Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone brought this to the last potluck. It was the most popular dessert and multiple people asked for the recipe. The person who brought it told everyone it was so easy!
https://bellyfull.net/chocolate-eclair-cake/
This is reminiscent for school cafeteria dessert or something we had at sleepaway camp. Perhaps it would work at a family reunion picnic. I would not serve this to nighttime function for mainly adults. Boxed pudding, cool whip, gram crackers?
Anonymous wrote:do you warn people about the caffeine?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make brownies. The Ghirardelli box mix is good. They will disappear!
I started subsituting (inspired by that DCUM thread) -- butter instead of oil, milk instead of water, and I very slightly undercook. Oh my god. incredible. Took them to a school event recently and they disappeared within minutes.
I sub coffee for water! Doesn’t make them taste like coffee, just extra chocolate-y.
Anonymous wrote:Someone brought this to the last potluck. It was the most popular dessert and multiple people asked for the recipe. The person who brought it told everyone it was so easy!
https://bellyfull.net/chocolate-eclair-cake/
Anonymous wrote:Someone brought this to the last potluck. It was the most popular dessert and multiple people asked for the recipe. The person who brought it told everyone it was so easy!
https://bellyfull.net/chocolate-eclair-cake/
Anonymous wrote:Rice Krispie treats, but brown the butter first before adding marshmallows
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you trying to be elegant with fresh fruit and a fancy pastry, or are you okay with using premade processed foods like pudding, or condensed milk, or the like?
Someone else is bringing fruit salad. I just want something yummy and easy. Brownies might be a good idea. Any way I could elevate them, maybe with frosting?
I know this isn’t helpful but I would
seriously side-eye someone bringing fruit salad if tasked with a dessert
I wouldn't. I'm grateful every time I see fruit as a desert option. And I don't think I'm alone there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brownies. And vanilla ice cream if you're feeling fancy. Everyone loves brownies.
This. Add some chocolate and caramel syrup, whipped cream, and nuts.
I always take the same thing for potluck dessert - chocolate and vanilla ice cream and different toppings. Mini cookies, mini brownies, sprinkles, crushed pineapple, nuts, whipped cream.
I'm not against ice cream sundaes as a dessert but this is not the most potluck friendly item. The host has to find a spot to store the ice cream until dessert and then take out a bunch of bowls and utensils to just serve the toppings. Then pack up everything at the end of the night. I don't have a lot of excess space in my freezer, especially when I'm hosting a party.
Brownies, bars, cookies, etc. are great for potlucks because they only require a napkin and leftovers can stay on the plate they were served on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you trying to be elegant with fresh fruit and a fancy pastry, or are you okay with using premade processed foods like pudding, or condensed milk, or the like?
Someone else is bringing fruit salad. I just want something yummy and easy. Brownies might be a good idea. Any way I could elevate them, maybe with frosting?
I know this isn’t helpful but I would
seriously side-eye someone bringing fruit salad if tasked with a dessert
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brownies. And vanilla ice cream if you're feeling fancy. Everyone loves brownies.
This. Add some chocolate and caramel syrup, whipped cream, and nuts.
I always take the same thing for potluck dessert - chocolate and vanilla ice cream and different toppings. Mini cookies, mini brownies, sprinkles, crushed pineapple, nuts, whipped cream.