Sunday, June 27, 2010
Devil's Food Donut Experiment II: the Glaze. . .
Ingredients:
1 pound bittersweet or semi-sweet chocolate (chips or finely diced)
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter
1/2 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup water
3/4 teaspoon vanilla
2 tablespoons corn syrup
Pinch salt
Directions:
1. Place the chocolate in a large bowl.
2. In a medium saucepan, combine the butter, cream, water, vanilla, corn syrup and salt. Bring to a good simmer over high heat. Remove from heat.
3. Pour the cream mixture over the chocolate and gently stir to combine, melting the chocolate and forming a glaze.
4. The glaze will thicken as it cools. This makes 2 1/2 cups glaze, which will keep for up to 1 week, covered and refrigerated. Rewarm slightly to thin.
Note: I used a package of semi-sweet chocolate chips (which is really only 12 oz) and added about 1/4 of another package of chocolate chips. It turned out dreamy.
My thoughts:
You know how Anne Hathaway in the Princess Diaries talks about her foot popping when she has the perfect kiss? Well, this glaze brought about a foot pop.
It keeps for a week, so I am already thinking of things to use it on--in fact I had it on a fresh peach tonight before I went to bed. Delish! I also have some French vanilla gelato in the freezer which may need some of this later. I tried out some oatmeal pancakes last weekend (which will become a post) and added chocolate chunks in. This glaze would be amazing with those. . . There aren't a lot of things I think would be bad with it. Maybe watermelon.
An experiment in donuts. . .
Note: One batch, really is enough. At the same time, if you have problems with scale (read: me), then you make two batches. My eyes are still watering from the oil in the air.
Ingredients:
4 ounces bittersweet chocolate
3 tablespoons butter
3 cups (12.75 ounces) flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa
2 eggs
2 egg yolks
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup sour cream
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
1/2 cup strong coffee, cooled--as I do not drink coffee, so don't have it on hand, we mixed water with cocoa and added it in.
Canola oil for frying
Directions:
1. In a glass bowl or measuring cup, combine the bittersweet chocolate and butter. Microwave, stirring every 30 seconds or so, until the chocolate and butter have melted and are combined. Set aside.
2. In a large bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cocoa. Set aside.
Note: this made the house smell like a chocolate lover's dream.
3. In the bowl of a stand mixer, or in a large bowl using a hand mixer, beat together the eggs, egg yolks and sugar until lightened in color, 2 to 3 minutes. Beat in the sour cream, vanilla and melted chocolate.
4. Gently beat half of the flour mixture, a spoonful at a time, into the egg mixture, then beat in the coffee. Continue to beat in the rest of the flour mixture, a spoonful at a time, until all of the ingredients are combined and a sticky dough is formed.
Note: if you are using a stand mixer, you should have used the bread hook, if you are using a hand mixer, about halfway through the flour, you will have switched to a spoon--and then your hands (picture coming shortly). It will be sticky.
5. On a well-floured surface, roll the dough into a round just over one-half inch in thickness. Using a doughnut cutter, or 2 biscuit cutters (a larger one measuring 3 to 3 1/2 inches in diameter, and a smaller one measuring about 1 inch in diameter), cut the dough into doughnuts, spacing the doughnuts as close as possible. Collect the scraps and roll out to form another batch of doughnuts (note that this batch may be a little tougher than the first as the dough has been worked).
Note: Use a lot of flour on the surface you are rolling--in fact, roll on parchment or wax paper--it will make your life easier. Also, with a double batch, we rolled out a few times, and it got easier. We also rolled it between wax paper, to make it less sticky, kind of. Also, we tried a few different sizes. The size of a goblet with middle of the vanilla cap was the best size, though the donut holes were delicious!
6. Fill a deep fryer with oil, or fill a large pot to a depth of at least 3 inches, and heat to a temperature of 350 degrees.
7. Gently place the doughnuts in the fryer, being careful not to crowd. Fry the doughnuts on each side until puffed and golden, about 4 minutes, flipping every 30 seconds or so.
Note: this is an experimental process. Because the dough is dark, you have to make sure the oil isn't too hot, and that the donut is cooked all the way through (though we didn't mind some of the doughy in the middle ones--it is like brownie batter, so not a lot of bad there). It puffs on the side in the oil, so make sure you flip them well. These will not hold onto the oil, so you really just need paper towels to drain onto.
8. Drain the doughnuts on a rack and cool slightly, then frost and decorate as desired.
Note: See the next post for the glaze. LOVE the glaze. . .
My thoughts:
I'd definitely make these again. They are extremely dense, so you cannot eat a lot of them. Well, you can, but, you know. . . Also, the recipe says they take an hour, but they take more than an hour if you double the recipe. I recently watched an episode of Top Chef Masters where they made a honey bacon donut, so that may be next in the donut experiment.
I'm still trying to get the smell of the fair out of my house, so I am not loving that, but when you bite into one you've just glazed, and it all melts together in a smooth lusciousness of chocolate, you kind of don't mind. I cannot wait to have them for breakfast tomorrow.
A slight change. . .
With Taste,
T
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
A recipe, An experiment, and a request. . .
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Tantilizing Photos
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
An Invitation and a recipe
Irish Soda Bread with Raisins (optional) Bon Appétit | February 2005
by Anitra Earle, Yonkers, NY
Anitra Earle of Yonkers, New York, writes: "I'm a perfume detective who hunts down hard-to-find and discontinued scents. One of the benefits of running my business from home is that I get to cook every day. I usually make dishes that I've relied on for years."
Yield: Makes 1 loaf
Ingredients
- Nonstick vegetable oil spray
- 2 cups all purpose flour
- 5 tablespoons sugar, divided
- 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 3 tablespoons butter, chilled, cut into cubes
- 1 cup buttermilk
- 2/3 cup raisins (optional, try dried blueberries for a fun twist!)
Preparation
Preheat oven to 375°F. Spray 8-inch-diameter cake pan with nonstick spray. Whisk flour, 4 tablespoons sugar, baking powder, salt, and baking soda in large bowl to blend. Add butter. Using fingertips, rub in until coarse meal forms. Make well in center of flour mixture. Add buttermilk. Gradually stir dry ingredients into milk to blend. Mix in raisins.
Using floured hands, shape dough into ball. Transfer to prepared pan and flatten slightly (dough will not come to edges of pan). Sprinkle dough with remaining 1 tablespoon sugar.
Bake bread until brown and tester inserted into center comes out clean, about 40 minutes. Cool bread in pan 10 minutes. Transfer to rack. Serve warm or at room temperature.
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Serve with Corned Beef and Cabbage. . . I saw this recipe for Corned Beef and Cabbage recently, and was BLOWN AWAY by their presentation. I don't think I've ever thought of creatively producing my recipes.
Have a delightfully lucky St. Patrick's Day!
Monday, March 1, 2010
The Easiest Cookies You'll Ever Make
Ingredients:
- 1 box cake mix, any flavor
- 1/2 cup oil or 1 cube butter
- 1 egg
Bake for about 8 minutes at 375.
Thus far, I've made yellow, chocolate, German chocolate, Funfetti, yellow with cinnamon sugar, strawberry, and chocolate with red sprinkles. (The above is strawberry with red sprinkles.)
Sunday, February 28, 2010
An odd way to say, "Thank you!"
- A "bounty!" of produce brought by Mom and Dad (B has a habit of singing this while raising her arms that compels me to shake my head at her).
- The night before surgery, the nummy pork from Cafe Rio that Ashlee gifted us with for Mom's birthday (made by me).
- The night after surgery (my first food in more than 24 hours), the hospital's beef with broccoli.
- The next day and part of the next--grilled cheese and tomato soup--Velveeta and Campbell's--totally childhood memories of feel-better comfort food (sorry, it is what I wanted).
- A beautiful Southern Season chocolate gift basket from the 3 Musketeers at work.
- Gorgeous, delicate, white bean soup while cheering for various Olympic sports with AP.
- Mashed potatoes.
- Pineapple, clemantines, oranges, bananas . . .
- German Pancakes from B.
- Cereal--as a non-cereal eater, I've been weirdly pro-cereal of late. Maybe because all of the drugs make my body uneasy about a lot of things, so cereal is simple enough not to throw it into a tailspin.
- A pasta salad bursting with so many intricate flavors, I am sure I haven't hit them all yet--maybe Rachel will share the recipe?
- Crepes, crepes, crepes. Brit's berry sauce recipe and Thells's lemon custard recipe, I may need. Though the standard Parmesan chicken with Boursin and raspberry jam is always delicious, spiced nuts with pear and goat cheese is pretty amazing.
- Crack cupcakes (really pumpkin, chocolate baby cupcakes that you can't stop eating) from the Major Baker.
- German Chocolate Cake Balls--mmm, mmm, mmm. CC, we need to have a tasting of various flavor combinations and then rate them all!
- Reheated sausage and egg, from A, mixed with golden pancakes for a delicious new take on pigs in a blanket.
- As a kid, I hated meatloaf, but when HK (doesn't that kind of feel like a combination of Harry Potter and JK Rowling?) stopped by with baked potatoes, green beans, and mini-meatloaves (almost a deconstructed shepherd's pie), both Miss B and I couldn't get enough! Long after there were exclamations of it's goodness.
- Pizza, Pizza.
- Oatmeal, pumpkin, chocolate chip cookies (another Major creation of doom--and by doom I mean I cannot stop eating them) and milk.
- Pineapple.
- Shakespearean in it's flavor pedigree, but simple in its ingredients--gorgeous, perfectly seasoned Asparagus with moist, flavorful chicken. And a berry pie. Perfectly, lusciously delicious and filling--not too fancy, but perfection in every bite.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Around the Web in Foodie Posts: Randomness
- Pie Pops - brilliant!
- A menu plan for Sunday School
- Waffleizer - fabulous new blog I have stumbled across. This is genius!
- Ironman meets Ironchef - if you are into working out and cooking, do not miss this year's!
- Eating light for the new year
- An amazing way to reuse your lemon peel.
- A defense of crisco - it really does make the best pie crust!
- A conversation about school lunches.
- Gorgeous pictures of a Paris open-air market.
- Cocoa brownies to die for
- A restaurant in a tree!
- Bizarre Lady Gaga cookies
- Superbowl recipes! - just in time for this weekend!