Older confection recipes that are either non-standardized or have the ability to be recast interest me.
Chocolate shortbread is one such recipe. Simple, elegant; dressed up, dressed down, it has a graceful foundation and future possibility as both its simple self and as a component for more sophisticated creations.
Elegance is obvious in its succulent mouth feel, a consequence of an extremely high percentage of butter. Shortbread has a relatively low overall percentage of sugar.
The recipe I use was published in The Pleasures of Cooking, the Cuisinart mag that celebrated the company’s inception in 1983 or 1984. An Epicurious.com recipe includes vanilla and uses Dutch-process cocoa powder instead of the semi- or bittersweet chocolate in the The Pleasures recipe.
Chocolate Shortbread
Process 3 oz semi- or bittersweet (62-70% cacao) baking chocolate and 1/2 C superfine sugar in the Cuisinart using the metal blade, turning the machine on and off just until the chocolate is coarsely chopped. Let the processor run for 60 seconds or until the mixture is very fine.
Add 1 C (2 sticks) unsalted butter cut into small pieces; process until creamy, scraping the bowl as necessary. Add 2 C all-purpose flour, scraping down as necessary until well mixed. Dough will form a soft ball. Pat dough evenly into a buttered 13×9 pan. Bake at 300 degrees F for 35-40 minutes, or until the center is firm.
Cool in pan on a wire rack for 10 min, then cut into squares; allow it to remain in the pan to cool completely.
Each square may be decorated with a butter cream frosting rosette, if desired.
Butter cream frosting: Process 3 Tbsp unsalted butter at room temp, 1 C confectioners sugar and 1-2 Tbsp heavy cream in food processor. Pipe onto chocolate shortbread with pastry bag with star tip to form rosettes.
It will be fun to experiment with both recipes to compare depth of chocolate flavor before deciding which to use as a component of future recipes.
Dutifully discerning desserts.
The Top 7 Reasons Not to Eat Dark Chocolate
By lindanaylor
On August 22, 2014
In Chocolate Commentary
Chocolate
Commentary
Top 7 reasons not to eat dark chocolate:
1. The risk of a possible cacao overdose.
2. You don’t give any credibility to that study that says eating dark chocolate daily reduces heart disease by 1/3.
3. You’re really afraid of what better health might feel like.
4. You’re convinced high blood pressure is a good thing.
5. You’re sure narrow arteries improve your focus and you don’t want better blood flow to dilute it.
6. Spiking insulin is a ride you like.
7. You already have an excess of theta brain waves and are totally, totally relaxed.