Recipe courtesy of Tillman's Roadhouse

Table Top S'mores

  • Level: Intermediate
  • Yield: 12 servings
  • Total: 2 hr 30 min
  • Prep: 15 min
  • Inactive: 2 hr
  • Cook: 15 min
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Ingredients

4 cups whole milk

1 1/3 cup honey

1 1/3 cup molasses

4 teaspoons vanilla extract

8 whole eggs

4 cups all-purpose flour

4 cups wheat flour

2 cups rye flour

2 1/3 cups granulated sugar

8 teaspoons baking powder

2 teaspoons kosher salt

4 tablespoons ground cinnamon

Two dozen Orange Marshmallows, recipe follows

Chocolate Bark, recipe follows

Orange Marshmallows:

Powdered sugar, as needed (about 1 pound)

1 1/2 cups granulated sugar

1/2 cup light corn syrup

4 egg whites

2 tablespoons gelatin

1 orange, zested

Chocolate Bark:

3 pound semisweet coating chocolate

Directions

  1. For the batter: Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.
  2. In a bowl, combine the milk, honey, molasses, vanilla and eggs. In a separate bowl, combine the all-purpose flour, wheat flour, rye flour, 1 1/3 cup of sugar, baking powder and salt.
  3. Mix the wet ingredients into the dry and mix until completely incorporated. Work until a dough forms and it comes together in a ball. Do not overwork. Freeze any extra dough for future use.
  4. Combine the remaining sugar and cinnamon for the topping.
  5. Roll out the dough to a thickness of approximately 1/8-inch. Dock dough and cut with a rippled edge pasta cutter to make 20 graham crackers. Place the crackers on parchment paper, dust with the cinnamon sugar and bake until the edges are golden brown, about 8 minutes.
  6. To assemble: Layer 1 graham cracker, 1 piece of chocolate, 1 marshmallow and top with another graham cracker and enjoy.

Orange Marshmallows:

  1. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and lightly dust with powdered sugar.
  2. Combine the granulated sugar, corn syrup and 1/2 cup cold water together in a heavy-bottomed pot with a candy thermometer. Bring to a boil and cook to a temperature of 235 degrees F, (soft ball stage of caramel).
  3. While the sugar is cooking, add the egg whites to the mixer. Dissolve the gelatin in 1/4 cup cold water and reserve.
  4. Once the sugar reaches 235 degrees F, immediately remove from the heat and stir in the gelatin. Turn on the mixer to high speed while the gelatin is dissolving. With the mixer running on high, whip the egg whites to soft peaks and then stream the hot sugar into the egg, building an emulsion as you combine the two. If the stream is too fast, the egg will break.
  5. Once all the sugar has been incorporated into the egg, a meringue is formed. Add the orange zest and whip the meringue until it is just below body temperature. Once the meringue has reached the correct temperature, stop the mixer and place the meringue into a pastry bag and pipe onto prepared baking sheet. Coat the tops of the marshmallows with another thin dusting of powdered sugar after piping. Let the marshmallow air dry for 2 hours. Store all unused marshmallows in an airtight zip lock bag with a liberal amount of powdered sugar. The sugar is to keep the marshmallows from sticking together.

Chocolate Bark:

  1. Melt the chocolate in a bowl over hot water. Pour the melted chocolate on a parchment lined baking sheet or counter top into one large sheet about 1/8 inch thick. Cool to room temperature and break into large pieces.

Let's Get Cooking!

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Anonymous

I too had the same issue with the "dough" turning out to be a wet lumpy batter. But I forged on with what I had. Instead of trying to firm up the batter I first tested a thin layer of the batter in a pan to see if it was going to bake up or bake flat like a graham cracker. The batter more than doubled in height as it baked resulting a cake (which I somewhat expected from the consistency of the batter going in. I then proceeded to bake up 2 more cakes. In all I got 2 9x13 pans and 1 10x10 pan of cake and the 10x10 pan cake was pretty thick but I was running out of pans and patience to keep cooking up the cake so I threw it all in. The 9x13 pans took about 30 minutes to bake and the 10x10 took closer to 45-50 minutes because of the thickness. I was unsure when these were done because the center still jiggled when you shook the pan but a cake tester came out clean. I assumed the clean cake tester was good enough and that it must just be a really moist cake.

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