When you find yourself with leftover chocolate and heavy cream there is only one thing to do: make ganache. I threw together cupcakes today as a vehicle for the ganache. To make a long story short, you’ll need two parts semisweet chocolate to one part cream. Boil the cream and pour it over the chocolate (in small pieces) in a bowl. Let it sit for a moment and then whisk or stir until smooth. You can use this to glaze cakes, frost cupcakes, make truffle balls, or simply eat as-is. Yes, eat as-is. Man, there is nothing like cold, leftover ganache that you have to pry out of the container. The longer you let ganache sit the firmer it will be. Our cupcakes were not pretty because Matthew was loading them up with the stuff at various levels of firmness, so we lost that glossy effect we had after the first layer.
Monthly Archives: February 2008
The men of the house
Pix of the menfolk. Here’s a photo of the founder of the feast (on the right). He works hard so I can do this kind of thing much of the time. He’s not easy to photograph because he hates having his picture taken and acts all weird. We also have Matthew and Jon, who need to be beaten away from the front of a camera with clubs. They promptly grab photos I take of them for upload to Facebook. Matthew has photo albums on Facebook with titles like “me,” “more of me,” “me in SF in June,” and other variations of “me.” Man, I would have hated to plaster my photo around when I was 20. It must be wonderful to feel so secure at that age. They walk around like they are The Shit! Steve, Matt & Jon eat quite a bit of the food I talk about on the site. These are serious food people: lusty appetites and the desire to try almost anything. Matthew, who favors Chinese food, recently said it would be out of the question for him to have a serious relationship with anyone who didn’t like dim sum. “The person doesn’t know how to handle chopsticks — I’d have to think twice about that.”
One recipe of Nigella’s bites
I like Nigella Lawson’s cookbooks.
I got a used copy of Nigella Bites (2002) the other day and prepared two recipes thus far: chocolate fudge cake (page 47) and liptauer (page 161). I am always on the lookout for a good chocolate cake recipe, but I can honestly say that this isn’t one. The cake itself came out dry and bland and is not worth the ingredients or multiple bowls you’ll need. I have numerous “toss everything in one bowl and let her rip”- type recipes that turn out a much better product. The frosting was also just so-so. That said, my mother loved the cake because it was not overly sweet and she liked the heavy, buttery frosting.
The liptauer, however, was great. (Liptauer is what Californians would incorrectly call a schmear for bagels, even though schmear means “a little,” as in, “a bagel with a schmear,” which, when ordered in New York City, would get you a bagel with a little plain cream cheese.) . I had an Austrian chef-instructor in cooking school who talked fondly about liptauer. It’s a cheese spread that you make by processing everything together in one fell swoop and then pressing the resulting mass into a mold. You eat this stuff on bagels or good, hearty bread – the kind that can stand up to the caraway seeds, which provide a pronounced flavor to the mix. The only thing I suggest is to drain the cottage cheese she calls for – since I assume you’ll be using the runny cottage cheese that is prevalent in the US. My guess is that people in Europe use quark, which is something like cottage cheese but not easy to get here and considerably more expensive. If you can find dry curd cottage cheese, that’ll solve your problem altogether. Please do not use fat free cheese or you won’t get a good mouth feel – and that goes for the cream and cottage cheeses. Use real block cream cheese, sil vous plait. I have no photos of the items, so I substituted Berry, just to add a little color to the entry.
A dog in a car
Berry is unhappy in the car, as you can see here. He should be happy, though, because he knows that I always get him a McDonald’s double cheeseburger without condiments when we have to go to the vet or something else unpleasant. Just about any other time I pile him into the car we go to the park or to the bay so he can go around with his nose in overdrive. Given that he knows he is either getting a burger or going to the park, I don’t get this drama with car trips. I also cannot get him into his canine seat belt because he acts like a jerk when I try. This limits me to slow, local routes with someone in the back seat holding him when I have to stop at a light.
Great Szechuan in Richmond
A meal today at Steve’s new favorite restaurant, Great Szechuan (3288 Pierce Street, Richmond) at the back of Pacific East Mall. I’ve written about this place before but did not have any photos until this trip. I again ordered the Szechwan spicy fish and again was not disappointed. As I reported last time, this dish is generous, with many deep-fried fillets served on a wooden tray under hundreds of chili peppers and Sichuan peppercorns. Hot. Numbing. Steve had the hand pulled noodles with pork, which he said was very good, with no heat whatsoever. Jon ordered the seafood chow mein, crispy style, which he made short work of. If you can’t deal with hot dishes they serve a number of mild things, so no worries there.