Thursday, September 29, 2011

Recipes

Chocolate-Dulce de Leche Flan

confiture de lait
It’s been a tough week. A while back I got it into my head to do some major upgrades on the site, which also involved moving the site to a new platform, which subsequently prompted (or I should say, “required”) a move to a dedicated place to park the site, rather than sharing a machine in a nameless office park, with a bunch of other sites like I did before. So after my relaxing week in the south, I returned a nearly blank space where my site used to be.
I say ‘nearly’ because in the vast whiteness of the blank pages that kept coming up instead of my site, there were error messages and mumbo-jumbos of numbers that confounded me, and the tech support people on the phone didn’t realize my knowledge of numbers only extended to quantities of butter and sugar for baking cookies, measuring cups of flour, and counting out eggs for a custard.
dulce de leche  chocolate flan/cake
So while I sat there dumbfounded by all the technology, I decided to check out other sites on all the internets that were working, and read some simmering debates about which words (and emoticons) are okay to use when writing about food, and which should be avoided. Words like ‘delicious’, ‘tasty’ and ‘yummy’ are the objects of scorn and are supposed to be banished from recipes. Other no-no’s are exclamation points and emoticons. But when something just is so delicious that you find it indescribably yummy, I don’t know about you, but I think it’s worth smiling about : )
And I’m not kidding! ; )
On the plus side, when I came back from my trip, a copy of My Sweet Mexicohad arrived in the mail from my publisher. They’ll often send me books that have me scratching my head, such as the River Cottage Meat Book. Then I’ll start flipping through it, and realize why they sent it to me. Like that book on meat that has become one of my favorites, My Sweet Mexico is gorgeous and beautifully photographed. Sorry to use those words, but it’s been a long week. (And to anyone who doesn’t like it—just be glad you’re not looking a blank page to look at right now.)
Aside from the recipes that caught my attention, this is a lovely book. Mexican desserts and sweets aren’t as popular as their other courses, but this book has recipes for things like Chocolate Milk Fudge, Corn Ice Cream, Burnt Custard, and even Calabaza en Tacha, whole candied pumpkin, that might change your mind.
But it was the Impossible Chocolate Flan that made me slip a bookmark in the page. Reading through the headnote at the beginning of the recipe, Fany Gerson, the author, wrote:
“…when you check whether it’s done a little while later, you find that the flan is hiding somewhere and all you see if the chocolate cake! You wait for it to cool, unmold it, and there is the flan!”
I don’t know about you, but if I made a two layer flan, put it in the oven, and opened the door a few minutes later and saw that one of the top layer disappeared, I’d be speaking with a few exclamation points, too.
dulce de leche cake drip cajeta
Still, when I saw the picture of the two-toned cake, with dark chocolate on the bottom and a dulce de leche-caramelized top, I knew that was the first recipe I wanted to tackle.
Mine came out a bit different than it looked on the pages. For one thing, the recipe called for a full cup of cajeta (or dulce de leche), which seemed like an awful lot. Not that one can ever have too much dulce de leche. And sure enough, there was quite a bit left in the cake mold when I released the flan. So I reduced the quantity in her recipe a little. (Although I know exactly what to do with the leftover dulce de leche.)
dulce de leche flan/cake
Also the chocolate cake layer wasn’t as majestic as the accompanying photograph. (I hope it’s okay to call a cake ‘majestic’….) But indeed, it did separate out when I sliced into the cake. Just not as dramatically. Still, I am really looking forward to working my way through some of the Mexican sweets in this book.
In the meantime, I’ve got a cake mold that needs my attention…
confiture de lait

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