Showing posts with label bread pudding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bread pudding. Show all posts

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Candy Cap Blondies

Last month, after signing up for the culinary interest group for the Mycological Society of San Francisco, I found myself volunteering to help make desserts for the annual holiday dinner. The organizer and her other volunteer both live within a few blocks of me, so meetings were convened and e-mails flew back and forth.  In the end, I brought a pile of delicious vegan desserts including: Mexican Chocolate Torte, Persimmon Bread Pudding with a Bourbon Anglaise sauce and  Candy Cap Blondies using a recipe created by Eric Tucker for one of his classes at Millennium Restaurant (recipe below). 

The dinner came off pretty smoothly - my friend Scott joined me and even loaned a hand (& tools) to help set up the xmas tree and set tables.  There was so much food!  We could have easily had more people there - and the East Bay location at the Albany Community Center had a fantastic kitchen and huge dining room.  The chanterelle-quinoa stuffed portobello mushroom was really delicious, as were the mashed potatoes with *vegan* mushroom gravy and a delicious mushroom soup with loads of delicious mushrooms.  My desserts partner made up about 20 different kinds of chocolate truffles, mini eclairs and cream puffs.  Needless to say - I was very well fed and brought home much of my dinner for lunch the next day. 

I am still eating some leftover desserts this week, as well - I hope you'll pop in for coffee and cake!

Eric's Millennium Candy Cap Blondies

INGREDIENTS:
  • 1/4 c cocoa butter
  • 1/3 c grapeseed oil
  • 2 T ground dry candy cap mushrooms
  • 1/4 c rice or almond milk
  • 1 t vanilla extract
  • 1 c brown sugar
  • 1 1/2 c all purpose flour
  • 1 1/4 t baking powder
  • 1 t Ener-G egg replacer
  • 1/4 t salt
  • 1/2 t ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 t ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 t ground allspice
  • 1/4 t ground clove
  • 1/2 c pecans, lightly toasted and roughly chopped
  • 1/2 c chocolate chips
DIRECTIONS
  1. Place the first 5 ingredients into a double boiler and melt.  Remove from heat and let steep for 20 minutes or so, then remove double boiler from hot water and let it cool.
  2. Sift dry ingredients together - except for pecans and chocolate chips.
  3. Add wet ingredients - at room temperature, not warmer - to dry ingredients.  When mixed, add pecans & chocolate chips.
  4. Turn into lightly oiled pan lined with parchment paper, bake 22-24 minutes at 350.  This will fit in a large loaf pan or a 9 x 9 pan if you like thinner blondies (which will need to be removed sooner than a deeper pan).  Keep an eye on this - if you increase the recipe size, it will take longer.  If you use a dark metal pan that holds more heat, they will cook faster and you will end up with cookie instead of blondie.  You want to see the blondies puff up and get tall, filling the sides of the pan and becoming golden brown on top.  A 3x batch fits a 13 x 9 pan and takes well over 40 minutes to achieve doneness!

Friday, December 03, 2010

Persimmons are BACK! - Persimmon Bread Pudding for BREAKFAST!

If you're like me - an avid forager & kitchen witch - you might wake up one morning to discover that 40 of the 212 persimmons you harvested and have spread out on cookie sheets, trays and the little cardboard trays that once held pint and half pint canning jars - are ripe and already have been discovered by the ants.  Fortunately, the ants never get farther than under the little crown of four leaves at the stem and are easily evicted under running water.

After filling six dehydrator sheets with sliced persimmon, and putting 11 cups of persimmon pulp into freezer bags - you then discover that the gallon bag of croutons and the decidedly non-vegan chicken parts rescued from the freezer of a friend moving to Portland (to pass along to another friend for chicken stock - hey, the chicken is already dead!) - are taking up so much space that you don't have much room for more persimmon pulp in the freezer.

Then, the next morning - say, today - you wake up and find that only 3-4 persimmons, small ones at that, are really super ripe and it's not worth adding them to the dehydrator when you can kill two birds with one stone by using up some of those fabulous sourdough croutons.

Ladies & Gems - I give you:


Persimmon Bread Pudding


INGREDIENTS:
  • 4 cups bread cut into 1"-1.5" chunks (last night's leftover baguette baseball bat is ok!)
  • 3 cups almond milk (regular or vanilla)
  • 2-3 small Hachiya persimmons so ripe that you have to take care not to pierce the skin with your fingertip
  • 1/3-1/2 cup maple syrup
  • 1 Tb ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground clove
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 cup raisins or currants or dried cranberries (or some other dried fruit - chopped dried apricots, nectarines or apples might be nice!)
  • 3/4 coarsely chopped pecans
DIRECTIONS:
  1. Pour almond milk into your blender up to the 2 cup mark.
  2. Cut hachiyas in half and scoop out pulp with a big tablespoon, straight into the blender.
  3. Check the level - add more almond milk to bring it up to 3 or 3.5 cups.
  4. Add maple syrup (reserving 3 TB), cinnamon, clove, vanilla to the blender cup - put the lid on and process til smooth.
  5. Pour custard onto bread crumbs in a large mixing bowl - let soak 5-10 minutes, depending on how tough your bread is already.  You want it to absorb a lot of the liquid and there will still be some liquid floating around.
  6. Mix in raisins and toasted nuts gently - don't mash up the bread!
  7. Transfer to a lightly greased gratin dish or baking dish - the depth of the dish affects the cooking time and the final outcome.  If you like a soft, custardy bread pudding, use a deeper dish - if you like it to be a little more chewy and crispy, use a more shallow dish.
  8. Drizzle reserved maple syrup on top.
  9. Bake in 375 oven for 20 minutes - the bread pudding will bubble and get puffy - it will settle a bit after it cools.
Eat it warm or cold!