Yesterday I made a pie for the first time — gasp! — all summer. I went all out, too, loading it up with 3 pints of local blueberries, massaging lemon zest into the sugar, and making a lattice crust, egg-washed and all. After an hour in the oven, it emerged bubbling and golden, and it tasted, well, good, not great. It was kind of a mess of blueberries and not enough crust, which mostly disappeared beneath the mass of stewy fruit. There are worse things for sure, and though I couldn’t resist picking away at it, each successive bite filled with the promise of something spectacular, there was a real positive: I gained a serious appreciation for the chocolate-espresso icebox cake I had made a few weekends ago, which took all of 20 minutes to throw together, which received rave reviews from our guests, and which I, too, found irresistible, impossible, in fact, not to sneak a little spoonful of every time I opened the fridge. I learned about this Barefoot Contessa icebox cake from one of you who had been making a meyer lemon version, flavored with limoncello, lemon juice, and zest, which sounds as delicious as the original, which is made with coffee liqueur, cocoa, espresso powder, and Tate’s Bakeshop chocolate chip cookies. I replaced the espresso powder and coffee liqueur with an equal amount of brewed espresso, which worked beautifully. For a second I contemplated making chocolate chip cookies or wafers, something like Thomas Keller Oreos, then quickly came to my senses and picked up two boxes of Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers, which always work well in these applications. If you’re heading to a bbq tomorrow, this icebox cake might be something to keep in mind. It’s not nearly as festive as pie, but for the effort, it’s hard to beat.
No reviews The Original recipe calls for Tate’s Bakeshop chocolate chip cookies, which I’m sure are delicious, but if you can’t find them, Famous Chocolate Wafers work like a charm. Original recipe also calls for 5 layers of cookies — probably because the Tate’s choc chip cookies are big, so you need fewer per layer. I ran out of steam—so lazy!—after making 3 layers of cookies, but do as you wish. Four layers of wafers probably would have been fine, but I think 5 would have been too many. I don’t think you can mess this kind of thing up. Also, original recipe called for coffee liqueur, which I’m sure would be delicious, but I didn’t have any, so I used brewed espresso instead, which I made with my Nespresso Pixie, which, by the way, I love. Such a luxury, but really great. If you don’t want to use booze and don’t have a Nespresso, you could use instant espresso with 1/4 cup boiling water or strong coffee. If you want to use both coffee liqueur and espresso, you can use 1/4 cup liqueur and 1 teaspoon instant espresso powder. This meyer lemon variation looks fantastic, too.