Thursday, March 12, 2009

Fastnacht Day in Savannah


So These are the ones I made with the same recipe Pam used (from our Dutchie mother)I dipped half in chocolate and the other in cinnmon sugar.

For the holes I mixed in poppy seeds and dipped them in a lemon glaze. These I couldn't get to cook all the way through with out over cooking the outside.

I Also made crullers which were freekin awsome!


Here's the recipe:


1 cup water
8Tbs unsalted butter
pinch of salt
1cup flour
4 eggs
vegetable oil
Combine the water, butter, sugar, and salt, in a large saucepan and bring to a boil over medium heat, stirring occasionally so the butter melts. Remove from the heat, add all the flour at once, and stir wiht a wooden spoon until all the flour is incorporated and it forms a ball. Return the pan to medium heat and cook. Stir continuously to evaporte some of the moisture, about 90 seconds.

Scrape the micture into a medium bowl, beat in 3 whole eggs one at t time, making sure they are completely incorporated. Add as much of the 4th egg as neede so that the dough is thick and holds its shap, but falls slowly and steadily from your spoon. It should be smooth and shiny.
Using a pastry bag with a star tip, pipe the dough onto a squares of parchment paper in 3" circles. Heat 3" of oil to 360F . place the crullers (still on their papers) upside down in the oil, After about 15 seconds use tongs to pull off the papers. Turn the crullers until golden brown on both sides, using a skimmer transfer them to a wire rack to drain the oil.
I just piped them right into the oil and set them on paper towels to absorb the oil and it worked just fine.


The first batch I covered with powdered sugar.

and the second I dipped in an orange glaze
(made simply with orange juice and powdered sugar)



-Jackie

Ashville

On our second day in Ashville we popped into town for a bite to eat before we heade home. We ended up finding this great restaurant called Carmel





I got a salad and Pizza:
Chopped spinach with spiced pecans, pear, blueberry stilton, and a balsamic honey dressing
Thin crust pizza with sundried tomoto pesto, baby spinach, bree, and candied tomatoes.
Both were amazing, I can't believe we randomly found a restaurant were we got to experience some new flavors. I definatley need to find a recipe for candied tomatoes, and will be recreating a version of this salad in the near future.



Scott got the potato corn chowder and BBQ chicken pizza.
Also very good. Especially the soup becuase it was snowing.

A very happy day.

-Jackie

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Fastnacht Day


Happy five days after fastnacht day! In honor of this hallowed event, we agreed to make doughnuts. I wanted to do something interesting... but couldn't really think of anything. I almost decided on basil or rosemary, but... a little scared, I thought I'd stick to the classics. So here we have sugared persimmon doughnuts (above), and plain dougnuts filled with vanilla-orange cream.

The basic recipe is the one our dutchy mother grew up using, so it's the real deal.

Fastnachts
  • 1 package active dry yeast
  • 1/4 cup warm water
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 3 cups sifted flour
  • 2 cups milk, scalded and cooled to lukewarm
  • 3 eggs, well beaten
  • 1/4 cup melted butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
  • 3 1/2 to 4 cups sifted flour

Soften yeast in warm water. Let stand 5-10 minutes. Add 1 teaspoon sugar and 3 cups sifted flour to the milk, stirring until smooth. Stir in the yeast. Cover; let rise in a warm place until doubled. Stir in eggs, butter, the remaining sugar, salt, nutmeg, and enough flour so that mixture can no longer be stirred with a spoon (a soft dough). Cover; let rise until doubled. Punch down dough and divide into two portions. On a floured surface, roll out each portion about 1/2 inch thick. Cut dough with a doughnut cutter (anything with a circular rim works fine- I used the rim of the flour sifter). Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled. Fry in vegetable oil heated to 370 degrees 3-4 minutes or until lightly browned; turn doughnuts to brown evenly. Remove and drain.



the first doughnut I ever made! and its hole.


I found it hard to regulate the temperature of the oil. But even when I was 15 degrees below what it was supposed to be, they never took 3 minutes to cook. It was much closer to 1 minute. For the persimmon doughnuts, I added 1 chopped persimmon to half of the batter. The other half I left plain. The persimmons really didn't add much though- they just taste like sugar, themselves, as did the doughnuts. Not to say that they weren't delicious.

Vanilla Orange Cream Filling
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1/8 cup sugar
  • zest of 1/2 orange
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Combine all ingredients in container with lid (I used a jar) and shake until it reaches the consistency of whipped cream. Put into a piping bag, or a ziplog bag with the corner cut off. Prepare doughnuts by making a hole in the side reaching to the center, and enlarged to create a hollow. Squeeze cream into hollow as neatly as possible!





To make up for this debacle, I had steamed brussels sprouts and mushrooms for dinner, but felt over-sugared anyway. But, alas, such is life!


--Pam