Fall is in full swing, and if you’re in the mood for baking, you’ve come to the right place. Below you’ll find 5 tried-and-true traditional fall recipes, made with apples, pumpkin, blueberries, butterscotch, and of course, chocolate. Following the recipes are some great baking tips and money-saving ideas. Read on!
Pumpkin Pie
Pumpkin Pie is a must-have on Thanksgiving, and if you want to serve up a home-baked, traditional pie, here’s the recipe for you. Chances are you’re going to have your hands full with making the turkey and trimmings, so save yourself the extra time associated with putting together a homemade crust and go with a refrigerated store-bought one instead. (CoolSavings currently has a printable coupon for 50 cents off 2 packages of Pillsbury Refrigerated Pie Crusts.)
Instructions: Combine ingredients. Mix thoroughly. Pour into pastry-lined pie pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes or until inserted knife comes out clean. Serve with whipped cream if desired.
Apple Pie
Pillsbury offers this recipe for Perfect Apple Pie, which provides the classic apple pie flavor many of us grew up with, but with the convenience of – you guessed it – refrigerated pie crusts.
You can also easily turn this into Caramel-Pecan Apple Pie by following the simple instructions at the bottom of the recipe: Immediately after removing pie from oven, drizzle with 1/3 cup caramel ice cream topping. Sprinkle with 2 to 4 tablespoons chopped pecans.
Blueberry Muffins
Want to bake some blue-ribbon winning muffins? Make these! The cinnamon and sugar coating on top is what makes them stand out.
Cream butter and sugar together until well blended. Beat in eggs, one at a time. In a separate bowl, mix flour, salt and baking powder. Add, alternately with milk, to the egg mixture. Crush around ½ cup of the blueberries with a fork, and mix them into the batter. Gently fold in the remaining blueberries.
Pour the batter into greased muffin tins and sprinkle tops with the cinnamon and sugar mix. Bake at 375 degrees for 30 minutes or until a tester comes out clean.
Remove muffins from pan immediately, and cool on a wire rack. Makes approximately 12 muffins.
A few words of advice for this recipe: These tend to stick to the pan so we recommend using tin or paper cupcake liners so you get the best results for all your hard work. Also, the amount of cinnamon called for in the topping may be a bit much for your liking. Either make the entire amount of topping and save some for a future batch (you’ll surely want to make one!) or make a little less up front. Feel free to use frozen blueberries, which may be a more convenient and less expensive alternative to fresh ones.
Nestle Tollhouse Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars
CoolSavings editors have made these Nestle Tollhouse Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars time and time again, and they get rave reviews. Baking the batter in a jelly roll pan and simply cutting the finished product into squares is so much quicker than scooping and spooning to make regular cookies!
Our notes: You can add in 1 cup of chopped nuts. For softer, chewier bars, we recommend you start testing for doneness between 15 and 20 minutes.
Oatmeal Butterscotch cookies
As much as we all love chocolate, butterscotch is a yummy, welcome alternative. For some sweet and comforting Oatmeal Butterscotch cookies, follow the directions in this recipe for Quaker’s Best Oatmeal Cookies, but stir one cup of butterscotch chips into the batter.
Like with the chocolate chip cookie bar recipe above, these too can be made in a (9x13) pan and cut into bars, per the instructions at the bottom of the recipe. Word to the wise: If you’re going to batch these up to give to friends or take to a potluck, do it quickly, as your family will likely be eating them up right from the oven! They smell heavenly while baking so everyone will be waiting in anticipation.