Friday, November 27, 2009

Thanksgiving Feast for 2 (with tons of leftovers!)





The Thanksgiving Menu (Featuring recipes from Cooks Illustrated)

Brined Turkey Breast (5 pounds, free-range, organic from Bowman and Landes--semi-local!)
Scalloped potatoes (Cook's Illustrated)
Cornbread Stuffing with Xtra Hot Chorizo (from Loveland Meats, local!) and red peppers (Cooks Illustrated)
Roasted Vegetables with Oregano (we made a much simpler version with sweet potatoes, parsnips, carrots, and Brussels sprouts, tossed with olive oil, dried oregano, S+P)
White and Wheat Dinner Rolls (from a local bread shop)
Mystery Gravy from Bloomingfoods (a local co-op--I've never tried to make gravy, so I picked up some pre-made homemade stuff and some (disgusting) powdered gravy from a pouch (that would have been suitable to pour over the cat's food. I think they were even offended by its chemically smell. Local homemade it was)
Dutch Apple Pie
Whipped Cream




The turkey breast, all cooked and moist and delicious! Surrounded by the roasted root veggies and sprouts.




Scalloped potatoes and cornbread stuffing (wait, dressing, right? Cause it's not in the bird? Eh.)


Dutch Apple Pie. Made with local Winesap apples. It's the best apple pie I've ever had.

Food, Mammeh. Food plz. I ask nice. I sit in my chair. No paws on table. Wherez mah turkeh? Reggie got his turkey day treats later--his much desired Wellness brand, canned, Turkey flavored.


Local/Regional turkey breast, brined, and stuffed under the skin with a zippy parsley pesto with local roasted chestnuts (it was frakkin' delicious and something we made up on the fly!)


Skin replaced. Sorry to stuff your delicious skin with delicious treats and basically desecrate your (delicious) corpse. When your turkey friends are able to catch me and eat me, I give you permission to do the same to me.


It was a success! Our thermometer broke, and we were terrified we overcooked the bird, but it came out perfect without any rawness or signs of being overcooked. Okay, now time for more pie. :)

The November 2009 Daring Bakers Challenge: Cannolis

The November 2009 Daring Bakers Challenge was chosen and hosted by Lisa Michele of Parsley, Sage, Desserts and Line Drives. She chose the Italian Pastry, Cannolo (Cannoli is plural), using the cookbooks Lidia’s Italian-American Kitchen by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and The Sopranos Family Cookbook by Allen Rucker; recipes by Michelle Scicolone, as ingredient/direction guides. She added her own modifications/changes, so the recipe is not 100% verbatim from either book.




CANNOLI SHELLS
2 cups (250 grams/16 ounces) all-purpose flour
2 tablespoons(28 grams/1 ounce) sugar
1 teaspoon (5 grams/0.06 ounces) unsweetened baking cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon (1.15 grams/0.04 ounces) ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon (approx. 3 grams/0.11 ounces) salt
3 tablespoons (42 grams/1.5 ounces) vegetable or olive oil
1 teaspoon (5 grams/0.18 ounces) white wine vinegar
Approximately 1/2 cup (approx. 59 grams/approx. 4 fluid ounces/approx. 125 ml) sweet Marsala or any white or red wine you have on hand
1 large egg, separated (you will need the egg white but not the yolk)
Vegetable or any neutral oil for frying – about 2 quarts (8 cups/approx. 2 litres)
1/2 cup (approx. 62 grams/2 ounces) toasted, chopped pistachio nuts, mini chocolate chips/grated chocolate and/or candied or plain zests, fruits etc.. for garnish
Confectioners' sugar

1. In the bowl of an electric stand mixer or food processor, combine the flour, sugar, cocoa, cinnamon, and salt. Stir in the oil, vinegar, and enough of the wine to make a soft dough. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead until smooth and well blended, about 2 minutes. Shape the dough into a ball. Cover with plastic wrap and let rest in the fridge from 2 hours to overnight.

2 Cut the dough into two pieces. Keep the remaining dough covered while you work. Lightly flour a large cutting or pastry board and roll the dough until super thin, about 1/16 to 1/8” thick (An area of about 13 inches by 18 inches should give you that). Cut out 3 to 5-inch circles (3-inch – small/medium; 4-inch – medium/large; 5-inch;- large. Your choice). Roll the cut out circle into an oval, rolling it larger and thinner if it’s shrunk a little.

3 Oil the outside of the cannoli tubes (You only have to do this once, as the oil from the deep fry will keep them well, uhh, oiled..lol). Roll a dough oval from the long side (If square, position like a diamond, and place tube/form on the corner closest to you, then roll) around each tube/form and dab a little egg white on the dough where the edges overlap. (Avoid getting egg white on the tube, or the pastry will stick to it.) Press well to seal. Set aside to let the egg white seal dry a little.

4. In a deep heavy saucepan, pour enough oil to reach a depth of 3 inches, or if using an electric deep-fryer, follow the manufacturer's directions. Heat the oil to 375°F (190 °C) on a deep fry thermometer, or until a small piece of the dough or bread cube placed in the oil sizzles and browns in 1 minute. Have ready a tray or sheet pan lined with paper towels or paper bags.

5. Carefully lower a few of the cannoli tubes into the hot oil. Do not crowd the pan. Fry the shells until golden, about 2 minutes, turning them so that they brown evenly.

6. Lift a cannoli tube with a wire skimmer or large slotted spoon, out of the oil. Using tongs, grasp the cannoli tube at one end. Very carefully remove the cannoli tube with the open sides straight up and down so that the oil flows back into the pan. Place the tube on paper towels or bags to drain. Repeat with the remaining tubes. While they are still hot, grasp the tubes with a potholder and pull the cannoli shells off the tubes with a pair of tongs, or with your hand protected by an oven mitt or towel. Let the shells cool completely on the paper towels. Place shells on cooling rack until ready to fill.

7. Repeat making and frying the shells with the remaining dough. If you are reusing the cannoli tubes, let them cool before wrapping them in the dough. Or else you'll have burned fingers, which is just not fun on cannoli day.



PUMPKIN FILLING
1/2 cup (123 grams/4.34 ounces) ricotta cheese, drained
1/2 cup (113 grams/4.04 ounces) mascarpone cheese
1/2 cup (122.5 grams/4.32 ounces) canned pumpkin, drained like ricotta
3/4 cup (75 grams/2.65 ounces) confectioner’s sugar, sifted
1/2 to 1 teaspoon (approx. 1.7 grams/approx. 0.06 ounces) pumpkin pie spice (taste)
1/2 teaspoon (approx. 2 grams/approx. 0.08 ounces) pure vanilla extract
6-8 cannoli shells

1. In a bowl with electric mixer, beat ricotta and mascarpone until smooth and creamy. Beat in confectioner’s sugar, pumpkin, pumpkin pie spice, vanilla and blend until smooth. Transfer to another bowl, cover and chill until it firms up a bit. (The filling can be made up to 24 hours prior to filling the shells. Just cover and keep refrigerated).

2. Dip the ends of the cannolo in whatever you'd like--shaved chocolate, mini chocolate chips, dried fruit, etc. I dipped mine in turbinado sugar and sprinkled on a little bit of cinnamon, and dusted with the traditional powdered sugar!






And there you have it. Cannolis. Nom.

What's this, you ask? That would be my invention. It's a cannolo (singular for cannoli) doughnut. The cannolo popped off of the tube while frying and made a cool hollow in the middle doughnut shape, which I filled with extra pumpkin filling. I'm not wasting my time with the tubes anymore---cannolo doughnuts FOR THE WIN! Much easier, and you get more of the filling. :)

Unfortunately, I also followed the instructions for this month's challenge and also prepared the TWO POUNDS of traditional ricotta filling for the cannoli. The few cannoli I made I filled with the pumpkin filling.

So, if you'd like TWO FRAKKIN POUNDS of cannoli filling, give me a ring. I've got it ready for you :)