Dessert Archive

Nancy Silverton’s Bittersweet Chocolate Cake

Posted December 4, 2011 By Adri

The Signature Chocolate Dessert from Osteria Mozza

Chocolate Cake

Give Americans a menu, and most will order the chocolate dessert. Last Thursday’s Los Angeles Times Food section showcased a chocolate dessert dressed to the nines, just in time for the holidays. From Los Angeles area chef Nancy Silverton of Osteria Mozza, comes a bittersweet chocolate fantasia – dense chocolate cake napped with voluptuous fudge sauce presented with a trio of chocolate confections – candied almonds dipped and rolled in cocoa, chocolate coated candied hazelnut clusters and chocolate dipped honeycomb. I simply can not conjure up a more spectacularly elegant dessert for New Year’s Eve.

The success of this dessert will rest on the quality of your ingredients. With one pound of chocolate in the cake alone, you will not want to skimp, especially not when you are going to invest this much effort. Be sure to use fine quality: my favorite is Callebaut (available from Amazon). However, brands such as Valrhona and Scharffen Berger are also marvelous. The same holds true for the fudge sauce – use high quality cocoa. Go for Pernigotti, or Penzeys high fat (24%) natural cocoa from Penzeys.com.

Okay, I know it looks like a lot – this is fine dining in the home, senza dubito. Don’t be daunted; you can do this. Just do not make the mistake of thinking you can do it all in one day. Each of the five components can be made ahead, some as far as a week, and in the case of the fudge sauce, several weeks. The recipe and directions available at the LA Times website are meticulous in their detail, and Ms. Silverton and the editors have generously included a video.

Buone feste!

Chocolate Cake


Note: You can click on any picture for a larger image, and to see a slide show!

I have no affiliation with any product, manufacturer, or site mentioned in this article.

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Mocha Espresso with Amaretto

Posted November 26, 2011 By Adri

Mocha Espresso with Amaretto

Are you looking for a grown-up hot chocolate? Look no farther. This combination of cocoa, stovetop espresso and Amaretto topped with whipped cream will satisfy. The espresso lends its own unique coffee flavor to this libation. but if you do not have access to an espresso maker, stovetop or mechanical, you can use freshly brewed double strength coffee. As for the Amaretto, make it Luxardo, the most glorious of all. Whip your cream ever so softly, just to thicken it, and don’t omit the 1/8 teaspoon almond extract. It may not sound like much, but it works magic on the whipped cream.

Mocha Espresso with Amaretto

serves 2

2 cups whole milk
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
7 tablespoons Dutch process cocoa, such as Pernigotti or Penzeys High Fat
1cup brewed espresso
1/3 cup Amaretto
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
cocoa for dusting drinks

Whipped Cream
1 cup heavy cream
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/8 teaspoon almond extract

Make the whipped cream. Pour heavy cream into medium bowl. Add sugar and extracts. Beat until thickened. Set aside.

Pour milk into saucepan. Add sugar and cocoa, whisking to combine. Heat to scalding, whisking occasionally. Remove from heat and add hot espresso, Amaretto and vanilla extract. Pour into serving glasses, top generously with whipped cream and a dusting of cocoa. Serve at once.

Buon natale!

I have no affiliation with any product, manufacturer, or site mentioned in this article.

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Panna Cotta all’Amaretto

Posted October 20, 2011 By Adri

Another in The Panna Cotta Diaries

Amaretto Panna Cotta

Well, I am back to The Panna Cotta Diaries. I was in the mood. Comfort food. Easy comfort food. For me, that’s Panna Cotta. I decided to use Amaretto, and not just any Amaretto – Luxardo Amaretto di Saschira. If you have never tasted this brand, then you have never tasted Amaretto, the “little bitter” liqueur.

Amaretto
 
Luxardo uses the famous almonds from Avola in the province of Siracusa in the south of Sicily. Real almonds. Some say really the best almonds. Not all brands use almonds, much less the magnificent ones from Avola. Some use lesser quality nuts, peach pits or synthetic flavorings. I mention all this because until I tasted Luxardo, I did not care for Amaretto very much at all. If you think Amaretto is not for you, give the Luxardo a try. I bet that just as I did, you will change your mind.
 
 
The liqueur is a gorgeous clear amber. Open this sleek, slender bottle, and smell the heady scent of the finest marzipan. It is not as sweet as other brands, and the almond taste opens up as the liqueur wraps your mouth in a delicate blanket of almond. This is one luxurious liqueur, and it imparts the most extraordinary burnt sugar and almond flavor to this dessert.

 

 

 

Amaretto Panna Cotta

Amaretto Panna Cotta

makes 6 1/2 cup servings

This Panna Cotta is just in time for elegant winter time dinner parties. I make it with a full 1/4 cup of Amaretto along with almond and vanilla extracts. Don’t skimp on the quality of liqueur. With this much Amaretto, you must use high quality spirits. Go for the good stuff, such as Luxardo. Ditto for the almond extract and vanilla extracts – use a fine brand such as Nielsen-Massey or Sonoma Syrup Co.
 
I tried several amounts of gelatin with this one. I started with 2 1/4 teaspoons, and the set was not firm enough. I upped it right to 3 teaspoons, and it was much too firm – a nerf ball comes to mind. I backed off to 2 ½ teaspoons – it was just a shade too tight, finally settling on a scant 2 ½ teaspoons. Remember though, the set on Panna Cotta is very much a personal choice. So feel free to change the amount up or down. but just remember that you will not need to change it very much. Unless you want a nerf ball, that is. For a photo essay on how to make Panna Cotta and information on how to treat gelatin, see my post on Espresso Panna Cotta.

1 1/2 cups heavy cream
1 1/4 cups whole milk, divided
1/4 cup Amaretto
1/4 cup granulated sugar
scant 2 1/2 teaspoons powdered gelatin
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
chocolate curls to garnish

Pour 1/4 cup milk in shallow bowl. Sprinkle gelatin over milk and soften five minutes. Be sure all the gelatin comes in contact with the milk – otherwise it will not soften properly.

Pour cream, remaining 1 cup milk and sugar in medium saucepan. Stir to combine. Over medium flame, heat to scalding. Do not let mixture boil.

Remove from heat, add softened gelatin, stirring to combine thoroughly. Continue stirring until gelatin has dissolved. The mixture should be quite smooth.

Strain mixture into clean bowl. Add Amaretto and extracts and combine thoroughly.

Set bowl over an ice bath. Stir frequently to promote even cooling until mixture develops the consistency of high-fat heavy cream.

Pour into serving glasses. Cover with plastic and refrigerate 2 hours or overnight.

Garnish with bittersweet chocolate curls for service.

A note: I like to cool the Panna Cotta until it thickens somewhat. That way when I move it from my counter to the refrigerator, it does not shift in the serving glass and I get a perfectly even line of Panna Cotta in the glass. Do avoid the pitfall of letting it get too thick. You will wind up with an uneven surface. I know. I know. Picky, picky.

Amaretto Panna Cotta


Note: You can click on any picture for a larger image, and to see a slide show!

I have no affiliation with any product, manufacturer, or site mentioned in this article.

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LA Times Gravenstein Thin-Crusted Apple Tart

Posted August 16, 2011 By Adri

Gravenstein Apple Tart

When you have really nice apples you don’t need anything else. Well, except for some butter and flour to make a tart. When I saw the article in the August 11 edition of the Los Angeles Times about the endangered Gravenstein apple and the accompanying recipe, I just had to give it try. I had forgotten about Gravensteins. They were one of my mother’s favorites for baking, along with Jonathans. The Gravenstein apple, once a large crop in California is now in danger of disappearing. There are several reasons, foremost among them, the apples are difficult to harvest, perishable and quite simply, farmers can make more money growing other crops. However the Gravenstein is not without friends. Read more… »

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Acqua di Cedro – a Drink and a Panna Cotta

Posted August 14, 2011 By Adri

Acqua di Cedro Citron

Acqua di CedroMove over Limoncello. Acqua di Cedro has arrived. This clear liqueur is made with citron, cedro in Italian (botanical name – Citrus medica.) Poor unattractive and underused citron, aside from its candied peel used for Christmas baking, it is pretty much ignored in my kitchen. Not so however on my dressing table where its essential oils form the base of many of my favorite perfumes. This most ancient of citrus with its gnarled and bumpy skin is said to have flourished in the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and was brought to Italy by Alexander the Great – this baby’s got some history behind it. Read more… »

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Stracenate, Stracnar and a Cavarola Board

Posted July 18, 2011 By Adri


“…This is another of those great old pastas that must be made manually and is disappearing, but let us revive it…”
Giuliano Bugialli, in Bugialli on Pasta


Cavarola18


Everything old is new again. No jive. Question: What’s a cavarola? Answer: a small rectangular wooden board with a herringbone surface used to make some of the traditional pastas of Italy’s Mezzogiorno. These household boards are relatively small, usually about 12 inches long and 8 inches wide. They can be made from any wood – fruit woods and beech being very commonly used. The herringbone pattern is carved into one side of the board, and is transferred to the pasta with a rolling pin. The resulting pasta is unique, lovely to look at and the irregular surface holds condimenti better than any smooth pasta ever could. Read more… »

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