Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts

Friday, March 11, 2011

Recipe Fridays!

Spring Shower Almond Petit Fours

These are ADORABLE! And, they give me the perfect excuse to practice my gum-paste flowers too;)


Ingredients

6 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened, plus more for baking sheet
1 1/4 cups cake flour (not self-rising), plus more for baking sheet
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup almond paste
4 large eggs, separated
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1/2 cup whole milk
1/2 cup cherry preserves, processed in a food processor
Sugar Glaze
Gum paste cherry blossoms, (available at Wendy Kromer Confections)

Directions

1.Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 12-by-17- inch rimmed baking sheet, and line with parchment paper. Butter parchment, and dust with flour, tapping out excess; set aside. Sift flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt into a large bowl; set aside.

2.Put 3/4 cup sugar and the almond paste into the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Mix on medium-low speed until mixture resembles coarse meal, about 2 minutes. Raise speed to medium-high. Add butter; mix until pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes. Mix in egg yolks and vanilla. Add flour mixture in 2 batches, alternating with the milk. Transfer to a large bowl; set aside.

3.Put egg whites into the clean bowl of an electric mixer fitted with whisk attachment; beat on medium-high speed until foamy. Gradually add remaining 1/4 cup sugar, beating until soft peaks form. Fold one-third of egg-white mixture into batter with a rubber spatula. Gently fold in remaining egg-white mixture.

4.Spread evenly into prepared sheet. Bake until a cake tester inserted into center comes out clean, 15 to 20 minutes. Transfer sheet to wire rack; let cool completely. Unmold; remove parchment.

5.Cut cake in half crosswise. Spread one half with preserves; top with remaining half. Refrigerate 1 hour. Trim cake, and cut into 11/2-inch squares. Transfer to a wire rack set over a rimmed baking sheet. Pour glaze over each petit four, spreading over top and sides to coat completely. Reuse glaze, straining to remove any solids, if needed. Refrigerate until set, about 20 minutes. Garnish with blossoms. Cakes can be refrigerated up to 2 days.


Thursday, April 15, 2010

Spring has sprung!


This is the time of year I dearly love, when the temperature is nice enough to go without a coat and you can wear sandals to work. If it is sunny and lovely where you are, get out today and enjoy every moment you can!

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Spring retreats . . .


April is a changeable month in Chicago; one week, you're walking around in shorts and sandals, and the next you break out your winter coat and bundle up against the snow. Last week, we broke a record, going over 80-degrees for the first time since the 1920's. Today, it is 37-degrees, and flurries are expected. It's hard not to let that get you down, so I'm posting this picture and daydreaming about the return of nicer days . . . .

Monday, April 5, 2010

Sunshine and Blue Skies . . .


I love the combination of blue, orange, and yellow. It just makes me think of warm weather, sun, and smiling happiness. I can't think of too many better color palettes for a Spring/Summer wedding, can you?

What do you think, dear readers? Blue, yellow, and orange: a do or a don't?


Friday, March 12, 2010

Recipe Fridays!


Chocolate Eggs

All right, I know what you're thinking: this is really more of a project than a recipe, but if you can eat it, then in my book it's a recipe. I have been dying to try these for a few years, and I think this spring is the year;)

Martha used Valrhona dark chocolate in this recipe because it is relatively easy to temper; the temperatures that are listed apply specifically to this brand.


Chocolate Egg How-To

1. Using a pin, poke a hole in the bottom of a large raw egg; insert the tip of a utility knife, and turn to open the hole slightly. Using a rotary drill fitted with a 3/8-inch bit, carefully widen the hole to at least 1/2 inch in diameter.
2. Insert pin into the hole to pierce and "stir" the yolk. Hold the egg, hole down, over a bowl, and blow air into the hole with a rubber ear syringe (the air will displace and expel the egg). Rinse out egg. Repeat to make 12 blown eggs (you may want to make extras in case some break).


3. Sterilize eggs: Submerge them in a pot of cold water with 1 tablespoon white vinegar; bring to a boil, then simmer, skimming foam from surface, 10 minutes. Let drain on a pin board. If not dyeing eggs, let dry completely on pin board, 2 to 3 days (check insides for moisture).
4. If dyeing eggs: Mix 4 tablespoons vinegar and 12 drops of blue food coloring with 2 cups boiling-hot water in a heatproof glass or enamel bowl. Fill a separate cup with white vinegar. Using a plastic spoon, dip eggs in vinegar, then into the dye, 2 to 3 minutes. Pat eggs with paper towels to eliminate streaks. (If dye begins to cool while you're working, make a new batch.) Let the eggs dry as described above.
5. Using an offset serrated knife, very finely chop 3 pounds of chocolate. Reserve 1 cup chocolate; using a bench scraper, transfer remaining chocolate to a large heatproof bowl.



6. Temper chocolate: Set bowl over a pan of simmering water. Melt chocolate, stirring occasionally, until a chocolate thermometer registers 131 degrees. (Note: Many brands of dark chocolate should not be heated to more than 118 degrees.) Remove from heat; stir in reserved cup chocolate until completely melted. Pour 2/3 of the melted chocolate onto a clean smooth work surface (such as marble or stainless steel). Spread thinly with an offset spatula. Then gather together chocolate, and take temperature. Continue spreading and gathering chocolate until it cools to 82 degrees to 84 degrees.



7. Scrape chocolate back into bowl with remaining chocolate. Stir until it cools to 82 degrees to 84 degrees. Set bowl over a pan of warm water, and reheat to 88 degrees. To check consistency, dip a spoon in chocolate and remove; chocolate should set in about 2 minutes, turning shiny and hard. Note: This temperature must be maintained as you fill the eggs; keep a thermometer in the chocolate, and check frequently. Rest the bowl on a heating pad wrapped in a towel, or set bowl over the pan of warm (not hot) water.

8. Place eggshells in an egg carton. Place a disposable pastry bag in a tall glass, and fold top down. Fill bag with chocolate; cut tip to create a 1/4-inch opening.

9. For solid chocolate eggs: Insert tip of bag into each egg, and fill with chocolate (about 1/4 cup per egg; fill a new bag with chocolate as needed). Let set completely, about 4 hours.

10. Alternatively, fill eggs with ganache: Fill all eggs with chocolate, then let stand 5 minutes instead of letting chocolate set. Pour chocolate out of eggs into a glass measuring cup, tapping your hand against cup to let most of the chocolate drain out (do not add to tempered chocolate). Let chocolate "shells" set completely.

11. Fill a disposable pastry bag with ganache (recipe follows); cut tip to create a 1/4-inch opening. Insert tip into egg; fill with ganache. Tap egg gently, hole up, on a folded kitchen towel to eliminate air pockets; fill to top. Continue with remaining eggs. Refrigerate until set, about 4 hours. Ganache-filled eggs can be refrigerated up to 1 week; solid eggs can be stored in a cool, dry place until ready to serve.
To Make Ganache

For semisweet ganache, use 2 cups heavy cream and 1 pound semisweet chocolate. For milk-chocolate or white-chocolate ganache, use 1 1/4 cups heavy cream and 1 1/4 pounds milk or white chocolate. Bring cream just to a boil, then pour over finely chopped chocolate into a medium bowl. Let stand 5 minutes; stir until smooth. Press plastic wrap directly onto surface; let stand, stirring occasionally, until cool enough to pipe (no warmer than 80 degrees), 1 to 2 hours.
Note: The steps here are for tempering chocolate by hand. If you work with chocolate frequently, investing in a tempering machine will save time and make cleanup easier -- and the chocolate will be perfectly creamy, smooth, and shiny. Every brand of chocolate requires different tempering temperatures; see package instructions. For Valrhona, the following temperatures apply: milk chocolate, heat to 118 degrees, cool to 81 degrees to 82 degrees, then warm to 84 degrees to 86 degrees; white chocolate, heat to 118 degrees, cool to 79 degrees to 81 degrees, then warm to 82 degrees to 84 degrees.



Wednesday, March 10, 2010

as spring opens, touching skillfully, mysteriously . . .

Courtesy We Heart It

It may be grey and rainy, but it is going to be near 60 degrees today, and that cheers me immensely. I've had a few personal setbacks recently, got my heart a little broken, but the coming of Spring seems to make all that fade into the background. Soon, the trees that have been barren and covered in frost will bud, and then all at once, overnight, will burst into a riot of whites and pinks and delicate wines, and the air will be full of drifting petals with every breeze. The Japanese, who have always been an inspiration to me, wrote endlessly of cherry blossoms, a sort of national obsession of theirs. Some may scratch their heads at the fixation, but I have always understood: their beauty lies in their transcience, their delicacy,  in the fact that they will not last long, and cannot be taken for granted. Like Spring. A time of transitions, of beginnings and endings, of unpredictability.

It doesn't take much to cheer me up, and a warm day after such a long winter, even one a bit gloomy, is enough for me.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

The Farmer's Market comes to Daley Plaza . . .

For another year, the Farmer's Market has arrived at Daley Plaza. Every Thursday they will be here, selling flowers, vegetables and fruit and herbs, honey, bread and pastries, even soap and pasta sauce. The stalls fill up the plaza, and the scent of lilacs and rosemary mingle with cherry and freshly baked bagels. I cannot tell that spring has truly arrived until I go through the Farmer's Market.



Monday, May 4, 2009

Spring has finally arrived . . .

. . . the Cherry Blossom tree is in bloom;)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Hopeful signs . . .

It may be only 39-degrees outside, but this is what the cherry blossom tree in the courtyard looks like. I have to keep reminding myself, in a few weeks, I will be able to put my winter coat in the closet. . . .

Monday, April 6, 2009

Snow in April . . .

I hate snow.
For as long as I can remember, Chicago in Spring has been the most unpredictable season of any, showing a daring ankle with 65-degree weather in March and then shocking us with 30-degree weather in April. I remember in my childhood a snowstorm at the end of May. When I move to SoCal in 2011, I'm never crossing the Mississippi again.
Still, there is a kind of strange beauty in the juxtaposition of ice crystals over tender green buds just peeking out of branches; a rime of frost on new tulips and crocuses. Spring, for its very changeability and unpredictability, has been the favorite topic of poets and painters for centuries. In spite of the shock of snow boots in April, I still say that Spring is my favorite season.
All the same, I can't wait for the move;)

If there were fragrance
these heavy snowflakes settling . . .
Lilies on the rocks
-Basho