Showing posts with label Meringues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meringues. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2014

Spumetti (Hazelnut Meringues)




Hazelnut Meringues
(“Spumetti” or “Little Foamies”)
Adapted from Nick Malgieri (who adapted these from Richard Sax)
By Blue Heron Kitchen

Any formal training I have, I attribute to Peter Kump’s cooking school. Nick Malgieri steered the pastry department and mentored my teacher, with whom I opened a wholesale bakery. I never took a class with Nick, but he was always around. I once heard him gossiping about Maida Heatter. He intimated that she’d hit bottom because she published a cookie book. It wasn’t too long after that his (great) cookie book came out. Why will I never forget this?

Nick’s published recipes are reliable; but all of his recipes at Kump’s were perfect. More, I learned what I consider a wonderful ‘method’. When Peter Kump died, the school closed, relocated to the Flatiron district and re-opened under new management and name, “ICE”, the Institute of Culinary Education. I’ve never taken a class there, but many of the instructors are still the same and Nick is still head of the Pastry division. Check it out if you’re interested in “pro”, “avo” or just a single class. You’ll receive excellent instruction.

This recipe comes from his “Cookies Unlimited” book. These are perfect for your Easter dessert table. If you’re unorthodox about Passover ingredients, and can live with using 10X (confectioner’s) sugar, these are a nice change from the ‘same old’ macaroons. They’re a mixture of chocolate, cinnamon and hazelnut. Meringenius.

When they emerge from the oven, the texture is sponge-like (“little foamies”.)  As they set up, they don’t stay sponge-like. The cocoa/cinnamon will bitter if they're too well done, so don't over-bake them, thinking they'll set up better and "de-sponge" if you bake them longer. They won't. They'll bitter-up.

And don’t be deceived by the cartoonish name. Little foamies are for grown-ups.

Avere una dolce primavera, una felice Pasqua e una dolce Pesach.

peace and love,
jane

Ingredients:

6 oz. hazelnuts, toasted and skins removed
1 cup 10X (confectioners’) sugar
3 Tbsp. unsweetened cocoa powder (I used Valrhona.)
¼ tsp. ground cinnamon (make sure it’s fresh!)
3 egg whites, size large, room temperature
pinch of kosher salt


Procedure:

Preheat oven to 350º F. Rack in upper and lower third of oven.
If you need to skin the hazelnuts, place on jelly roll pan and toast them for 5-8 minutes until skins are brown. Put hazelnuts in a rough tea towel and rub them rigorously. The skins will come away from the nuts. Any skins that don’t – don’t sweat it.

Line a couple of baking sheets with parchment paper.

Coarsely chop hazelnuts. You can use a food processor. Or you can do this by hand. I have a hand nut grinder and grind them on the “coarse” setting.

Sift together: ¼ cup of the 10X sugar, the cinnamon and the cocoa powder and set aside.



In the bowl of an electric mixer (Take care that there is no fat in the bowl or on the whisk, or your whites won’t come up to a meringue. Similarly, if any yolk comes into the white when you separate your eggs, dump that egg. It will ruin the meringue.) beat the three egg whites until foamy. Add a pinch of salt (be generous) and continue to beat until they begin to stiffen.

One tablespoon at a time, add the remaining ¾ of a cup of 10X until you have a stiff meringue.

Remove from the stand and by hand, fold in the sifted mixture of 10X, cocoa and cinnamon until fully incorporated. Be patient.

Fold in the hazelnuts.



By tablespoonful, drop onto cookie sheets.

Bake for approximately 20 minutes, half way through, rotate sheets, top to bottom, front to back.

These will still be soft and spongy when you remove them from the oven.

Cool completely and then store the macaroons between sheets of parchment or waxed paper in a container with a tight fitting cover.

Yield: approx. 30 cookies



Saturday, December 15, 2012

Candy Cane Kisses


Candy Cane Kisses
From Masala Farm by Suvir Saran, with gratitude to Suvir,
adapted by Blue Heron Kitchen
For Nancy




This recipe will make you look forward every year to the arrival of fresh candy canes in the market. I’ve tried substituting those “starlight mints”, the ones you get in bags at the pharmacy, but they're not as good. Candy Canes are a seasonal food choice.

Here’s a truc: Leave them in their wrappers and pound them with a heavy skillet. Snip them open. Ta-da!



I found Ghirardelli mini chips. They're inexpensive and they worked well. Of course, you can upgrade to higher end chocolate and chop it into small bits.

Meringues are child’s play if you’re careful meticulous when separating eggs. If any yolk gets into the white, make an omelet. If there's any trace of fat in the bowl you're using, on the wire whip or whisk or even on the dishtowel that you’ve used to wiped your mixing bowl, both you and your whites will weep.

Suvir Saran is a gifted chef, cookbook author and teacher, and several years ago, I had some great fun with him, socializing, traveling and eating. If you’re the tiniest bit interested about Indian cooking, buy his books. Even if you’re not interested in Indian cooking, buy this one, Masala Farm, which is a “farm to table” mélange of recipes that he and his partner, Charlie and collaborator, Raquel, published in 2011. Nominated for a James Beard Award, this gorgeous book is one you should consider owning. It’s Kindle-ready too!

These are fantastic, beautiful; and be advised, they're addictive. In a clear cellophane bag, tied with a ribbon or bakery twine, these make a great homemade gift!

Here are a couple of today’s, ready for their close-ups:





More recipes soon: 
Marshmallows! 
Updated graham crackers made with teff flour!
(just add a chocolate bar and what's that spell?) 

care, live well, work for peace (and gun control) and cook,
jane

Ingredients:

4 egg whites, size large, at room temperature (they whip up better at room temperature)
¼ tsp. cream of tartar
1/8 tsp. kosher salt
1 ½ c./300 g granulated sugar
3 Tbsp. crushed candy canes (8-9 minis)
8 oz./225 g semisweet mini chocolate chips (Ghirardelli or better, please)
            or fine quality chocolate, finely chopped
1 tsp. vanilla extract (I use Baldwins)

Procedure:
Preheat oven to 240º F/120º C
Line three baking sheets with parchment. (If you don’t have three sheets, you must let the sheet cool before you use it again. If it's not your summer now, try putting it outside, or use it to prop open the window for five minutes.)

Using a Kitchen Aid or electric mixer fitted with the wire whip, or a hand mixer, beat the whites until foamy.

Add salt and cream of tartar and beat on medium speed until soft peaks form.

While the mixer is running, add the sugar, one tablespoon at a time. (Be patient and be careful. Today, the spoon hit the whisk and my reaction including some words I'm not printing.) You can crank it up to medium/high and beat the meringue until stiff, glossy peaks are formed.

Remove the bowl and fold in the remaining ingredients (crushed candy canes, chocolate and vanilla) using a rubber spatula.

Form dollops of meringue using a tablespoon or a small scoop (I used a small scoop and when it stopped releasing, I rinsed it with cold water.) Here, uniformity is cool.

Bake for 45-50 minutes, transferring sheets half way through the bake top to bottom, front to back. When the meringues are slightly cracked on the top, they’re ready to be fully cooled on wire racks.

These can be stored in airtight containers for about a week; and I've had success freezing them!

Yield: with the small cookie scoop, about 7 dozen. With a tablespoon, about 5 dozen.



With Metta, from My Little Blue Heron's Kitchen

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