T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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571.1 | | ROLL::HARRIS | | Wed Apr 01 1987 17:48 | 3 |
| Have you looked in the Chocolate notes file? There is an entry
for CHOCOLATE RASPBERRY DECADENCE that sounds like it is right
up your alley!
|
571.3 | Simple chocolate, raspberries, and cream. | LASSEN::PURMAL | Big is more than small is less | Wed Apr 01 1987 19:42 | 15 |
| As a dessert in a Swiss/French restaurant I had a very simple
combination of chocolate, raspberries, and heavy cream. It was
a ring of chocolate somewhere between milk and semi-sweet with an
outside diameter of 3 inches and an inside diameter of 2 inches.
The ring of chocolate was placed on a shallow dish filled with about
1/8 to 1/4 inch each of raspberry puree and sweetened heavy cream.
The cream and puree were seperated to form a sort of ying-yang
design.
The chocolate must have had something else in it because you
could cut it with a fork without breaking the ring completely and
spraying cream and raspberries all over the place. It was the
perfect ending to a magnificent meal.
ASP
|
571.4 | CHOCOLATE RASPBERRY PIE | BUFFER::MILLER | Silents, Please... | Thu Apr 02 1987 19:46 | 49 |
| From Gourmet magazine (Gourmet had a few chocolate/raspberry concoctions
but boy, are they hard to make! This was the *easy* one... If you want
the hard ones, let me know!)
Crust:
1 1/4 cups graham cracker crumbs
1/4 cup softened butter (half a stick)
1/4 cup chopped walnuts
1 Tbsp. Sugar
Combine and press mixture firmly onto the bottom and sides of a lightly
buttered 9-inch pie plate and bake the shell at 375 degrees for 8 minutes.
Place on a rack and cool.
Pie Filling:
10-ounces frozen raspberries
1 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup softened butter (1 stick)
1/3 cup sugar
2 oz. unsweetened chocolate, melted and cooled
2 eggs
Thaw the raspberries in a colander set over a bowl, reserving the juices.
In a separate bowl whip the cream until it holds soft peaks. In the bowl of an
electric mixer cream together butter and sugar until light and fluffy.
Stir in chocolate and 1 egg, and beat at high speed for 3 minutes. Add the
other egg and beat mixture at high speed for another 3 minutes. Fold in
the cream and raspberries. Spoon the flling into the shell, making a
slight edge, and chill the pie for 2 hours.
Sauce:
1/3 cup currant jelly
Thawed raspberry juice
1 Tbsp. cornstarch dissolved in 2 Tbsp. water
2 Tbsp. cassis
In a saucepan heat the currant jelly and the reserved raspberry juices
over moderately low heat, stirring. Stir in cornstarch mixture, bring
the liquid to a boil, stirring, and simmer until thickened. Remove from
heat, stir in the cassis, and let the mixture cool to room temperature.
Pour the sauce onto the center of the pie and garnish the edges with
walnut halves.
|
571.6 | | BUFFER::MILLER | Silents, Please... | Fri Apr 03 1987 14:40 | 5 |
| Cassis is a liqueur made from fruit and is stocked by most liquor
stores.
Let me know your mailstop and I'll send the challenges on... Good
luck!
|
571.7 | Cassis - A Currant Event | HARDY::KENAH | O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!! | Mon Apr 06 1987 16:15 | 12 |
| Specifically, cassis is a liqueur made from currants.
Cassis is one of the ingredients of Kir, a popular
before-dinner drink. The other ingredient is a dry
white wine. (Kir Royale uses champagne.)
The proportions are left to individual tastes, but
differences of opinion are vast and strong.
Working from memory,
Andrew
|
571.8 | CHOCOLATE RASPBERRY SQUARES | BUFFER::MILLER | Silents, Please... | Tue Apr 28 1987 13:08 | 21 |
| Found another recipe:
Chocolate Raspberry Squares
1/3 cup softened butter or margarine
1 cup brown sugar
2 eggs
1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 1/4 tsp. baking powder
1/8 tsp. salt
3/4 cup raspberry jam
1/2 cup semisweet chocolate bits
In large bowl, beat together the butter, sugar and eggs
until ight. Sift flour with baking powder and salt and
stir into beaten mixture. Add jam and chocolate bits.
Spread mixture in greased 9-inch square pan. Bake at
350 degrees for 30 minutes, or until tested done. Cool
on wire rack.
|
571.9 | Chocolate Raspberry Torte Brownies | CURIE::JOY | Expensive but worth it | Tue Apr 28 1987 13:56 | 16 |
| I don't have the recipe in front of me but I think I remember it
(I've made it enough times!). Its always been a crowd pleaser.
Make a 13x9" pan of brownies (I've found the packaged mix turns
out just as good as from scratch and now with the "gourmet" brownie
mixes you can comeup with some real decadent stuff). After the brownies
have cooled, put them in the fridge for an hour or so to make them
easier to cut. Cut the pan of brownies in quarters and remove from
the pan. Cut each quarter in half horizontally and place the bottom
half back in the pan. Spread raspberry jam over the bottom half
of the brownies and replace the top half over the jam. Make a frosting
of 1 1/2 squares of baking chocolate, 1/3 cup raspberry jam, 1 cup
confectioner's sugar and 2 tblsp. butter. I'm not positive about
the proportions on the frosting but you get the idea. Spread the
frosting on top of the brownies and chill. Cut into normal brownie
sizes and serve. Pure heaven!!
|
571.10 | Re .4-- Real Good and Rich | ARCH::MANINA | | Wed Apr 29 1987 17:38 | 15 |
| RE .4
I made this pie for desert on Easter. Boy, was it rich!! Just a
few comments. I assumed that when the recipe called for frozen
raspberries it was suppose to be the kind that came frozen in a
pouch with syrup. Didn't matter because I went to 5 different stores
looking for them and finally ended up with a plain bag of frozen
raspberries (I think it was a 16 oz bag). I defrosted the whole
bag and used it except I added just enough sugar so that you didn't
end up with a permanent pucker. I also cheated by using a Keebler
graham cracker crust because I didn't have enough crumbs to make
my own. It really wasn't that difficult to make or take that much
time. I think next time, I may add just a little more sugar though.
Manina
|
571.11 | chocolate/raspberry dessert | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Tue Jul 21 1987 15:11 | 12 |
| re: Note 571.3 by LASSEN::PURMAL
-< Simple chocolate, raspberries, and cream. >-
> The chocolate must have had something else in it because you
> could cut it with a fork without breaking the ring completely and
> spraying cream and raspberries all over the place. It was the
> perfect ending to a magnificent meal.
The chocolate sounds like a genache (reference chocolate truffle
recipes), it is a mixture of chocolate, butter and cream and is a soft
confection.
|