Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Christmas

Havregrynskugler - Oat "truffles" with Marzipan and Cognac

Christmas, Holiday, Sweets and CandyTove Balle-PedersenComment
Oat "truffles" with Marzipan and Cognac

Oat "truffles" with Marzipan and Cognac

Just another version of Havregrynskugler aka oat truffles.

Ingredients:

  • 180 g oat
  • 75 g butter
  • 75 g sugar
  • 10 g unsweetened cocoa (I use Valrhona)
  • 1 tablespoon espresso, cold
  • 100 g marzipan (almond paste)
  • 2 tablespoons cognac

Directions:

In a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment mix butter, oats, sugar, cocoa, marzipan, coffee and cognac until you have a uniform texture. Add more cognac if needed.

Form small bite-size ball of the dough in your hands, and roll them in multicolored sprinkles.

Store the truffles in an airtight tin in the refrigerator.

Happy Holidays - Glædelig jul

ChristmasTove Balle-PedersenComment
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We made it, we made it to the December 24. - And we it made to Christmas. Even though I live in the US, the 24th will always be Christmas for me.

In Denmark we have our celebration on Christmas Eve. We start by eating dinner, dance around the christmas tree singing carols, and then we get our christmas gifts.  Christmas Day and the day after, we go visit the relatives we didn't get to see on Christmas Eve. Normally it would be around lunch time and we will have open faced sandwiches beer and snaps. 

I want to thank you for visiting my blog and I wish you and your family a happy holiday.

Cheers

Chocolate Covered Candied Orange Peel

Christmas, Sweets and Candy, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
Chocolate Covered Candied Orange Peel

Chocolate Covered Candied Orange Peel

December 23. - Making the last of my planed christmas treats. I don't know if I or the treats got covered the most in chocolate.

There is something about the combination of orange and chocolate, the flavors compliments each other perfectly. I alway buy chocolate covered orange peel at christmas time, and they are not cheap, by any means. So when I learned how make these at a Valrhona chocolate workshop at Sur la Table, I was very happy. I think you would like this recipe, so you can save some money making your own. It's actually really simple, but it takes some time, because you have to cook the peels 3 times to get rid of the bitterness. 

This is the recipe I got from my cooking class.

Ingredients:

  • 3-4 large navel oranges

  • 1,5 cups sugar

  • ⅓ cup (180ml) orange flavored liqueur, Cointreau or Grand Marnier

  • 1 cup sugar (to coat the cooked orange peels)

  • 340 g Bittersweet chocolate (like Valrhona 61%)

Directions:

Cut of the top and bottom of the oranges and discard. Cut the oranges into quarters and remove all but the but 1/2-inch of flesh, which will assist in removing the bitterness of the  peel during the cooking process. Cut the quarters into 1/4- inch wide matchstick strips.

Place the orange slices in a medium saucepan, cover with cold water and place on the stove over a medium-high heat. Bring the water to a boil and boil for 5 minutes. Using a strainer, remove the water and repeat the process with fresh water two more times.

After the third boil, drain and rinse the cooked orange peel under cold water and remove any pulp that is attached to the peel.

Return the orange slices to the pan with 1-1/2 cups of sugar and the liqueur and place on the stove over a low heat to cook, stirring constantly, until the sugar is dissolved, about 4 minutes.

Continue to cook on low heat until the sugar is absorbed by the peel, about 1 hour. While the peel is cooking, spread the remaining sugar evenly on a rimmed baking sheet. Remove the saucepan from the stove and immediately roll the orange peel strips in the sugar, separating the slices to coat them completely. Transfer the slices onto a sheet of parchment paper and then let them air-dry, about 20 minutes.

To dip orange peel with chocolate: Line 2 rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper. Melt and temper the chocolate over a double-boiler.

Dip a slice of the candied orange peel into the chocolate, half-way or completely, thoroughly coating it. With a fork or a dipper, remove the slice from the chocolate, gently shake off the excess chocolate, and turn the slice out onto the paper. Repeat with the remaining slices. Let the chocolate dipped orange peel set up at room temperature, or chill in the refrigerator, about 15 minutes.

Cherry sauce - kirsebærsauce

Christmas, Desserts, HolidayTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Cherry sauce - kirsebærsauce

Cherry sauce - kirsebærsauce

This cherry sauce can be used on ice or puddings, but I always make this for my christmas dessert, risalamande

Growing up my parents had a cherry tree in their yard. Every year, my mom would preserve cherries to use for Christmas. The best part of my moms preserved cherries was the small nuts from inside the cherry-stone. After being preserved, the tasted like almonds, so yummy.

When I turned 9, my parents decided to move, and in their new yard, there were no cherry tree. And this was the end of homemade preserved cherries in my family. Now we had to eat store bought cherry sauce, like most other danes. 

Moving to the US, gave me a challenge with the cherry sauce, but one of my Danish friends, who moved to the US 4-5 years earlier than me, had the answer. You make your own cherry sauce from caned cherries. 

This is Mrs. Olsen's recipe for cherry sauce - well I might have tweaked it a bit, but the credits goes to Mrs Olsen. 

Ingredients:

Directions:

Heat the cherries, cherry juice and sugar in a saucepan, bring it to a boil. Dissolve the cornstarch in cold water. Thicken the sauce with the cornstarch. Add lemon juice and sugar to taste. A spash of cherry liqueur only makes the sauce better.

Serve this sauce with ice cream, puddings or on risalamande.

Risalamande - Danish Rice Pudding

Christmas, Desserts, HolidayTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Risalamande - Danish Rice Pudding

Risalamande - Danish Rice Pudding

December 22. - I think, I need to plan the hunt for the almond carefully this year. I really want the marzipan pigs from Summerbird.

Risalamande means rice with almonds, and even though the name sounds french, it is a danish dessert, dating back about hundred years.

This is the dessert 90% of danes have at christmas dinner on christmas eve. Normally the cook will put one whole blanched almond in the the bowl with Risalamande, which  is served family style. The person who gets the whole almond gets a special gift. In many families the gift is a pig made from marzipan, or at least some kind of sweet or candy. As if you need more sweets and candy at christmas time.

Before risalamande was invented the norm was to start the christmas dinner of with a bowl of rice porridge. Maybe to fill you up with an inexpensive dish, so you wouldn't have to eat so much of the more pricy goose or duck roast. The Danish royal family still to this day start their christmas dinner with rice porridge. 

Risalamande is served with a hot or cold cherry sauce.

This is how my mom made risalamande.

Serves 6-8 people

Ingredients:

  • Rice porridge made from 1 l milk, cold

  • ¼ liter heavy whipping cream (use organic, without any other ingredients other than cream/milk)

  • 1-2 tablespoons sugar

  • 1 vanilla pod, the seeds from.

  • A large handful chopped blanched almonds

Directions:

Whip the cream in a large bowl, until stiff peaks are just about to form. If you over-beat the cream, it will leave you with butter. (been there, done that).

Spilt the vanilla pod lengthwise and scrape out the seeds with the tip of a knife. Using the knife, mix the seeds with some sugar. This helps the seeds to distribute in the risalamande. You want an even distribution of seeds in the risalamande, like small black freckles.

In another bowl mix the rice porridge, sugar and vanilla. Use s couple of dollops of the whipped cream to soften the porridge. Fold in the whipped cream and the chopped almonds a little at a time. Taste the risalamande, so you won't put in to much. You want a fluffy light dessert, but not a bowl full of whipping cream.

Serve the risalamande cold from the refrigerator with hot or cold cherry sauce.

Enjoy.