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Conference taveng::bagels

Title:BAGELS and other things of Jewish interest
Notice:1.0 policy, 280.0 directory, 32.0 registration
Moderator:SMURF::FENSTER
Created:Mon Feb 03 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1524
Total number of notes:18709

669.0. "Kosher For Passover Brownie Receipe Wanted" by SRFSUP::PLAUT (Milt) Thu Mar 23 1989 16:47

    Has anyone got a receipe for kosher for Passover brownies?  Any
    help would be appreciated now that Passover is coming close.
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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669.1You can always buy it in a boxLDP::GOLDJack E. Gold, MRO4Fri Mar 24 1989 16:253
    If all else fails, I have seen Passover brownie mixes sold.

    Jack
669.2Wanted - The Real Thing - Mixes Won't Do!SRFSUP::PLAUTMiltTue Mar 28 1989 02:052
    Thanks, but we are looking for the "real thing".
    
669.3Here's one with *NO* matzohs in it!CADSYS::RICHARDSONTue Mar 28 1989 09:4717
    Most of the recipes for Pesachdic baked goods taste like wet matzohs to
    me (maybe flavored wet matzohs, if you are lucky!), but this one
    doesn't have matzohs in it.  A similar recipe suggested adding a small
    can of chopped pineapple pieces, for something different.
    
    3 eggs
    1 c sugar
    1/2 c oil
    2 T unsweetened cocoa
    1/2 c potato starch
    1 c chopped nuts
    grease for 9-inch pan
    
    beats eggs and sugar.  Add oil, then cocoa and potato starch.  Mix in
    chopped nuts.  Pour into prepared pan.  Bake at 350 oF for 30 minutes.
    
    /Charlotte
669.4"And, of course, contains no calories"BOLT::MINOWWho will can the anchovies?Wed Mar 29 1989 17:21105
The following looks like it would be acceptable during Passover.
Also, if ground almonds are ok, I could post a very good torte
made with almonds, cocoa, and eggs.  It came from Usenet.  I haven't
tried it, but I've done a number of similar recipes.

Martin.

  Here is the Chocolate Torta as originally posted to Usenet.

		Torta Di Cioccolata Alla Sanna

	        from Chocolatier, Vol. 1, No.	1

	    The	Mocha Divine Cake, originally created by Sanna
       Cohen of	Sanna's	Restaurant in Philadelphia, is delicious
       proof of	how chocolate is translated on a transcontinental
       scale.  The original recipe called for a	sweeter, milkier
       chocolate for the cake, but the customers at Washington
       Square Bar and Grill in San Francisco wanted a denser, more
       bittersweet taste in their desert, so the recipe	was altered
       to fit the needs	of the restaurant's clientele and renamed
       in honor	of its creator,	Torta Di Cioccolata alla Sanna.


	1 pound	sweet butter
	1 cup plus 2 tablespons	sugar
	1 cup plus 2 tablespoons espresso or french roast coffee
	12 ounces bittersweet chocolate
	4 ounces unsweetened chocolate
	8 large	eggs

	1.  Preheat oven to 350	degrees. Line a	9X3 inch false
       bottom or spring- form pan with aluminum	foil and grease	and
       flour generously.  Set aside.

	2.  In saucepan, over LOW heat,	melt together sweet butter,
       sugar, and coffee.

	3.  Whisk the above ingredients	together.

	4.  Add	chocolate and continue to stir until melted.

	5.  Remove from	heat and add the eggs, slightly	beaten.

	6.  Whisk together and turn into prepared pan.	Bake for
       50-55 minutes.  Cake is done when top has a crust and is	dry
       to touch.  You can eat this as soon as it is cool enough, or
       refrigerate up to 12-14 hours and eat it	then.

	Yields 12-14 servings

	Note:  This is a chocoholic's delight. No flour, one pound
       of chocolate.  It is very simple	to make, and of	course,
       contains	no calories.


  **********************************************************
   This article was posted as an addition to  the above.

NOTE: Evidently some would be cooks in netland were confused as to
      the meaning of "add 1 cup of coffee", thus I recently posted
      the following addition.

      Bon Apiteto

 As the original poster of the Chocolate Torta recipe, let
me clear up the confusion.  First of all, the coffee should
be LIQUID FRESHLY BREWED.  You can also use a freeze dried
coffee provided you make it in the ordinary way as if you
were going to drink it.  Think about it!  Coffee grounds
are fit only for feeding to worms, and a cup of instant
coffee makes an awful lot of coffee.  Can you imagine
the taste if you were to do those things? BLEAH! YUCH!

 As an additional note, I have made some changes and I think
improvements in the original recipe.  First, I used a regular
dark roast coffee instead of French roast.  My first torta was
a little heavy on the French coffee flavor for my taste. This
seems to work much better.  Second, I add 2 tsp of vanilla extract.
This adds flavor and cuts the taste of so many eggs.  Finally,
I added 2 tablespoons of flour.  This helps the cake set up 
faster.  This is a real trick as you can not add flour to
the hot butter chocolate mix.  The alternatives are to try to mix
the flour with the eggs, or better save a little coffee aside,
mix the flour with it, and add at the last moment before
placing in the oven.  Be sure to mix well with a wisk.

 This is a VERY RICH Torta.  I have served it to many friends
with much praise and requests for the recipe.  My gourmet
group went wild over it.  Needless to say, this torta goes
a long way, since only a small slice will suffice.  Therefore,
I managed to cut the recipe exactly in half, bake in a 6 X 3
inch spring form pan for 35-40 min at 350, with great
results.  This still makes plenty of torta for all.
I have also used a 6.5 inch ceramic souffle dish.  Line
it with aluminum foil, butter and flour it, and when the
torte cools you can lift it out and peel the foil away.
It should be completely cool before you handle it too much.
As with most chocolate dishes, this one gets better with age.
It seems to reach its peak after about two days in the 
refrigerator.  Be sure to cover it to keep it from drying out.

                        d. l. philen akgua!dlp


669.5only 16 more days and counting!! LDP::STEARMANSusan MRO4-2: Scientific VisualizationMon Apr 03 1989 18:353
My mother always makes chocolate mousse for Seder.  Its basically eggs and 
chocolate. Any standard or French recipe book should contain a good recipe. 

669.6Every year we manage to muddle through, somehowCADSYS::RICHARDSONTue Apr 04 1989 13:2714
    I don't mind eating things that are supposed to be "bad" for me for the
    duration of Passover, such as all the eggs, but I just can't eat things
    I am allergic to even once, such as chocolate.
    
    Actually, not having chocolate doesn't bother me, but I really LIKE
    oranges, and they cause real serious sinus problems for me (limes, too,
    but not grapfruits, lemons, or citrons (etrog)).
    
    We cleaned out another couple of areas of the house last night; Paul
    and I have decided that we are *NOT* going to end up doing a cleaning
    marathon the evening before the first seder; we are going to have most
    of the house clean before that so we don't go into the holiday
    exhausted.  Especially since the second seder is at our place this
    year! - our first seder at home in 7 years of marriage.
669.7Pesach Brownies (and other goodies)ACESMK::MALMBERGThu May 04 1989 11:2176
    These are among my favorite Pesach desserts -- recipes for hazelnut 
    cookies, excellent honey cake and brownies (as originally requested) 
    follow.  I am sorry I didn't put them here before the holiday.  Enjoy 
    them next year.  I also make the Pecan Torte recipe from 'The Joy
    of Cooking', several torte recipes from Maida Heater's dessert
    cookbook, and Creme Caramel for dessert during Pesach.  I've been
    quite successful with substituting matzoh meal for bread crumbs
    in torte recipes.  However, I've had better luck with recipes which
    call for oily nuts (like pecans) than with drier nuts (like almonds).
    
    I was in Paris with relatives for two days during Pesach.  I had
    the pleasure of eating French matzohs and biscuits.  The matzohs
    are denser like a cookie and have a round lacy shape.  I had wonderful
    cookies (biscuits to them) which were sweet with orange and white
    wine flavoring.  These were lacy and the same texture as the matzohs.
    Also -- you know how French people wipe up the last bits of sauces
    with bread and eat it?  Well, for Pesach, this family had matzoh
    which was ground to a size bigger than matzoh meal but smaller
    than farfel which they sprinkled on their plates and spooned up
    to eat the last of the sauces in lieu of bread crusts.  This meal
    is sold commercially in France for exactly this purpose.
    
    *****************************************************************
    
    Greg's Aunt Harriet's Hazelnut Kisses
    350 degree oven

    1/2 pound ground hazelnuts
    1 cup sugar
    4 egg whites, beaten stiff

    Mix 3/4 cup sugar with the ground nut meats.  Beat the rest of the 
    sugar into the egg whites.  Mix the nuts and the egg whites together.  
    Refrigerate 1/2 hour.  Form into balls the size of a small walnut.  
    Decorate with hazelnut halves or candied cherries.

    Bake ten minutes at 350 degrees.  I bake these on parchment paper.  
    I find parchment paper in gourmet cooking shops or shops which sell 
    cake decorating supplies.

    ***********************************************************************

    Frank's Six Egg Honey Cake
    325 degree oven

    6 eggs, separated
    1/2 cup sugar
    1/2 cup honey
    Juice and rind of 1/2 lemon
    1/2 cup cake Matzoh meal 
    3 tablespoons potato starch
    1/2 cup ground pecans

    Beat egg whites until stiff; gradually add the sugar.  Beat yolks with 
    honey and lemon.  Fold the egg mixtures together.  Fold in the 
    remaining ingredients.  Bake at 325 degrees in an ungreased 10 inch 
    tube pan for 55 to 60 minutes.  Cool in the inverted pan.

    ***********************************************************************

    National Geographic's WORLD Magazine's Passover Brownies
    350 degree oven

    1 stick margarine
    1 cup sugar 
    2 eggs
    1 teaspoon vanilla
    1/2 cup cake Matzoh meal
    1/8 teaspoon salt 
    1 cup chopped nuts (optional)
    2 (1 ounce) squares unsweetened chocolate, melted

    Cream the margarine and sugar together.  Add the eggs and beat.  Stir 
    in the remaining ingredients.  Pour the mixture into a greased 8 inch 
    square pan.  Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes.  Cut into squares 
    while hot.  Cool the brownies in the pan.
669.8VIVACE::ACKERMANDBS Tech WriterTue Mar 30 1993 23:203
I'm looking for some recipes for Passover desserts.  I'm also interested in 
hearing what you serve for Passover.  I'd like any ideas or recipes you have.
Thanks!