Food recipes
Chocolate Cobbler
Chocolate Cobbler Ingredients: wheat flour, white, all-purpose, unenriched sugars, granulated cocoa, dry powder, unsweetened cocoa, dry powder, unsweetened milk, fluid, 1% fat, without added vitamin a and vitamin d va...
Chocolate Cobbler
Ingredients:
wheat flour, white, all-purpose, unenriched
sugars, granulated
cocoa, dry powder, unsweetened
cocoa, dry powder, unsweetened
milk, fluid, 1% fat, without added vitamin a and vitamin d
vanilla extract
oil, olive, salad or cooking
nuts, pecans
sugars, brown
water, bottled, generic
Directions:
Preheat oven to 350; grease an 8x8 inch baking pan.
In a big bowl, mix the flour, sugar, and 2 tablespoons cocoa powder together.
Add in the milk, vanilla, oil, and nuts; mix well; pour into the baking pan.
In a smaller bowl, mix the brown sugar and 1/4 cup cocoa powder together.
Sprinkle evenly over the batter.
Very slowly pour the hot tap water over the dry mixture and batter (be sure you pour the water slowly or you will mix up the ingredients; using a glass measuring cup is helpful).
Bake for 40-45 minutes; to test for doneness, stick a toothpick in no more than 1/2 inch; if it comes out clean, the cobbler is done.
Ingredients:
wheat flour, white, all-purpose, unenriched
sugars, granulated
cocoa, dry powder, unsweetened
cocoa, dry powder, unsweetened
milk, fluid, 1% fat, without added vitamin a and vitamin d
vanilla extract
oil, olive, salad or cooking
nuts, pecans
sugars, brown
water, bottled, generic
Directions:
Preheat oven to 350; grease an 8x8 inch baking pan.
In a big bowl, mix the flour, sugar, and 2 tablespoons cocoa powder together.
Add in the milk, vanilla, oil, and nuts; mix well; pour into the baking pan.
In a smaller bowl, mix the brown sugar and 1/4 cup cocoa powder together.
Sprinkle evenly over the batter.
Very slowly pour the hot tap water over the dry mixture and batter (be sure you pour the water slowly or you will mix up the ingredients; using a glass measuring cup is helpful).
Bake for 40-45 minutes; to test for doneness, stick a toothpick in no more than 1/2 inch; if it comes out clean, the cobbler is done.