Chocolate Salty Balls
http://www.geekychef.com/2011/08/chocolate-salty-balls.html?m=0
From the South Park television show
I have always tried to keep this blog kid-friendly, but this is one of those things I just can't avoid forever. In honor of Isaac Hayes, I decided to create a Chocolate Salty Balls recipe using the ingredients from the song. I apologize in advance for any offense. Parents, please forgive me, and avert your children's eyes if you must. If you've been doing your job your kid won't get the joke anyway. South Park has always been a very controversial show, with topics that range from offensive to just plain disgusting. But, unlike many other similar television cartoon shows (I won't name which) it actually always has something to say, though the message may not be agreeable for everyone. Throughout it's 17 seasons the show has slowly evolved from a silly immature cartoon into a genuine satire, with honest and occasionally virtuous messages imbedded amongst the crude humor. Additional to decent writing, it has won the respect of many nerds everywhere with detailed references to such geeky things as World of Warcraft, Batman and Star Trek. One week from today is the three year anniversary of the death of Isaac Hayes, a talented and influential soul singer, and the man who voiced the beloved South Park character called Chef. Chef was the portly and promiscuous cafeteria cook for the first 10 seasons of the show. As one one of the more kind and down-to-earth characters, his advice was often sought by the four protagonists... though his advice generally manifested itself in totally inappropriate and non-relevant soul songs. The recipe I have for you today comes from one of those comedic misguided soul songs, probably the most popular song from the show, titled "Chocolate Salty Balls." You can listen here, or read here, but I warn you it's totally NSFW (or for the squeamish, or easily offended, OR children). The song basically describes a recipe for a salty spherical pastry to um, well... to suck on. Despite the obvious metaphor here, I thought a salty chocolate pastry sounded pretty darn good... and guess what? I was right! Chef's balls are delicious!
Ingredients
2/3 cup salted butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/4 cup brandy
4 cups semisweet chocolate chips
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 eggs
2 tablespoons cinnamon
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon table salt
Coarse sea salt, to taste
Directions
In a saucepan, bring the butter, sugar and brandy to a boil, stirring constantly. Remove from the heat. Stir (with a wooden spoon) in 2 cups of chocolate chips until melted. Remember to give that spoon a lick! Cool mixture slightly. Stir in vanilla. In a large mixing bowl, beat the eggs. Gradually add the chocolate mixture and mix well. Combine the flour, baking soda, cinnamon and salt, then gradually add the dry ingredients to the chocolate mixture. Stir in any remaining chocolate chips. Spread into a greased baking pan. Bake at 325 degrees for 35-45 minutes or until a fork inserted in the center comes out clean. Careful not to burn your balls! Let cool just enough that it won't burn your hands. Meanwhile set up a small plate or cutting board with some of the sea salt on it. Scrape up the brownie mix, working around the edges. You don't want to use the hard edges for the balls. Begin shaping 1″ balls out of the mix, give or take in size. Roll the balls in the salt. Do this very lightly (I suggest you do NOT try to emulate the picture), a little sea salt goes a very long way. If you do happen to oversalt, just brush the excess salt crystals off. Too much salt is bad, mmmkay? You're done, put 'em in your mouth and suck 'em!
I have always tried to keep this blog kid-friendly, but this is one of those things I just can't avoid forever. In honor of Isaac Hayes, I decided to create a Chocolate Salty Balls recipe using the ingredients from the song. I apologize in advance for any offense. Parents, please forgive me, and avert your children's eyes if you must. If you've been doing your job your kid won't get the joke anyway. South Park has always been a very controversial show, with topics that range from offensive to just plain disgusting. But, unlike many other similar television cartoon shows (I won't name which) it actually always has something to say, though the message may not be agreeable for everyone. Throughout it's 17 seasons the show has slowly evolved from a silly immature cartoon into a genuine satire, with honest and occasionally virtuous messages imbedded amongst the crude humor. Additional to decent writing, it has won the respect of many nerds everywhere with detailed references to such geeky things as World of Warcraft, Batman and Star Trek. One week from today is the three year anniversary of the death of Isaac Hayes, a talented and influential soul singer, and the man who voiced the beloved South Park character called Chef. Chef was the portly and promiscuous cafeteria cook for the first 10 seasons of the show. As one one of the more kind and down-to-earth characters, his advice was often sought by the four protagonists... though his advice generally manifested itself in totally inappropriate and non-relevant soul songs. The recipe I have for you today comes from one of those comedic misguided soul songs, probably the most popular song from the show, titled "Chocolate Salty Balls." You can listen here, or read here, but I warn you it's totally NSFW (or for the squeamish, or easily offended, OR children). The song basically describes a recipe for a salty spherical pastry to um, well... to suck on. Despite the obvious metaphor here, I thought a salty chocolate pastry sounded pretty darn good... and guess what? I was right! Chef's balls are delicious!
Ingredients
2/3 cup salted butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/4 cup brandy
4 cups semisweet chocolate chips
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 eggs
2 tablespoons cinnamon
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon table salt
Coarse sea salt, to taste
Directions
In a saucepan, bring the butter, sugar and brandy to a boil, stirring constantly. Remove from the heat. Stir (with a wooden spoon) in 2 cups of chocolate chips until melted. Remember to give that spoon a lick! Cool mixture slightly. Stir in vanilla. In a large mixing bowl, beat the eggs. Gradually add the chocolate mixture and mix well. Combine the flour, baking soda, cinnamon and salt, then gradually add the dry ingredients to the chocolate mixture. Stir in any remaining chocolate chips. Spread into a greased baking pan. Bake at 325 degrees for 35-45 minutes or until a fork inserted in the center comes out clean. Careful not to burn your balls! Let cool just enough that it won't burn your hands. Meanwhile set up a small plate or cutting board with some of the sea salt on it. Scrape up the brownie mix, working around the edges. You don't want to use the hard edges for the balls. Begin shaping 1″ balls out of the mix, give or take in size. Roll the balls in the salt. Do this very lightly (I suggest you do NOT try to emulate the picture), a little sea salt goes a very long way. If you do happen to oversalt, just brush the excess salt crystals off. Too much salt is bad, mmmkay? You're done, put 'em in your mouth and suck 'em!
Oh, I am totally trying these.
ReplyDeleteDo it!!
DeleteI cannot wait to try these bad boys out.
ReplyDeleteim going by the original recepie the only thing im changing is im going to add the salt, go to the geeky chefs chocolate salty balls at www.geekychef.com/2011/08/chocolate-salty-balls.html for the original chef recepie
DeleteProblem with the recipe is there is a bag or two of sugar. So you better find some pretty small bags!
DeleteI see what you did there!
DeleteI can't believe you did this.
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to try it.
put em in your mouth and suck em!!!!!!!!!!!!
DeleteI went there! They're actually super yummy.
DeleteThey're packed full of vitamins, and good for you!
ReplyDeleteAnd by vitamins, you mean absolutely nothing good for you, right? XD
DeleteHIGH IN FIBER!
Deletei always thought Chocolate was "vitamin C"
DeleteThese look great. Can't wait to make this.
ReplyDeleteDo you take suggestions? I'm a huge Pokemon fan and I noticed that you don't have any recipes of Pokemon-inspired food items.
Here are a few I'd like to taste/try to make: Volcano Burger, Rage Candy Bar, Pokemon Lemonade, and this Pokemon ketchup that Pikachu cried over in the Anime.
See my link for a photo: https://files.nyu.edu/hs1232/public/images/pikachu5.png
Thank very much for reading my suggestion. :3
Thank you for your suggestion! I will definitely look into this.
DeleteThis is really funny!
ReplyDeleteYour recipe reminds me of German Rum Balls- the "German"/European people they take "old" cakes, add cocoa and rum and then roll in chocolate sprinkles and nuts!
it is quite good actually.
www.prettytastyreviews.blogspot.com
Oooh! Nice! Thank you for sharing. It's probably really similar.
DeleteFantastic! I did wonder if anyone had published the recipe online. Brilliant. Well Christmas is at the in laws this year. What better offering can I give for Christmas than to munch on my very own salty balls. I do hope they enjoy them. It's a must!
ReplyDeleteWhat an excellent Christmas surprise!
Deletecan u do this without brandy in it cuz i shouldnt be havent it at 13
ReplyDeletetoughen up princess
DeleteThe alcohol will evaporate during cooking and only the flavor will remain.
DeleteSay, how long have you done this, Geeky Chef?
DeleteYou can just leave out the brandy or add some other non-alcoholic liquid, but generally, brandy is just going to leave a flavor. The actual alcohol will evaporate while cooking.
ReplyDeleteThis Anon speaks truth.
DeleteThanks so much for this. My friends and I have had a running commentary on Chef and his CSBs on Facebook for a few weeks now. Can not wait to put 'em in my mouth and suck 'em!!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! I hope you like them.
DeleteWhat a great sight, I can't wait to try this one.
ReplyDeleteThey're some good balls.
DeleteNooo!
ReplyDeleteYou have to bake them at tree-fiddy! Tree-fiddy!
Give me $3.50 and I'll change it.
DeleteNo loch Ness monster, no 3.50 for you
Delete^tree fiddy
DeleteI just made a batch of these, and they taste fantastic! I made them late last night, and after balling them and salting them, I let them sit out and rest overnight. They taste really incredible about 12 hours after making them. I used Kosher salt on mine, and the salty/sweet/fat mix in these is absolutely addictive. Great recipe!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad you liked them! I also noticed they get better over time.
DeleteI am currently looking at this recipe at school, and am making these as my controlled assessment recipe. Boo-ya! I'll try not to burn them. 'Oh man, baby..you just burn't my balls!!' :D
ReplyDeleteI'm betting your teacher will ask to see you after class! Wink wink, nudge nudge.
DeleteBrilliant thanks very much
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! Thank YOU!
Deletethey look sexy
ReplyDeleteYou look sexy (I imagine).
DeleteLove it! What size pan did you use?
ReplyDeleteI think it was 9x13, but 8x8 should work too. I's not terribly important because you'll just be rolling it into balls, so brownie thickness is not an issue.
DeleteCould you please use metric measurements so that outside of the us people can make it. i cant really find a clear conversation of a cup of butter to grams (everyone seems to have a different opinion about it )
ReplyDeleteSorry about that buddy, but my viewership is predominately American and most of us are not accustomed to the metric system. I know Imperial is a little nonsensical but unfortunately it's what I (and most of my viewers) know. One cup of butter is approximately 225 grams. If you are over or under by a few grams it won't make much of a difference, so don't worry too much if there is some variation of opinion.
DeleteI st made these and only realised after I finished that I didn't use the cinnamon... it's in the ingredients list, but not the instructions... oh well. Hopefully it will taste OK without cinnamon too! Thanks for the recipe - it's for a work friend who often says 'she can suck on my chocolate salties...' :) X
ReplyDeleteHave you tried to roll them into balls first and then bake them? Do they not retain their ball shape?
ReplyDeletethere is cinnamon in the ingredient list, but not mentioned in the directions. When/how do you use the cinnamon? 2 Tbsp is a LOT of cinnamon???
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure cinnamon is a "dry ingredient" so "gradually add the dry ingredients to the chocolate mixture." Not that much cinnamon considering how much batter.
DeleteOld post but well explained. I think chef skill to be good at a range of course, Have extensive experience of specialty diets and food preparation.
ReplyDeleteChefs For Hire
I tried this recipe out a while back and it turned out pretty well. There are a couple of 'suggestions' that I may add to this recipe (about to experiment on round 2).
ReplyDelete1) Up the brandy to 1/2 cup. The brandy flavor didn't really come through.
2) Use a glass baking/ casserole dish. It'll leave the edges a little crispy, but it'll be less likely to burn.
3) Don't roll the balls in salt! The exterior sea salt kind of overpowered the balls. What you may try doing is:
- Once the mixture comes out of the oven (it'll look like a giant brownie), spread some sea slat on top of that.
-Using a fork, flake the gooey center (it'll be hot) and sort of mix the brownie together, combining the outer crust, sea salt, and gooey center. This should also help to cool down the mixture enough to handle a little more easily.
-From that brownie mixture roll the balls as usual without adding extra sea salt.
Other than that, great recipe and great tribute to Chef!
best
ReplyDeletethats agreat recipe
ReplyDelete