Wednesday, March 28, 2012

bake52: week 13-- Crème brûlée

 This week was my week to host bake52!  Yipee!  I was so excited.  I knew from the start of bake52-- I wanted to make Crème brûlée!  And yes, I have my reasons.  Well, only one: to avoid further public humiliation.

I'll explain.  :)

We live in a pretty small town with limited dining out options-- but we discovered one little local place that serves YUMMY Crème brûlée!  We moved here when I was 7 months pregnant with our third baby, and let me tell you, our first two did NOTHING to prepare us for number three!!  Our little Miss was the type of baby and toddler{and now preschooler!} who often drove me to my wit's end, and I have to admit, there were many an afternoon when I thought to myself, "You know what would make this better?  A take out of Crème brûlée and a Diet Coke!"  I would then load the minivan up with my mini people and run out to treat myself, have a nice drive and often have several little ones out cold by the time we returned home.  It was a win-win.

Until the public humiliation day!

I arrived to pick up by call in order.  It had been a BAD morning.  I LOVE being a stay at home mom, but there are just some days that test the mettle of a mama!  This had been one of those days.  I was in my "exercise clothes" {although NO exercise was on my to-do list that day!}, I am sure I had spit up in my hair and just looked the part of the exhausted, worn out mom! 

There was a new girl at the front and she called out LOUDLY to another server, "That lady who called in a Crème brûlée and large Diet Coke to go is here!"-- just as a big group of local policemen were leaving the restaurant.  They all exchanged a look and started snickering!!  One even said, with his voice dripping in mock sympathy, "Bad day, huh Mom?" 

Oh my gosh!  I've never been so mortified!  Now, I have no doubt that if those tough men had been left on their own with Miss Grace for a half hour, they would have been begging for me to take her back. :)  That girl was born with a set of lungs and an iron will!  But I swore right then and there that I was going to learn how to make my own Crème brûlée so I would not repeat that same awful experience!!

Luckily for my waistline, my burned out baby brain had no motivation to learn a new recipe and a frozen yogurt place opened up and I headed there for my comfort instead!

My love of Crème brûlée started years ago-- I remember my husband taking me somewhere nice and trying to pick something sensible from the desert menu.  My logic looked something like this:
"Hmm... brownie sundaes....pies... I really want something light... Crème brûlée?  Well.... custard is like pudding.... some puddings are fat free... I'm gonna go with Crème brûlée!"  Obviously, looking over this recipe with it's 10 egg yolks and 4 cups of heavy cream I can see that my logic failed me!!  ha!

I thought this was a quick and elegant desert, something I'm excited to have in my arsenal for when I want to make something fancy for company!!  I hope you all enjoyed making it with me this week, thanks for participating! 

 Preparing my ramekins in a water bath
egg separating time!
 yikes!  That's a lot of yolks!
 Madagascar Vanilla Beans

 One bean-- only two come in the bottle.  

sliced in half and extracting seeds with a paring knife

tempering the eggs 
straining the custard
 poured into ramekins

after baking

 My son keeps calling this "Mom's flame-thrower" and it has made me SO cool to him!!  ha!

 post- flame throwing!

 caramelized sugar

 YUM!



THE RECIPE: 


If you don't have vanilla beans, stir 2 teaspoons vanilla extract into the yolk mixture and skip the 15-minute steeping time.  If using shallow ramekins, which normally hold 4 to 5 ounces, you may find that you have enough custard base for an extra one or two custards-- note also that they will bake more quickly, and give you more surface area for the caramelized sugar topping.  For making the caramelized sugar topping, we like to use turbinado sugar (or Sugar in the Raw), but granulated sugar can be substituted.  


Source: the America's Test Kitchen Family Baking Book



Ingredients

  • 1 vanilla bean, slit lengthwise with a paring knife, seeds removed and reserved
  • 4 cups heavy cream
  • 2/3 cups granulated sugar (4 2/3 ounces)
  • Pinch salt
  • 10 large egg yolk, room temperature
  • 1/4 cup turbinado sugar (see note above)
Directions

  1. Adjust an oven rack to the lower-middle position and heat the oven to 300 degrees. Place a kitchen towel on the bottom of a large baking dish or roasting pan and arrange eight 6 ounce ramekins (or shallow fluted dishes) on the towel; set aside. Bring a kettle of water to a boil over high heat.
  2. Scrape the seeds from the vanilla bean.  Combine the vanilla seeds, vanilla bean pod, 2 cups of the cream, granulated sugar, and salt together in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil over medium heat, stirring occasionally to dissolve the sugar. Remove the pan from the heat and let steep to infuse the flavors, about 15 minutes.
  3. After the cream has steeped, stir in the remaining 2 cups cream to cool down the mixture. Whisk the yolks together in a large bowl until uniform. Whisk about 1 cup of the cream mixture into the yolks until loosened and combined; repeat with 1 more cup of the cream. Add the remaining cream and whisk until evenly colored and thoroughly combined. Strain through a fine-mesh strainer into a 2-quart measuring cup or pitcher, discarding the solids. Pour or ladle the mixture evenly into the ramekins.
  4. Gently place the baking dish with the ramekins on the oven rack. Pour the boiling water into the baking dish, being careful not to splash any water into the ramekins, until the water reaches two-thirds the height of the ramekins. Bake until the centers of the custards are just barely set and are no longer sloshy, and a digital instant-read thermometer inserted in the centers registers 170 to 175 degrees, 30 to 35 minutes (25 to 30 minutes for shallow fluted dishes). Begin checking the temperature about 5 minutes before the recommended time.
  5. Transfer the ramekins from the baking dish to a wire rack and let cool to room temperature, about 2 hours.
  6. To Store:
  7. Wrap each ramekin tightly in plastic and refrigerate for up to 4 days.
  8. To Serve:
  9. Unwrap the ramekins; if condensation has collected on the custards, place a paper towel on the surface to soak up the moisture. Sprinkle each custard with about 1 teaspoon turbinado sugar (1 1/2 teaspoons for shallow fluted dishes); tilt and tap the ramekin for even coverage. Ignite a torch and, following the manufacturer’s instructions, caramelize the sugar by holding the end of the flame about 1 inch from the surface of the custard until the sugar melts, then burns to a golden brown, proceeding the same way until the entire surface is deeply golden brown and hard. Refrigerate the ramekins, uncovered, to rechill, about 30 minutes (but no longer).
  10. To Serve Right Away
  11. ill the baked custards as directed in step 6 until they are set, about 4 hours, before serving as directed in step 7.



 

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

bake52: week 11-- Ciabatta Bread

Emily was our bake52 host this week and she chose Ciabatta Bread! 

 Here is a shot of my bread rising- isn't that beautiful!?!  I felt so accomplished!

This recipe takes some time-- you start by making a sponge and letting it sit overnight, then multiple risings, etc.  I was so nervous, too-- this is a WET, sticky dough!!  I felt like I must have been doing something wrong the whole time!!

 Close up of the final rise--

Then, you bake it.  I was in HEAVEN while this thing baked-- I served it for dinner with Chicken Tortilla Soup and the aromas mixing together were perfect.  I really felt like I knew what I was doing and was feeling pretty darn proud of myself and my mad homemaking skills.  You know what they say, though-- pride cometh before the FALL! 
 My first, gorgeous, pride-inducing loaf!

...and my fallen loaf!! :) 

I don't know what happened.  I swear, I have to be the only person who can make two loaves from the same batch of dough and have them turn out so differently!  One was perfection.  One was tossed in the garbage!  My second loaf was flat {maybe it sat out too long while the other one was cooking and fell?} and dense and hard as a rock.  Pretty much the exact opposite of the first loaf!   Oh well, I guess you can't win them all!  

We loved the first loaf and if was the perfect accompaniment to our soup.  I will be making it again! 

Visit Emily's blog for the recipe!




Wednesday, March 7, 2012

bake 52: week 10-- Lunchbox Brownies

Liz is our hostess for bake52 this week and she chose Lunchbox Brownies!  I honestly can't wait to read what she has to say about them, because her posts are always so entertaining.  She had me at the get-go when we were making quiche, which was a bit of a particular recipe, and Liz kept referring to it as "Her Ladyship Quiche".  She really does have a way of making baking wildly entertaining!! 

I chose to do the peanut butter variation-- here you can see my lovely swirls:

And fresh out of the oven:


Isn't she gorgeous?  {And why did my peanut butter turn out 70's orange??}

A few things I loved about this brownie recipe:

*It came together SO quickly.  I am having one of those weeks and so I was so grateful for that!  I think this may have been the fastest, easiest thing we baked so far!

*Again, it had me with the aroma!  YUM!

*I love finding great recipes for things I usually make from a box- I like knowing it's just as easy to make it from scratch- and really, it is!

*This one was a hit with the kids.  Ryan and I were able to stay out of it for the most part, but the kids devoured it!

One thing I would note:

*I didn't love the peanut butter swirls- they are just straight peanut butter and I wish now that I'd mixed in some powdered sugar and cream cheese.  YUM.  I am excited to try the other variations, though!

THANKS LIZ for picking a delicious and easy recipe!!

You can find the recipe here at Liz's blog!