Topic: Sweet stuff and other
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Cathy's photo

Cathy

Wed 05/29/24 12:42 PM

I will be posting recipes for sweet things that I have tried and tested.
The first one will be for the classic French dessert crème brulee.
6 yolks
200g sugar
400 ml cream (a good cook will know which one to use)
250 ml milk
Vanilla - or something else

Mix the yolk with sugar and vanilla.
Heat the cream with milk.
Mix it together. Pour into ceramic containers.
Bake in a water bath 90 st C about 3 hours (+/-)
Take out and cool. Burn the sugar on the dessert before serving.
JustJosh's photo

JustJosh

Wed 05/29/24 12:53 PM

Excellent excellent
Thanks for sharing
Your year in France was certainly not wasted
soufiehere's photo

soufiehere

Wed 05/29/24 03:39 PM

Looks wonderful.
I would try it but for the lack of recognizable
measurements/temps ;-)
Cathy's photo

Cathy

Thu 05/30/24 09:36 AM


Looks wonderful.
I would try it but for the lack of recognizable
measurements/temps ;-)

Soufie - I’m sorry but I post this in the measurements I use. These are grams (kilograms) liters (milliliter).
You can find a conversion factor for the measurements you use.
no photo

Farid

Thu 05/30/24 09:56 AM



Looks wonderful.
I would try it but for the lack of recognizable
measurements/temps ;-)

Soufie - I’m sorry but I post this in the measurements I use. These are grams (kilograms) liters (milliliter).
You can find a conversion factor for the measurements you use.

I think she is just kidding. She can find the recipe given in imperial units on the web, if she wants to.
JustJosh's photo

JustJosh

Thu 05/30/24 09:56 AM

If you like I could translate into English
2 1/4 cups (560 ml) heavy whipping cream (35%)
¼ tsp salt
1 vanilla bean, halved and seeds scraped OR 1 tsp vanilla extract
5 large egg yolks
½ cup (100g) sugar
The trick is getting the eggs frothy enough, right, Catherine?
When I worked at a very fine French restaurant we used a salamander for carmelizing the sugar.
And did you know that the water bath in which the crème brûlée is cooked is called a “ban Marie” meaning Marie’s bath. The French are still sore at Marie Antoinette
Cathy's photo

Cathy

Thu 05/30/24 10:03 AM


If you like I could translate into English
2 1/4 cups (560 ml) heavy whipping cream (35%)
¼ tsp salt
1 vanilla bean, halved and seeds scraped OR 1 tsp vanilla extract
5 large egg yolks
½ cup (100g) sugar
The trick is getting the eggs frothy enough, right, Catherine?
When I worked at a very fine French restaurant we used a salamander for carmelizing the sugar.
And did you know that the water bath in which the crème brûlée is cooked is called a “ban Marie” meaning Marie’s bath. The French are still sore at Marie Antoinette

You right JustJosh, ban Marie still function in French language and recipes. I couldn't write it like that because someone might not understand.
Cathy's photo

Cathy

Thu 05/30/24 10:05 AM


I think she is just kidding. She can find the recipe given in imperial units on the web, if she wants to.

Maybe yes maybe no…
I like Soufie :blush:
Cathy's photo

Cathy

Thu 06/06/24 08:59 AM

Lemon madeleines

2 eggs
100 g sugar
70 g butter
95 g flour
1 teaspoon of baking powder
1/3 teaspoon vanilla extract
squeezed juice from half a lemon
grated lemon peel

Melt the butter. Break the eggs and mix with sugar, beat and mix with baking powder. Combine with butter and grated lemon zest. Add the flavoring, then the flour and the juice of 1/2 lemon. After mixing, place a spoon in a baking mold for madeleines (shells). Bake in a preheated oven at 180 degrees Celsius until they are light golden in color (depending on the oven, 10-14 minutes).