"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
Scripture Bars (i.e. Mud Hen Bars or Marshmallow Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars)
by Melanie Gunnell
So apparently, I’m
waaaay behind the times when it comes to these magnificent little
bars. You may know them as Mud Hen bars or maybe Halfway Cookies or
even Chocolate Chip Cookie Meringue Bars (boring!), but I was
introduced to them as Scripture Bars. So Scripture Bars they shall be
known to me and mine.
Come to find out, this
recipe (or one like it) exists in just about every church cookbook
and black plastic spiral bound family reunion cookbook for the past
50 years. I’ve obviously been out of the loop on this one.
I was kind of left
with the feeling I may or may not have been living under a rock
for the past 30+ years (either that or my family and church has
seriously dropped the ball on the whole
submit-a-recipe-and-make-a-cookbook thing).
I found this recipe
(and about 58 others) after stealing my friend Deb’s awesome
extended family cookbook. When I asked Deb about the bars, she said
her mom had submitted this recipe and that it’s one she has
made for years and years to eat while they read scriptures
together as a family (hence the name).
Talk about a sweet
memory! Deb raved about them so I knew I had to make them. And I did.
That same day. Because self-control is not my middle name.
Different than
absolutely any other bar dessert I’ve ever made, the best way
to describe these babies is a lightly sweet cookie crust with a
chewy, marshmallow topping and chocolate chips sandwiched in
between. The contrast in textures is what won me over. And that
yummy, chewy top layer is so fun and delicious that I wondered for
the 10th bar, er, I mean, time, where these have been all my
life.
Unique and so very
tasty, no matter what they are called, you kind of have to make them
at least once in your lifetime. I cut the sugar in half and they were
still plenty sweet (in fact, I loved how the sweet marshmallow top
layer complimented the tender, just barely sweet cookie layer)
especially when you factor in chocolate chips and marshmallows.
Hello.
Of course now I’m
pretty sure I need to get my hands on every other family and church
cookbook that exists in the world just to find out what else I’ve
been missing. I hate feeling left out.
3 egg yolks (save the whites for later in the recipe)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
Toppings:
1 cup chocolate chips
1 cup mini marshmallows
Meringue:
3 egg whites
1/2 cup brown sugar
Directions
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
Lightly coat a 9x13-inch pan with cooking spray and set aside.
With an electric mixer (handheld
or stand mixer), beat the butter and granulated sugar together until
creamy. Add the egg yolks and vanilla and beat again until
well-combined. Stir in the flour, salt and baking powder and mix
until the dough comes together.
Press the dough into the bottom of
the prepared pan.
Sprinkle the chocolate chips and
marshmallows over the top.
In a clean bowl beat the egg
whites until soft peaks form (they'll be foamy at first and then
turn white and thick). Add the brown sugar and beat until stiff
peaks form.
Dollop the egg white mixture over
the top of the bars and using an offset spatula or thin knife,
spread as evenly as possible (it's ok if the chocolate chips and
marshmallows peek through; it doesn't have to be perfect).
Bake for 25-30 minutes until the
top of the bars are golden brown and is set in the middle.
Let the bars cool completely. For
easier cutting, run a sharp knife under hot water, wipe dry and cut.
Recipe Source: adapted from Deb’s mom (two of the loveliest people I know!)
Melanie Gunnell is a food-loving, chocolate-obsessed mom who has a desperate need to share
her favorite tried-and-true recipes with the world. In a past life she graduated from Brigham
Young University with a degree in public health, but for the past ten years, stay-at-home
motherhood has been her job along with blogging-from-home for the past five.
She resides in the brilliantly cold tundra of Northern Minnesota with her husband and their brood
of five children: four boys and one tiny, bossy girl. Dark chocolate (particularly the act of
shoving chocolate chips in her mouth whilst hiding in the pantry) is her coping skill of choice for
both the never-ending winters and the never-ending wrestling matches in her front room.