teaberryblue: (Default)

Lately, I’ve developed a fondness for homemade marshmallows. I’ve been making marshmallows on and off for a few years now, but never really started experimenting with them, although I Had Ideas.

Let me start with a secret: making marshmallows is easy. It is so ridiculously easy, and fairly reasonably-priced, and the results are so good, that if you have forty minutes to make them and don’t mind waiting overnight to have marshmallows, you might never buy store-bought marshmallows again.

I’m serious.

Basically, marshmallows are simple: you boil a mixture of 1 cup sugar, 1 cup corn syrup, 1/2 cup water, until it reaches about 250 degrees Fahrenheit on a candy thermometer. You pour the sugar solution into a blender where you have .75 oz of gelatin in another 1/2 cup water. The solution will foam up; you will turn the mixer on to its highest speed and mix for ten to fifteen minutes, at which point you will feel like Bartholomew Cubbins fighting off the Oobleck. You will coat a rubber spatula in margarine, which will make the Oobleck miraculously slide off the spatula, as you scrape it into a greased baking sheet lined with a mixture of 1/2 cornstarch, 1/2 confectioners’ sugar. You will let it sit overnight. In the morning, there are marshmallows. You can cut them apart with scissors, and then toss them in more sugar-cornstarch.

The basic trick to marshmallows is just to have a really good mixer. I destroyed two hand mixers making marshmallows, which had a lot to do with why I didn’t make them very often– but then, for Christmas this year, my parents gave me a standing mixer. And it makes a huge difference in the marshmallow-making process.

The thing with marshmallows is that they required heavy whipping for an extended period of time. So if you have a hand mixer, you had better have a book in the other hand or a television in the same room as your mixer. Or something. This is why having the standing mixer makes such a difference.

So once I got the mixer, I really started spending a lot of time playing with flavors. I started logically– infusing herbs in the sugar syrup, peppermint once, and lavender and tarragon another time. Then I moved on, realizing I could substitute some of the unflavored gelatin for Jell-o, and get day-glo marshmallows with delicious artificial candy flavors. Lately, I’ve been playing with boozemallows, and I’ve done three flavors that are all quite good: Angostura, Fernet-Branca, and Sazerac.

The Sazerac marshmallows were the first ones I made that actually approximate a cocktail instead of just having a bit of a specific ingredient flavoring the marshmallow. They’re very mild, but if you eat them alone, you can taste all the subtle flavors you expect from a Sazerac: whiskey, absinthe, and Peychaud’s, and they even have the tiniest tinge of pink to them (though it doesn’t come across much in the photo).

To the recipe I related above, I added about 1/4 cup Catoctin Creek Roundstone Rye, about 1/8 cup Tenneyson Absinthe, and about ten dashes of Peychaud’s bitters– I added these right at the beginning of the whipping process, into the mixer. Use a splash guard for your mixer if you have one. You can taste the marshmallow to see if you want more or less of any ingredient, and it’s easy to add a little bit more later on– as long as it’s not too much, it mixes in well.

Of course, once the marshmallows are done, I recommend popping a couple of them into a glass of whiskey.

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Vector Me!)

Lately, I’ve developed a fondness for homemade marshmallows. I’ve been making marshmallows on and off for a few years now, but never really started experimenting with them, although I Had Ideas.

Let me start with a secret: making marshmallows is easy. It is so ridiculously easy, and fairly reasonably-priced, and the results are so good, that if you have forty minutes to make them and don’t mind waiting overnight to have marshmallows, you might never buy store-bought marshmallows again.

I’m serious.

Basically, marshmallows are simple: you boil a mixture of 1 cup sugar, 1 cup corn syrup, 1/2 cup water, until it reaches about 250 degrees Fahrenheit on a candy thermometer. You pour the sugar solution into a blender where you have .75 oz of gelatin in another 1/2 cup water. The solution will foam up; you will turn the mixer on to its highest speed and mix for ten to fifteen minutes, at which point you will feel like Bartholomew Cubbins fighting off the Oobleck. You will coat a rubber spatula in margarine, which will make the Oobleck miraculously slide off the spatula, as you scrape it into a greased baking sheet lined with a mixture of 1/2 cornstarch, 1/2 confectioners’ sugar. You will let it sit overnight. In the morning, there are marshmallows. You can cut them apart with scissors, and then toss them in more sugar-cornstarch.

The basic trick to marshmallows is just to have a really good mixer. I destroyed two hand mixers making marshmallows, which had a lot to do with why I didn’t make them very often– but then, for Christmas this year, my parents gave me a standing mixer. And it makes a huge difference in the marshmallow-making process.

The thing with marshmallows is that they required heavy whipping for an extended period of time. So if you have a hand mixer, you had better have a book in the other hand or a television in the same room as your mixer. Or something. This is why having the standing mixer makes such a difference.

So once I got the mixer, I really started spending a lot of time playing with flavors. I started logically– infusing herbs in the sugar syrup, peppermint once, and lavender and tarragon another time. Then I moved on, realizing I could substitute some of the unflavored gelatin for Jell-o, and get day-glo marshmallows with delicious artificial candy flavors. Lately, I’ve been playing with boozemallows, and I’ve done three flavors that are all quite good: Angostura, Fernet-Branca, and Sazerac.

The Sazerac marshmallows were the first ones I made that actually approximate a cocktail instead of just having a bit of a specific ingredient flavoring the marshmallow. They’re very mild, but if you eat them alone, you can taste all the subtle flavors you expect from a Sazerac: whiskey, absinthe, and Peychaud’s, and they even have the tiniest tinge of pink to them (though it doesn’t come across much in the photo).

To the recipe I related above, I added about 1/4 cup Catoctin Creek Roundstone Rye, about 1/8 cup Tenneyson Absinthe, and about ten dashes of Peychaud’s bitters– I added these right at the beginning of the whipping process, into the mixer. Use a splash guard for your mixer if you have one. You can taste the marshmallow to see if you want more or less of any ingredient, and it’s easy to add a little bit more later on– as long as it’s not too much, it mixes in well.

Of course, once the marshmallows are done, I recommend popping a couple of them into a glass of whiskey.

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Default)

Have you ever had a quail egg?

If you haven’t, they are tiny and delicious:

They are often just served raw or lightly poached over other food, or pickled.  Anyway, I was at the market (if you can’t get them at your usual grocery store, try an Asian market; they cost around $3 for a package of 18 near me in New York City) and quail eggs were on sale, so I thought it would be fun to try ice cream with them.

Recipe: Quail Egg Ice Cream
Recipe Type: Dessert
Author: Tea
Prep time: 9 hours
Cook time: 65 mins
Total time: 10 hours 5 mins
Serves: 4-10
A traditional ice cream made with quail eggs instead of chicken eggs.
Ingredients
  • 3/4 cup whole milk
  • 3/4 cup half & half
  • 1/2 Tsp vanilla extract
  • 10 quail egg yolks
  • 5 whole quail eggs
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 2 cups heavy cream
Instructions
  1. Stir egg yolks and sugar together until frothy and yellow
  2. Bring milk, half and half to boil slowly with vanilla
  3. Pour hot milk into egg mixture very slowly, in 1/3 cup increments, whisking well to temper the egg mixture
  4. Once 2/3 of the milk has been added to the eggs, pour the milk and egg mixture back into the pot and whisk well
  5. Put the pot back over medium heat. Stir intermittently to keep the mixture from sticking to the pot and burning
  6. Once the mixture begins to thicken to a consistency like pudding, remove it from heat
  7. Refrigerate for four hours or overnight.
  8. Add cream and whole quail eggs to mixture and stir well.
  9. Put mixture in your ice cream freezer and follow the instructions for your ice cream freezer
  10. Remove when ice cream reaches the desired consistency. Freeze for two hours or overnight before serving
  11. Eat it all up!

The ice cream was actually a bit lighter and milkier than a traditional custard-based chicken egg ice cream, which I found to be very interesting, especially with those extra raw eggs added in.  Other than that, there is not too much of a difference.  It was pretty good lightly sweet ice cream.

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Vector Me!)

Have you ever had a quail egg?

If you haven’t, they are tiny and delicious:

They are often just served raw or lightly poached over other food, or pickled.  Anyway, I was at the market (if you can’t get them at your usual grocery store, try an Asian market; they cost around $3 for a package of 18 near me in New York City) and quail eggs were on sale, so I thought it would be fun to try ice cream with them.

Recipe: Quail Egg Ice Cream
Recipe Type: Dessert
Author: Tea
Prep time: 9 hours
Cook time: 65 mins
Total time: 10 hours 5 mins
Serves: 4-10
A traditional ice cream made with quail eggs instead of chicken eggs.
Ingredients
  • 3/4 cup whole milk
  • 3/4 cup half & half
  • 1/2 Tsp vanilla extract
  • 10 quail egg yolks
  • 5 whole quail eggs
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 2 cups heavy cream
Instructions
  1. Stir egg yolks and sugar together until frothy and yellow
  2. Bring milk, half and half to boil slowly with vanilla
  3. Pour hot milk into egg mixture very slowly, in 1/3 cup increments, whisking well to temper the egg mixture
  4. Once 2/3 of the milk has been added to the eggs, pour the milk and egg mixture back into the pot and whisk well
  5. Put the pot back over medium heat. Stir intermittently to keep the mixture from sticking to the pot and burning
  6. Once the mixture begins to thicken to a consistency like pudding, remove it from heat
  7. Refrigerate for four hours or overnight.
  8. Add cream and whole quail eggs to mixture and stir well.
  9. Put mixture in your ice cream freezer and follow the instructions for your ice cream freezer
  10. Remove when ice cream reaches the desired consistency. Freeze for two hours or overnight before serving
  11. Eat it all up!

The ice cream was actually a bit lighter and milkier than a traditional custard-based chicken egg ice cream, which I found to be very interesting, especially with those extra raw eggs added in.  Other than that, there is not too much of a difference.  It was pretty good lightly sweet ice cream.

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Vector Me!)

 

 

Recipe: Cherry Vanilla Gelato
Recipe Type: Dessert
Author: Tea
Prep time: 10 mins
Cook time: 65 mins
Total time: 1 hour 15 mins
Serves: 6-10 depending on size of scoops.
This is a simple gelato recipe. Gelato makers use about 1.5 cups of liquid plus additional ingredients. For a standard ice cream maker, approximately doubling the recipe should work.
Ingredients
  • 1/2 cup whole milk
  • 1/2 cup half & half
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1/4 + 1/4 cup sugar (any kind will do)
  • Approximately 15 washed and pitted fresh cherries
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla
  • 2 egg yolks
Instructions
  1. ) Put water, 1/4 cup sugar, and cherries in a small saucepan over high heat until water begins to boil and sugar is dissolved.
  2. ) Turn heat to low, add vanilla. Let cook, stirring intermittently, until cherries have cooked down and liquid has become syrupy. (This can take about 20 minutes)
  3. ) While cherries are cooking, mix milk, half & half, and cream together.
  4. ) Add sugar and eggs and whisk together well.
  5. ) Put milk mixture into gelato maker and begin freezing according to instructions.
  6. ) Put cherries in freezer and wait until cool
  7. ) When milk mixture is halfway hardened, stop freezer and add cherries and syrup from pan.
  8. ) Continue freezing in gelato maker until done.
  9. ) Eat soft or freeze 2 hours or more for scoopable gelato.

 

Please also take a moment to check out my recipe for blueberry-peach gelato on Nommable!

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Default)

 

 

Recipe: Cherry Vanilla Gelato
Recipe Type: Dessert
Author: Tea
Prep time: 10 mins
Cook time: 65 mins
Total time: 1 hour 15 mins
Serves: 6-10 depending on size of scoops.
This is a simple gelato recipe. Gelato makers use about 1.5 cups of liquid plus additional ingredients. For a standard ice cream maker, approximately doubling the recipe should work.
Ingredients
  • 1/2 cup whole milk
  • 1/2 cup half & half
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1/4 + 1/4 cup sugar (any kind will do)
  • Approximately 15 washed and pitted fresh cherries
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla
  • 2 egg yolks
Instructions
  1. ) Put water, 1/4 cup sugar, and cherries in a small saucepan over high heat until water begins to boil and sugar is dissolved.
  2. ) Turn heat to low, add vanilla. Let cook, stirring intermittently, until cherries have cooked down and liquid has become syrupy. (This can take about 20 minutes)
  3. ) While cherries are cooking, mix milk, half & half, and cream together.
  4. ) Add sugar and eggs and whisk together well.
  5. ) Put milk mixture into gelato maker and begin freezing according to instructions.
  6. ) Put cherries in freezer and wait until cool
  7. ) When milk mixture is halfway hardened, stop freezer and add cherries and syrup from pan.
  8. ) Continue freezing in gelato maker until done.
  9. ) Eat soft or freeze 2 hours or more for scoopable gelato.

 

Please also take a moment to check out my recipe for blueberry-peach gelato on Nommable!

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Default)

My mom doesn’t like cherries.

Well, that’s not completely true.  I’ll amend the statement: my mom doesn’t like maraschino cherries. The nearly-fluorescent syrupy sweet things that barely resemble anything that could have ever grown on a tree.

When I was a kid, this was a pretty sweet deal.  Ice cream sundaes?  I got the cherry.  You know, unless my brother got it.  But there was a one in two chance I was getting an extra cherry.

Then I got older, and less excited about cherries, and more excited about boozey things that cherries go in.

So, around November of last year, I started experimenting with making cherries my mom would actually like.

Here’s the resulting recipe.

Pickled Sour Cherries
Recipe Type: Condiment
Author: Tea
Prep time: 45 mins
Cook time: 40 mins
Total time: 1 hour 25 mins
Delicious pickled sour cherries made with sherry
Ingredients
  • 1/2 cup sherry vinegar
  • 1/2 cup sweet sherry
  • 1 stick cinnamon
  • 1 Tb whole peppercorns
  • 2 pods black cardamom
  • 1/2 cup unrefined sugar
  • 1 1/2 cups dried pitted sour cherries
Instructions
  1. Put vinegar, sherry, cinnamon, peppercorns, and cardamom in a small saucepan
  2. Bring to a boil and then reduce heat to medium
  3. Add sugar, stir over medium heat until sugar is dissolved
  4. Add cherries. Cook at medium heat for five minutes, then reduce heat to low
  5. Cook over low heat for 30 minutes, until liquid has become thick and syrupy and cherries are partially reconstituted.
Notes

You can replace the sherry with other liquor, like whiskey, brandy, port, or rum.
Cherries will keep in the fridge for a long time. You can also jar them in sealed jars like other pickles.

 

Tea | Nommable!

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Vector Me!)

My mom doesn’t like cherries.

Well, that’s not completely true.  I’ll amend the statement: my mom doesn’t like maraschino cherries. The nearly-fluorescent syrupy sweet things that barely resemble anything that could have ever grown on a tree.

When I was a kid, this was a pretty sweet deal.  Ice cream sundaes?  I got the cherry.  You know, unless my brother got it.  But there was a one in two chance I was getting an extra cherry.

Then I got older, and less excited about cherries, and more excited about boozey things that cherries go in.

So, around November of last year, I started experimenting with making cherries my mom would actually like.

Here’s the resulting recipe.

Pickled Sour Cherries
Recipe Type: Condiment
Author: Tea
Prep time: 45 mins
Cook time: 40 mins
Total time: 1 hour 25 mins
Delicious pickled sour cherries made with sherry
Ingredients
  • 1/2 cup sherry vinegar
  • 1/2 cup sweet sherry
  • 1 stick cinnamon
  • 1 Tb whole peppercorns
  • 2 pods black cardamom
  • 1/2 cup unrefined sugar
  • 1 1/2 cups dried pitted sour cherries
Instructions
  1. Put vinegar, sherry, cinnamon, peppercorns, and cardamom in a small saucepan
  2. Bring to a boil and then reduce heat to medium
  3. Add sugar, stir over medium heat until sugar is dissolved
  4. Add cherries. Cook at medium heat for five minutes, then reduce heat to low
  5. Cook over low heat for 30 minutes, until liquid has become thick and syrupy and cherries are partially reconstituted.
Notes

You can replace the sherry with other liquor, like whiskey, brandy, port, or rum.
Cherries will keep in the fridge for a long time. You can also jar them in sealed jars like other pickles.

 

Tea | Nommable!

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Default)

This is the very first post on Nommable! And it is delicious!

A few weeks ago, I asked the folks who read my recipe posts to suggest ice cream flavors they would like to see. The consensus was overwhelmingly for bacon ice cream! Here’s what I’ve got for you! It’s an easy recipe that can be made at home with a regular consumer-grade ice cream maker. I used a gourmet bacon toffee for the toffee chunks, but you can replace that with your favorite toffee bar or chocolate chips if you can’t find a bacon toffee. Bacon seems to be trendy right now, though, so check out your local chocolate shop– a lot of them have chocolate-covered candied bacon around here!

Maple Bacon Toffee Ice Cream
Recipe Type: Dessert
Author: Tea
Prep time: 9 hours
Cook time: 1 hour 15 mins
Total time: 10 hours 15 mins
The most popular request on my personal blog: a recipe for bacon ice cream!
Ingredients
  • 1/2 lb bacon
  • 3/4 cup whole milk
  • 3/4 cup half & half
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 2/3 cup maple syrup
  • 4 oz Vosges bacon caramel toffee (If you can’t find this, using Heath or Skor bars is perfectly okay)
  • 2 cups heavy cream
Instructions
  1. Cut the uncooked bacon into 1/2″ pieces
  2. Cook the bacon until it is crispy, set it aside to drain
  3. Stir egg yolks and syrup together until frothy
  4. Bring milk, half and half, and one tablespoon of the grease from the bacon just to boil
  5. Pour hot milk into egg mixture very slowly, in 1/3 cup increments, whisking well to temper the egg mixture
  6. Once 2/3 of the milk has been added to the eggs, pour the milk and egg mixture back into the pot and whisk well
  7. Put the pot back over medium heat. Stir intermittently to keep the mixture from sticking to the pot and burning
  8. Once the mixture begins to thicken to a consistency like pudding, remove it from heat and refrigerate for four hours or overnight.
  9. Add cream to mixture and stir well.
  10. Crush toffee into small bits and add to mixture
  11. Add bacon
  12. Put mixture in your ice cream freezer and follow the instructions for your ice cream freezer
  13. Remove when ice cream reaches the desired consistency. Freeze for two hours or overnight before serving
  14. Eat it all up!
Notes

Most of the prep time involves having the ice cream mixture in the fridge or freezer. Most of the cooking time involves having the ice cream in the ice cream freezer. The active time for this recipe is about 25 minutes.

You can vary the quantities of milk, half and half, and cream– it should come out to 3 1/2 cups total, but you may like a different texture better. Use more cream and less milk for thicker ice cream, more milk and less cream if you like it lighter.

PS– A few of you have expressed an interest in writing for Nommable! If you’d like to post regularly or semi-regularly, you can email me at demiurge@antagonia.net with your preferred username, and I’ll set up your account. If you have a single submission you’d like to send my way, you can go to the contribute page on the website.

Mirrored from Nommable!.

teaberryblue: (Vector Me!)

This is the very first post on Nommable! And it is delicious!

A few weeks ago, I asked the folks who read my recipe posts to suggest ice cream flavors they would like to see. The consensus was overwhelmingly for bacon ice cream! Here’s what I’ve got for you! It’s an easy recipe that can be made at home with a regular consumer-grade ice cream maker. I used a gourmet bacon toffee for the toffee chunks, but you can replace that with your favorite toffee bar or chocolate chips if you can’t find a bacon toffee. Bacon seems to be trendy right now, though, so check out your local chocolate shop– a lot of them have chocolate-covered candied bacon around here!

Maple Bacon Toffee Ice Cream
Recipe Type: Dessert
Author: Tea
Prep time: 9 hours
Cook time: 1 hour 15 mins
Total time: 10 hours 15 mins
The most popular request on my personal blog: a recipe for bacon ice cream!
Ingredients
  • 1/2 lb bacon
  • 3/4 cup whole milk
  • 3/4 cup half & half
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 2/3 cup maple syrup
  • 4 oz Vosges bacon caramel toffee (If you can’t find this, using Heath or Skor bars is perfectly okay)
  • 2 cups heavy cream
Instructions
  1. Cut the uncooked bacon into 1/2″ pieces
  2. Cook the bacon until it is crispy, set it aside to drain
  3. Stir egg yolks and syrup together until frothy
  4. Bring milk, half and half, and one tablespoon of the grease from the bacon just to boil
  5. Pour hot milk into egg mixture very slowly, in 1/3 cup increments, whisking well to temper the egg mixture
  6. Once 2/3 of the milk has been added to the eggs, pour the milk and egg mixture back into the pot and whisk well
  7. Put the pot back over medium heat. Stir intermittently to keep the mixture from sticking to the pot and burning
  8. Once the mixture begins to thicken to a consistency like pudding, remove it from heat and refrigerate for four hours or overnight.
  9. Add cream to mixture and stir well.
  10. Crush toffee into small bits and add to mixture
  11. Add bacon
  12. Put mixture in your ice cream freezer and follow the instructions for your ice cream freezer
  13. Remove when ice cream reaches the desired consistency. Freeze for two hours or overnight before serving
  14. Eat it all up!
Notes

Most of the prep time involves having the ice cream mixture in the fridge or freezer. Most of the cooking time involves having the ice cream in the ice cream freezer. The active time for this recipe is about 25 minutes.

You can vary the quantities of milk, half and half, and cream– it should come out to 3 1/2 cups total, but you may like a different texture better. Use more cream and less milk for thicker ice cream, more milk and less cream if you like it lighter.

PS– A few of you have expressed an interest in writing for Nommable! If you’d like to post regularly or semi-regularly, you can email me at demiurge@antagonia.net with your preferred username, and I’ll set up your account. If you have a single submission you’d like to send my way, you can go to the contribute page on the website.

Mirrored from Nommable!.

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