Cheat Day [cheet dey] – noun: The one day of the week where diet minded fitness freaks throw caution to the wind and indulge only on the most tantalizing, ridiculously calorie dense foods known to man. Often associated with the term, “carb hangover,” which occurs the morning after a particularly fruitful cheat day. Synonyms: Free Day, Fun Day, Fat Day

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Chocolate Dipped Caramel Shortbread Bars

So Monday marks my two year wedding anniversary with the sweetest, most patient, most tolerant man I've ever met.  For serious.  He brings a lot to our relationship:


- Adorableness
- Cooks me dinner so I don't end up eating egg beaters and oatmeal every night from here until infinity
- Ability to smile and nod when I'm on a tirade about something that is not important
- Allows me to go to the gym for hours on end when there are much more practical things I should be doing
- Brings me coffee when I'm cranky
- Brings me a pug when I'm REALLY cranky
- Brings me cinnamon rolls and fruit juice when I'm SUPER cranky/sick
- Fixes things when they are broken
- Pays bills that I forget about
- Loves my crazy family
- Does dishes
- Drives me places


And here is an inclusive list of what I bring to the relationship
- I bake


So- in order to keep my man happy, I set out to bake him up something delicious for our anniversary.  So of course, I ask him to think up any sort of amazing, delicious, complicated dessert his little mind can fathom.  If I were presented with a scenario like this, my dreams would be filled with visions of dancing scones and cupcakes in a river of ganache with lined with truffles and rainbows.


His first answer?  "I want you to not have to bake!"


Does this man not know me at ALL?  No baking for a cheat day is like summer without sunshine!  It's like Starbucks without caffeine!   It's like Christmas without presents Jesus. 


So I nixed that.


His second answer?  "I don't know- chocolate chip cookies?"


Really?  I mean- I like chocolate chip cookies like the rest of America.  But if I could have any dessert known to man, I most certainly would set my sights a little higher.  So it looks like this one was going to be up to me.


I started brainstorming things my husband really likes:
- S'mores
- Smoked meats
- Cereal
- Lasagna
- CANDY!


He always comments when I make my awesome shortbread that he wishes I could turn it into a homemade twix bar.  I had it- not the most inspired, amazing dessert known to man... But fun, a step up from chocolate chip cookies and most importantly: delicious.

Step One: The Shortbread
I've made my fair share of shortbread in my day, and I've come to learn that there are two key ingredients to make one kick butt shortbread.  Rice flour, and butter.

 Mmmm... butter.  

My husband wanted regular butter, but I've used Irish butter in the past which was freaking phenomenal. 

First, preheat your oven to 350 and then cream your softened butter with one cup of sugar until it's nice and fluffy. 

Slowly add in your flour (one cup of rice flour, 3 and a half of regular all purpose flour) in slowly until combined.

Turn your batter out onto a well floured surface and kneed slightly until it forms into a ball.


You know what's the great thing about this cookie recipe?  No eggs.  Sample by the handful for all I care!

Ok- next is my patented, freaking awesome way to making some awfully perdy cookies.  
Pat your dough into a 10 x 15 inch pan that is lined with parchment paper.  

Next, grab a floured rolling pin, and roll over your cookie dough so they are nice and flat.  This is how you avoid bumpy, ugly cookies that are sad.  This is especially important if you are not going to be covering them in caramel and chocolate.... too bad that's exactly what we are going to do.



Ok, next you will want to score your cookies and pierce them with a fork before baking, like so.

Bake.... cool... inform your husband that no, they will not be done tonight even if he was "saving his carbs" so he could eat them.  

So when you are ready to make your caramel, make sure the sides of your pan are high enough to prevent any caramel spillage.  If not, transfer cookies over to pans (lined with parchment paper) that do have high enough sides.  This is what I did, because I ended up making two varieties of bars in two different pans.  I'll get into that later.

See- different pan.  Good times. 








Step Two: Caramel
Ok, next it's caramel time.  Otherwise known as happy time.  I love caramel.  So flipping much.  I also love shortbread a lot.  And they both remind me Christmas.  Caramel, shortbread and Christmas.  If somehow the making of this recipe also caused there to be a litter of puppies delivered to my front door, I would be the happiest woman alive.

Combine a cup of butter, a cup of light brown sugar, 1/4 cup corn syrup and a cup of sweetened condensed milk in a pan.  Heat over medium heat until it boils.  Stirring constantly, boil for 5 min and then remove from heat, still stirring, for 3 minutes.  

I cannot stress how important the stirring part is. Put the damn camera down and stir.

Sorry- that wasn't meant for you. 






You'll end up with something like this:
Pour the caramel over your pan and let it cool.  I left mine in the fridge over night.  That seemed to work well.

Step Three: Chocolate Time
So if you are in a rush, you can take a shortcut here.  Melt 2.5 cups of chocolate (I used milk) in the microwave and pour over the top of your bars.

This way, your caramel can still be kind of hot and your don't have to go through the dipping process.
But, they aren't as pretty when you cut them and you get less chocolate per bar, which is why I suggest you do the following.


Since your bars are already cut on the bottom of your pan, you'll want to flip the whole thing out onto a cutting board.  (First, cutting along the sides of the caramel.)

Oh yum

Next, leaving them upside down, you can cut along the lines, through the caramel, getting nice little, happy cookie bars. 
Yay!  They are turning out so nice!

Once they are all cut, dust the suckers off and start melting your chocolate (about 2 lbs) over a double boiled.

The reason I scored the bars before baking, and then after baking, and then cut them again once they've been covered in caramel is that shortbread has a tendency to crumble.  This process takes care of that.  








Ok, so your bars are ready and your chocolate is melted.  Dipping these is pretty easy- just grab them one by one, dip the caramel side into your chocolate, and place the completed cookie bar on parchment paper to cool.

Look!  An action shot!

 
And then you are done!  Oh my gosh, these guys were fabulous.  I will never buy a regular twix again.  Why would you, when you can have something like this!  I suggest serving them at room temperature- the caramel will be soft and yummy that way.  

 For some reason, shortbread makes me think of tea parties.  So I whipped out the floral china for these guys.

Fancy.





So I bet you are wondering what happened to that other pan.  You know, the one that I just poured the chocolate on top of?
Yeah, I didn't forget about those.  It's bonus recipe time!

Bonus Recipe: Chocolate Dipped Caramel Shortbread Bars with Coconut!
Because seriously, doesnt adding coconut make everything better?

So make the shortbread and transfer it over to a pan with higher edges.  Before you do the caramel, add a layer of coconut.

For the coconut mixture, just add 10 ounces of sweetened condensed milk to 6 ounces of sweetened, shredded coconut. 

Then top with your caramel followed by the chocolate.  The coconut layer will make the entire bar an ooey, gooey delicious mess.  Fabulous.  Super sweet- but fabulous.




And there you have it!  Two recipes, for the price of one.  And just so you know, hubby loved his anniversary cookie bars.  And I loved making them for him.  Happy Anniversary, husband.  Best two years of my life.

Recipes!

Shortbread Cookies

Make cookies exactly as directed in a 10 by 15 pan lined with parchment paper.  If you do not have a pan this size with tall sides, transfer the cooked, cooled cookies over to several taller pans lined with parchment.

Optional Coconut Layer
Ingredients
10 ounces sweetened condensed milk
6 ounces sweetened coconut


Directions
Combine milk and coconut and spread over the shortbread before making your caramel.  If you do this, you shouldn't attempt to dip the cookies.  They will be too moist and it would be messy.


Caramel and Chocolate Layers
Recipe from:  http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/caramel-shortbread-squares/detail.aspx

Ingredients
1 cup (salted) butter
1 cup light brown sugar
1 cup sweetned condensed milk
1/4 cup light corn syrup
 2 lbs of chocolate chips (2.5 cups if you aren't dipping)

Directions
In a large saucepan, combine butter, brown sugar, corn syrup, and sweetened condensed milk. Bring to a boil. Continue to boil for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and beat vigorously with a wooden spoon for about 3 minutes.  Pour over cookies.  

If you aren't dipping the cookies- melt 2.5 cups of chocolate in the microwave and pour over the top of your caramel.  Let cool completely and flip entire batch onto a cutting board to cut. 

If you are dipping the cookies, let caramel cool and flip recipe onto cutting board.  Cut into bars along score marks.  Melt 2 lbs of chocolate over a double boiler and dip cookies.  Place on parchment paper to cool.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Boston Cream Cupcakes

So I think I am going to rename this blog, "Caketastrophe."  I've realized that I spend far more of my time describing what NOT to do instead of providing helpful, thought out, tried and true methods provided by an experienced baketress.  


But instead of this experienced baketress you get me- the woman who just spent 30 minutes cleaning red food coloring off of her tile floor.  Little tip- when adding red dye to whole grain strawberry muffins, don't accidentally spill a drop of coloring on the floor and then step in it and then walk everywhere.  

Little red smears and blotches everywhere...  It looked like a freaking lilliputian crime scene in my kitchen. 

Alright, so on to the little life lessons I learned from the cupcakes I made for this weekend.  First and foremost- don't promise to make a complicated recipe if you havne't in fact, planned out when you are going to make said recipe.  I offered to make my dad some Father's Day cupcakes, and promised that Boston Cream Pie cupcakes would be no problem at all!

1.  I've never make Boston cream pie.
2.  Excluding ganache, I've never made any of the components of Boston cream pie.
3.  I didn't even really have a full understand of what goes into Boston cream pie.  (What, "yellow cake, puddin' and chocolate" isn't a valid description?)

So I did a little research, and started plotting out my pound cake and pastry cream recipes.  Ganache- totally got that covered.  I also decided I'd add some whipped cream frosting garnish.  What didn't I plan?  When to freaking make these little buggers.  Long story short, I had one day to make these guys, and I wasn't going to get home from work that day until around 7:00 pm.

Well, let me tell you how well THAT went...

Pastry Cream Calamity
So I'm not what one would call a custard aficionado.  In fact, the closet I've ever come to making a custard is lemon curd.  And those aren't close at all. 

So here's how this went down:
- Go to grocery store over lunch to quickly grab all the ingredients for everything
- Run home and throw my milk on the stove for a double batch of pastry cream.

That was my first error.  Ok- in NO WAY did the recipe require a double batch of cream (even though I was making a double batch of cupcakes.)  Lesson learned: One batch = OK

- Start heating 7 flipping cups of milk
- Realize milk will never boil fast enough for me to get back to work on time
- Split milk into two pans
- Put eggs, salt and sugar in food processor
- Realize all the milk will not fix in food processor either
- Split egg mixture into two batches
- Pour one pan of milk into the eggs and sugar
- Overflow
- Pour second pan of milk into new batch of eggs and sugar
- Overflow again
- Yell a lot
- Return both batches (with the added cornstarch and flour) to one big pot and stir like crazy over the stove
- Cry
- Look at the horrible mess that is your kitchen
- Try to tidy
- Don't mix it enough leading to slightly grainy consistency
- Boiling commences
- Too much boiling
- Splatter ultra hot custard on arm
- Swear
- Finish boiling custard
- Pour in bowl and cover with saran wrap, put custard in fridge

I don't suggest you follow my route unless you want to start tearing your hair out.  With my luck, that hair would have ended up in the damn custard. 


Freaking custard.  I hate you.

But you're delicious.  So I'll forgive you.  Only a little though- because I didn't stir enough and the consistency was off.  A good whip in the stand mixer fixed all this!  I wouldn't suggest doing this normally- as that will thin it out a little, but since this is going inside cupcakes and not supporting a cake, all is fine.

Pound Cake Debacle
Well, as you may or may not know, I'm a firm believer that boxed cake mixes are amazing and can accomplish almost anything.  So after a little research, I tried a new recipe that is much denser than the typical white cake I make (which calls for whites, not whole eggs.) 

A resounding HECK YES on this recipe.  Delicious!

Does that mean I didn't screw up this portion of the recipe?  That's a solid HECK NO on that one.

It's 7:10 pm and I'm returning to the house to spend the evening whipping up some deliciousness.  I've got two batches of custard in the fridge.  I've got two sets of all the ingredients I use to doctor up my boxed mix.  I've got one box mix.

Damn it.

So after my impromptu Dahls run, I make two batches of pound cake cupcakes.  I then proceed to stick all four pans in the oven at the same time, because I'm impatient and frazzled and stupid. 

I ended up with about 75% of the cupcakes being golden and delicious, and about 25% charbroiled and sad.

 But thankfully, the golden delicious ones turned out to be hubby's new favorite cake recipe- so my little pound caketastrophe ended up having a silver lining.

Assembly Mayhem
So when the cupcakes are cooled, it's time to start filling them.  Of all the compenents of the recipe, this was the part I was most concerned about.  Should I inject the filling or core them?  If I inject them, will I get enough of the filling in?  If I core them, how can I top them with ganache without causing a horrible mess?

I landed on coring them, filling them with custard, and putting just the top of the cupcake back on to cover the custard.  I thought after everything that had happened, this was probably going to end up a disaster.  And ironically, this was the step that went swimmingly.


How perfect do these look?  

Next, once they were all filled, I made some ganche and immediately started spooning it over each of the cakes.

This also went surprisingly well.  I just went slow and steady and made sure not to let any drip over the sides. 

So at this point, it was about 9:30 or 10:00, my husband was back from his boys night out and was aghast at the horrible mess that was in his kitchen.  And then he saw all the dishes and gave his mess of a wife a big hug and offered help.  What a saint.

But despite all this- these little cakelettes needed some extra oomph, so I quickly got my google on and found a good whipped cream frosting recipe.  Apparently the one I had saved in my future recipe arsenal called for reduced fat cream cheese- so I immediately distrusted the recipe and anyone who would make it.  I located a recipe that called for full fat everything and went on my merry way whipping it up. Quite literally.

So after only spilling one ingredient all over the floor (the salt!) I filled up my pastry bag and ended up with something that looks like this...


Alright- after all this, you cupcakes better be the best damned best cupcakes I've ever eaten.











You got lucky.






These are SO good.  SO FLIPPIN BANANAS good.  The custard, after fixing the consistency, was rich and creamy.  It paired perfectly with the slightly lighter than typical pound cake.  The ganache, as always, was intense and fabulous and the frosting cut that intensity with a final touch of sweetness.  While I might have felt like a failure countless times while making this, the final product was totally winning.

Recipes, baby!

Pound Cake Cupcakes
Recipe from: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/grandmothers-pound-cake-i/detail.aspx

Ingredients
1 package yellow cake mix (I used "Moist Deluxe")
1 (3.5 ounce) package instant vanilla pudding mix
3/4 cup vegetable oil
3/4 cup warm water
4 eggs
1 teaspoon butter flavored extract
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract


Directions
Preheat oven to 350.  Mix all ingredients and pour into lined cupcake tins.  Bake according to box.


Pastry Cream Filling
Recipe from: http://www.boston-discovery-guide.com/boston-cream-pie-recipe.html

Make a half recipe of the cream detailed here.


Dark Chocolate Ganache 
Taken exactly from: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/chocolate-ganache/Detail.aspx


I did not change this recipe, so you can follow the instructions here.  I do not add the optional rum. 


Whipped Cream Frosting
Taken exactly from: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/whipped-cream-frosting-2/detail.aspx


I did not change this recipe, so you can follow the instructions here.



Sunday, June 12, 2011

Reese's Peanut Butter Cup Cake

So Reese's Peanut Butter trees are the reason I gain weight over the holidays.  It's pretty much an unwritten rule in my family that for the secret Santa style stocking exchange, you give your designated recipient a ridiculous amount of Peanut Butter trees.   That way, you avoid the shame of leaving Wal-Mart with a stack of seven 6-packs of trees, excusing the gluttony by telling yourself "they are gifts!"  And when you receive your very own pile-o-trees in your stocking... Well, it'd just be rude not to devour them.


Confession: I bought some extra trees for myself before Christmas.  I had a reward system: wrap a gift, unwrap a tree.  I have two sisters, one brother in law, parents, parents in law, four cousins, four grandparents, and four aunts and uncles.  They all got gifts, or multiples.  And what did I get?  A tummy ache.


So when I stumbled upon a recipe for chocolate cake, peanut butter frosting, and peanut butter dark chocolate ganache, I knew I had to make it.  All that was left was to wait for the appropriate occasion.  Well happy Birthday, grandma, it's cake time!


Reese's Peanut Butter Cup Cake
This cake has three elements- all of which I changed from the original recipe that I found.  And the end result was freaking spectacular.

You start with two, moist, delicious 8 inch round chocolate cakes (I used my favorite chocolate cake recipe) choc' full of peanut butter and semi sweet chocolate chips.

Next, layer with delicious, creamy peanut butter cream cheese frosting, and you'll end up with something like this.

Frost the entire cake, and leave about 3/4 cup of the frosting to decorate.

The great thing about this frosting is that, despite containing cream cheese and peanut butter, it's not all that tacky.  Once you frost your entire cake and get it as smooth as you can, let it set up in the fridge for a few hours.  When you are ready to top with your ganache, you can pull it out and treat it like you would a butter cream.  Grab a moistened paper towel and smooth down any imperfections.

Once that's taken care of, get your cream on the stove so you can make your peanut butter chocolate ganache!

Pour your chips into a bowl and once the cream is just about to boil, pour it into the bowl.  Whisk (or use your mixer to whisk it) until combined.  If you are using a mixer, keep it on a low speed in order to avoid bubbles from forming.

Wait a few minutes for it to thicken up and slowly drizzle over the top of the cake letting some of the ganache drop down the sides.  Let it set up in the fridge before decorating.


Do you think Grandma would be mad if it had a slice taken out of it?

Now it's time to tap into your inner cake artist (cause that's a thing, right?) and make it look all pretty.  I went with the peanut butter frosting dollops with Reese's cups smashed into them. 

I'm sure you can come up with other significantly more creative ideas.

I'm less about the creativity, more about the eating. 







Lastly, take a picture of the final product, artistically avoiding showing your pathetic attempt at "Happy Birthday" written in the middle.  Who am I kidding?  Written slightly to the right of the middle of the cake.  It would be less pathetic and embarrassing had it been poorly written but centered.  Couldn't even manage that. 



Ok- so final verdict: SO FREAKING GOOD.  I was a little worried that a simple cake would pale in comparison to some of my recent endeavors (See: putting an entire cheesecake in the middle of the cake) but it didn't.  This recipe reminded me that simple ol' cake and frosting go together like peanut butter and jelly.  No no!  Like peanut butter and cake!

And it's recipe time!


Chocolate Cake with Peanut Butter and Chocolate Chips
Recipe adapted from: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/too-much-chocolate-cake/Detail.aspx

Ingredients
1 package dark chocolate cake mix
1 (5.9 ounce) instant chocolate pudding mix
1 (8 ounce) container of sour cream (full fat)
1 cup vegetable oil
4 eggs
1/2 cup warm water
1 cup peanut  butter chips
1 cup semi sweet chocolate chips

Directions
Preheat oven to 350.  Mix everything but the chips until combined.  Add in the chips and pour into two greased 8 inch round cake pans.  Bake as directed on the box.

Peanut Butter Frosting
Adapted from: http://smittenkitchen.com/2008/08/chocolate-peanut-butter-cake/
This is the blog entry that inspired the entire creation! 

Ingredients 
10 ounces cream cheese at room temperature
1 stick unsalted butter, softened
5-6 cups powdered sugar (I used one full 1 lb box plus two cups)
7 ounces smooth peanut butter (I used skippy)
1.5 tsp vanillla

Directions
Beat cream cheese and butter together until fluffy.  Add the sugar one up at a time, scraping the sides well reserving 1 cup for the end.  Beat until fluffy, about 4-5 min.

Add the peanut butter and the vanilla and beat until smooth.  Add the final cup (or a little more, or less) until the frosting reaches desired consistency. 

Peanut Butter Dark Chocolate Ganache
Adapted from: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/chocolate-ganache/Detail.aspx

Ingredients
One half pint heavy whipping cream
3.5 ounces peanut butter chips
5.5 ounces bitter sweet chocolate chips (I used Ghirardelli)

Directions
Place chips in a bowl with mixer handy.  Heat cream on the stove over medium until it just about boils.  Pour over the chips and whisk until combined.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Cake Batter Popcorn and Chubby Hubby Popcorn

So once upon a time I decided to prematurely reinstate Cheat Day after being on probation, clearly disobeying my well intentioned nutritionist and letting my cravings for cinnamon rolls and beer prevail.  Shoot.  Oh well.  I was a pretty epic day, in more way than one:

Woke up at 4:00 in the freaking morning.  Husband was altogether too chipper.  Felt urge to knock him down a couple pegs/kick him in shins.  Drank coffee instead.

Much stretching and coffee drinking and aspirin taking occurred in next half hour.

Kathy (running buddy, friend, ride) shows up and hauls my butt downtown to park the car near the finish line of the impending race.

Bus (smelly, hot, full of more chipper people) takes us to the start line.  There is something about sitting on a bus for a half an hour that is extremely unsettling, when you know that your own way back is to run.

But we did it- we ran the 12.4 miles back to the finish line!  It was hot, and humid, and kind of really awesome.  My three awesome running buddies and I finished and actually had a pretty darn good time people watching, chatting, and accomplishing something pretty amazing.  We trained together, started together and finished together.

So after all this, and about an hour of locating my family in a crowd of thousands of sweaty, disoriented people throwing back the free beer, the whole "no cheat day thing" went out the window.  And it went something like this:
- Cinnamon Rolls and coffee after the run
- Almond Bars from freezer
- A rouge Cadbury Egg that somehow had managed to avoid being eaten until now
- Salami
- Chicken Salad wrap
- Philly Cheese Steak
- Sweet Potato Fries
- Nachos
- Apple Crisp with whipped cream that my mom forgot at my house and is now gone

Annnnnd popcorn.  But not just any popcorn.  Popcorn that was totally not my idea that I stole from another blog! Cake Batter Popcorn!  And, since I was popping up some pop corn anyway, I decided to dig through the pantry to see if inspiration would strike.  I ended up making up some "Chubby Hubby" popcorn which was great, but I found so many things that I could have put in the popcorn, but I had to hold myself back.

Also, I think I might have a hoarding problem.  It's not normal to have 3.5 packages of Ghiriadelli chocolate chips on hand the weekend after you made a recipe aimed at using up the chocolate chips in your pantry.  I also neglected to include the toffee I found, several packages of girl scout cookies, as well as both Christmas AND Easter candy (ok- I used a little of the Easter Candy.)

So here's my journey into the wild world of pouring melted white chocolate over candy and popcorn.  In no way could this recipe NOT turn out delicious.

Cake Batter Popcorn and Chubby Hubby Popcorn
Start by gathering up your mix ins.  For this recipe, that'll be sprinkles for the Cake Batter popcorn, and for the Chubby Hubby you'll need Reese's candy along with chocolate covered pretzels filled with peanut butter.  Chop up whatever needs to be chopped up:



Next, pop your popcorn and pour it into a bowl.

I first poured mine onto the counter top and transferred it into the bowl, avoiding any unpopped kernels.




Start melting your white chocolate over a double boiler.


As the chocolate is melting, throw half of your mix ins into the bowl with the popcorn.



If you are doing the cake batter kind, once the chocolate is melted, wisk in 1/4 cup cake batter and sprinkle another 1/8 cup over the popcorn itself.

Pour the white chocolate over the popcorn and mix until coated.  Pour the mixture onto some parchment paper to let it harden up.


Sprinkle the rest of the candy over the top and you are done!



You can drizzle some dark chocolate over the popcorn if you'd like.  I'd be ok with that.














Yum.


So this was way easy, and way fun.  You can be creative and throw in whatever kind of candy you like.  I took out about half the cake batter kind all on my very own, and a good portion of the chubby hubby.  This is pure salty sweet perfection.  It's recipe time!

Cake Batter Popcorn

Ingredients:
One bag butter popcorn
3/8 cup yellow cake mix
8 ounces White Chocolate
4 tbsp sprinkles
Chocolate for drizzling (optional)

Directions
Pop popcorn and sift out unpopped or burned kernels.  Put into a large bowl and top with 2 tbsp of the sprinkles and 1/8 cup cake mix.  Melt white chocolate and pour over popcorn mixture.  Stir until coated and pour mixture onto parchment paper.  Top with remaining sprinkles and drizzle with chocolate if desired.  Let cool and break into pieces.

Chubby Hubby Popcorn
Ingredients
One bag butter popcorn
8 ounces White Chocolate
2.5 ounces of Reese's Candy's (about 4 peanut butter eggs)
3.5 ounces chocolate covered, peanut butter filled pretzels 
Chocolate for drizzling (optional)

Directions
Chop candy.  Pop popcorn and sift out unpopped or burned kernels.  Put into a large bowl and top with half of the mix ins.  Melt white chocolate and pour over popcorn mixture.  Stir until coated and pour mixture onto parchment paper.  Top with remaining candy and drizzle with chocolate if desired.  Let cool and break into pieces.