The April 2011 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Evelyne of the blog Cheap Ethnic Eatz. Evelyne chose to challenge everyone to make a maple mousse in an edible container. Prizes are being awarded to the most creative edible container and filling, so vote on your favorite from April 27th to May 27th at http://thedaringkitchen.com!
So, can I tell you a secret? I'm not writing this at the last minute. It always seems that real life craziness gets in the way of my ability to complete the Daring Challenges until the very last minute (like the day it is due to be posted) and then I find myself up late after the kids are in bed trying to get the post finished. Not this time! I have more than a week to go before this post will publish. It feels kind of...strange actually. But I think I like it.
When I first read this challenge, I only skimmed over it assuming that it was the same as the Daring Cooks edible container challenge, except sweet instead of savory. I missed one key detail in reading the instructions where it said, "There are 2 mandatory components to this challenge. You must make one of the 2 maple mousse recipes listed below and you must make an edible container in which to place your mousse for presentation." They even put them in bold. Somehow I thought I could make any filling and it wasn't until the other day that I realized I was suppose to make a maple mousse.
When I realized the filling had already been selected for me I didn't really mind, but I wasn't able to get back to the store to get the real maple syrup that was required. Not seeing any time in the near future that would be convenient to pick some up and wanting to get started filling the bowls I had already made, I decided to go with Honey, which had been presented as an alternative. The dried pineapple bowls were inspired by the dried pineapple flowers on Martha Stewart's site, which I saw quite some time ago. Her recipe says you only need to dry them for around an hour which I found not nearly sufficient. Perhaps if you can manage to get your pineapple slices paper thin that will be fine, otherwise expect to check it every half hour or so until it is nice and dry and tacky.
I'm wondering if it would have helped to dried them flat for the first half hour or so before trying to flip them over and place them in my silicone muffin cups. Trying to fit the stiff, fresh pieces of pineapple was a little tricky because they wanted to tear and break but I noticed when I was checking on them that they had become much more pliable after a little time in the oven. Be sure that you dry your pineapple on some parchment paper, or a silpat, or something else that it won't stick to otherwise you will end up rather aggravated later. The muffin cups I used were a gift from one of my brothers (hmm, I seem to get a lot of cooking paraphernalia from those guys) and I don't get to use them often but they worked marvelously for this. I might make some individual sized fruit leathers in them soon.
Here I am rambling on and I haven't yet told you how wonderful the pineapple and honey went together! The mousse on it's own was incredibly sweet and I can't really see myself eating much of it that way. After I paired it with the dried pineapple I was surprised how much less sweet it seemed. Even though pineapples are a sweet fruit the acidity from the citrus really seemed to mute the sweetness of the mousse. The pineapple cups were a little chewy and I loved that next to the melting smoothness of the mousse.
Don't forget that this month's challenge is a competition! Browse around and see what some other creative souls from the Daring Bakers have come up with and make sure that you vote for your favorite from April 27th to May 27th at http://thedaringkitchen.com! And if you'd like to try it, find the challenge recipe here!
Showing posts with label custard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label custard. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Daring Bakers Make Mousse in an Edible Container
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Daring Bakers make Panna Cotta and Florentine Cookies
The February 2011 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Mallory from A Sofa in the Kitchen. She chose to challenge everyone to make Panna Cotta from a Giada De Laurentiis recipe and Nestle Florentine Cookies.
All month I have been putting off making this challenge for the simple reason that I didn't want to be the only one to eat it. Hey, Babe isn't really big on dessert (so he claims) and insists that he pretty much just sticks to cookies. Since the deadline for the challenges was very helpfully coinciding with our plans to visit my family, I was pleased to started whipping everything together. I hadn't anticipated any trouble. Since it just looked like a soft pudding to me, I thought it would be a cinch to make.
Actually, the Panna Cotta really was simple. I didn't have any trouble tweaking it to make the coconut version I had visions of. The trouble came when I tried to create a recipe for chocolate geleé. You see, my vision included a chocolate geleé layered with creamy coconut Panna Cotta and served with a crispy almond Florentine cookie alongside. Things didn't quite turn out the way I had planned. The chocolate geleé never actually set, which I discovered as I was ready to pour my assembled Panna Cotta into the dishes. On top of that, Hey, Babe became miserably ill with his second stomach virus in a month while I was in the middle of preparations. It turns out that I won't be having anyone to share my incredible dessert with after all since we did not feel inclined to spread the plague to another household and opted instead to stay home.
At the last minute I poured my coconut panna cotta into two large bowls and only one of the prepared glasses with the chocolate not-quite-geleé. Since the one I poured into the glass didn't really layer nicely I feel it was a wise choice. The chocolate not-really-at-all-geleé-now-that-I-think-about-it I simmered in a pot until it became a much thicker chocolate sauce. Tasty, but not what I had planned. The combination between the two was absolutely perfect. The bitterness of the chocolate subdued the sweetness of the panna cotta and danced together with the coconut in perfect harmony. It was exactly as I had hoped. The Florentine cookies added a pleasant crumbly crunch to an otherwise silky smooth experience and all in all I am completely satisfied with the results. The only shame was the lack of any appreciative audience to share it with.
To the given recipes I made the following changes:
-Substituted 1 can (2 cups) of coconut milk for the 1 cup of milk and 1 of the cups of heavy cream
-Substituted sugar for the honey (I wasn't sure how strong the coconut flavor was going to be and so I didn't want to take any chane that the honey would distract from it)
-Added 2/3 cup of chopped almonds to the cookies
-Substituted almond flour/meal for the all purpose flour (I think it made them quite crumbly but I liked them that way)
All month I have been putting off making this challenge for the simple reason that I didn't want to be the only one to eat it. Hey, Babe isn't really big on dessert (so he claims) and insists that he pretty much just sticks to cookies. Since the deadline for the challenges was very helpfully coinciding with our plans to visit my family, I was pleased to started whipping everything together. I hadn't anticipated any trouble. Since it just looked like a soft pudding to me, I thought it would be a cinch to make.
Actually, the Panna Cotta really was simple. I didn't have any trouble tweaking it to make the coconut version I had visions of. The trouble came when I tried to create a recipe for chocolate geleé. You see, my vision included a chocolate geleé layered with creamy coconut Panna Cotta and served with a crispy almond Florentine cookie alongside. Things didn't quite turn out the way I had planned. The chocolate geleé never actually set, which I discovered as I was ready to pour my assembled Panna Cotta into the dishes. On top of that, Hey, Babe became miserably ill with his second stomach virus in a month while I was in the middle of preparations. It turns out that I won't be having anyone to share my incredible dessert with after all since we did not feel inclined to spread the plague to another household and opted instead to stay home.
At the last minute I poured my coconut panna cotta into two large bowls and only one of the prepared glasses with the chocolate not-quite-geleé. Since the one I poured into the glass didn't really layer nicely I feel it was a wise choice. The chocolate not-really-at-all-geleé-now-that-I-think-about-it I simmered in a pot until it became a much thicker chocolate sauce. Tasty, but not what I had planned. The combination between the two was absolutely perfect. The bitterness of the chocolate subdued the sweetness of the panna cotta and danced together with the coconut in perfect harmony. It was exactly as I had hoped. The Florentine cookies added a pleasant crumbly crunch to an otherwise silky smooth experience and all in all I am completely satisfied with the results. The only shame was the lack of any appreciative audience to share it with.
To the given recipes I made the following changes:
-Substituted 1 can (2 cups) of coconut milk for the 1 cup of milk and 1 of the cups of heavy cream
-Substituted sugar for the honey (I wasn't sure how strong the coconut flavor was going to be and so I didn't want to take any chane that the honey would distract from it)
-Added 2/3 cup of chopped almonds to the cookies
-Substituted almond flour/meal for the all purpose flour (I think it made them quite crumbly but I liked them that way)
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Daring Bakers Make Biscuit Joconde Imprimes, part Two
Our happy plans of celebrating some birthdays with this marvelous dessert over the weekend were shot to pieces when Hey, Babe came home from work with a stomach virus. I suddenly found myself with an enormous dessert and no one to share it with, though I really can't complain about that part. It is unfortunate that the change in plans happened so last minute, if the party had been canceled sooner I would have been able to put off making it, make a smaller version, or even try to freeze it right away. However, that wasn't the case.
I wasn't sure how well the mousse was going to freeze since I've never tried it before. Some Google searching didn't give me any promising reports for a mousse made with gelatin, noting weeping and separating in some cases. Not only that, but I had no idea how to package the mousse to protect it in the freezer. I didn't have a big enough container to fit it in as a whole and I was afraid that anything I could wrap it in would just stick to it and ruin it. So I just ate the whole thing myself.
I'm kidding! Although I really could have because whoa, it was the best one I've made to date. I ended up cutting the mousse into pieces and freezing them in smaller containers and when I defrost a piece I will be able to find out how well this particular recipe freezes for future reference. I had hope that Hey, Babe would recover quickly so I optimistically left a piece out for us to share. Hey, Babe not recovering fast enough, plus the fact that Little Man also caught the bug, plus the mountains of gross laundry that resulted from all that sent me to the fridge often to console myself. Needless to say, the unfrozen piece is long gone. Poor Hey, Babe will have to wait until I defrost another piece before he can try it.
At first I wasn't sure that the caramel layer came through over the strong flavor of the white-mocha layer. After several taste tests I have decided that it doesn't (and really can't) come through over the mocha layer, but it definitely complements it. I am pretty sure that this is my new favorite triple mousse cake. And thanks to some unfortunate luck on Hey, Babe's part, I will get to eat it several more times. Hmm, I wonder how it tastes frozen?
Triple Layer Mousse
Ingredients:
Milk Chocolate Mousse:
10 oz. Milk Chocolate
1 1/2 c. Heavy Cream
1 tsp. unflavored Gelatin
2 Tb. cool Water
White Chocolate-Mocha Mousse:
10 oz. White Chocolate
1 tsp. unflavored Gelatin (or 2 sheets)
1 1/2 c. Heavy Cream
1 ½ TB. Instant coffee granules
Caramel Mousse:
For the caramel:
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup heavy cream
2 teaspoons unsalted butter
1/4 tsp salt
For the mousse base:
1 tsp powdered gelatin
2 tsp cool water
1 egg yolk
1 TB sugar
1/4 cup milk
1/2 tsp. vanilla
1 cup heavy cream
Instructions
For the Milk Chocolate Mousse:
Chop the milk chocolate and place it in a double boiler. Pour ½ c. of the heavy cream over the chocolate and allow the gentle heat of the simmering water below melt the chocolate. Stir the chocolate and cream mixture until smooth.
While the chocolate is melting, pour the 2 TB of cool water into a small dish and sprinkle the gelatin over the top. Let sit until the gelatin has completely dissolved and begins to thicken into a gel. Add the gel and stir it into the milk chocolate mixture until it has completely melted. Allow chocolate mixture to begin cooling so it does not melt the whipped cream you will be adding.
Using your mixer, whip the remaining 1 c. of heavy cream to soft peaks. Check the chocolate, you want it around 80°F or cool but not stiff. Add about half of the whipped cream to the melted chocolate, whisking and folding gently until it is incorporated. Fold in the remaining whipped cream once the first half is whisked in. When the chocolate and cream are evenly blended, pour the mousse into your chosen vessel. I had a layer of the Joconde cut to the size of my Springform pan and placed in the bottom. But this can also be poured over a flourless dark chocolate cake, or into glasses to be served individually. Smooth the top and put in the fridge.
For the White Chocolate-Mocha Mousse:
Wait around 20 minutes after the first mousse was made before you begin to give it a bit of time to set and then proceed in the exact same manner as the first mousse with the exception of adding the coffee granules to the ½ cup of heavy cream before pouring over the white chocolate (unless you prefer to leave the white chocolate mousse plain, in which case omit the coffee). Pour the finished white chocolate mousse over the previous layer and place back in the fridge.
For the Caramel Mousse:
For the caramel:
Place the sugar in a small heavy bottomed saucepan set over high heat. Cook until the sugar has melted and is beginning to turn darker in color. Remove from the heat (the residual heat from the bottom of the pan will continue cooking it until it is a darker color) and add the heavy cream and butter. Stir with a wooden spoon until completely smooth, add the salt and stir a bit more until it is incorporated. Scrape out into a small bowl and set aside.
Prepare the mousse base:
Measure the cool water into a small dish and sprinkle the gelatin over top to soften. Set aside. In the now empty caramel pot, whisk the egg yolk with the sugar until very pale. Add the milk and vanilla and heat slowly over medium heat until it has thickened enough to coat the back of a spoon. Add the softened gelatin and stir until it all dissolves into the cream. Add the waiting caramel back to the pot and whisk well to combine. Let cool to room temperature.
In a medium bowl, whip the heavy cream to soft peaks. Carefully whisk and fold 1/3 of the whipped cream into the caramel base. Continue on and gently fold in the rest of the whipped cream. Pour the finished caramel mousse over the previous layer, smoothing carefully. Allow the assembled layers of mousse to chill in the fridge at least an hour (a few more would be better) before serving.
I wasn't sure how well the mousse was going to freeze since I've never tried it before. Some Google searching didn't give me any promising reports for a mousse made with gelatin, noting weeping and separating in some cases. Not only that, but I had no idea how to package the mousse to protect it in the freezer. I didn't have a big enough container to fit it in as a whole and I was afraid that anything I could wrap it in would just stick to it and ruin it. So I just ate the whole thing myself.
I'm kidding! Although I really could have because whoa, it was the best one I've made to date. I ended up cutting the mousse into pieces and freezing them in smaller containers and when I defrost a piece I will be able to find out how well this particular recipe freezes for future reference. I had hope that Hey, Babe would recover quickly so I optimistically left a piece out for us to share. Hey, Babe not recovering fast enough, plus the fact that Little Man also caught the bug, plus the mountains of gross laundry that resulted from all that sent me to the fridge often to console myself. Needless to say, the unfrozen piece is long gone. Poor Hey, Babe will have to wait until I defrost another piece before he can try it.
At first I wasn't sure that the caramel layer came through over the strong flavor of the white-mocha layer. After several taste tests I have decided that it doesn't (and really can't) come through over the mocha layer, but it definitely complements it. I am pretty sure that this is my new favorite triple mousse cake. And thanks to some unfortunate luck on Hey, Babe's part, I will get to eat it several more times. Hmm, I wonder how it tastes frozen?
Triple Layer Mousse
Ingredients:
Milk Chocolate Mousse:
10 oz. Milk Chocolate
1 1/2 c. Heavy Cream
1 tsp. unflavored Gelatin
2 Tb. cool Water
White Chocolate-Mocha Mousse:
10 oz. White Chocolate
1 tsp. unflavored Gelatin (or 2 sheets)
1 1/2 c. Heavy Cream
1 ½ TB. Instant coffee granules
Caramel Mousse:
For the caramel:
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup heavy cream
2 teaspoons unsalted butter
1/4 tsp salt
For the mousse base:
1 tsp powdered gelatin
2 tsp cool water
1 egg yolk
1 TB sugar
1/4 cup milk
1/2 tsp. vanilla
1 cup heavy cream
Instructions
For the Milk Chocolate Mousse:
Chop the milk chocolate and place it in a double boiler. Pour ½ c. of the heavy cream over the chocolate and allow the gentle heat of the simmering water below melt the chocolate. Stir the chocolate and cream mixture until smooth.
While the chocolate is melting, pour the 2 TB of cool water into a small dish and sprinkle the gelatin over the top. Let sit until the gelatin has completely dissolved and begins to thicken into a gel. Add the gel and stir it into the milk chocolate mixture until it has completely melted. Allow chocolate mixture to begin cooling so it does not melt the whipped cream you will be adding.
Using your mixer, whip the remaining 1 c. of heavy cream to soft peaks. Check the chocolate, you want it around 80°F or cool but not stiff. Add about half of the whipped cream to the melted chocolate, whisking and folding gently until it is incorporated. Fold in the remaining whipped cream once the first half is whisked in. When the chocolate and cream are evenly blended, pour the mousse into your chosen vessel. I had a layer of the Joconde cut to the size of my Springform pan and placed in the bottom. But this can also be poured over a flourless dark chocolate cake, or into glasses to be served individually. Smooth the top and put in the fridge.
For the White Chocolate-Mocha Mousse:
Wait around 20 minutes after the first mousse was made before you begin to give it a bit of time to set and then proceed in the exact same manner as the first mousse with the exception of adding the coffee granules to the ½ cup of heavy cream before pouring over the white chocolate (unless you prefer to leave the white chocolate mousse plain, in which case omit the coffee). Pour the finished white chocolate mousse over the previous layer and place back in the fridge.
For the Caramel Mousse:
For the caramel:
Place the sugar in a small heavy bottomed saucepan set over high heat. Cook until the sugar has melted and is beginning to turn darker in color. Remove from the heat (the residual heat from the bottom of the pan will continue cooking it until it is a darker color) and add the heavy cream and butter. Stir with a wooden spoon until completely smooth, add the salt and stir a bit more until it is incorporated. Scrape out into a small bowl and set aside.
Prepare the mousse base:
Measure the cool water into a small dish and sprinkle the gelatin over top to soften. Set aside. In the now empty caramel pot, whisk the egg yolk with the sugar until very pale. Add the milk and vanilla and heat slowly over medium heat until it has thickened enough to coat the back of a spoon. Add the softened gelatin and stir until it all dissolves into the cream. Add the waiting caramel back to the pot and whisk well to combine. Let cool to room temperature.
In a medium bowl, whip the heavy cream to soft peaks. Carefully whisk and fold 1/3 of the whipped cream into the caramel base. Continue on and gently fold in the rest of the whipped cream. Pour the finished caramel mousse over the previous layer, smoothing carefully. Allow the assembled layers of mousse to chill in the fridge at least an hour (a few more would be better) before serving.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Sugar High Friday #72: Trifles!
I knew exactly what I was going to make when I saw the announcement on Cream Puffs in Venice stating that Sugar High Friday #72 was featuring Trifles. My family had already decided on an Italian-American theme for Christmas dinner which meant that Tiramisu though probably quite cliché was my obvious number one choice.
I was a bit at a loss for what recipe to use since there are so many available. I browsed through several cookbooks as well as some blogs from my reader before I remembered that the Daring Bakers had made Tiramisu before I became a member. After checking out the recipe and some of the posted results I felt confident that using their version would get me the results I was looking for and so when my sisters came to visit we did some prep by baking the ladyfingers.
I have to admit that I did not make my own marscapone, as the original challenge called for and I wonder if that was a mistake. I have never tried marscapone, in any recipe calling for it I have always subbed in the standard cream cheese, and so I was curious as to what was so special about it. Before adding it in with the other ingredients I tasted it and from my perspective it was nothing special. Perhaps this is because I did not taste a possibly incredible home made version instead. Until I find time to make the marscapone myself, I suppose I will not know.
I cannot begin to describe home wonderful this tasted. There were going to be 10 of us eating this after dinner since I was pretty sure that the kids would only be interested in cookies (turns out I was half right). I recalled the recipe saying that it served 6 so I doubled it. I am so glad that I did! I have to say, serving only 6 people from one batch of the recipe would mean extremely large portions. After double the recipe we were all able to have a slice on Christmas, and then we all got another piece the next day when we were finishing leftovers. Something to keep in mind, not that any of us were complaining when it turned out that we had so much. As I made each of the components I tasted them. My only change to the given recipe was to omit the lemon zest since I didn't have any. I believe that in the future when (not if) I make this recipe again, I will have to reduce the sugar a bit, either that or perhaps add more coffee or some bittersweet chocolate.
After assembling your tiramisu it helps for serving if you let it sit in the freezer for a bit. This enables you to more precisely slice and serve each portion (while semi-frozen). Of course, by doing so you are suppose to wait and allow them to finish thawing, however, I can vouch for how tasty they are before they have completely thawed. What can I say? I couldn't wait.
If you wish to make your own incredibly delicious Tiramisu, please find the recipe I used here, on the Daring Baker's site. And please be sure to check out the round up for Sugar High Friday #72: Trifles!
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