If you’re a follower of Sarah Kieffer’s popular and award-winning Vanilla Bean Blog, you might already feel like she’s an old friend.
A natural storyteller, slices of her personal life are woven through the posts, each punctuated with a recipe and a mouthwatering photo. Through the years, we’ve learned that she got her baking start at the Blue Heron Coffeehouse in Winona, Minn., and that she first started a blog that chronicled her life with young kids. But that blog became so food-heavy that the recipes, in her words, “needed their own space.” It also allowed her to write a food history for her family, something that was lacking in her life and recipe box.
The Vanilla Bean Blog led to her first cookbook, “The Vanilla Bean Baking Book,” which brought her a new level of fame. The following year, the New York Times published Kieffer’s “pan-banging” technique for making chocolate chip cookies. The crinkly, butter-rich cookies had gone viral on Instagram, and the Times catapulted the recipe into a baking sensation. It also inspired her next book, “100 Cookies.”
She’s published two more cookbooks since then, with another due this fall. Now, Kieffer is adding baking columnist to her résumé. Each month, she’ll talk readers through baking fundamentals, offering tips for both experienced and beginner bakers — all punctuated with a recipe and mouthwatering photo, of course.
We asked Kieffer a few questions ahead of her debut, from her baking playlist and favorite kitchen tool to why she’s on a quest to create recipes for easy dinners.
Q: Your pan-banging was the technique heard around the internet. How did it even occur to you to try that?
A: It was discovered by frustration initially. In high school I tapped the pan on the oven rack during a baking session when cookie dough wouldn’t spread, and loved the result: set edges and beautiful cracks along the top of the cookie. When I was testing recipes for my first book, I was frustrated at a cookie that was spreading too much and tapped the pan and found different results: set, wrinkly edges. The pan-banging method was developed out of the latter: letting the cookie bake for 10 minutes, and then banging the pan every 2 minutes after to create ripply, crispy edges.
Q: There are music playlists included in each of your cookbooks. Why?