Dessert Archive

Espresso Panna Cotta

Posted July 30, 2010 By Adri



Espresso Panna Cotta

...



The French have Creme Brulée.  The Italians have Panna Cotta.  Creme Brulee is thickened with eggs.  Panna cotta is thickened with gelatin.  Both are creamy.  Both are delicious.  Today’s post is Italy’s answer to the French.  And I think it is a great answer.

Panna Cotta can be made with lots of different dairy products – milk, cream, yogurt, buttermilk, sour cream, creme fraiche, pretty much anything you can think of.  It is often flavored, always sweetened and always includes gelatin.  My Espresso Panna Cotta is made with milk and cream, sweetened with sugar, flavored with espresso beans and set with gelatin.  Classic.



Unflavored Gelatin

...


A few words about Fear of Gelatin.  If you were born after the ascendancy of JELL-O you have it.  We all have it.  In 1950  JELL-O began a heavy advertising campaign, and they really took America by storm.  Housewives everywhere were looking for shortcuts, and Jell-O was a sure bet.  The homemade fruit gelatins my mom grew up with all but disappeared.  At about the same time menu items such as Tomato Aspic and gelées in general fell very much out of vogue.  Use of gelatin decreased overall.  For lots of us our main gelatin memory is that we drank it in hopes of growing long, strong beautiful nails.   But when you make this Espresso Panna Cotta, you will conquer your fear.  Really.  My sister always gives me grief when I say a recipe is easy.  But this one is.

So, about gelatin.  It is made from the collagen found in beef and pork.  It is an animal product.  Vegetarians out there, beware.  For those following a kosher diet, kosher gelatin is available, but not all gelatins are created equal.  While unflavored gelatin can be found sold in bulk, the product most supermarkets sell is KNOX Unflavored Gelatine, and it is supplied in boxes containing individual packets.  Each packet contains 1/4 ounce of gelatin, an amount just shy of 2 1/2 teaspoons.  If your recipe calls for anything other than a packet of gelatin, you must measure.

I have made many Espresso Panna Cotta recipes that call for instant espresso.  They are really good, and they are pretty quick, but if you are looking for a depth of round coffee flavor, go for the beans.  And the beans you use are important.  Use a good full flavored fruity espresso bean.  I used Oro Blanco Tazzo D’Oro, from Guidi Marcello in Santa Monica, California or Amazon.com.



Crushed Coffee Beans

...


To infuse the cream with the coffee flavor you must first coarsely crush the beans.  I said crush, not grind.  Use a hammer, a meat mallet, a skillet or what ever grabs your fancy.  Put the beans in a plastic bag (that way you can see how much you have crushed them) and get to it.



Beans and Cream Infusion

...


Next, place the cream, beans and sugar into a saucepan, stir to dissolve the sugar and heat until small bubbles form around the edge of the pan.  This technique is called scalding.  Please note I did not say “Boil the cream.”  If you go beyond the scald and arrive at the boil your next stop is the dreaded boil over and its attendant mess.  You will wind up with cream all over your stovetop.  Some of it will scorch and stick to your stovetop, and you will have quite a clean up job on your hands.  Do keep a good eye on your saucepan.  You have been warned.  Once you have scalded the cream mixture, remove the pan from the heat, cover and let the mixture steep for  20 minutes.



Sprinkle the Gelatin

...


After 15 minutes pour the milk into a small bowl and sprinkle the gelatin over it to soften, also called blooming.  Do not stir.



Gelatin Landscape

...


The softened gelatin will look like a relief map of a very blond landscape, all rolling hills.  This is what you want.  Things are progressing well.



All Togehter Now

...


After the gelatin has softened for 5 minutes (we are at 20 minutes total now) pour it into the cream and stir to combine and dissolve the gelatin.  (If you are concerned about the gelatin not melting,  heat the cream mixture briefly before you add the gelatin to insure the cream is hot enough.)



Ice Bowl Setup

...


Prepare an ice bath.  For this you need two bowls, one larger than the other.  Fill the larger bowl half full with ice water.



Filtering Out the Beans

...


Strain the mixture into the smaller of the two bowls.



Cooling

...


Set the bowl containing the panna cotta  into the bowl containing the ice water and stir occasionally until it is cool, about 15 minutes, taking care that no ice water gets into the panna cotta.  This will cool the panna cotta to allow for a smooth and uniform set.

Don’t discard the crushed coffee beans!  They are an excellent high nitrogen mulch for your tomatoes.  Waste not.  Want not.



Into the Bodum

...


Once your panna cotta is cool, pour into serving containers and refrigerate until you are ready to serve.  It will take several hours to set up.  I suggest making it in the morning, or even the day before.  This is such an ethereal dessert, and I love to see how my guests savor each bite.  I can tell when people like dessert.  Table conversation stops.  That makes me smile.  You will too.



Finished

...



Espresso Panna Cotta

makes 4 servings



Espresso Panna Cotta1 1/2 cups heavy cream

1/3 cup espresso beans, coarsely crushed

3 tablespoons granulated sugar

1/2 cup whole milk

1 1/4 teaspoons gelatin





Combine cream, espresso beans and sugar in a saucepan.  Stir until sugar is dissolved.  Heat over medium heat until scalding.  Remove pan from heat, stir and cover.  Steep for 20 minutes.


After the cream mixture has steeped for 15 minutes pour milk into a small bowl and sprinkle gelatin over it.  Allow gelatin to soften for 5 minutes.


After the gelatin has softened pour the milk and gelatin mixture into the cream mixture, stirring until smooth and gelatin is completely dissolved.  Pour through a fine strainer set over a bowl.  Place bowl in a water bath to cool, about 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.


Pour cream mixture into 4 serving glasses and cover carefully with plastic wrap.  Refrigerate until completely chilled.


To serve, garnish with white or dark chocolate shavings or chocolate covered espresso beans.


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.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
2 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Pesche Ripiene – Stuffed Peaches

Posted July 13, 2010 By Adri

Peaches-Amaretto-640x463-3745_755

The Italians have a way with peaches.  They eat them out of hand.  They put them in wine.  And they fill them with Amaretti cookies and bake them.  Oh, what a dessert.  Peaches were introduced to the Italians by the Persians in the first century of the Common Era.  In fact, let’s set the record straight right here.  No, Titus Pullo did not avail himself of peaches from Cicero’s garden before assassinating the great lawyer and orator.  There were no peaches to be had, unless at that point he had been in Greece.  I, as much as any fan of HBO’s series Rome, hated to see the error.  History calls out to be put right.  The Keeper of the Flame is pleased to oblige.
Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
4 Comments so far. Join the Conversation

Gelato Affogato

Posted July 2, 2010 By Adri

Gelato Affogato

David Rocco again today.  His Gelato Affogato is a classic recipe, vanilla gelato smothered in espresso.  Gelato affogato al caffe, to call it by its full name, is like an Armani suit, simple and elegant.  You can dress it up.  You can dress it down.  It can go from day into night. I prefer mine dressed with whipped cream, con panna as they say in Italia.


But which is the star?  The gelato or the espresso?  Hard to say.  The gelato must be rich.  And if  it is a good gelato, it will be.  The espresso must be strong, Italian and hot, which is a good combination for lots of things besides espresso.  But I digress.




PouringThis dessert sounds so simple, espresso poured over ice cream, but it is a remarkably complex blend of flavors, temperatures, textures and smells.  Start with cold creamy gelato, usually vanilla, but some prefer chocolate.  (It is your dessert.  Have what you want.)  Pour on the espresso – the hot liquid essence of coffee with just a hint of a bitter edge.  The perfume of the espresso wafts up to your nose before you place your spoon in your mouth.


Gelato AffogatoThis is a dessert for the senses.  A grown-up dessert for sure, the kind you would expect to see Audrey Hepburn enjoying in an outdoor café on the Via Veneto.  Or maybe Giorgio Armani.




And with chocolate

More than one


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

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Be the first to comment

David Rocco

Posted June 29, 2010 By Adri
Brutti ma Buoni with coffee

...

One of the things a foodie loves best is discovering new things about food, whether it be new  cuisines, foodstuffs, gadgets, books or food personalities.  Passions work that way.  New is fun.  New is often good.  David Rocco is new.  David Rocco is good.  Read more… »

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
2 Comments so far. Join the Conversation
Content Protected