Showing posts with label desserts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label desserts. Show all posts

creme brulee/ yellow


when you host dinner parties often preparing all three courses can become exhausting, which is why grace and i have started outsourcing dessert to our invited friends. usually this involves a pint of ice cream, brownies, or some homemade cookies, which are all fantastic choices and are happily received. that is, until the day someone brings a blowtorch over. now, if you bring anything less than a dessert involving power tools, just note that i'm privately comparing it to this beauty:


there is nothing more satisfying that the crunch of burnt sugar as your spoons slides into the creamy yellow pudding beneath, especially when you've been able to caramelize that sugar yourself. the only thing wrong with this dessert is the obvious problem of scale. once you learn how to blowtorch the hell out of something, you never want to stop. similarly, once you finish that one creme brulee allotted you, you feel as if you can eat them forever. so, while it may seem like a good idea to double, or triple, this recipe, i can tell you from personal experience, at one of those fancy buffets in las vegas, that caution should be exercised in all aspects of this dessert. but that doesn't shouldn't stop you from taking pictures of yourself looking maniacal while holding a blowtorch.

creme brulee, thanks to shannon + jes

from: "creme brulee, the bonjour way" by randolph w. mann.

1/2 cup whole milk
1 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
2/3 cup granulated sugar
pinch of salt
1 vanilla bean (or whatever you want to infuse with - we used 3 cinnamon sticks, 1 tsp cloves, 1 tsp coriander seeds, 12 cardamon pods split, 1" piece ginger peeled and sliced)
6 egg yokes
1/4 cup brulee sugar (or regular granulated sugar)

combine the milk, cream, sugar, salt and vanilla bean (or whatever) in a small sauce pan and stir over medium heat until it reaches the boiling point. set aside to steep until it cools down. pre-heat the oven to 300 degrees, and adjust a rack slightly lower than center. in a separate bowl, whisk the egg yokes briefly, add the cream mixture very slowly into the yokes, whisking well with each addition so the yokes don't cook. once blended, strain the mixture through a fine sieve. pour the custard mix evenly into 8 shallow ramekins. bake them in a water bath for 30 to 40 minutes, until the centers are softly set. if you have deeper ramekins, they might need an extra 5 minutes. remove from the oven and cool in water bath until comfortable to handle. cover the dishes and refrigerate for 2 hours. these can be stored 1 or 2 days before serving. to serve, sprinkle each top with about 1 1/2 tsp of sugar, and torch to caramelize.

note from s+j: if we make this again, we would probably use 1 less yoke, swap the whole milk for heavy cream, and let the infusion steep for another 15 minutes or so.

more than the sum of its parts


while this phrase can be used to describe any number of things, when describing the pizookie it finally achieves the full intended effect. obviously there is nothing bad about a warm chocolate chip cookie the size of your pillow or ice cream or hot fudge or caramel sauce, but take that same cookie and cover it with a full on ice-cream sundae immediately upon removal from the oven and you've got yourself a winner. grab a couple of spoons, a handful of friends, and new year's eve tv countdown, and start the year off oh-so-wrong.

you can use the chocolate chip cookie recipe here. oh, and thanks to heddy, my best college roommate for introducing me to this midwestern bastardization of dessert. without you, my life would never be so good.

thanksgiving desserts?

there are two potential thanksgiving desserts here; one from my mom's kitchen, and one from the mcdonalds in hawaii. you can guess which will be more probable at our thanksgiving table, although i'm sure us filipinos would enjoy the taro pie just as much.





the first is from my recent trip to hawaii with grace (oh, i didn't mention it before? btw, we went to hawaii!) where an advertisment for this very taro pie greeted us constantly on our drives. let's just say mcdonalds is pretty popular there. after seeing it in techicolor so many times, we were curious to see the live model, especially since it is so innocently wrapped in the same apple pie exterior. to break an "apple pie" open to a flood of pale lavender is quite an experience. and actually really delicious too, if you like taro, which is from the yam family, and similar to a golden sweet potato but a little starchier. in the philippines they call it ube, and they use it primarily in desserts.

the second is one of my mom's many amazing creations, and sadly, i don't think it will make it to thanksgiving. to give some context on my mom, this was just for a regular potluck. seriously. this woman is not joking around with dessert. the recipe (including my mom's handwritten comments) is below. i think for thanksgiving she is making pumpkin cheesecake and some probably equally as impressive apple something. oh, and i looked over the recipe and it looks complicated. props to you if you make it, and mad props to my mom!

OLD
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