Baker’s One Bowl Brownies

Sometimes in life all you really need is a brownie. Just a plain ‘ol brownie. Second in line to my deep love for cookies, is brownies. A good chewy brownie, preferably with chocolate chips, with or without nuts and covered in a thick layer of chocolate frosting. I love brownies made with Baker’s chocolate but I don’t have a problem with boxed brownies either. I have learned that when using a boxed brownie mix to slightly under bake the brownies. Another thing, find a mix you like and stick with it…I always use Ghirardelli brownie mixes. Same goes for “made from scratch” brownies, find a chocolate you like and stick with it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pick Some Up

Today I decided to go for the gusto and make “from scratch” brownies. I found the recipe on the back of a box of Baker’s chocolate. I recently stopped at the Dollar Tree to pick up some wrapping paper and on a display by all the holiday baking must haves, were boxes of Baker’s Unsweetened Chocolate.

Baking Cupboard

I remember when I was a kid and found a box of unsweetened chocolate in my mom’s baking cupboard. My mom Aggie had a baking cupboard, as do I, specifically for baking only. All the good stuff could be found in that cupboard. Marshmallows, chocolate chips, nuts, coconut, and graham crackers. Every once in awhile Aggie would ‘hide’ candy bars in her baking cupboard, as do I. With six kids, she probably wanted a treat for herself! I had two kids and I hid candy bars in my baking cupboard too and still do:)

Baker’s Chocolate

When I found a box of Baker’s chocolate in Aggie’s baking cupboard when I was a kid I thought I’d died and gone to heaven. I found a chunk of yummy chocolate and if I broke off a couple of squares, I was sure she’d never notice. I carefully opened the box of chocolate, unwrapped it from the white paper and broke off two squares. I carefully re-wrapped the chocolate, put it back in the box and shut the cupboard door. I had hit the ‘chocolate mother lode’ and it was all mine! One bite of chocolate quickly told me why this chocolate was left in the baking cupboard. Unsweetened meant just that! I never knew that chocolate could taste so bad and I never again made that same mistake.

Most people (me included) when they think of Baker’s Chocolate, they think of  Baker’s German’s Sweet Chocolate. Even though Baker’s Chocolate was been around since the 1700’s, not many people know the history of Baker’s chocolate. I certainly didn’t. Most people can tell you a little about Hershey’s or Nestle’s but nothing about Baker’s Chocolate. The following are excerpts taken from an article by Peter F. Stevens originally published in the Reporter in 1998.

History of Baker’s Chocolate

In the fall of 1764, Dr. James Baker smelled an opportunity along the Neponset River. A mouth-watering, money-making product – that was what materialized that autumn in Baker’s chance encounter with down-on-his-luck Irish immigrant John Hannon. Baker, a Harvard graduate who had practiced “physicke [sic.],” medicine for a time and had run a Dorchester store, met Hannon on a local road and soon discovered that even though the Irishman did not have a shilling in his pocket, he did possess a prized skill.

John Hannon knew how to make chocolate, for which colonists were willing to part with steep sums. And even after paying for the pricey product imported from the West Indies, people had to “work” for their “fix” by grinding chocolate with mortar and pestle or with cumbersome, expensive “hand mills.” Most significantly for Baker, the Irishman not only knew how to make the “sweet stuff,” but also knew how to set up and run a chocolate mill.

A Butcher, A Baker, A Chocolate Maker?

John Hannon was not in the business for the long haul, just for a quick and lucrative profit. Baker, once he had determined that the Irish immigrant knew the chocolatier’s trade, staked both savings and energy on the venture, which he hoped would prove long-term. In the spring of 1765, Hannon was ready to put the plan to the test by grinding cocoa beans between two massive circular millstones. Now, his Dorchester partner would learn whether the Irishman knew his craft or had sold him a proverbial bill of goods.

Hannon set the top millstone to one third, the speed used to grind corn. As the stone groaned and began to spin, he poured cocoa beans into a hole cut through the stone’s center. Then, the Neponset’s flow set the bottom stone whirling, and the motion of both “wheels” pulverized the beans into a thick syrup. The Irishman and Baker poured the liquid into a giant iron kettle and then into molds, where the concoction cooled to form chocolate “cakes,” more like “bricks” in weight and consistency.

America’s First Chocolate Factory

With that first batch, Hannon proved that he could deliver the goods. America’s first bonafide chocolate factory had been born along the banks of the Neponset River in Dorchester. Baker and Hannon were soon hard-pressed to keep up with sweet-toothed neighbors’ demands for the duo’s “hard cakes.” Sold under Baker’s name and advertised in Dorchester, Boston, and beyond, the chocolate was intended to be scraped by customers and boiled in water to make heavily sweetened cocoa.

Rising orders compelled Baker and Hannon to move the operation in 1768 to a larger space on the Neponset, Baker renting a fulling (cloth) mill from his brother-in-law, Edward Preston. Preston, however, was not satisfied with merely being the chocolatiers’ landlord. He had his eyes on the business – literally. For the moment, he appeared “interested” in only a curious fashion, but all that would change.

In 1772-1779…

In 1772, Baker, with sales continuing to swell, opened a second Dorchester mill. Speculation that he and Hannon, who continued to operate the other plant, had quarreled and had either parted ways or forged a looser partnership, abounded. Baker had learned much from the Irishman: the new mill turned out nearly nine hundred pounds of chocolate in 1773. With the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1775, the Dorchester chocolate-makers struggled to stay in business. Their dependence upon cocoa from the West Indies forced the pair to smuggle shipments of beans through the web of Royal Navy warships prowling the eastern seaboard.

In 1779, Hannon reportedly vanished on a voyage to buy beans in the West Indies. No one in Dorchester ever again saw or heard from him. Baker was soon enmeshed in legal wrangles with Hannon’s “widow,” who seemed intent on running her husband’s mill with his capable apprentice, Nathaniel Blake, as her workhorse. Blake, deciding that Mrs. Hannon was running the business into the ground, walked out on her. He had little trouble in finding a new post – with James Baker.

In 1790’s-1812…

In the 1790s, James Baker, the Harvard doctor and businessman who had launched America’s first permanent and profitable chocolate factory, stepped down after nearly four decades as “the king of cocoa.” He chose his son Edmund as the successor to run the family business.

Edmund expanded sales from the Northeast to the western outposts of the young republic’s widening borders. But in 1812, America’s second war with Britain suddenly heaped upon him the same shipping problems his father had suffered during the Revolution. This time, the Royal Navy’s squadrons choked off cocoa shipments so effectively that the kettles and molds inside the Baker chocolate mill stood virtually empty for two years.

Still, Edmund Baker’s prescience in expanding into the grain and cloth industries kept the family’s finances afloat, and, in an impressive act of faith that the aroma of chocolate would again waft above and along the Neponset, he tore down his chocolate mill to build one bigger and better.

In 1830-1850…

Having taken the chocolate business to new heights, Edmund Baker entrusted the company to his son Walter. One of Walter’s first gambits was to expand his work force. In a sign of the changing times in the nation, two of the Dorchester businessman’s hires were young women, Mary and Christiana Shields, who walked onto the plant floor in petticoats in 1834. By 1846, Baker’s payroll included several women.

The Baker workers made their boss the first name in American chocolate. Such success also led to tough competition from two chocolate-making interlopers. By 1835, the Preston mill rolled out 750 pounds of the product a day. The Neponset featured a third chocolate competitor, Webb & Twombley, by 1842. The scent of chocolate permeating the area led locals to call the site “Chocolate Village.”

In 1850-1868…

The pressure to fill endless wagonloads of “brown gold” was acute for Baker and his Dorchester rivals alike, for, with refrigeration for chocolate products nonexistent, the millstones ground to a halt in summer. Finally, in 1868, the advent of refrigeration turned the Chocolate Wars into year-round “combat.” Walter Baker died in 1852, before the family could reap refrigeration’s benefits to the business. His passing marked the end of the Bakers’ hegemony in the chocolate business, which they had ruled for nearly ninety years. They had profited, persevering in the face of war, cut-throat competition, embargoes, recessions, and fires. Although other men would run the company, the Baker name and the outfit’s logo would endure.

The Legacy Lives On…

The Baker Chocolate Factory continued to turn out its near-legendary products along the Neponset until 1965. In that year, two centuries after a Dorchester doctor and shopkeeper and an Irishman set their first two millstones into motion, General Foods, Baker’s parent outfit since 1927, shut down the venerable red-brick plant and moved the operation to Dover, Delaware. It is in the annals of Dorchester, not Dover, or anywhere else, that the proud legacy of Baker Chocolate truly lives on. For Dorchester was the site of America’s first successful chocolate mill, where Dr. James Baker and John Hannon turned cocoa into cash.

Baker's One Bowl Brownies

The name says it all...One Bowl, That's All
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Ingredients

  • 1 package (4 oz) Baker's Unsweetened Chocolate
  • 3/4 cup butter or margarine
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1 cup flour
  • 1 cup chocolate chips

Instructions
 

  • Heat oven to 350. Line 13 x 9-inch pan with foil, with ends of foil extending over the sides. Spray with cooking spray.
  • Microwave chocolate and butter in large microwavable bowl on high 2 minutes or until butter is melted. Stir until chocolate is completely melted and mixture is well blended.
  • Stir in sugar. Blend in eggs and vanilla. Add flour and chocolate chips, mix well. Pour into prepared pan. 
  • Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Do not overbake. Cool completely. Use foil overhang to lift brownies from pan before to serve.

Notes

*For a festive look, chill brownies in the refrigertor for several hours. Remove brownies from pan using overhanging foil. Remove foil and cut out brownies with cookie cutters in shape of your choice. Decorate with frosting and candies* 
Did you make this recipe?Tag @lynnturnips on Instagram with the hashtag #turnips2tangerines

Anyway you make brownies, whether making from scratch or from a box, brownies are delicious.