Homemade Rocks! Sweet Mango Ice Cream

Posted on October 12, 2011

Do you ever feel like you just can’t wait till dessert because you know it’s something really yummy? Today, I churned this mango ice cream, then stirred in bits of super sweet fresh mango, plucked from a friend’s garden. The base is my recipe for Rich and Creamy Vanilla Ice Cream (without the vanilla), see January 2011 blog post http://catherinejonescooks.com/pages/2011/01/. I added 1-1/2 cups of fresh mango puree and 1 cup diced mango. I will definitely keep this dessert in mind for future dinner parties.

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Homemade Rocks! Luscious Lemon Mousse

Posted on September 14, 2011

The other day my kitchen counter was covered with plates of luscious lemon mousse, garnished with sugared strawberries, fresh flowers (that I bought to coat with sugar, along the lines of candied violets, but my attempt failed miserably), and crispy, Aussie-style coconut-cornflake cookies. I think my guests liked it…or, at least, the glasses came back clean. I was one dessert short (you can see the missing mousse in the front row), so I filled my husband’s glass with homemade banana ice cream. No one noticed the difference except him, though I have to admit, I felt pangs of guilt because I know this mousse is one of his favorite desserts. He said he liked the banana ice cream just fine, but he still missed his share of the mousse. Guess I’ll have to make it again. Here’s the recipe if you want to give it a go.

Luscious Lemon Mousse

You will need three bowls to make this mousse: one for the whipped cream, another for the lemon-yolk mixture, and a third for the egg whites. It can be made a day in advance, which is perfect for entertaining. If you want to make a pretty garnish, instead of 1-1/4 cups of heavy cream, you can whip 1-1/2 cups and reserve some to make rosettes on top of the mousse. (Please note that this dessert contains raw egg.)

Serves 8 to 10
1 tablespoon powdered gelatin
1-1/4 cups heavy cream
3 large eggs, separated
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons superfine sugar
Grated rind of 2 lemons
1/3 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
¼ teaspoon cream of tartar
  1. Have ready a medium serving bowl, glass cups, or ramekins to serve this mousse.
  2. In a ½-cup metal measuring cup, combine the gelatin and ¼ cup cold water; set aside. (Note: The reason for the metal cup is that you will be placing it in hot water to dissolve the gelatin later on.)
  3. Whip the heavy cream until soft peaks form, then cover and refrigerate until ready to use.
  4. In  a large bowl, combine the yolks and 1 cup of the sugar. Beat with an electric mixer on medium speed until thick and pale yellow, about 3 minutes. Add the lemon rind and lemon juice and beat on low speed for 30 seconds; set aside.
  5. In a large bowl (make sure the bowl is very clean), combine the reserved egg whites and cream of tartar. Beat with an electric mixer on low speed for 30 seconds. Increase the speed to medium and beat for 30 seconds more, until frothy bubbles begin to appear. Add the remaining 2 tablespoons of sugar, increase speed to high, and continue beating until soft, glossy peaks form, about 3 minutes. Set aside.
  6. Soften the gelatin by placing the metal measuring cup in a shallow pan filled with boiling hot water. Stir until the gelatin becomes a smooth liquid with no lumps.
  7. Using a whisk, mix the gelatin into the reserved lemon-yolk mixture, stirring until well combined. Using a rubber spatula, gently fold in the reserved egg whites; be careful not to deflate them, but make sure they are evenly incorporated. Then, gently fold in the whipped cream, and transfer the mousse to the serving bowl, or evenly divide it among individual serving cups.
  8. Cover and refrigerate until set, about 2 to 3 hours. Garnish with whipped cream, if desired.



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Homemade Rocks! Oreo Ice Cream

Posted on July 19, 2011

Maybe it’s time to worry when you’re kids tell you to go into the ice cream business. “Mom, you could be the next Ben and Jerry’s. I like your ice cream better than theirs.”

Hmmm. Not going to happen. But, I must confess that the reason why I make my own ice cream is because there is nothing better than freshly whipped ice cream. I was spoiled working in the restaurant business for many years, where the ice cream I sampled was always freshly made and perfectly whipped. I particularly remember the ice cream at the two-star Michelin restaurant called Arperge in Paris, where I did a internship for two weeks. I fell in love with the chef’s curry ice cream, made by infusing a caramel base with Indian spices. Spicy and cool at the same time…perfectly luscious.

This oreo ice cream get s a two-thumbs up from both my kids, and everyone else who takes a bit. To make it, start with my recipe for rich and creamy vanilla ice cream (blog dated January 31, 2011) and once it’s churned, add 1 cup coarsely crushed Paul Newman’s Organic O’s (I use Newman’s because they don’t contain partially hydrogenated oils, plus they’re really good and proceeds go to charity…win, win, win). Freeze for a few hours and serve. It’s a great way to escape the heat, even for just a few minutes.

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Happy Birthday America! Totally Cool 4th of July Orange Cupcakes

Posted on June 27, 2011

If you’re looking for a fabulous dessert to serve at your Fourth of July BBQ, picnic, pot luck, or fancy dinner….you’ve landed at the right cooking blog. This recipe, from one of my favorite baking books, Sweet Gratitude: How to Bake a Thank-You by Judith Sutton, produces cupcakes with a rich yet light crumb balanced by a creamy orange frosting. Decorate to your heart’s content…I went for red-white-and-blue stars and hearts, and wisps of ribbons in between. Happy Birthday America!

Judith Sutton’s Orange Cupcakes with Orange Cream Cheese Frosting

Makes 85 mini cupcakes, or 24 regular cupcakes
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
14 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 cups sugar
4 large eggs
2 teaspoons pure orange extract
1 tablespoon grated orange zest
1-1/2 cups whole milk

  1. Center an oven rack and preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Line muffin cups, large or mini, with foil or paper cupcake liners.
  2. Whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt in a medium bowl.
  3. In a large bowl, beat the butter and sugar with an electric mixer on medium speed until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Scrape down the sides of the bowl. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in the orange extract and zest. On low speed, beat in the flour in three additions, alternating with the milk in two additions and beating just until incorporated.
  4. Spoon the batter into the muffin cups, filling each cup about two-thirds full. Bake for 17 to 19 minutes (less for mini muffins), or until a toothpick inserted into the center of a cupcake comes out clean. Let the cupcakes cool in the pans for 10 minutes, then transfer them to a wire rack to cool completely. (The cupcakes can be baked up to 1 day ahead and stored in an airtight container at room temperature.)

Orange Cream Cheese Frosting

One 8-ounce package cold cream cheese, cut into chunks
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 teaspoons grated orange zest
1 teaspoon pure orange extract
2 cups confectioners’ sugar

  1. In a large bowl, beat the cream cheese and butter with an electric mixer on medium speed until light and creamy. Beat in the orange zest and extract. On low speed, beat in the confectioners’ sugar in two additions, beating until smooth.
  2. Spread the frosting generously over the cupcakes. Or, for a fancier presentation, transfer the frosting to a pastry bag fitted with a star-tip and pipe a generous swirl or rosette of frosting onto each cupcake. The frosted cupcakes can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. Bring to room temperature before serving.

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Homemade Rocks! Hale’s Perfect Banana Split

Posted on May 22, 2011

Wow! Get a load of this stunner made by my eleven-year-old son, Hale. I had just made a batch of chocolate-walnut-coconut-milk sherbet from David Lebovitz’s Room for Dessert…super yummy and light, and I added chopped walnuts for texture…and boom, my son takes one look at it and says, “Mom, can I make a banana split?”

“Sure, but only if you let me photograph it,” I said, smiling.

He agreed, but at the same time made me promise not too take any more food photos when his friends are over for dinner…as I did last night. “It’s just embarrassing when you say, no, don’t eat it yet, let me get just one more shot.”

Fair enough. He’s right. I admit I to being camera crazy sometimes. But I also enjoy a good shot…like the way the blue jimmies match the placemat in this pic. Fun and delicious! Makes me happy. This sherbet will make you happy, too.

Chocolate-Walnut-Coconut-Milk Sherbet
Makes 1 quart
1 cup water
1 cup sugar
5 ounces bittersweet chocolate
2 cups Thai canned coconut milk
1 tablespoon dark rum
1/2 cup chopped walnuts, toasted

  1. Heat the water and sugar until the sugar has completely dissolved.
  2. Coarsely chop the chocolate, add it to the syrup, and whisk until the chocolate has completely melted. Remove from the heat and stir in the coconut milk and rum (the rum is the key to a delicious flavor, but maybe not for kids!).
  3. Chill thoroughly, then freeze in an ice cream maker according to manufacturer’s instructions.

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Two-Star Michelin Chef Curtis Duffy Comes to KL…and Brings Some Unique Flavors of America!

Posted on May 2, 2011

What happens when a two-star Michelin chef from Chicago comes to town as part of an event called, “The Best of America,” held at the Hilton KL? He brings good things! At a cooking demo followed by a lunch, a lucky group of 30 learned how to make this olive oil poached salmon. Duffy seals the raw salmon with the oil in a bag using the sous-vide method, then he poaches it for 45 minutes at 118 degrees F. The finished fish, of a buttery yet firm texture, is combined with the flavor of licorice coming from lacy strips of fennel bulbs and a fennel leaf emulsion. A mustard vinaigrette, chopped black olives, red sorrel leaves, anise hyssop, sweet cicely leaves and fennel blooms round out the rest of the flavors. The accompaniment: a smattering of airy, crisp crackers made from tapioca flour, akin to rice crackers. Salmon and fennel are two of my favorite foods…so I truly enjoyed this dish and its fresh, green, spring-like presentation.

Soup followed…a healthy, earthy combination of barley and quinoa enveloped in veil of amaranth, moistened with a toasted sunflower seed consomme. At Duffy’s cooking demo, I learned that there are 12 garnishes in that dish, yes, twelve! Sultanas, caramelized pearl onions, puffed amaranth, fried sunflower seeds, sunflower sprouts, burgundy amaranth, quails grass, chive tops, chive blossoms, lemon balm, sweet woodruff, and Queen Anne’s lace. Let’s here it for fresh herbs!  Duffy described the flavor profile as earthy, nutty, and dark, with raisins and onions for sweetness, and the lemon balm to lighten and highlight.

I’ve never come across a palate cleanser quite like this before: liquid sudachi (a small, green Japanese citrus fruit described as a mandarin hybrid with a tangy grapefruit-like flavor) wrapped in coco butter and white chocolate with nepitella mint resting on a bed of super fine sugar. These white balls came with an official warning from the chef and waiter: put it in your mouth and keep your mouth closed. Why? Because the perfectly tart liquid center squirts out like a geyser. At the cooking demo, we learned how to make these lovely balls…I will give it a try someday.

Finally, this sinful dessert reminds me of the game Candyland. Strings of chocolate Manjari ganache form a checkered path along which one might fall into a pool of caramel spiked with cassia buds, puddles of blueberry and lemon puree, a sand pit of brown butter powder, or hit a rock of cocoa. Mountains of hazelnut financiers are buried under the winding path, one of them topped with a quenelle of mandarin ice cream garnished with dill, banana mint, and candied rind. All I can say is, Wow! I’ve never experienced so many flavor combinations on one dessert plate. The chocolate rush was so intense I felt like a kid again.

As part of Duffy’s gastronomic program he also prepared a six-course dinner, including all of these delicious dishes plus…sea urchin with rhubarb, hojo santa and hyssop bloom (excellent flavor combo); Nantucket bay scallops with romaine lettuce marmalade and white poppy seed milk (okay, the milk was a little too funky for me); and grilled Wagyu beef ribeye with smoked coconut pudding, yuzu puree, preserved kumquats with African blue basil (really nice, even if I’m not a red meat eater…my husband loved it).

During an interview, when I asked Duffy to describe his cuisine, he said, “thoughtful-progressive.” He’s right on both counts. I predict a third star will come his way someday.

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So, I Decided on Chocolate Mousse

Posted on April 30, 2011

Remember on my previous  post how I couldn’t decide what to serve the Thai Ambassador to Malaysia for lunch: homemade peppermint stick ice cream or chocolate mousse? Well, I decided on the mousse. Light yet flavorful, with a hint of almond extract, it was perfection. Crispy almond tuiles sealed the deal. YUM!

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Homemade Rocks! Peppermint Crunch Madness

Posted on April 24, 2011

When I mentioned  I was playing around with ice cream, I wasn’t kidding. Peppermint stick is one of my favorite flavors…so I decided to whip up a batch. Now, I have to decide whether to serve this to the Thai Ambassador for dessert at Tuesday’s lunch…or to serve an equally rich and scrumptious chocolate mousse with almond tuiles. Such are the delicious questions that fill my mind every week.

To make this peppermint crunch ice cream, search my blog for my “Homemade Rocks! Vanilla Ice Cream” recipe or go directly to January 2011 and scroll down to my January 31 entry. Follow the directions, but omit the vanilla extract. Instead, to the churned ice cream, add 1 to 2 teaspoons peppermint or mint extract (to your taste…I love a minty flavor so I add 2), a tiny drop of pink food coloring (I used pink not red, but I suppose red will work, or go natural and skip it), and a 1/3 to 1/2 cup of peppermint crunch, which I purchased on-line from King Arthur Flour, but you can smash a couple of candy canes for the same effect. As you can see on the bottom left corner of the photo, before I take the finished ice cream out of the machine, I place my metal bowl on ice to prevent melting. This buys me time to mix in the extra ingredients. Enjoy!

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Happy Birthday to Me…with Help from my Dog!

Posted on April 24, 2011

While I was organizing my photos today I came across this picture of my birthday cake…well, it’s actually chocolate pavlova. I wanted to do something different this year and everyone agreed that a chocolate pavlova with whipped cream and strawberries sounded wonderful. For my birthday dinner (on March 21) we went out to an Indian restaurant…a tradition I’ve been keeping alive for a few years now to celebrate the fact that I was born in New Delhi, India. Sometimes, when the stars really line up, my mother-in-law, Evelyn Jones, who was also born in India (Bombay, now called Mumbai, her birthdate is April 7), happens to be visiting us wherever we are in the world…Thailand, the Philippines, and Malaysia are a few places she’s traveled to…and we celebrate our birthdays together in an Indian restaurant, with a special toast to India, where our lives began.

Oh…and here’s Pucci, my beloved blond, seven-year-old labradoodle, helping me open my gifts while ingesting bits of yellow tissue paper. He’s soooo cute with the gold bow around his neck. :)

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Valentine Lamingtons for Your Sweethearts

Posted on February 12, 2011

Moist vanilla sponge cake doused with chocolate icing rolled in shredded coconut spells sweet bliss. The other day I made a batch of these Australian confections for a coffee I hosted.  My guests, who normally pass on sweets, couldn’t resist. I won’t tell you how many I ate…needless to say, it drastically increased my time in the gym. Over the years, I’ve tried a number of different lamington recipes. I think this one, adapted from Books for Cooks 8 (a fabulous British cookbook series), is the best so far. If you have the desire and energy for a bit of baking, give them a go. Hope your Valentine’s Day is a happy one. I’m a bit overdone on Asian food lately, so Paul and I are going to an Italian restaurant to celebrate. Cheers!

Lamingtons
For the Cake
1-1/4 cups all-purpose flour
2-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
Pinch of salt
8 tablespoons (1 stick, 1/2 cup) unsalted butter, softened
3/4 cup caster sugar (superfine sugar or granulated sugar)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large eggs
1/4 cup milk
For the Icing
3-1/4 cups icing sugar
3/4 cup cocoa powder
3 tabelspoons unsalted butter, softened
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon brandy (I skipped this)
2 cups desiccated (shredded dry) coconut

  1. Center an oven rack and preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter a 9- or 10-inch square cake pan and line the bottom with baking parchment.
  2. Sift the flour, baking powder, and salt. Beat the butter, sugar and vanilla until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, sprinkling in one tablespoon of the flour mix after each egg (this is to stop the curdling). Gently fold remaining flour mix in two goes, alternating with the milk to make light, smooth batter with no trace of flour. Spread the mixture over the base of the buttered and lined tin and bake until the sides of the cake have shrunk slightly from the tin and a skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean, about 30 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack and leave to cool for 15 minutes before turning out on the wire rack to cool completely.
  3. Make the icing. Sift the sugar and cocoa into a large bowl. Beat in 1/2 cup boiling water until smooth, then beat in the butter, vanilla, and brandy to make a runny icing. Spread half of the coconut in a pie plate.
  4. With a serrated knife, trim the crusts off the sides of the cake. Cut the cake into nine equal squares, about 3 inches square. NOTE: I made much smaller squares, about 1-1/2 inches in size. Take two forks to gently lift a cake square into the chocolate icing and turn to coat in all sides. NOTE: I found it easier to hold the cake square with a large fork and to spoon the icing on top of it. Transfer the square to the plate of coconut, then scoop coconut on top of it to completely coat all sides. Transfer to a large plate dusted with a bit of the coconut to dry. NOTE: It might take a few squares to get your routine in place (any mess ups are still delicious).

Think ahead: The cake is best baked a day in advance for easier cutting. Let cool completely, wrap in cling film and store in an airtight container. Once iced, store in an airtight container for 3 days. If not making a day ahead, cut the cake into squares as soon as it is cool and leave the squares to dry out on a wire rack for at least an hour to make icing easier. If too fresh, the cake sheds crumbs into the icing.

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