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WELCOME TO OUR KITCHEN: We're doing a taste test of boxed brownie mixes!
Episode 1227th November 2023 • Cooking with Bruce and Mark • Bruce Weinstein & Mark Scarbrough
00:00:00 00:20:19

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Who doesn't love brownies? But there are so many mixes on the market. We thought we'd give a bunch of them a shot and see which comes out on top.

Want to try our favorite mix? It's right here.

We're Bruce Weinstein & Mark Scarbrough, veteran cookbook authors with over three dozen cookbooks to our names, not counting the ones ghost-written for celebrities. We live for food and cooking, as you can imagine. If you'd like to check out our latest cookbook, THE LOOK & COOK AIR FRYER BIBLE, please go to this link here.

Besides brownies in this show, we've also got a one-minute cooking tip ahead. And we'll let you know what's making us happy in food this week.

Here are the segments for this week's episode of COOKING WITH BRUCE & MARK:

[00:59] Our one-minute cooking tip: Cut potatoes into smaller bits for faster cooking.

[02:37] Our taste test of brownies from boxed mixes. You won't want to miss the fun!

[16:51] What’s making us happy in food this week? Finger Lakes wine-tastings and a Finger Lakes fry bar for lunch!

Transcripts

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Hey, I'm Bruce Weinstein, and this is the podcast cooking with Bruce and Mark.

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And I'm Mark Scarbrough.

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And together with Bruce, we have written a total of 41 books.

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That's impossible to believe, but you didn't know Bruce

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wrote two knitting books.

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In addition to all our cookery books, he wrote a cocktail book

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before we ever hitched up together.

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And I wrote a memoir bookmarked about my life in the great

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works of Western literature.

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Wow, it is crazy.

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So we are now in our food and cooking podcast.

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We've got a one minute cooking tip.

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We're going to do a taste test of brownie mixes.

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I laughed because I couldn't figure out how to get out of that introduction.

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Can you hear that?

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A taste test of brownie mixes.

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Bruce has made a ton, five different brownie mixes.

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And we're going to taste them on air and see what we think about them.

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them, and then we're going to tell you what's making us happy

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besides brownies in food this week.

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Today's one minute cooking tip is all about potatoes.

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Are you making potato salad or mashed potatoes or any

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other dish that requires you?

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What's happening here?

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Is it, what?

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Potato salad.

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Why not?

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I love potato salad in the winter.

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Oh, yum.

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Do, do go on.

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Well if you're making...

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Anything that requires boiled potatoes, cut them into pieces before boiling them.

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I know it sounds obvious, but you would not believe how many people in our

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cooking demos and classes say, Why does it take so long to cook potatoes when

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they're putting them in the water whole?

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It's true.

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It's absolutely true.

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If you cut potatoes up into smaller pieces, they cook more quickly.

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I know.

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But you can't believe how many cooking classes we've been in where people

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have dropped an entire baked potato in a pot and brought it to a boil

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and complains of takes a long

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and it's kind of amazing.

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Yes, indeed.

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Cut them into small bits.

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And just so you know, the smaller you cut them a the more starch they leach into

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the water and be the quicker they cook.

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So if you don't want dry potatoes.

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Don't cut them into little tiny bits.

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Otherwise they leach a lot of starch out into the water.

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Okay, that seems like a good cooking tip.

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All of that potatoes.

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We know all about potatoes, don't we?

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We wrote a book, the ultimate potato book did

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spokespeople for potato boards and all that kind of thing.

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Do you know there's a difference between the U.

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S.

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Potato board And the American Potato Board, and the Idaho Potato Board.

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And do you know they all don't speak to each other?

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Oh no, they hate each other.

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And do you know that they're all Mormons?

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Well, I learned that.

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So there you go, that's what we can tell you about potatoes in the U.

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S.

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Let's move on.

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We have got a taste test of brownie mixes up next.

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This is going to be wild.

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We're going to taste them live on air, so let's get to it.

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I baked these last night, so they've all had the same amount of time

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to cool and stale out or whatever they're going to do together.

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Stale out.

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Well, it's not like I want to, I didn't want to bake one

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yesterday and some this morning.

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I

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baked them all at the same time.

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I know, I know, I get it.

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They do collapse.

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They do condense and collapse.

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They can.

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And I baked them all in 9 inch square pans because every one of these box mix said

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you could do a 9x13 or a 9x9 or an 8x8.

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Isn't that interesting?

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Wait a minute, the box mixes say you can use a variety of pans?

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And they give you the different.

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temperature of your oven and the different cooking time,

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depending upon what you're doing.

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Wow.

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Okay.

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So that's, uh, that's how long it's been since I made a boxed brownie mix.

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So

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I followed the instructions on the back of each box for a nine by nine.

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And I tried to keep the flavor variety the same or as close

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as I could when I bought them.

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So we are going to start with Pillsbury.

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Chocolate fudge.

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Okay.

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Now, all of these brownies just want to say pulling it off.

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You pull it off.

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I'm not talking about because the mixes all require one or two eggs.

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They all required anywhere from half to two thirds of a cup oil.

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They all call for a little bit of water.

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And yes, you can Play with those things, but I didn't I followed it exactly.

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So I pulled it off.

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It's very very dark colored It has the traditional crackly crust.

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I haven't touched it yet Eating it and I have to say that just looking at it.

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It appears though It says what fudge brownies chocolate fudge

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these appear to be pretty cakey.

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So, let's see I'm eating my um,

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um,

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Well, it's very fudgy.

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Okay, so that was the Pillsbury chocolate fudge.

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And here's my take on it.

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My initial reaction, in my head, is candy.

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That's my initial reaction.

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Very sweet.

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Is that I taste candy.

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I'm not tasting brownie.

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I'm tasting

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candy.

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It had, you know what?

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The chocolate is not super intense.

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No.

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It almost, I'm taking your candy theme and running with it.

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I feel like I've eaten a Tootsie Roll.

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Yeah, except, except darker chocolate.

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There is more chocolate to it than

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that.

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But there's a Tootsie Roll flavor afterwards, after I swallowed it.

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There's a

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there's a huge difference and you probably know this already if you're listening

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to us long enough But you probably know there's a huge difference in cocoa powder

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and chocolate in what the final tastes are like in baking and this Definitely is more

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cocoa powder, even though it says fudge to me Yeah, it has that the same thing that

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you know, if I made hot chocolate with cocoa powder It has that quality of taste

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to it except it's really sweet I mean

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so sweet and the sugar is overwhelming the chocolate and so I

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happen if you made it in a nine That's nine by 13.

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They would be thinner and maybe a little more caramelized because

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they would burn a little bit.

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I wonder,

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I wonder about that.

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I wonder if that's a part of what happens.

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Okay, well, so let's, let's not belabor the point and move on down.

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What's the next one?

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The next one is Betty Crocker's dark chocolate.

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And the funny thing is.

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These are a little darker in color, but not terribly

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dark.

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And when I just, I just hunked off a corner of it.

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We're literally pawing this with our fingers.

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Yeah, but we're both eating corner pieces.

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Because we're not Ethan.

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We eat the corners.

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Um, so...

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It's got a crackly top.

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I like that.

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It does.

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It doesn't have as much of a crackly top as the Pillsbury did.

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And, uh, it looks moisture to the eye.

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Oh, there's that word.

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Everyone hates moist.

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But it does look like it's wetter to the eye.

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If it's possible, less chocolate flavor.

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And less sweet.

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Okay, so this is the Betty Crocker dog chocolate.

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It is definitely less sweet.

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Yep, but also less chocolaty.

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So interesting, but I like it better.

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I like the texture.

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Yeah.

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It has a, it, it, when I put it in my, oh, this is going to be gross.

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Now we're going to gross you out on air.

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When I put it in my mouth, it instantly balled

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up.

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Oh, you made a bolus.

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I did make bolus of chocolate.

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Do you know that's the technical term for the wad of food in your

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mouth before you swallow it?

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So, um, the, we worry about boli, is it boli?

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Boluses?

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I don't know.

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We worry about those as cookbook writers.

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Anyway, um, it definitely has that feel.

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I don't want to tell you how we worry about them.

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It has that feel of balling up a bit in my mouth.

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It was interesting.

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The other one, the, the Pillsbury tended to more fall apart, like cake in my mouth.

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This one tended to roll

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forward.

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It did.

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It almost did like what happens with Wonder Bread, where

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you can mush it into a ball.

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It absolutely did.

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What's really fascinating is I'm looking at this cutting board at

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the array of thin, long slices, and it's like a color chart.

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All right, so now this is a much lighter color.

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This is Duncan Hines Chewy Fudge.

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And interestingly enough, the color of it is a lot lighter.

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It looks like milk chocolate on

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the top

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for my money, for my dollar.

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This has the most crackly top to it of all of them.

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And Duncan Hines, I swear, this is what my mom made when I was a kid.

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It also looks the least.

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For, I'm not going to use that word again that everyone hates.

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The M word.

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I'm going to say it looks the least wet inside when I pulled off a piece.

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Again, we are pawing this with our fingers.

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It's

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ridiculous.

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I actually think this one is good.

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It has, oh my gosh, more chocolate.

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That's my childhood.

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It has more chocolate.

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than the Betty Crocker did than the previous one, but also

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less sweet than the Pillsbury.

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I don't know how they do this.

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I'm sure it's a chemical thing because it's dried or it's dried vanilla, but

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it has a vanilla aftertaste to it.

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And looking at the color, because it's a lighter chocolate, my guess

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is that this is not Dutch cocoa.

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Regular cocoa powder is a light.

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Chocolatey color.

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When they use dutched cocoa where they add an alkali to it, it gets

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very dark and that's what gives like Oreos their darkness is dutch cocoa.

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And my guess is this is not, the color of this tells me it's not dutched cocoa.

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But I, so far what I like about this is that I have a little more chocolate.

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Then the first one in the Pillsbury, but less sweet, which is good.

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Yeah, so so far of the three I like this.

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I mean listen, you know, everybody of course loves to put ice cream

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on brownies And the the for me the Pillsbury is too sweet for ice cream.

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This one was too sweet for anything the right one to put ice the so far

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the Duncan Hines is the right one to put and what Duncan Hines is it again?

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Chewy fudge.

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And I didn't get all that chewiness out of it.

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I wonder, now you made these with oil.

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I wonder if we had run in like my mother used to and substituted

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melted butter if we get a

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little more chewiness.

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You can do that, but I was trying to follow, you know, what they say on it.

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Right.

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My mother always substituted melted butter for the oil in the box recipes.

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And I want to say that someone we posted a couple weeks ago that we were

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doing this as a podcast and someone posted online and said that they

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substitute chocolate syrup for the water or sometimes butterscotch ice

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cream topping thinned out for the water.

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Now that would make it very sweet, but she did say that made it chewier or

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it changed the texture and it would.

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When I think about the fact that I added water to all these.

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And I think about the interview I did with Philip Corey a few weeks ago, who is the

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head pastry chef at Harrods of London.

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Oh, that was a fabulous episode.

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Now here we are making box brownie mixes and there I was talking to

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the head pastry chef at Harrods.

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But what he said when I asked him about using, you know, milk

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alternatives, because he does a lot of vegan baking, was he said, you

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know, the liquid in cakes and bakes for the most part, Can just be water.

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All you really need is water.

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He said, we add milks.

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We add oat milk, we add dairy milk, we add almond milk, to give it a little

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other flavor, a little richer mouthfeel.

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But water works in baking.

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So it was interesting.

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True enough for that, I suppose.

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I have to say, before we go back to tasting brownies, that since Bruce had

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Philip Corey on, Bruce has made the vegan tahini chocolate cookies from

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his book, and they are Unbelievable!

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Go buy that book, A New Way to Bake, just to get that recipe for

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the vegan tahini chocolate cookies.

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They are over the top.

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Okay, so we're moving on in our testing.

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So we've done, um, Pillsbury, we've done Betty Crocker, we've done Duncan

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Hines, and now what are we moving on to?

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Ghirardelli.

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And these are the darkest.

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These are almost black.

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And this is Ghirardelli dark chocolate.

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These have little bits of chocolate chips in them.

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Oh my gosh, this is the chocolateiest without a

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doubt.

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This is, I know I'm eating chocolate

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to be fair.

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There are some little mini chocolate chips in this.

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So I am getting bites of real chocolate.

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It's also back to be, it is sweeter than the Duncan Hines or the Betty

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Crocker was, but there is so much chocolate flavor that the sweetness

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is balanced a little bit better.

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I think in it it's drier.

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Um, You know, again, I'm not a heathen, so I eat the edges, only heathens

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eat the middle of brownies, just, may I say, having offended all of you.

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Um, so I eat the edges, and this one, because it's got more chocolate in

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it, has, I don't want to say burned a bit, but it's gotten crunchy on the

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edge.

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Well, the interesting thing about this is, All the boxes say to bake

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anywhere between 22 and 32 minutes.

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These Ghirardelli said to bake 45 minutes.

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That's then why it's also crunchier and drier.

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That they're particularly wanting you to have this

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flavor.

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Well, for my money, that's the best chocolate flavor of the bunch.

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Okay.

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And what's the last one?

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The last one is an outlier.

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It's Kodiak, and Kodiak was a brand I saw at the supermarket, and their

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flavor here is chocolate fudge.

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It's a whole grain brownie.

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Oh, okay.

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All right.

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And their recipe on the box said, called for butter, but said you

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can all, you can substitute oil and even a little yogurt or applesauce.

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So I did that so that they were all made with oil, so we knew the differences.

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There were, you know, so we knew that it was on the same playing field.

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Okay, so it's made, I've already eaten my bite, Bruce is still talking.

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As this is our relationship in a nutshell, I've eaten my bite and he's still talking.

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Um, the, the, um, it's drier and you would expect it to be drier.

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Oh, I'm not fadding.

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Well, just let me finish.

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So it's drier and you would expect that with the whole wheat ingredients

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and all that kind of stuff.

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I can't.

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It has a bready quality to it because of the whole wheat.

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And I kind of like I don't admit if you were looking for a very standard U.

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S.

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Canadian brownie.

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This would not fit your bill.

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But it does kind of fit my deal because I like that bready taste.

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It's got in

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it.

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I'm still swallowing.

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It's kind of dry, so it's hard to swallow.

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It is

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dry.

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It is.

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With, out of doubt, the Kodiak is the driest of the whole board in front of us.

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What I think is this, to me, is almost like a chocolate quick

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bread, as you said, a bread.

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Or even...

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Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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I can imagine making a chocolate layer cake with a very, very

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rich, creamy chocolate icing and using this as the cake layers.

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You're

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wanting to fat it back up.

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Because of the whole wheat.

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So you're wanting to

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put a buttercream on it.

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It's not only whole wheat, it's whole grain oats too.

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Yeah.

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And I actually, again, but okay, this is a confession on Mark's part.

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I actually like the taste of whole wheat bread rat way more than white bread.

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So I'm drawn to this taste.

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And if you're drawn to a whole wheat is this Kodiak is a really good cookie.

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alternative.

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And doesn't it claim to be really high in protein?

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This is also high in protein.

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They have some extra protein added in.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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And so, you know, I guess it's a unallegedly healthier alternative

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is calorie in calorie out, but it's an allegedly healthier

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alternative for my money.

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If I had to say what I was going with on the board, I would go with the gear.

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Yeah,

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me too.

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If, if I'm ever making box brownies again, you're getting your ghiradelli.

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Yeah.

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I,

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that's where I would land because it seemed the best.

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I also may.

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Uh, just say I liked the Duncan Hines a lot because it

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reminded me of my childhood.

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It's so much what my mom would make, except again, she would

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make it with butter, not oil.

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And it just tasted like what I'd come home from school and there'd be brownies

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on the stove and I'd get to eat a brownie corner, corner, corner, because I'm not

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a heathen, a corner of the brownies.

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And it tasted like that.

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So that was very nostalgic for

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me.

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Um, my mom never baked anything, so the only nostalgia I have is

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that I would buy brownies and all

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right.

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All right.

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Yeah.

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And I didn't grow up in fancy New York City.

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So the brownies that I would have bought would have been a safe way.

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So mom made brownies and my grandmother only made brownies.

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from scratch.

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My mother made them from a mix because of course I was born and raised

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in the convenience 60s and 70s.

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So my mom made them from a mix.

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The Duncan Hines, it has an assaulter for me.

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The Ghirardelli is the best.

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Uh, for me, the loser is the Pillsbury.

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It's too sweet, way, way, way too sweet and not enough chocolate.

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It's

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too sweet.

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Well, there's our brownie taste test.

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We would love to know what you think about Box Mix brownies, or if there's

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a kind that you love and we didn't try.

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If you want to drop us a note about that you can find us on our Facebook group

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cooking with Bruce and Mark, or you can find us on our website, Bruce and mark.

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com.

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You can drop us a note about a brownie mix that you like.

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And we will try another round on the air with listener favorites.

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So give us a give us a ring, give us a buzz drop us a line.

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I sound really old on I give us a ring on the air to Yeah, on the air.

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Oh my gosh, how on a streaming service on the air.

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Hello, folks out in TV.

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Oh, I didn't I see you there.

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When did you come in?

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I don't even think our listeners are old enough to know that that was a

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thing, that it was this faux thing that you walked into people's living rooms

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on TV and they would say, literally, Oh, hello, I didn't see you there.

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I don't think our listeners probably are even as old as we are.

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Anyway, yes, we're very old.

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So um, the very old people like Ghirardelli.

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So there you go.

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There's our chocolate brownie taste test.

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We'd love to know more from you and as is traditional, let's finish up with

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What's making us happy in food this week?

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So what's making me happy in food this week is that we recently spent a

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weekend in the Finger Lakes in New York and we went to some wineries in the

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Finger Lakes in New York and actually did some tasting and we did a big

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fancy tasting at Silver Thread Winery and not on their dollar on my dollar.

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We're not sponsored by Phil Silverhead.

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And we were, they didn't.

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And we didn't get this for free.

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We're not ridiculous influencers.

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Oh my gosh.

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We did pass one influencer shooting a video in a, it made me laugh so hard.

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I could, I couldn't sit still in the car, but we actually went to Silverhead

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and we, I tasted their Rieslings.

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Specifically, and we actually bought a case of one of their Rieslings.

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So what's making me happy in food this week are Finger Lakes Rieslings.

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They were quite delicious.

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I liked the drier, rather than the sweeter.

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Always see, there I am back to my dark chocolate self.

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I like the drier, redder than the sweeter.

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And it was fun.

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I had, we had a lot of fun.

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I had never been, it's hard to believe, but I'd never been to the Finger Lakes

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and I had never been to Seneca Lake or any of the Finger Lakes before.

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And so there we were.

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Going around

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Seneca Lake.

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Well, I'd been to Ithaca before as a kid.

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My cousin went to Cornell, and so I spent time with them.

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But it was my first time back there, too.

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And quite honestly, what we did before that wine tasting is what

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made me happy in food this week.

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And it's all about fry food.

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We had a fry bar lunch that we don't do it very often.

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But boy, did that make me happy.

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We went into this place with our friend Ruth.

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In Watkins,

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New York.

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Outside of the Glen.

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We had fried calamari.

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We had fried cauliflower.

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We had battered fried pickles.

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We had deep fried chicken wings.

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Then I think I'm missing something.

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I think there was a cardiologist's office just next door to this restaurant.

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And it

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was probably connected.

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It was just all that fried food.

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And then we went to the wine tasting.

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Yeah, that, and that's a day.

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So that it was, it was a lot of fun and I can really recommend Finger

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Lakes wineries as just a really.

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fun thing to do on a long weekend.

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If you ever want to take a long weekend to upstate New York.

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And we were there super off season, super, super leaves down.

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No, no tourists really around.

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And it was nice.

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We had the place to ourselves, which made it even nicer in my books.

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Okay.

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That's our podcast for this week on cooking with Bruce and Mark.

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We ask that if you could, if you would subscribe to this podcast,

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if you would rate it, do those things, please, to help us in the

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analytics, we certainly appreciate it.

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So your support for us would be to give us a rating or even a comment.

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And just by the way, we do have a newsletter.

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It's a comes out every two to three weeks.

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You can sign up for that newsletter on our website, Bruce and mark.

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well as a lot more about life, about knitting, about all kinds of things

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Tell us there what's making you happy at Food This Week and I'm

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going to post a picture of this very cutting board with the five strips of

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brownies that we've been picking at so you can see that we actually did.

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Tasty Brown is here on Cooking with Bruce and Mark.

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