Wednesday, 7 January 2015

Salted Caramel Hot Chocolate

Though a mug of simple hot cocoa is welcomed daily chez nous during the winter months, sometimes one clamours for a hot chocolate with a dramatic flair, unctuous richness, and cordial sophistication. Is there a powdered mix that can pull that off? Nope! Only by whisking together milk with added cream and a copious amount of high-quality dark chocolate over moderate heat can such a phenomenal presentation be made. To make a lasting impression, slosh some salted caramel sauce into the bottom of the glass or cup before pouring this aromatic elixir.


INGREDIENTS
makes approximately two 6 fluid oz/175 ml servings, adapted from Vanessa's recipe

  • Salted caramel sauce, 2 heaping T, my recipe here
  • Chocolate, dark/bittersweet, cocoa content of at least 70%, 85 grams/3 dry oz, broken into small pieces
  • Milk, whole, 4 fluid oz/120 ml
  • Cream, heavy, 4 fluid oz/120 ml


Combine the milk and cream. Put two fluid ounces/60 ml of this mixture into a heavy-bottomed saucepan. Add the chocolate. Whisk over moderate heat.


It takes a couple of minutes for the chocolate to melt completely.


Slowly add the rest of the cream/milk, all the while, whisking. Once smooth, carefully stir with a wooden spoon to ensure that everything is indeed melted. Heat until there is a slight bubbling around the edge which should take a few minutes.


Put a heaping tablespoon of salted caramel sauce into each glass.


Pour the hot chocolate. Stir to introduce the chocolate to the caramel. Nice to meet you!


The only thing that can make me feel more marvelous than this kissed-with-caramel, liquid dessert truffle masquerading as hot chocolate is if the recalcitrant genie I keep in a small brass lamp finally grants my wish to drink from the fountain of youth.


My new year resolution: turn off the flash when photographing Dirac the kitten. This way, we all get to see his gorgeous hazel eyes.


His teething is mostly over but there are times that it is necessary for me to stick a hacky sack into his adorable mouth, especially those times when he is gazing at my neck in that sneaky vampire manner of his.

Not a sleepy Dirac, but just temporarily made purblind by my inconsiderate use of the flash


À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

How to make chocolate sauce and chocolate truffles

Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Season's Greetings!

Dirac the kitten, The Calm One, and I all wish you the happiest of holidays! Laugh, eat up a storm, pet the furry one(s) you love, and don't forget to do something especially nice just for yourself. 

My apple pie recipe is here (sans cheddar in the crust)

Dirac already told us what he will be doing. Catching up on his reading!

He has many catalogs to browse...

See you in the new year!

Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Parmesan Polenta with Tomato Sauce (Quick Recipes Series)

Polenta if made with the fast cooking variety presents its sunny goodness in minutes. Mounded in a bowl, it invitingly glistens. A possible response? Make an ample indentation, sprinkle some Parmesan, pour in a simple, easily made tomato sauce, and top with more cheese!


Ingredients
provides a huge serving for a very hungry person
  • Polenta, quick cooking (I used fine grain), 120 ml/4 fluid ounces
  • Water, 355 ml/12 fluid oz
  • Tomato paste, 3 T to be diluted with 8 T of water
  • Garlic, one large clove, minced
  • Thyme, dried, 1/4 tsp
  • Olive oil, 1 T
  • Parmesan, freshly grated, 2 heaping T plus some 'ribbons' made with a veggie peeler for garnishing
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Put the 355 ml/12 fluid oz of water into a medium-sized saucepan and bring to a boil.  In a skillet, saute minced garlic in olive oil for a minute or two over medium low heat, and then add the tomato paste and thyme.


Carefully pour in eight tablespoons of water and blend.


Simmer for a few minutes until thickened. Add salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste. Reserve and keep warm.


Into the boiling water, very gradually add the polenta in a fine rain, all the while stirringContinue to stir over low heat and simmer for a few minutes. Test taste to see if it's cooked to your preference. Pile into a bowl. Make a well in the centre and line it with one heaping tablespoon of Parmesan.


Puddle some sauce.


Scatter another heaping tablespoon of cheese and finish with cheese ribbons.

Dwarf snapdragons are still blooming chez nous!

This colourful duo of polenta and tomato sauce are made for each other. The sauce brings to each substantial spoonful of warming porridge a fragrant reminder of summer.


Dirac the kitten often assists in my publishing posts at Souped-up Garden. Here he is identifying some prose needing revision.


He attentively observes my editing.


He thoughtfully approves.


À la prochaine!

Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Quick Coffee Cake

Coffee cakes which are raised with yeast and served when still warm from the oven are my preference. Their steamy softness emitting a whiff of spice and topped either with buttery crumbs or a plain icing makes me happy that an aromatic, invigorating brown liquid exists.


But this type takes time. My culinary bible, Fannie Farmer, to the rescue! It contains a recipe for a baking powder version whose simple cinnamon sugar topping becomes transformed into a carmelised crust which seals in moisture. Barely an hour is needed to put a freshly baked delice on the table!


INGREDIENTS
makes nine approximately 2.5 inch/6.5 cm squares

  • Sugar, white, 200 grams/8 fluid oz
  • Flour, white, 245 grams/14 fluid oz
  • Baking powder, 2 tsp
  • Butter, sweet, 60 grams/4 T (cold and cut into small pieces)
  • Egg, large, 1, slightly beaten
  • Milk, whole, 1 dL/4 fluid oz
  • Topping:  1 T sugar mixed with 1.5 tsp cinnamon
  • If desired, cake squares can be split and filled with lemon curd, recipe here (decrease sugar by 2 T because this cake is pretty sweet)

Preheat the oven to 190 degrees C/375 degrees F. Butter an 8-inch/20 cm square pan. Mix the sugar, the flour, and the baking powder in a large bowl.


Work in the butter with your fingers until the mixture resembles coarse sand.


Add the egg and milk...


...and blend till mostly smooth.


Spoon into pan. Shake to level out the thick batter. If required, smooth out to the edges with a wet, metal tablespoon. Sprinkle the sugar mixture evenly all over the top.


Bake for about thirty minutes or until the sides pull away just a bit and when the centre is pressed it springs back slightly. Served warm, this cake has a pleasing doughy crumb and a crust close to toffee in taste and texture. It still is pretty good when completely cooled and in that state it can be easily split and filled with lemon curd. You are right if you are thinking that I didn't wait for either the cake or the curd to cool completely. Hence the yellow lava flow.

A fabulous pairing!

Dirac the kitten is slated to start a course where he will learn not to run in circles around my computer screen. Well, at least not continuously for thirty minutes. Yes, he is still teething and thank goodness for hacky sacks and the international conglomerate who inserts them in our cereal boxes.

One half of the circle: back of the screen

The other half of the circle:  front of the screen

À la prochaine!

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Linguine in a Creme Fraiche, Sorrel, Capers & Garlic Sauce (Quick Recipe Series)

Herbs, preferably fresh, can enliven the flavour of a dish during the winter, for example, if they are minced finely and stirred into spaetzle batter or into creamy potato soup. Sage, rosemary, thyme, parsley, and chives can be coaxed into providing vibrant bounty all through cold weather either by their being potted and placed on a sunny window sill/under plant lights or overwintered in the garden by covering them snugly with horticultural fleece. Also more and more markets are stocking an enticing variety of fresh herbs all year round.


Our sorrel has had a banner year, poking up early in February and staying fresh and green all through a normally wilting summer to its present lushness so it was a matter just of going out to the garden and harvesting a big handful.


Sorrel is noted for 'melting' when sauteed in butter so it features nicely in a fast and easy pasta sauce.


A chiffonade is a good way to prepare sorrel. Wash and dry the leaves. Stack them in a pile and trim off the stems. Roll up like a cigar and slice.


INGREDIENTS
makes one meal-sized serving, can be multiplied if desired

  • Linguine, bunch measuring about 2.5 cm/1 inch in diameter, cooked until almost tender
  • Crème fraîche, 4 T
  • Sorrel, 1 large handful (reserve a few for garnishing)
  • Capers, drained, 2-3 tsp (if you love capers as much as I do, then the full dose is for you)
  • Butter, sweet, 1 T
  • Garlic clove, large, 1, peeled & minced
  • Pasta cooking water, 6-8 T
  • Parmesan, freshly grated, 2-3 T
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Saute the garlic briefly in the melted butter, add the chiffonade of sorrel, and gently cook for a few minutes or until the leaves have turned an olive green and have started to disintegrate.


Add the capers, crème fraîche, and the pasta water. Give it all a good stirring.


Toss in the pasta to finish its cooking and stir for a minute or two over medium heat until the sauce thickens, coating each strand. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste.


Serve hot with the grated Parmesan. This dish turned out to be Alfredo Fettuccine's cousin who while singing the lemony praises of sorrel was whisked off to paradise to be enthroned on a buttery cloud which was anointed with garlic, laced with sour cream, seeded with piquant capers, and graced with cheese. Savoury salvation, indeed. Of the super supper kind.


Dirac the kitten after successfully completing his course of How Not To Hog Michelle's Computer Screen has developed a routine. He at first politely keeps to the right of my screen while maintaining a sentinel stance...


...which after five minutes or so morphs into a drowsy demeanor...


...ending with, well, complete abandonment of his guardian duties.


À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

Sorrel as an ingredient in Gözleme, a Turkish stuffed bread
Sorrel as an ingredient in Minestrone
Sorrel added to scrambled eggs

Wednesday, 19 November 2014

The Adventure of the Speckled Pie!

A while back, OK, very much back, like many moons ago, one stormy night found me curled up on a sofa while intently poring over my culinary bible, Fannie Farmer. A description of how well cheddar goes with apple pie intrigued me as until then I thought the only worthy accompaniment was another slice, right next to the first one. Since I would forget to put some cheddar with a serving of pie, it was only when Pinterestyes, fast forward to the presentpopped up in my stream a photo of an apple pie cleverly made with a cheddar-enriched crust that I finally got around to tasting this wonderful pairing.

The cheddar causes the mottling

Though I was tempted to do a lattice crust on top, I remained instead committed to regarding pie as a lidded vessel for braising fruit. Simmer away, baby.


A potent mingling happens when fruit is well sealed within pastry: does the juice comes from the fruit or does the juice form the fruit? Where does the filling end and the crust begin? Primordial pie. 


INGREDIENTS
makes a 9 inch/23 cm double crust pie

Pastry Dough:

  • Flour, white, plain, all-purpose, 20 fluid oz/350 g
  • Salt, 1/2 tsp
  • Butter, sweet, cold, cut into small pieces, 3 fluid oz/82 g
  • Lard, cold, cut into small pieces, 3 fluid oz/82 g
  • Cheddar, not colored, finely grated and lightly packed, 8 fluid oz/235 ml
  • Water, cold, 4-7 T

Filling:

  • Apples, large, firm, tart, 6 (I used Granny Smith apples)
  • Sugar, white, 8 fluid oz/200 g
  • Salt, 1/2 tsp
  • Cinnamon, 1 tsp
  • Nutmeg, freshly grated, 1/2 tsp
  • Flour, 1.5 T
  • Butter, sweet 2 T
  • Optional:  lemon, small, freshly squeezed, about 3 T can be added if apples are not that tart or very fresh or if you prefer a more tart pie

To make the pastry, in a large bowl work the lard and butter into the flour and salt using your fingertips until the mixture resembles coarse sand.


Stir in the grated cheese and blend thoroughly.


Add the cold water, one tablespoon by tablespoon. The moisture content of the flour I used called for just four tablespoons; moister, that is, fresher flour would call for less while dryer and older, more water. Though it is important as it is often advised to keep the fat cold to achieve a flaky pastry, what is probably just as important if not more is to use the right amount of water. That's why I use my fingers so I can feel how wet the mixture is getting.

I test right in the mixing bowl after each addition of water if the dough will come together into a ball.  When it does, knead gently about five times on a lightly floured surface until the dough is mostly smooth. Halve into two equal parts by weighing them and lightly flatten both. Put in the fridge for at least thirty minutes.


Mix together the flour, sugar, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Reserve.


Preheat oven to 425 degrees F/220 degrees C. Quarter a washed apple. Core the quarters. Peel, slice, and put them in a large bowl. The thinner they are, the more they will become saucier when baked. Repeat with the rest. If adding lemon juice, toss well with the apples.


Roll out one half of the cold dough on a floured surface. Use a pie plate for a template and cut all around, leaving a bit in surplus. Collect any scraps for later freezing. This pastry could be used in fresh fruit/veggie rounds.

Putting a tea towel/dish cloth under the pastry board prevents it from slipping

Using a thin, long, straight spatula, loosen the round from the surface. Fold in half.


Place the folded pastry midway in the pie plate. Unfold and press it gently to fit. Toss the spice/sugar mixture with the sliced apples. Put them first evenly into the plate and then pile the remaining in the centre to make a rounded hill shape. Dot with butter.


Roll out and fold in half the top crust and slide it midway over the apples, then unfold. Press together the top and bottom edge. Crimp around the perimeter either using the tines of a fork or as I did, with my fingers: thumb and first finger on one hand goes on the inside while the first finger on the other hand is doing shaping duty in the opposite direction on the outside. Decoratively slash the pie. I did four longer slashes in the shape of a cross leaving the very centre unmarked. Four shorter ones were added in between those. Line a shallow baking pan with parchment paper and put the pie on it.

If you prefer to hide the speckles, then coat the top with egg wash (beaten egg diluted a bit with water)

Bake for ten minutes at 425 degrees F/220 degrees C and then for another thirty to forty minutes at 350 degrees F/180 degrees C. The crust should be nicely browned, juices bubbling, and when a wooden skewer is inserted near the centre, it should penetrate the apples easily.

Slices are cleaner in shape if cut when the pie is just slightly warm or cool which could take at least an hour. Back in the day, that's why they were put on a sill of an opened window. For the first piece, I didn't do that. Maybe twenty minutes after this fragrant mound of lusciousness left the oven, I took a knife to it. The resulting pool of gooey juice was easily handled by spooning it around the slice. Think of it as soup being served with a fruit cheddar casserole. I did.


When warm, this pie wreathes you in aroma that of spice, butter, cheddar, and apple. It tastes great too!


Dirac the kitten is approaching the ripe old age of seven months. He's still teething, but less so, and he still gets into everything, but less so. He has graciously allowed me to teach him how not to hog my computer screen. Though a long series of classes were required, he now discreetly stands to the screen's right side.

Dirac preening with pride at his hard-earned accomplishment

À la prochaine!

RELATED LINKS

The truth about what kind of apples Johnny Appleseed planted
The Adventure of the Speckled Band