Posts Tagged ‘cooking with spirits’

Elegant Chocolate Amaretto Cheesecake

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

choc-amaretto-cheesecake

While a basic cheesecake, well-made, is a delight to the senses, when you add chocolate and amaretto it becomes every chocolate lover’s dream.  The almond liqueur enhances the chocolate flavor like no amount of pure vanilla extract.  The texture is smooth and creamy like a soufflé so you want to let it linger on your palate for a while and sip a fine cup of espresso in between bites.

Start the day before and make your own crème fraiche. To 2 cups of heavy cream add 3 Tbsp of buttermilk, cover lightly and let set for 24 hours at room temperature.  You now have fabulous sour cream at half the cost of commercial brands and without preservatives.  Refrigerate until needed.  Use unsweetened crème fraiche on potatoes, omelets, and on everything else you’d normally use sour cream. 

To make sweetened crème fraiche, start with a cold bowl and cold beaters or a whisk.  Pour 1 cup of your homemade crème fraiche into the cold bowl, add 2 tsp of sugar, or to taste, and whip or whisk until soft peaks form.  It’s now ready to use on your favorite dessert.  Try it on fruit clauflouti, puddings, crumbles, strawberry shortcake and this Chocolate Amaretto Cheesecake.

Ingredients for 9-inch Cake:

·         20-22 Oreo cookies, about 1 ½ cups crushed

·         1/3 cup butter, melted

·         1 lb. cream cheese, (2 (8 oz.) pkg. Philadelphia Cream Cheese) softened

·         1 (14 oz.) can Borden’s Sweetened Condensed Milk

·         4 whole eggs

·         3 oz. Amaretto liqueur

·         4 oz. chocolate chips, melted (use a brand with 60% cocoa)

·         Whole berries for garnish

·         1 cup homemade sweetened crème fraiche

·         1 oz chocolate chips, melted for chocolate comb

Method:

1.      Preheat oven to 375° F.  Butter the bottom and sides of a 9-inch spring-form cake pan.  Line the sides of the pan with a strip of parchment paper.   

2.      Combine Oreo cookie crumbs with melted butter.  Press into the bottom of the prepared cake pan and up the sides ½-inch.  Bake in preheated oven for 10 minutes. Cool. Reduce oven temperature to 325° F.

3.      Combine cream cheese with condensed milk in a mixer until smooth.

4.      At low speed, add eggs, one at a time, until incorporated. Add Amaretto and melted chocolate and mix just until uniformly distributed, scraping down sides of bowl occasionally.  (Avoid beating air into the batter by using a low speed setting.)

5.      Pour into prepared crust.  Place pan on a baking sheet and bake for 40 minutes in center of oven.  The top should look slightly dry with the center a little more wet and giggly when moved.  Turn off oven and leave cake to cool in the oven for one hour.  Take care not to over bake or the cake will be dry and heavy.  Remove from oven and chill in refrigerator at least 2 hours.

6.      Drizzle melted chocolate onto a piece of kitchen parchment paper in a tic-tac-toe design or a Spanish comb design, chill until serving time, then carefully remove each design from the parchment paper.

7.      Remove spring-form from cake.  Peel off parchment paper.  Slice using a thin knife dipped in warm water. Top with sweetened crème fraiche and set the chocolate comb upright in the crème fraiche. Garnish with fresh berries and mint sprigs.

Notes:

  • To make individual cheesecakes, butter mini spring-form pans or ramekins.  Line the ramekins with 2 strips of parchment paper 2-3 inches wide and long enough to extend over the rim of the ramekin at least 2 inches on each end.  Crisscross the centers of the strips at the center of the bottom of the ramekins, bringing the ends of the strips up and over the sides.  This will make removal of the cakes easier.  
  • Bake individual ramekins for 20 to 25 minutes.

 

Red Snapper Meuniere

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

meunierWhen you live on an island in the middle of the Pacific fish is paramount to your diet.  There are relatively few cases of grouchy teenage syndrome, behavioral and learning problems among youngsters and life expectancy is above average for the adult population.  The indigenous diet is full of veggies, fruit, fish and coconut in every form.  Its probably a contributing factor to the high number of PhD’s per capita among the Tongan populace.  Unfortunately, this results in a brain-drain of the islands as the educated migrate to mainland countries. However, they do return to the islands for retirement.

One of the most popular main courses served at my restaurant, Coco’s, was red snapper meuniere.  Lightly dredged in flour, pan fried in butter and olive oil, and dressed in a aromatic lemon sauce with hints of tarragon and chili sauce for sparkle.   Side dishes included a choice of yellow coconut rice or baked potato and ratatouille.  Nothing compares to a fresh caught fish for flavor and nutrition.  The American Heart Association recommends 3 servings of fish per week so try this dish one night soon.

Ingredients:

  • 1 lb. fresh red snapper fillets (or cod, white fish, or tilapia)
  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp fresh ground pepper
  • pinch of tarragon
  • 2 Tbsp butter
  • 2 Tbsp olive oil
  • splash of white wine
  • Juice of 1 lemon
  • 1 Tbsp butter
  • dash or two of Tabasco sauce

Method:

  1. Heat a non-stick skillet over medium high heat.  Add oil and butter and heat until bubbly.
  2. Mix flour, salt, pepper, and tarragon in a flat pan or plate.  Dredge fish fillets lightly, shake excess flour off, and place in skillet.
  3. Cook 3-4 minutes on each side until golden brown and fish flakes with a fork.  Remove from pan to a plate. 
  4. Add wine to deglaze pan, scraping up brown bits, add lemon juice and swirl.   Add butter and Tabasco, swirl until creamy.
  5. Pour sauce over fish fillets.  Garnish with lemon slices, capers or parsley sprigs.

Marguerita Pound Cake

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

pound-cakeIf you love pound cake and margueritas you’ll savor this marriage.  The pound cake recipe is a classic from Sunset Cookbook published in the 90s and the margueritas glaze is myown creation.  Cooking with wine, liqueurs, and liquor adds a whole different dimension to taste enhancement.  A little white wine in soups, a little Kahlua in the marinade, a little gin in the stew and the ordinary becomes extrordinary, not to mention the tenderizing benefits.

Shortly after returning from the South Pacific I had a slice of Starbuck’s lime crumb cake with a tall double latte.  It was impressive, though the latte left much to be desired, with a genuine lime perfume when whiffed and lime flavor on the tongue.  I think this  marguerita pound cake with its heady lime perfume and glaze outshines even Starbuck’s cake.

Pound Cake

  • 1-1/2 cups butter
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 5 eggs
  • 3 cups flour
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup fresh lime juice (about 5 large limes)
  • 1-1/2 tsp vanilla extract (Mexican if available)

Marguerita Glaze - makes 1 cup

  • 2 shots tequila
  • 2 shots triple-sec (or Cointreau, or Orange Curacao)
  • 4 shots lime juice (or Roses of Lime)
  • 4 Tbsp sugar

Preheat oven to 325° F.  Grease and flour standard 9X5X3 loaf pan.  Mix flour with baking powder and set aside.  Cream sugar, butter, and eggs.  Beat in flour alternately with milk just until all is incorporated.  Whisk in lime juice and vanilla.  Pour into prepared pan, bake 90 minutes or until it tests done.  Cool 10 minutes, remove from pan, prick top and sides of cake with a wooden skewer.  To make glaze:  boil sugar, lime juice, tequila, and triple-sec in a small sauce pan for 1 minute to dissolve sugar and cook off alcohol.  Pour 1/2 of the glaze over the warm cake.  When glaze is cool, reheat remaining glaze just to pouring consistency and reglaze.  Cool completely before serving.  Serve with a sorbet and your favorite coffee drink.