Hot Silk

January 20th, 2007

This is my recipe for Sugar High Friday, as directed from David Lebovitz’ wonderful site. Only for David. I am not a real sweets lover, and then mainly fruit based sweets, this one had to be chocolate. I like chocolate, but I am not usually its slave. I used Valrhona chocolate because it is what I always use, trudging home from Eurochocolate every year with a kilo or two. Everything I make tastes better made with Valrhona.
Tonight my kitchen is a morass of butter and sugar bits that flew free from the mixer, cocoa powder that fluffed and dusted and slid from there to everywhere, and as I type I can hear the crack-crack of hardening caramelized sugar syrup. I am nipping at pieces of prosciutto to get the taste of sugar out of my mouth.

I tried to think of what I would like if it were chocolate. I decided I would like something slick, something crunchy, something creamy and that it should have chilies, but not inside the chocolate.
With the chilies in the spun sugar, the shy can eat less and the bold more. It actually is quite nice!

The chocolate

1 cup butter
1 cup sugar
Butter sugar 1
4 sq. melted Valrhona Le Noir Gastonomie chocolate
2 teaspoons rum

2 eggs
½ cup sifted Valrhona 100% cacao powder
2 more eggs

Cream the butter and the sugar together until really well blended.
Add the melted chocolate and the rum and incorporate them well.
Beat in 2 eggs, one at a time, beating 5 minutes to incorporate each at medium speed.
Sift the cocoa onto the mixture gradually while continuing to beat.
Add the next two eggs, one at a time, beating again five minutes after each egg is added.
Lightly spray molds with oil, then fill them with this mixture, using a large spoon, then use a palette knife to flatten them and to remove excess mixture. Chill in the refrigerator for several hours.
When they are firm, turn them out onto waxed paper and then slide them onto a pool of heavy cream on a serving plate. Mine needed the urging of a dip into warm water first.

The spun sugar

2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon corn syrup
6 small very hot chilies, cracked open
Vegetables spray and/or oil

1. Use a Silpat if you have one. If you want to make forms, then spray oil onto the outside of an upturned bowl. I used plastic, just in case I had to toss it.
2. If you don’t have a Silpat sheet, and why don’t you, use buttered foil or the shiny side of freezer paper.
3. Place the sugar, 1/2 cup water, the peppers and corn syrup in a heavy-bottomed saucepan, over low heat. Stir occasionally until sugar is dissolved. Raise heat to high and bring mixture to a boil. Continue cooking until the temperature registers 310*F (hard-crack stage) on a candy thermometer. If you do not have a thermometer because the battery man didn’t have it ready the two times you have returned to pick it up, have a glass of cold water ready for testing the syrup. When it is ready, it will be a lovely amber color and form a hard crack ball in the water. Remove from heat, and briefly plunge the saucepan into cold water to stop the cooking. Let stand to thicken slightly, about 1 minute. It was less for me.
4. Dip a fork or balloon whisk (preferably one that has had the wires cut off leaving many straight wires, but I couldn’t bear to torture mine like that) into the sugar syrup and wave back and forth to draw out long, fine, threadlike strands over the baking sheet. The syrup will begin hardening almost immediately. You may have to use your asbestos fingers to pull at it as it cools. Just break off the larger pieces that makes. With practice you can form the strands into a forms and shapes or a dome by drawing them out over an upside down oiled bowl.
Makes about about 2 cups.

Lay the spun sugar you’ve made over each mold on the serving plates.
Hot Silk 2

So, here it is. Anybody hungry?

Entry Filed under: Uncategorized

14 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Jke  |  January 20th, 2007 at 10:22 pm

    It looks like the kind of thing that tells you someone cares about you. And they did all this just for you.

    Does David know about this?

  • 2. Judith  |  January 20th, 2007 at 10:39 pm

    I tell him all the time! I’m his Italian fan. Now that ity’s made, ?don’t want to eat it I’m so sick of smelling sugar. Want some

  • 3. judith lea  |  January 20th, 2007 at 11:09 pm

    Brilliant pud and it looks as if I could do it!!! Fancy popping round to my house and cooking it for me, I will wash up

    JudithL

  • 4. Judith  |  January 20th, 2007 at 11:18 pm

    Sure, any time. You could definitely do it. It’s science. You can do science.

  • 5. Barbara  |  January 21st, 2007 at 9:35 am

    Looks fabulous, sounds fabulous! If we lived a bit closer I would have been happy to sample…this is just the sort of things friends do for one another,

  • 6. David  |  January 21st, 2007 at 11:01 am

    Of course I know…and as thanks, Judith sends me URL’s to secret blogs full of other forbidden fruits.

    Thanks for participating Judith…bisous.. xx

  • 7. Judith  |  January 21st, 2007 at 11:35 am

    Do you see that? That’s why my link on the right asks is this the most adorable man in Paris!

  • 8. Jke  |  January 21st, 2007 at 9:43 pm

    Well, I have to envy both David and Judith for having so much food and fun in the blogging world. At last that’s what I think you are getting out of it. You are, aren’t you?

    You’re making my want to quit my job so I can spend more time in the kitchen. And start a blog. Blogging communities are the new newsgroups, aren’t they? I might as well leap from Usenet to bloggin and skip that whole Yahoo group type stuff.

    I’m digressing.

    Judtih, I want to come over! Sugar with chilies must be divine.

  • 9. Judith  |  January 22nd, 2007 at 9:55 am

    Jke, I think both David and I do this for the love of writing about our interests.
    This is yummy sugar. It is no hotter on the tongue than the clove candies eg used to make. Cinnamon scented sugar threads might be a logical variation on this, no?

  • 10. veron  |  January 22nd, 2007 at 9:49 pm

    I’m hungry! I want to start with those spun sugar strands as appetizer and eat the chocolate as the finale!

  • 11. Rachel  |  January 22nd, 2007 at 10:40 pm

    Chilies in the spun sugar! You are a goddess.

    Was the spun sugar hard to make? It seems like it would be easy to end up with just a big blog! Yours turned out beautiful and it’s such an elegant touch.

  • 12. Kristen  |  January 23rd, 2007 at 4:11 am

    What a fantastic creation!

  • 13. Judith  |  January 23rd, 2007 at 8:10 am

    Thank you for all the nice comments!
    Rachel it isn’t at all hard to make, but it is a time to pay attention only to what you are doing. Get the syrup off the flame on time, lower the pan into cold water to stop the cooking, and then get the threads started asap. With a Silpat sheet, you can fling it around freely, but although I saw one chef recommend covering the floor with paper, I didn’t get any syrup on the floor. There were some threads that finished on the countertop, but they weren’t stuck and were usable. What got too cool stayed in the pan, but water overnight melted it all away.
    The next day the extra threads were softening already. I must look up how to preserve them, because I do not see me whipping sugar threads around the heads of guests, but I do see me making this for dessert!

  • 14. Lucy Vanel  |  January 27th, 2007 at 10:18 am

    Looks gorgeous. The spun sugar is the perfect added touch.

Leave a Comment

Required

Required, hidden

Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


My Calendar

February 2010
M T W T F S S
« Apr    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728

Recent Posts

 

Archives

Recent Comments

Links

Favorite Blogs

Food Blogs

This BLOG is hosted by:

Expats in Italy, ex-pats, assistance for those moving to italy, a forum with loads of information for the newbie or the old hand

The views expressed
in this blog are not
necessarily those of Expats in Italy.com