple dashes of bourbon that really takes this dessert to the next level.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tipsy toffee bars are packed full of sweet and salty flavours, but it’s a couple dashes of bourbon that really takes this dessert to the next level.

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