Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Holiday

Truffles with Orange Zest

Christmas, Holiday, Sweets and CandyTove Balle-PedersenComment
Truffles with Orange Zest (I used a cutie for the photo, I was all out of oranges.)

Truffles with Orange Zest (I used a cutie for the photo, I was all out of oranges.)

These truffles are melt in your mouth delicious. well they will melt in your hand too, so its a delicate chocolate. If you want them to be easier to handle when serving, you can use the truffle/ganache as a filling in chocolates, but may turn up the orange flavor a bit.

I used a cutie for the photo, I was all out of oranges.

Makes 20-30 small truffles.

Ingredients:

  • 175 ml heavy whipping cream

  • 175 g dark chocolate, I used Valrhona

  • 1 organic orange, the zest of

  • 1 tablespoon orange liqueur like Grand Marnier - optional

  • unsweetened cocoa powder, I used Valrhona

Directions:

Chop the chocolate finely, and set aside. Zest the orange, and set it aside. Line a small loaf pan with parchment paper, and set it aside.

Heat the cream to the boiling point in a small saucepan. Pour the hot cream over the chocolate and stir it until alll the chocolate is melted and the ganache becomes shining. Stir in the orange zest and liqueur. Pour the ganache into the prepared loaf pan and set in the refrigerator for 1-2 hours to firm up. Cut the truffles up in bite-size squares and cover them with cocoa powder. Store the truffles in an airtight container in the refrigerator.

Enjoy!

Is-a-la-mande - Ice Cream a la Risalamande

Christmas, Desserts, Holiday, Ice CreamTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
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This Ice cream is made to resemble the traditional Danish Christmas dessert Risalamande (Danish rice pudding). Some don’t like the risalamande (which I just can’t understand 🤷‍♀️😉), but making an ice cream should please most. I made this for a Danih Christmas Lunch this year. Adding 1 whole blanched almond, and the one who found the almond, got the almond-gift (mandelgaven) like with the normal risalamande. I think this was a great substitution.

Serves 8-10.

Ingredients:

Ice cream base:

  • 200 g sugar

  • 4 egg yolk

  • 1-2 teaspoons vanilla paste

  • 200 ml heavy whipping cream

  • 400 ml whole milk

Filling:

Cherry sauce:

  • 340 g (12 oz) frozen dark sweet cherries

  • 1 can Oregon dark sweet cherries in heavy syrup

  • 2 teaspoons vanilla bean paste

  • 100 g (½ cup) sugar

Directions:

Ice cream:

Warm milk and ½ of the cream in a saucepan. Pour the rest of the cream into a bowl over an ice bath. 

Whisk the egg yolks pale with the rest of the sugar, then whisk in the vanilla. Add the hot milk in a little at a time, while whisking. Pour the mixture back in the saucepan. Slowly heat the mixture over medium heat while constantly stirring. You want the mixture to thicken slightly, but you don't want the mixture to come to a boil, this will coagulate the egg yolks. You do not want the mixture to exceed 174℉ or 79℃. 

Pour the hot mixture through a strainer into the cool cream. Stir until the custard is cooled completely. 

Freeze the custard in your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's instructions.  When the ice cream is frozen to a thick ice cream, put into a container and mix in the filling. Let the ice cream rest in the freezer over night before serving. You can swirl in the cherry sauce as well, I just put some on top, and served extra on the side.

Cherry sauce:

Add all the ingredients to a sauce pan. Heat and stir until the sugar is melted. Turn the heat down a little, and reduce the sauce to about half, and let it sit too cool. Pour a little on the frozen ice cream, and serve the rest to the ice cream.

Enjoy!

Gingerbread Reindeers

Christmas, Cookies, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
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One of the thing I remember from baking Christmas cookies with my mom, were making gingerbread men, women or pretty much all kinds of shapes. And the part where we got to decorate them with colorful icing. But I never thought to be this creative, turning the gingerbread man upside down, making a reindeer.

Makes a lot.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 125 g butter

  • 200 g dark syrup or molasses

  • 150 g brown sugar

  • 1 teaspoon ground black pepper

  • 1 teaspoon ground ginger

  • 1 teaspoon ground cardamom

  • 3 teaspoon ground cinnamon

  • ¼ teaspoon ground all-spice

  • ¼ teaspoon ground cloves

  • 2 teaspoons baking soda

  • 1 egg

  • 500 g all-purpose flour

Decorating:

  • 150 g confectionary (powdered) sugar

  • 1 egg white

  • a spinkle og cream of tartar

  • food coloring

DIRECTIONS:

Melt butter, syrup/molasses and brown sugar in a saucepan over medium heat. Remove from heat, and stir in baking soda and spices. Let the syrup cool down for a bit, before you add egg and flour. 

Add syrup to a stand mixer, and mix in the egg and flour and keep mixing until you have a smooth and shiny dough. 

Let the dough rest in a ziplock bag in the refrigerator for at least 4 hours, before rolling out.

Preheat the oven to 355 ℉ (180℃).

Roll out the dough on a floured surface. The dough needs to be about 0.1-0.2-inch (3-5 mm) thick. Cut out the small gingerbread men and place them on a parchment lined baking sheet. 

Bake the cookies for about 5 minutes, and let them cool completely on a wire rack.

Royal Icing: 

Put all the ingredients in the bowl of the stand mixer. Whip the icing for 2 minutes, until it has an uniform consistency and is crisp white color. It starts off with a grayish hue.

Decoration:

Decorate the gingerbread men upside down like a reindeer with brown and white icing, red mini m&m's for the nose.

Franske Snegle - Cinnamon Palmiers

Brunch, Cake, Cookies, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
Franske Snegle - Cinnamon Palmiers

Franske Snegle - Cinnamon Palmiers

Normally these cookies are large, in fact huge. But I wanted to make them smaller, so you get a delicate cookie rather than a huge piece you cannot finish. So I decided to cut the roll into even smaller pieces than I described in the directions, so I ended up with cookie sized cinnamon palmiers. I hope you will try these, they are relatively easy to make.

Makes 12-16.

Ingredients:

  • puff pastry, store-bought and defrosted

  • 100 g butter, room temperature

  • 100 g sugar

  • optional 1 teaspoon cinnamon

  • 10 ml simple syrup (half sugar and half water boiled into a thick syrup)

  • extra sugar for sprinkles

Icing:

  • confectionary sugar (powder sugar)

  • Unsweetened cocoa powder (I use Valrhona)

  • and a little warm water

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 355℉/180℃ with convection, if you don't have convection, then preheat the oven to 400℉/200℃).

Cream the butter with the sugar, so you have a soft light mixture. Mix in the cinnamon.

Roll the pastry in to a 20 x 16 inch (50 x 40 cm) rectangle. Gentle spread the fluffy filling all over the pastry. Roll the pastry up tight. Cover the roll in plastic wrap, and let it sit in the refrigerator for 10-20 minutes to firm up a bit.

Cut the roll into 1 - 1.5-inch (3-4 cm) thick slices. Place slices on its ends, and press them flat to about ⅓-inch (1 cm) high. Brush both sides with the simple syrup. Place on a baking sheet with parchment paper. Sprinkle with sugar on top.

Bake the palmier for 20-30 minutes until deep golden brown. Let the palmier cool, before icing.

Enjoy!

Danish Kringle

Brunch, Cake, HolidayTove Balle-PedersenComment
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This old fashioned pastry became famous in Denmark, when a very popular TV-host from a gardening show raved about it as the worlds best kringle. The recipe originates from Anne Magrethe in Hirtshals. She was a kogekone a kinda cook for when you had large family parties at a kind of community center. You got home cooked style food from a cook who was used to scaling up the amount of food. It was kinda catering before we had catering.

I do agree that this pastry or kringle is really good. It have a nice flakiness without being a lamination of traditional pastry. You can add raisins or some kind of jam as filling. I like it best when it is more traditional.

Makes 4.

Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 200 ml lukewarm water

  • 300 g  butter, room temperature

  • 50 g  live yeast or 4 teaspoons dry yeast

  • 3 tablespoons sugar

  • 3 eggs (+ more for egg wash)

  • 450 g  all-purpose flour

  • 1½ teaspoons salt

Filling:

  • 225 g butter, room temperature

  • 225 g sugar

  • 100 g marzipan (almonds paste), grated


Sprinkles:

  • raw sugar

  • almonds slivers

Directions:

Mix water, yeast, sugar, eggs and diced butter together in the stand mixer bowl. Let it rest for about 20 minutes.

Add flour and salt and knead the dough together. Do not over-knead the dough. Let the dough rise in a warm spot in the house for about 30 minutes.

Mix together the filling and put it in a piping bag, cutting a dime sized hole.

Preheat the oven 425℉ (220℃). Prepare 2 baking sheets with parchment paper, set aside.

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The dough is kinda sticky, so place the dough onto a well floured surface. Divide it into 4 pieces. Roll each piece out to a narrow rectangle, about the length of your baking sheet. Pipe the filling onto the middle of the rectangle leaving a small piece without in both ends. Fold the dough over the filling, and Pinch the ends tightly, to keep the filling inside. Gently press a dent lengthwise in the middle of the pastry. Place 2 pastries on each baking sheet. (I know, I’m a rebel, I did 3 and one). Brush on some egg wash, sprinkle with sugar and almond slivers. Let the pastries rise for about 15 minutes.

Bake the pastries for 15 minutes until dark golden brown.

Let the pastries cool on a wire rack. Serve the pastries slightly warm or at room temperature.

Enjoy!