Crush

Dinner at Crush. This was a few months ago. Thanks to Pooja K. for bringing her camera. This was a decadent dinner that I shared with work folks. We may not agree on movies or music but you can bet we agree that there is some seriously good food around town.

Cave Aged Gruyere Cheese Gougeres

Cave Aged Gruyere Cheese Gougeres

Seared Sea Scallops, Black Currants, Cauliflower & Vaudauvan Broth

Seared Sea Scallops, Black Currants, Cauliflower & Vaudauvan Broth

Anderson Valley Lamb Saddle, Herbed Potato Gnocchi, Artichokes, Olive, Mint & Syrah Sauce

Anderson Valley Lamb Saddle, Herbed Potato Gnocchi, Artichokes, Olive, Mint & Syrah Sauce

Pistachio Sable

Pistachio Sable

Of course the photos don’t do the dinner justice. The flash makes everything a little less impressive, but still one of the amazing meals of the year for me.

In the words of Marvin Gaye, What’s going on?

Wow. I sure do spend a lot of money to host a blog that I never update. Life has been busy as of late. In February I started in a new position at the firm, and suddenly life went berserk, but in a good way. Here are some highlights.

1) I had to quit Daring Bakers because I was getting too stressed out with all the fancy baking. You can still visit their challenges monthly, and in fact you should because there are amazing bakers over there.

2) I discovered a new genre of fiction … urban fantasy. Yes, I’ve always been late to the game and this is no different. Trying to catch up on the werewolves/vampires/shapeshifter/fae fiction out there. And there is a lot of it.

3) Along those lines, the family visited beautiful Forks, Wash. It was C-R-A-Z-Y. Here is a taste.

4) I got a Kindle for my birthday. YES!

5) I’ve been spending my free time (after work and feeding the baby and playing with the baby and putting the baby to bed) reading. Or maybe working. But not blogging.

6) Baby is AWESOME.

7) What else do you want to know? I will try to come back and visit soon.

XOXO

Run for the border, eh! The Daring Bakers head north to Nanaimo

The January 2010 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Lauren of Celiac Teen. Lauren chose Gluten-Free Graham Wafers and Nanaimo Bars as the challenge for the month. The sources she based her recipe on are 101 Cookbooks and www.nanaimo.ca.

Shut up, you hoser!

Lauren’s choice is fitting, considering the imminent 2010 Olympics, hosted in beautiful Vancouver, B.C., just few hundred miles away from my home in Seattle. Am I going to be anywhere near there in February? Heck, no. But I will be watching the coverage down here, and what better local treat to enjoy than these wonderful chocolatey layer bars. For those of you unaware, Nanaimo is a city located on Vancouver Island in the province of British Columbia.

And there is some great history on behind the Nanaimo Bar. If I may quote the always-accurate Wikipedia:

The bar originated in Ladysmith south of Nanaimo in the early 1950s. A local housewife from Cowichan Bay, by the name of Mabel Jenkins, submitted the recipe to the annual Ladysmith and Cowichan Womens Institute Cookbook. This cookbook was sold in the early 1950s in the region as a fundraiser. It made its way throughout the province’s communities by way of household cookery recipes shared by housewives in the 1950s, particularly via company towns. It was sold in many of the coffee shops on Nanaimo’s Commercial Street, and soon became popular. Tourists in the region, especially US tourists on pleasure boats came to refer to these as “Nanaimo Bars”.

But before we get ahead of ourselves, let’s begin with the basics of Lauren’s challenge, namely, the homemade graham wafer (or as we ridiculous Americans like to call graham crackers). Seems to make sense now, until this challenge I did not know this is a North American treat. Loved hearing about the experiences of my global daring baker neighbors who have never seen or heard of a graham cracker, something I’ve taken for granted all my life.

Baking them was fun and simple. Reminded me why I enjoy baking. While Celiac Teen impressed upon us to try the gluten-free version, I opted for the gluten-ful version for cost reasons. I did look for the gluten-free ingredients and was surprised that the local natural foods store did not have all of the flours available in their bulk section, and not even all of them in the packaged section (Really, View Ridge PCC? I am shocked). Total costs of buying the flours packaged was over $15 at Whole Foods and since I had all of the gluten-ful ingredients at home anyway, I made the decision to go gluten.

I didn’t expect the cracker to be so simple to make. I love this recipe because it’s so natural. Most commercially-made graham crackers contain high-fructose corn syrup, something this family strives to avoid. Mine were a little softer than the grocery-store kind, but I kind of like them chewy that way. Works for me.

I must say the dough smelled terrific. Just like honey graham crackers! I loved making that dough. With fair warning from fellow DBs that it was sticky, I was well-prepared. I baked these Saturday, with the plan to make the Nanaimo Bars on Sunday, using crackers that came out a little bit more crunchy.

graham crackers

On Sunday, the husband took the babe with him to his parents and I was given a few hours to myself, some of which I thought I would spend on the bars. Not all of the 5 or so hours, just some. To my surprise, the simple recipe became a decidedly challenging one for me. First, I couldn’t find my square baking pan. I asked the husband who denies knowing its whereabouts. If I find my Calphalon pan under a sink catching a leaky pipe somewhere there will be heck to pay. Though this didn’t really slow me down. No problem, I thought. I’ll be creative and use my silicone muffin pan. That was challenge #1.

Challenge #2 was my desire to reduce the rich/sweetness, especially of the middle icing layer, which was basically icing sugar and butter. Other DBs declared this a decadent treat. My attempt to test a way to reduce the richness of that icing layer turned into a debacle. I got the math wrong or something, and my icing layer would not thicken. And it was lumpy. I hate lumpy. I was very close to throwing my Kitchen-Aid mixer out the window when instead I just left the house. Took a walk. Who knew making a layered bar would be so frustrating. When I returned I decided to turn that middle layer into a vanilla pudding layer and suddenly things looked up.

Because of the consistency of the pudding (kinda soft), I threw the pan into the freezer. My bars became a really great frozen treat. The layers themselves are not has thick as the typical bar, however in an effort to reduce the richness of it, I think I succeeded. I wouldn’t call these “light” by any means (a cup of butter by any other name is still a cup of butter), but definitely a great version for those not into the sweet-sweet treats.

For the bottom layer I traded the ground almonds for pecans, then sprinkled some of those pecans on top. The top layer is your basic semi-sweet chocolate. Yum.

In hindsight, a lot of fun. As always, very thankful for even a few hours of alone time between the kitchen and me, even if we fight a little. You gotta have a little passion in the relationship, right.

Jump for the recipes, download the PDF or visit TheDaringKitchen.com for recipes plus additional baking tips.

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You say it’s your birthday!

While L’s actual birthday was last week, I will never forget that my water broke the night of the AFC/NFC Championship games, which happened to be tonight. Haven’t decided who I’ll be rooting for in the Super Bowl, but I will try to remind the husband that I called these two teams as meeting in the Super Bowl back around week 5 or so. Seriously. No, really. I did. Maybe it wasn’t too difficult a call to make considering both teams were so frikkin hot, but I did and that’s what’s important. But, I digress.

Due to scheduling, we did a little celebratin’ yesterday, when Grandma was in town. Sheva, a gal I know from work who does photography on the side, came over and took pics of the family. I made cupcakes for the little girl. I made it easy on myself by purchasing Dr. Oetker brand organic cake and icing mix (chocolate/chocolate, as requested by the husband), then just whipped up a little bit of icing to decorate. Used some handy decorating tools that the MIL gave me for Christmas. Thus the fancy-schmancy leaf tips and star tips and somewhat neat handwriting using the round tip. Thanks, Grandma, for playing with the little monkey while I baked and frosted.

happy birthday

Happy Birthday, little monkey!

Tis the Season to Make a Gingerbread House


The December 2009 Daring Bakers’ challenge was brought to you by Anna of Very Small Anna and Y of Lemonpi. They chose to challenge Daring Bakers’ everywhere to bake and assemble a gingerbread house from scratch. They chose recipes from Good Housekeeping and from The Great Scandinavian Baking Book as the challenge recipes.

In the Daring Baker Hosts’ words:

“Anna: The recipe I tested is from Good Housekeeping – I chose it because it was simple and required only ingredients I personally always have in my kitchen. Plus, it was so funky I HAD to try it, and luckily that worked out. I made my house around Halloween and decided to take advantage of the spooky goodies I could only get at that time of year.”

“Y: I tested a Scandinavian recipe from The Great Scandinavian Baking Book. I chose a Beatrice Ojakangas’ recipe because I love her book, and usually have great success with her recipes. I was also attracted to the ingredients she had in her gingerbread. If you’re using this recipe, please be aware that in general, gingerbread for houses is usually designed less for taste and more for its ability to be sturdy and long lasting.”

To see photos and get tips and notes on baking a gingerbread house, and to see our requirements for this challenge, visit TheDaringKitchen.com.

This was quite the fun project! I used the recipe Anna tested from Good Housekeeping. It called for 9 ½ (yes 9) cups of flour. That tipped me off that I was making a lot of dough, but didn’t know how much until it was too late. For the future, if you are planning to make a smaller house, you are probably safe to half that recipe. I made one small house and millions of cookies afterwards.

When I first brainstormed ideas for what type of house to build, I did in fact consider creating a Twilight-inspired design(you can read my Twilight-obsessed post here). After searching on the Web did I find out that someone out there already created one (scroll down towards the end)! For reals? Yes! So of course I couldn’t repeat it. Not only that, I don’t really have the skills to do it anyway.

I settled on a simple template that I found on Gingerbreadbydesign.com. It was the “Elf House Template” and featured a steep roof and cute chimney and seemed something I could tackle. While some fellow bakers reported shrinkage with these recipes, I experienced the opposite. My chimney grew so large after baking that I was unable to use it. It was nearly as tall as the house and I waiting too long to try to trim the pieces (once the baked cookie cools, you can’t trim without breaking the entire piece).

No worries. I kept the decoration simple. Spice drops, candy canes and some sprinkles I had from last year’s cookie extravaganza were the main décor. I also used the smaller cookies that I baked as decoration as well (note the snowflake on the house as well as the stars on the roof). In addition to the Christmas trees outside, I also had a little Gingerbread family: Dad, Mom and little girl. Unfortunately I ran out of space and time and so ultimately ate them!

As the glue to keep everything together I used the “Ornamental Frosting” recipe from Good Housekeeping. It was a standard confectioner’s sugar + water + egg powder concoction that tasted terrible. Worse yet, the second batch I made was not as gluey as my first batch, which would come back to bite me in the butt later on. When I made a third batch of frosting, to frost the cookies I eventually took to work (did I mention I made a gazillion cookies with my leftover dough?), I added butter and vanilla and it was much much better.

I finished this “masterpiece” at around eleven at night. I would have preferred to wait until daylight to take a better picture. However, by the next day my roof had toppled over (shoddy craftsmanship?? by the Chinese?? Oh no!).  I was relieved that I thought to take pics that evening. But as a result the lighting is a bit much and the white coconut snow you see there is hidden behind the glare of the lights and aluminum foil I placed everything on.

As I usually am when I first read what the Daring Baker Challenge is going to be, I was a little bit intimidated by the thought of making a house from scratch. But, as usual, I had nothing to fear. The dough was a cinch to make, and I have visions of turning this into a new tradition at my home. By next Christmas I think little Lily will be old enough to help decorate her own little house and we can build our own little village!

Plus, this was far fancier than the graham cracker shack I made at my sister’s a few years ago:

Anna’s Recipe (via Good Housekeeping)

2 1/2 cups (500g) packed dark brown sugar
1 1/2 cups (360mL) heavy cream or whipping cream
1 1/4 cups (425g) molasses
9 1/2 cups (1663g) all-purpose flour
2 tablespoon(s) baking soda
1 tablespoon(s) ground ginger

1. In very large bowl, with wire whisk (or with an electric mixer), beat brown sugar, cream, and molasses until sugar lumps dissolve and mixture is smooth. In medium bowl, combine flour, baking soda, and ginger. With spoon, stir flour mixture into cream mixture in 3 additions until dough is too stiff to stir, then knead with hands until flour is incorporated and dough is smooth.

2. Divide dough into 4 equal portions; flatten each into a disk to speed chilling. Wrap each disk well with plastic wrap and refrigerate at least 4 hours or overnight, until dough is firm enough to roll.

3. Grease and flour large cookie sheets (17-inch by 14-inch/43x36cm)

4. Roll out dough, 1 disk at a time on each cookie sheet to about 3/16-inch thickness. (Placing 3/16-inch dowels or rulers on either side of dough to use as a guide will help roll dough to uniform thickness.)

5. Trim excess dough from cookie sheet; wrap and reserve in refrigerator. Chill rolled dough on cookie sheet in refrigerator or freezer at least 10 minutes or until firm enough to cut easily.

6. Preheat oven to 300 degrees F (149C)

7. Use chilled rolled dough, floured poster board patterns, and sharp paring knife to cut all house pieces on cookie sheet, making sure to leave at least 1 1/4 inches between pieces because dough will expand slightly during baking. Wrap and reserve trimmings in refrigerator. Combine and use trimmings as necessary to complete house and other decorative pieces. Cut and bake large pieces and small pieces separately.

8. Chill for 10 minutes before baking if the dough seems really soft after you cut it. This will discourage too much spreading/warping of the shapes you cut.

9. Bake 25 to 30 minutes, until pieces are firm to the touch. Do not overbake; pieces will be too crisp to trim to proper size.

Ornamental Frosting (via Good Housekeeping)

1 package(s) (16-ounce) confectioners’ sugar
3 tablespoon(s) meringue powder, (see note below)
Assorted food colorings (optional)
1) In bowl, with mixer at medium speed, beat confectioners’ sugar, meringue powder, and 1/3 cup warm water until blended and mixture is so stiff that knife drawn through it leaves a clean-cut path, about 5 minutes.

2) If you like, tint frosting with food colorings as desired; keep covered with plastic wrap to prevent drying out. With small spatula, artist’s paintbrushes, or decorating bags with small writing tips, decorate cookies with frosting. (You may need to thin frosting with a little warm water to obtain the right spreading or piping consistency.)

Merry Christmas!

These are a few of my favorite reads

I had planned on doing a “favorite-books-I-read-this-year” post but instead just ranted about Twilight. So here is that list that has been running through my head for the past few weeks. These are just books that I read this year, not books that were published this year. In fact, I think just one of these was published in 2009. I’m not saying these are good (because let’s be honest there is a lot of debate going on concerning the quality of my first pick, and I could argue both sides). These are just memorable.

In no particular order:

Twilight. Have to mention it but won’t say anything more since you can read my previous post about it.

The Hunger Games/Catching Fire. See above.

American Wife: A Novel. Curtis Sittenfeld’s third (and best, IMO) novel that follows the life of the fictional First Lady Alice Blackwell, who is patterned after Laura Bush. I loved this book so much I promptly checked out the Laura Bush biography that Sittenfeld used in researching her novel, only to sadly be reminded that fiction is way better than real life. I also loved it so much that I promptly checked out her second novel (but was disappointed again.)

What is the What, Dave Eggers. I picked this up over a year and a half ago while on jury duty. The cover said Dave Eggers and I was hooked. However I spent my seven days on jury duty reading Obama’s The Audacity of Hope (which, sadly, I still have not finished) and never got around to reading WITW until this spring. I had my misgivings when I saw what it was about but was entranced by Valentino’s amazing story. His true-life account, combined with Eggers’ effortless storytelling was a terrific mix. Again, enjoyed it so much that I took out my copy of AHWOSG to re-read. Only to learn that I didn’t love AHWOSG as much as I thought I did (I think it must have been the time in my life that I read it that touched me more than the book itself).

The Education of a Coach, David Halberstam. This was suggested by my former classmate, Jeff Kelly Lowenstein, in his book blog, (alongside a bio of Tom Brady, which was far less interesting, even for me, a huge TB fan). I’ve always enjoyed the Halberstam that I’ve read and this was no exception. He was one of the finest reporters America will ever see, and his stories and in-depth reporting for this was impressive and inspiring. This biography of Bill Belichik was a great suggestion to kick of the NFL season. It was fascinating to try to get inside the mind of what some call a football genius (and yes, despite the 4th down call vs. the Colts, despite the odd treatment of Randy Moss just last week, I still think he’s pretty wicked smart). Plus, you can’t go wrong when you’ve got New England prep school experience, right?

My Life in France, Julia Child. I picked this up randomly at the library (was going through a food book phase), not realizing that this was part of that Julie/Julia movie that came out later in the year. Julia Child’s book was fun, her cooking experiences tantalizing. It had me wishing I could visit France, but not today’s France, Julia’s 50s France. I quickly checked out the book Julie and Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerously and, once again, was quite disappointed at how plain bo-ring that was compared to Child’s memoir.

Seeing a pattern here? Wishing I could recreate something I’ve just read and loved and always falling short.

Ah well.

My other favorite books:

other books I have read

other books I have read

 

P.S. If any new mothers out there are wondering, how in the world does this person read so much, it’s not too difficult when you commute by bus every day. On top of that, for a while pumping milk at work also afforded me an thirty or more minutes a day.

P.P.S. I love reading! And hope that Lily will enjoy it as much as I do.

I See a Little (Twi)light

twilight_book_cover I’ve got YA books on the mind. Probably because I spent the better part of a week –and-a-half plowing through the “Twilight” book series. Here is my quick take on these books:

Twilight – Loved it. For the most part. Kind of lost me at the vampire baseball game (I can only suspend my disbelief for so long), but after reading all four I’ve decided this is my favorite.

New Moon– Mostly liked it but OMG really depressing to read for hundreds of pages about the hole in Bella’s chest. It did make me want to go to Italy, though.

Eclipse: Fight scene will be much better on film. Too much exposition.

Breaking Dawn: WTF?

I admit, I got kind of obsessed about the series while reading it. I had a feeling that would happen, which is why I tried really hard to avoid the books. In fact, as an alternative my pal Kate suggested I read “The Hunger Games” instead, but more on that in a minute.

I’m glad I read them. There is something fun in reading about teenage romance as an adult. First and foremost, I’ve been married for five years, and I was with the husband for six years before that. That’s 11 years for those of you not interested in doing the math. While I love and adore him, that new relationship, crazy-in-love thing … well let’s be honest, it kind of fades when you find yourself permanently sleep-deprived and out of time because there is a child (whom you also love and adore) that needs a lot of attention. With a fun read like this you get to re-live it in a sense. It’s similar to what the husband thought was an unhealthy fascination that I had with the series Dawson’s Creek (which, don’t know if I’ve mentioned before or not, does NOT stand the test of time). Oh I had such a crush on Joey and Pacey. And I think I did because it came at a time when I was missing those weird, awkward high-school years. Watching the series gave me that fix. And so the same goes with Twilight.

In addition to that guilty pleasure, now I get what the Team Edward/Team Jacob thing is all about. This pop-culture phenomenon is no longer lost on me. No, I won’t be visiting Forks, Wash. anytime soon, but at least I feel like I’m in on the jokes. I am not interested in figuring out the High School Musical/Hannah Montana/Jonas Brothers nonsense. But at least now I get Twilight.

Beyond the fan sites, there is a lot of talk about Edward & Bella’s relationship. One: Is Edward a stalker? Two: Is this actually an abusive relationship? Three: Is Bella’s “damsel-in-distress” character a poor role model for the young girls who are obsessed with these books? (I am waiting for college thesis papers to cover this topic, if they haven’t already) Four: Are you FOR REAL??

C’mon people. These are novels. Fiction. If I had a choice between my future tweenage daughter reading these FICTION novels and in the process discovering what eventually becomes a lifelong love of literature (please, please let my daughter become a bookworm!), or watching REALITY TV garbage like the Kardashians or Real Housewives, the choice is obvious.

Give the kids credit to recognize healthy and unhealthy relationships. Or, be ready to talk about them when the time comes. Twenty years ago it they would have been crazy about New Kids on the Block. Ten years ago it would have been N Sync or the Backstreet Boys. At least now these girls get some reading in alongside their swooning. And, they will grow out of it. We always do.

More importantly, when my daughter is done with Twilight, I have the opportunity to introduce to her a role model that I can be proud of. Maybe it’s Harry Potter and Hermione Granger. Or maybe it’s…

Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games! Now there is a kick-ass girl that I can stand behind. For those of you who haven’t read it, this futuristic view of a post-apocalyptic country pits teenager against teenager in a gladiator-type game. Social-class issues, love triangles, and yes, that confused I’m-a-teenager-what-the-heck-is-going-on type of situations arise. It is so easy to root for Katniss, the female heroine in this series because she is smart, independent, strong, and a fighter to the end. While some might consider Bella selfless (in that she makes choices to protect her parents and loved ones but are detrimental to her); Katniss truly is selfless, risking death to save her sister (as opposed to wanting to die to live forever with her vampire boyfriend).

As much as I loved reading Twilight and am looking forward to the movies (hey, I am also hooked on the Harry Potter and have been for nearly a decade), it’s the final book of The Hunger Games trilogy that I really can’t wait for. August 2010 can’t come soon enough. When push comes to shove, if I need to recommend a teenage girl one series, it won’t be Twilight. It will be The Hunger Games.

Some fun links I ran into while obsessing about Twilight:

Midnight Sun: Stephanie Meyer’s draft of 12 chapters of Twlight, as seen in Edward’s perspective.

Why Breaking Dawn Must Be Made Into  a Movie: A funny (and accurate) – and R-rated- synopsis of “Breaking Dawn”

Vanity Fair article on RPattz. I read it (before reading Twilight) and actually got nervous for him. I began picturing a dim future for him a la River Phoenix. But Cathy assured me he’s grounded enough and that if it gets too crazy he’ll just leave Hollywood. Phew.

Next topic: Why all the talk about Team Edward & Team Jacob & Team Bella? Where is Team Alice? Of all the characters from that series, I want Alice as my BFF. For reals.

Final notes about the cannoli

I wanted to share the “research” I did when I learned that the November Daring Bakers Challenge would be cannoli. After reading through the instructions I decided I needed to try cannoli to fully appreciate making them. So Lily and I trekked first to Remo Borrachinni’s Bakery on Rainier Ave. Remo’s is an Italian Bakery/Grocery that is all about family. When I walked in on a Saturday mid-morning a group of friends were sitting at a long table near the front, like they had been there for hours. The bakery was busy, where customers picked up their sheet cakes. Borrachinni’s is known for the great sheet cakes at reasonable prices.

I eyed the cannoli in the display case and immediately knew this wasn’t going to be the best cannoli ever. Simply because there was a sheet of cannoli, already filled with ricotta filling. Which, if we read the previous blog post, means that the crisp shell probably would not be crisp. I insisted on tasting, however, because I was there and it seemed I would have really failed if I didn’t at least try one.

It was still pretty good, but I was fairly certain not how it should truly taste. The filling was sweet, with little bits of candied fruit mixed in. The maraschino cherry was not necessary, in my opinion. The size of the cannoli was small, closer the the size of the ones that I ended up making, and that was a plus. The dessert can be so rich that you don’t really need a large one to be satisfied. All in all, for the price, at around $2, the cannoli was decent. Not the greatest. I probably wouldn’t order it again from here. I wouldn’t mind going back to the bakery itself, however. It’s traditional and a Seattle favorite.

Rather than return home I opted to try one more place. Whereas Borrachini’s isn’t exactly known for its cannoli (they don’t even mention on their Web site that they offer them), DeLaurenti’s is known for it’s gourmet Italian goodies. Located in the Pike Place Market, it was filled with tourists looking for gifts to take home, as well as locals who know where to get a good sandwich, espresso or dessert. I had high hopes for a tasty cannoli there. I was not disappointed. I ordered one for around $4 and when the clerk mentioned it would be a few minutes, I knew I was in the right place. I saw the women behind the counter take out the pieces to assemble the cannoli on the spot. The dessert was big compared to what I saw at Borrachinni’s, filled with the richest, creamiest ricotta filling. A couple of small slices of candied orange garnished the top, alongside some more filling, and perfect little chocolate shavings completed the package. The taste was exactly how I imagined it should be. It was an impressive sight.

With that inspiration in mind, I set out to make my own cannoli a few weeks later, and you know the rest.

Yum.

Leave the gun. Take the cannoli.

Daring Bakers November Challenge

Daring Bakers November Challenge

The November 2009 Daring Bakers Challenge was chosen and hosted by Lisa Michele of Parsley, Sage, Desserts and Line Drives. She chose the Italian Pastry, Cannolo (Cannoli is plural), using the cookbooks Lidia’s Italian-American Kitchen by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and The Sopranos Family Cookbook by Allen Rucker; recipes by Michelle Scicolone, as ingredient/direction guides. She added her own modifications/changes, so the recipe is not 100% verbatim from either book.

Cannoli are known as Italian-American pastries, although the origin of cannoli dates back to Sicily, specifically Palermo, where it was prepared during Carnevale season, and according to lore, as a symbol of fertility. The cannoli is a fried, tube-shaped pastry shell (usually containing wine) filled with a creamy amalgamation of sweetened ricotta cheese, chocolate, candied fruit or zest, and sometimes nuts. Although not traditional, mascarpone cheese is also widely used, and in fact, makes for an even creamier filling when substituted for part of the ricotta, or by itself. However, cannoli can also be filled with pastry creams, mousses, whipped cream, ice cream etc. You could also add your choice of herbs, zests or spices to the dough, if desired. Marsala is the traditional wine used in cannoli dough, but any red or white wine will work fine, as it’s not only added for flavor or color, but to relax the gluten in the dough since it can be a stiff dough to work with. By the way, the name ‘Lidisano’ is a combination of Lidia, Lisa and Sopranos.

Download a PDF of Lisa Michele’s recipe and instructions or visit TheDaringKitchen.com.

Fact: Cannoli is the plural form of the dessert, cannolo

Fact: Cannoli is the plural form of the dessert, cannolo

As for my results … I’m pretty pleased with them. Unlike the two other challenges I’ve done, this is the first time I feel like I actually accomplished what I set out to do. 1) Crispy, blistery shell. 2) Traditional, sweet-but-not-too-sweet filling. I followed the TDB (The Daring Bakers) recipe exactly, and the hints and tips which Lisa set out for us were right on. The dough was very stiff. Keep working it, Lisa told us, eventually it will give. And it did. I let the dough sit for quite a while (at least six hours), and let the ricotta drain for about 24-hours. Both helped a great deal, I think. The deep-fried shells were light and crispy. The tiny bit of cocoa and Marsala wine added a nice, complex flavor.

We enjoyed these as a Thanksgiving treat. I’m quite pleased that they turned out so well. I received compliments and a request for the recipe, as well as a declaration from the MIL that she would also try to make them. While I saw many of my fellow Daring Bakers go for nontraditional fillings, considering my in-laws’ Italian heritage I decided to go as traditional as possible. The filling includes ricotta cheese, confectioner’s sugar, cinnamon, vanilla, orange zest, mini chocolate chips and chopped pistachios. Maybe the big change was using part-skim ricotta cheese rather than the full fat!

As with every challenge thus far, this one did terrify me at first. Mainly because of the frying. I am not a fryer. It’s not in my blood to cook something in three inches of oil. I considered baking the shells instead. However, as part of my research into cannoli, I tasted one from DeLaurenti’s at Pike Place Market. After the first bite of possibly the best cannolo in town, I immediately knew that making the shells properly, in the fryer, was the only way to go.

Two questions I have for you. 1) What does one do with frying oil when one is done? and 2) Can you find me a cannolo better than the one I tasted at DeLaurenti’s?

Special thanks to my MIL, the cook of all cooks, for buying me cannoli forms! No need to hack something together, which I’m often prone to do.

P.S. For any of you who don’t know where the title of this post comes from … Shame on you. It is from one of the greatest movies ever made.