Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Meringue Shell Crowns and Lemon Curd Recipes!

So – if you get the itch to make the meringue shells pictured yesterday – here’s all you have to do – super easy!

6 Individual Meringue Shell Crowns

Ingredients:
3 large room temp egg whites
1/8 teaspoon cream of tartar
¾ cup sugar
½ teaspoon vanilla extract

Directions:
Preheat oven to 275-degrees and line a baking sheet with either parchment paper or a silpat. Dust the surface with a little corn starch.

Begin beating egg whites until frothy then add cream of tartar and continue beating on high speed. Begin adding sugar by the tablespoon full allowing mixture to beat well between each addition until all sugar is added. Pour in vanilla extract and continue to beat until stiff peaks form. When whites appear to be stiff, stop mixer and feel a pinch of the mixture between your thumb and forefinger. If it’s still a little grainy, continue beating until whites are smooth. All that sugar need to be completely dissolved. Once whites are no longer grainy – it’s ready to pipe.

Load the egg whites into a pastry/piping bag fitted with a large star tip. Pipe crowns by piping swirled circles (begin in the center of the circle and swirl around itself working its way outward) to form a 4 to 5 inch circle. Pipe 6 crown/circle bases this way, then come back to each and pipe stars atop the outer edge of each. When done, place tray in oven and bake for 45 minutes. When timer goes off, turn the oven off and open the door, leaving it ajar for an additional 45 minutes allowing the crowns to cool completely and slowly in inside the oven. You may then move them to an airtight container or rack to set until ready to fill. See? EASY!

Ina Garten’s Lemon Curd
(this is Ina’s recipe but my own comments are noted with a * *)

Ingredients:
3 lemons
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/4 pound unsalted butter, room temperature 4 extra-large eggs
1/2 cup lemon juice (3 to 4 lemons)
1/8 teaspoon kosher salt

Directions:
Using a carrot peeler, remove the zest of 3 lemons, being careful to avoid the white pith. Put the zest in a food processor fitted with the steel blade. Add the sugar and pulse until the zest is very finely minced into the sugar. * * I used a microplane to zest my lemon, creating very fine shards of lemon peel – but I still combined the zest with the sugar in the food processor to blend it together well.
Cream the butter and beat in the sugar and lemon mixture. Add the eggs, 1 at a time, and then add the lemon juice and salt. Mix until combined. (* * will be voluminous and light ‘whipped butter yellow’)
Pour the mixture into a 2 quart saucepan and cook over low heat until thickened (about 10 minutes), stirring constantly (* * It’ll take WAY longer than 10 minutes if you do this on low. I have my temp at a notch and a half below medium and stir the entire time – it takes a good 15 minutes or so. The mixture will go from that ‘creamy whipped butter appearance to a silky, more liquid form to finally a thicker form, say close to a pancake batter…never will it be like a super thick gel). The lemon curd will thicken at about 170 degrees F, or just below simmer. Remove from the heat and cool or refrigerate. Use as desired…..as in…EAT IT WITH A SPOON!!!!! YUM!!!!!

Monday, August 23, 2010

Meringue Shells with Lemon Curd

Hi! Nice to see you again! No – I didn’t get my phone fixed but I realized that all this time I coulda been borrowing my daughter’s phone to snap my pics! Yes, I would’ve had to endure the ‘eye rolling’ that comes along with asking “Okay, Min...I need your phone again” – but hey, at age 16, what doesn’t included eye rolling, eh?

So….I made a really fun dessert this past weekend – Meringues with lemon curd (my fave!) and fresh whipped cream and strawberries. I wish I’d have thought to take pics al the way through – but the idea didn’t come to me until these little beauties came out of the oven. Besides…my daughter might have had to miss/wait for the 300 missed calls during that time – for shame!

Anyhoo, I made a simple meringue (recipe to come tomorrow as I don’t have it in my head and I wnana make it exact, of course), and whipped the room-temperature egg whites and everything together until I had absolute stiff, snow white peaks, then put it all in a pastry bag with a big star tip and piped out individual meringues that once done, just begged to be filled with sweet scrumptiousness!Check it out…
Doesn’t that just look like a lovely, delicate yet delectable crown?! These fully baked and cooled meringues look exactly the way they did when they went into the oven –‘cept slightly off-white rather than snow. They baked for 45 minutes at 275-degrees then cooled in the oven – door ajar – for another 45. Truth be told, I thought the length of time was a it much for the temp. I might try 250 next time….and maybe 5 minutes less – just because it’d be so pretty to have these shells remain pure white.

Okay – so…I’d piped, baked and cooled – and while all this was happening, I made the filling. Lemon curd! OMG I love it so! I could live off it – it’s just that damn good. I follow Ina’s Garten’s recipe and it comes out ‘perfection each time’ (again, recipe tomorrow…promise. I just HAD to post without it today ‘cuz it’d just been too long!). I let the lemon curd chill out in the fridge for a few hours to thicken up a but more, but once I was ready to assemble….here’s what I did….
I put a couple of heaping tablespoons – maybe even 3..I said I loved it remember?! – in each meringue shell….
Then topped that with freshly whipped cream – sorry Cool Whip – you got kicked to the curb on this recipe!

Then…..I made sorta the wrong decision on this next part – but hey…live and learn, eh?
I ladled strawberries in syrup over the top. It was delicious, yes….but not nearly as pretty as it would’ve been had I just spooned on a few fresh slices of berries and maybe kiwi.....just like Mom said! Listen to your mother…at least SOME of the time!

All in all it was a fun undertaking – and really….quite easy. It’s nice to know that an elegant, eye-catching dessert can be made without tons of effort or money….just takes a little time.
Give these a try next time you wanna bump up ‘good ol’ dessert’ into something fancy-schmancy!

Recipes tomorrow!

P.S. – it’s nice to be back and thanks to all who said you missed me – right back at’cha ;-)