Category Archives: Dessert

Baking Cookbook Review Dessert Recipes

Butterscotch Cream — Grace’s Sweet Life Cookbook review + Giveaway! [Closed]

This is the per­fect time for a give­away, because it is the first anniver­sary of Yummy Work­shop! Time passes by so fast, I have about 50 posts on my blog so that makes about one post per week? I actu­ally don’t have a time­line for post­ing, I just write when­ever I have time and feel like it — that is what I like about blogging.

For the first anniver­sary of my blog, I will be doing my first cook­book review + give­away! *excited*

Grace’s Sweet Life was writ­ten by Grace Massa Lan­glois, a very tal­ented and suc­cess­ful Cana­dian food blog­ger (I wish I can pub­lish my cook­book one day too!). Her blog has a great num­ber of dessert recipes with beau­ti­ful pho­tos, you should check it out here. Com­ing from her Ital­ian her­itage, she recently pub­lished Grace’s Sweet Life fea­tur­ing Ital­ian desserts. The cook­book con­tains many authen­tic Ital­ian dessert recipes, such as can­noli, tiramisu, amaretti cook­ies etc. and more inno­v­a­tive recipes like can­noli cup­cakes. I wouldn’t say it is a sim­ple dessert recipe col­lec­tion, as some of the recipes require spe­cific ingre­di­ents and pro­ce­dure, but the end result is deli­cious and well pre­sented desserts. I think it is a great book for the avid home bak­ers and are look­ing for some­thing dif­fer­ent or want to bake to impress.

One of the recipes I tried was the But­ter­scotch Cream. This is one of the eas­ier recipes, it is like a crème brûlée except it is sweet­ened with demer­ara sugar and brown sugar so it gives a very deep cane sugar molasses flavour. They are then topped with a crunchy hazel­nut pra­line that adds another layer of flavour and tex­ture. Although it can be an optional ele­ment, I strongly rec­om­mend tak­ing the time to make the pra­line because it is like “icing on a cake”. The cus­tard tastes rich and creamy, it is quite the deca­dent dessert!
The recipe below was taken from Grace’s Sweet Life, by Grace Massa Lan­glois. Copy­right © 2012 by Ulysses Press.

Click on a photo to view the gallery of the process:

Ingre­di­ents:

Cus­tard:

(Makes 8 servings)

  • 2½ cups (590 ml) heavy cream
  • ½ cup (120 ml) whole milk
  • 1 vanilla bean, split and seeded
  • ¾ cup (150 g) dark brown sugar or mus­co­v­ado sugar
  • ¼ tea­spoon salt
  • 1/3 cup plus ½ table­spoon (70 g) demer­ara sugar
  • ¼ cup (60 ml) water
  • 8 large egg yolks
  • Prali­nata di Noc­ci­ola (Hazel­nut Pra­line), for garnish
  • Sweet­ened Whipped Cream, for gar­nish (optional)
Hazel­nut Praline:
  • 1–2/3 cups (250 g) hazel­nuts, toasted, skinned, and cooled (see page 20)
  • 1 cup (225 g) superfine sugar
  • 2 table­spoons (25 g) glu­cose (see note)
  • 1/3 cup (80 ml) water

Method:

Cus­tard:
  1. Pre­heat the oven to 300°F (150°C). Line a deep bak­ing dish with a folded kitchen towel. Bring a teaket­tle of water almost to a boil.
  2. Mean­while, in a heavy medium saucepan over medium heat, bring the cream, milk, vanilla bean and seeds, brown or mus­co­v­ado sugar, and salt to a boil, stir­ring con­stantly to dis­solve the sugar. Remove from the heat and cover to keep warm.
  3. In a heavy large saucepan, sprin­kle the demer­ara sugar over the water in an even layer. Bring to a boil over medium heat, stir­ring con­stantly until the sugar dis­solves. Con­tinue cook­ing, with­out stir­ring, occa­sion­ally swirling the pan over the burner until it turns a light caramel color, 2 to 3 min­utes. Use a pas­try brush dipped in water to wash down any crys­tals that form on the sides of the pan as the sugar cooks. Remove from the heat.
  4. Grad­u­ally add the warm cream mix­ture to the caramel (be careful—it will splat­ter and bub­ble up), whisk­ing con­stantly until smooth and well com­bined. (If you can see any clumps of sugar, return to the heat and whisk until the sugar dissolves.)
  5. Whisk the egg yolks in a large bowl until pale in color. Grad­u­ally, in a slow, steady stream, add the hot cream mix­ture to the egg yolks, whisk­ing con­stantly until well combined.
  6. Using a fine-mesh sieve, strain the mix­ture into an extra-large heat­proof mea­sur­ing cup. Skim off any foam with a spoon. Let stand for 15 min­utes, allow­ing any air bub­bles that may have formed to dissipate.
  7. Divide the cus­tard evenly among 8 (4-ounce) oven­proof bak­ing cups. Seal each cup with a piece of tin foil to pre­vent a tough skin from forming.
  8. Trans­fer the sealed bak­ing cups to the pre­pared bak­ing dish, spac­ing them a few inches apart (the cups should not touch each other). Open the oven door and pull out the mid­dle rack halfway; trans­fer the bak­ing dish to the rack. Care­fully fill the bak­ing dish with enough hot water to come halfway up the sides of the cups. Care­fully push in the oven rack.
  9. Bake until the cus­tard is set around edges but jig­gles slightly in the cen­ter when the bak­ing dish is gen­tly shaken, about 40 minutes.
  10. Care­fully remove the bak­ing dish from oven. Using tongs, care­fully remove the cus­tard cups from the water bath. Dis­card the foil tops and trans­fer to a wire rack to cool com­pletely. The cus­tard will con­tinue to set as it cools.
  11. Once cooled, refrig­er­ate until firm, 2 to 3 hours. Remove from the refrig­er­a­tor, allow the cus­tard to come to room tem­per­a­ture, and serve gar­nished with hazel­nut pra­line and a dol­lop of whipped cream, if using.
Hazel­nut Praline:
  1. Line a rimmed bak­ing sheet with parch­ment paper and lightly coat with veg­etable spray, or use a sil­i­cone bak­ing mat. Place an 8-inch ring mold (or the ring of an 8-inch spring­form pan) on the lined bak­ing sheet. Place the hazel­nuts in the mold in a sin­gle layer. Lift the mold up off the bak­ing sheet.
  2. In a medium non­stick saucepan over medium heat, bring the sugar, glu­cose, and water to a boil over medium heat, stir­ring until the sugar and glu­cose have dis­solved. Con­tinue to cook the syrup, with­out stir­ring, to a light amber color, about 320°F (160°C), occa­sion­ally swirling the pan over the heat and brush­ing down the sides of pan with a pas­try brush dipped in water.
  3. Pour the sugar syrup directly over the hazel­nuts, mak­ing sure all the hazel­nuts are evenly coated. Set aside to cool, allow­ing the pra­line to set, about 1 hour.
  4. To process the pra­line into a paste, break the pra­line into small pieces. Trans­fer the pra­line pieces to a food proces­sor and process to a thick smooth paste. (Depend­ing on the size of your food proces­sor you may want to process pra­line in 2 or 3 batches. Be patient through the process because it can take some time to obtain a smooth paste, 5 to 10 min­utes.) Trans­fer the paste to an air­tight con­tainer and refrig­er­ate until ready to use.
  5. To process the pra­line into crumbs, break the pra­line into small pieces, trans­fer to a food proces­sor, and pulse to fine or coarse crumbs. Or if you pre­fer, break pra­line into medium pieces and trans­fer to a reseal­able plas­tic bag. Using a rolling pin, crush to fine or coarse crumbs.

Note: I like to use a com­bi­na­tion of glu­cose and superfine sugar because the glu­cose helps pre­vent crys­tal­liza­tion while the sugar cooks, but if you don’t have any on hand, increase the sugar by 2 table­spoons (25 g).

Cook­book Give­away: [Closed]

For a chance to win a copy of Grace’s Sweet Life by Grace Massa Lan­glois, do one OR more of the following:

  1. Com­ment on this blog post, stat­ing what your favourite Ital­ian dessert is.
  2. Tweet the fol­low­ing on Twit­ter:
    I’ve entered to win an Ital­ian dessert cook­book via @YummyWorkshop
    Details here: http://​yum​my​work​shop​.com/​2​0​1​2​/​0​8​/​1​5​/​b​u​t​t​e​r​s​c​o​t​c​h​-​c​r​e​a​m​-​g​r​a​c​e​s​-​s​w​e​e​t​-​l​i​f​e​-​c​o​o​k​b​o​o​k​-​r​e​v​i​e​w​-​g​i​v​e​a​w​ay/ #giveaway
  3. LIKE” Yummy Workshop’s recipe photo on Face­book AND com­ment on why you want this cookbook.

You may do just one of the above OR all three, it will increase your chances of win­ning. Please do not repeat your com­ment or tweet.
The give­away is open to all Cana­dian and US res­i­dents.
The dead­line to enter is August 31, 2012, 12am PST. A win­ner will be selected ran­domly and will be announced on Sep­tem­ber 3, 2012.

Good Luck!

[UPDATE] Sep­tem­ber 3, 2012
Con­grat­u­la­tions to Kim­berly, who is the lucky win­ner of Grace’s Sweet Life cook­book giveaway!

Baking Cheesecake Dessert Recipes

Strawberry Jam Cheesecake

This recipe was taken from a cute Japan­ese bak­ing cook­book. I just love the rus­tic qual­ity of the design and pho­tos of the book. The for­mat of the book is like a jour­nal with lined pages inside. The author has a “web­site”. There’s not much infor­ma­tion on there, so I am bet­ter off just read­ing the cook­book. I decided to try this recipe because I hap­pened to have all the ingre­di­ents at home, and more impor­tantly, I have my home­made straw­berry jam made from local straw­ber­ries. The flavour and colour of the jam is just so much bet­ter than store-bought — I don’t think I will buy them again. I am patiently wait­ing for local berries to be in sea­son again so I get to pick and eat them!

Don’t expect a very dense cheese­cake from this recipe, it is rather soft and smooth, more like a cus­tard. I have noticed Japan­ese cheese­cake recipe often yield a softer and creamier tex­ture than North Amer­i­can recipes — prob­a­bly because of the high liq­uid con­tents. For this recipe, straw­berry jam is actu­ally mixed into part of the cheese­cake bat­ter and them poured on top. I don’t know if it is the ingre­di­ents here that made the dif­fer­ence, my cake didn’t turn out like the one on the pic­ture — it turned out more like a swirl instead. How­ever, it was quite tasty and creamy.

Straw­berry Jam Cheesecake

Yield: One 8\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\” cake

Ingre­di­ents

    Cheese­cake Batter:
  • 250g Cream Cheese (1 package)
  • 100g Sour Cream
  • 200 mL Whip­ping Cream
  • 90 g Gran­u­lated Sugar
  • 20 g Cake Flour, sifted
  • 2 Eggs, lightly beaten
  • 1 tbsp Lemon Juice
  • Pinch of Salt
  • 1 tsp Vanilla Extract
  • 60 g Straw­berry Jam
  • Crust:
  • 130 g Gra­ham Crackers
  • 60 g But­ter (melted)
  • Top­ping
  • 100 g Sour Cream
  • 3 tbsp Whip­ping Cream
  • 1 tbsp Icing Sugar

Method

    Prepa­ra­tion:
  1. Pre­heat oven to 325F/160C, heat water for water bath.
  2. Line spring-form pan with parch­ment paper and wrap bot­tom with foil to pre­vent water from going in when baked in a water bath.
  3. Crust:
  4. Place gra­ham crack­ers in a plas­tic bag and crush them into lit­tle pieces using a rolling pin.
  5. Mix gra­ham cracker crumbs with melted but­ter, press onto the bot­tom of the pre­pared pan. Refrig­er­ate until ready to use.
  6. Bat­ter:
  7. Place cream cheese in a mix­ing bowl, with an elec­tri­cal mixer, cream together cream cheese, sugar, and salt until well combined.
  8. In the fol­low­ing order, blend in: sour cream, eggs, whip­ping cream, cake flour, lemon juice, and vanilla extract.
  9. Reserve about one-third of the bat­ter, pour the rest into the pre­pared pan.
  10. Mix straw­berry jam into the reserved bat­ter, pour into the pan.
  11. Bake in a water bath for about 45 min­utes, until the cen­ter sets.
  12. Top­ping:
  13. Mix together whip­ping cream, sour cream, and icing sugar.
  14. When cake is done bak­ing, increase oven tem­per­a­ture to 350C/180C.
  15. Pour top­ping mix­ture care­fully onto the baked cake, smooth top.
  16. Return cake to the oven and bake for about 3–5 minutes.
  17. When done bak­ing, cool cake and chill overnight before serving.

Notes

Recipe adapted from Takako Inada’s “Small Baked Goods and Sweets to Share”, 2007.

http://​yum​my​work​shop​.com/​2​0​1​2​/​0​6​/​0​5​/​s​t​r​a​w​b​e​r​r​y​-​j​a​m​-​c​h​e​e​s​e​c​a​ke/

I like the creamy and light tex­ture of this cheese­cake, it is also not too sweet. The jam also adds a sub­tle straw­berry flavour. You can also top it off with more straw­ber­ries, or a straw­berry sauce, but I find it deli­cious as is.

Chilled Dessert Recipes

JC100: Chocolate Mousse

I am very excited to post my first recipe from Julia Child in cel­e­bra­tion of her 100th birth­day! I was asked to par­tic­i­pate in JC100, a cam­paign launched by pub­lisher Alfred A. Knopf to cel­e­brate what would have been Julia Child’s 100th birth­day in August by cook­ing her recipes. One of her recipes will be revealed each week and we would make it and write a post about it. As an avid home cook, it is my plea­sure to try any inter­est­ing home cook­ing recipes, let alone French ones. This week’s recipe is Choco­late Mousse.

Chal­lenge Accepted.

This mousse recipe doesn’t use any whip­ping cream, instead it uses beaten egg whites to pro­duce its light and fluffy tex­ture. The orange liqueur also com­pli­ments the choco­late very well.

Choco­late Mousse by Julia Child

Ingre­di­ents

    Yolks and Sugar Mixture:
  • 4 Egg Yolks
  • ¾ cup Gran­u­lated Sugar
  • ¼ cup Orange Liqueur (I used Grand Marnier)
  • A pan of not-quite-simmering water
  • A basin of cold water
  • Choco­late Mixture:
  • 6 ounces or squares Semi-Sweet Bak­ing Choco­late (I used 72% cocoa)
  • 4 tbsp. Strong Coffee
  • A small saucepan
  • 6 ounces or 1½ stickes of soft­ened Unsalted Butter
  • Optional: ¼ cup finely diced, Glazed Orange Peel
  • Meringue:
  • 4 Egg Whites
  • Pinch of Salt
  • 1 tbsp. Gran­u­lated Sugar

Method

  1. Beat the egg yolks and sugar together until mix­ture is thick, pale yel­low, and falls back upon itself form­ing a slowly dis­solv­ing rib­bon. Beat in the orange liqueur.
  2. Then set mix­ing bowl over the not-quite sim­mer­ing water and con­tinue beat­ing for 3–4 min­utes until the mix­ture is foamy and too hot for your finger.
  3. Then beat over cold water for 3–4 min­utes until the mix­ture is cool and again forms the rib­bon. It will have the con­sis­tency of mayonnaise.
  4. Melt choco­late with cof­fee over hot water. Remove from heat and beat in but­ter, a bit at a time, to make a smooth cream.
  5. Beat the choco­late into the yolks and sugar, then beat in the optional orange peel.
  6. Beat the egg whites and salt until soft peaks are formed; sprin­kle on the sugar and beat until stiff peaks are formed.
  7. Stir one fourth of the egg whites into the choco­late mix­ture. Fold in the rest.
  8. Turn into serv­ing dish, dessert cups, or petits pots. Refrig­er­ate for at least 2 hours or overnight.

Notes

Excerpted from Mas­ter­ing the Art of French Cook­ing by Julia Child. Copy­right © 1961 by Alfred A. Knopf. Reprinted with per­mis­sion from the pub­lisher Alfred A. Knopf, a divi­sion of Ran­dom House, Inc.

http://​yum​my​work​shop​.com/​2​0​1​2​/​0​5​/​1​7​/​j​c​-​1​0​0​-​c​h​o​c​o​l​a​t​e​-​m​o​u​s​se/

My step-by-step gallery:

I thought it would be inter­est­ing to serve the mousse in a mason jar, it seems like a trend now to serve desserts in jars. :) I have also topped it with some whipped cream, shaved choco­late, and fresh mint leaves. I found that the mousse is best enjoyed at a warmer tem­per­a­ture because it will have a very smooth, light, and creamy tex­ture. I had some right out of the fridge but the tex­ture was close to a choco­late ganache. I used an extra dark choco­late (72% cocoa) instead of semi-sweet because I just love the flavour of dark choco­late. The choco­late, orange and cof­fee flavours in the mousse — so deli­cious together! This was quite easy to pre­pare, most of the ingre­di­ents are likely already in your pantry, so give this a try!

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