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It has been a while, but we decided to make these again.
Cannoli Alla Siciliana Ingredients: Pastry 1 cup flour 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 scant Tablespoon sugar 1 Tablespoon soft unsalted butter 1/4 cup white wine Vegetable oil for frying Filling 2 cups ricotta 1 cup whipped heavy cream 3 Tablespoons sugar (or more if you wish) 2 Tablespoons candied fruit, or 3 Tablespoons cocoa and 2 Tablespoons chocolate bits (Jimmies) or 2 Tablespoons finely chopped nuts. 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla Confectioner's sugar Pastry: Place the flour in a mound on a pastry board or counter. Make a well in the center, and put in kthe salt, sugarm and dabs of the soft butter. Add the wine, and with a fork start stirring in the center. Keep on until most of the flour has been absorbed, and you have a paste yyou can work with your hands. Knead the paste until it is smooth and has picked up almost all the remaining flour. Roll it out no thicker than a noodle, and cut it into 3 1/2" X 3 1/2" squares, if you are using 5-inch-long, 1-inch-diameter cannoli forms. The diagonal of the squares should not be longer than the forms, so adjust the size of the squares to the length of the forms. Place the cannoli forms diagonally on the squares. Wrap the pastry around the forms, 1 corner over the other, and press the corners to hold them together. If the corners don't stick with pressure, mositen a finger with water, apply it to the contact point, and press again. Cover the bottom of a frying pan with about 3/4 inch of vegetable oil and heat it to 375°. If you don't have a thermometer, drop a bit of dough in. If it immediately starts to blister and turn a toast color, the temperature is right. Because connoli cook very fast and swell in size during the process, you may find 3 is a good number to cook at a time. Put them in the hot oil, turning them carefully when one side is done. Remove them as soon as they have become crisp, a uniform toast color, and rather blistered all round. The forms, naturally, get terribly hot: a pointed pliers is the easiest tool with which to lift them out of the pan. Hold the form with the pliers and give a gentle push with a fork to slip the fried cannolo off the form. Drain the cannoli on paper towels. Put the forms aside to cool. When cooled, rewrap, and continue frying until all are done. Cannoli, when cooked and left unfilled, will keep crisp a day or so in a tin or a dry place. If you want to make more than 18 cannoli, the recipe doubles easily using 2 cups of flour 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 1/2 Tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons soft unsalted butter 2/3 cups of white wine. If you are rolling on a pasta machine, which is ideal for this particular dough, start at the highest number and bring it down to #3. Filling: Put the ricotta in a bowl and fold in the whipped cream, adding the sugar as you fold. Chop the chocolate bits or nuts very fine and fold all but about a teaspoonful. Add the vanilla. Using a spatula or a broad knife, fill the cannoli first from one end and then from the other. Press the filling in gently to make sure the center is full. Scrape each end to smooth out the cream and decorate the ends by dipping them in the remaining chocolate bits or nuts. The cannoli should not be filled too long before serving, as that softens the pastry. The filling, however, can be chilled, and both parts of this elegant dessert can be made ahead of time and assembled shortly before the meal. Dust with confectioner's sugar. SOURCE: The Romagnolis' Table |
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On 4/3/2011 3:44 PM, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> It has been a while, but we decided to make these again. > > > Cannoli Alla Siciliana > > Ingredients: > Pastry > 1 cup flour > 1/4 teaspoon salt > 1 scant Tablespoon sugar > 1 Tablespoon soft unsalted butter > 1/4 cup white wine > > Vegetable oil for frying > > Filling > 2 cups ricotta > 1 cup whipped heavy cream > 3 Tablespoons sugar (or more if you wish) > 2 Tablespoons candied fruit, or 3 Tablespoons cocoa and 2 Tablespoons > chocolate bits (Jimmies) or 2 Tablespoons finely chopped nuts. > 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla > > Confectioner's sugar > > Pastry: Place the flour in a mound on a pastry board or counter. Make a > well in the center, and put in kthe salt, sugarm and dabs of the soft > butter. Add the wine, and with a fork start stirring in the center. Keep > on until most of the flour has been absorbed, and you have a paste yyou > can work with your hands. > > Knead the paste until it is smooth and has picked up almost all the > remaining flour. Roll it out no thicker than a noodle, and cut it into 3 > 1/2" X 3 1/2" squares, if you are using 5-inch-long, 1-inch-diameter > cannoli forms. The diagonal of the squares should not be longer than the > forms, so adjust the size of the squares to the length of the forms. > > Place the cannoli forms diagonally on the squares. Wrap the pastry > around the forms, 1 corner over the other, and press the corners to hold > them together. If the corners don't stick with pressure, mositen a > finger with water, apply it to the contact point, and press again. > > Cover the bottom of a frying pan with about 3/4 inch of vegetable oil > and heat it to 375°. If you don't have a thermometer, drop a bit of > dough in. If it immediately starts to blister and turn a toast color, > the temperature is right. Because connoli cook very fast and swell in > size during the process, you may find 3 is a good number to cook at a > time. Put them in the hot oil, turning them carefully when one side is > done. Remove them as soon as they have become crisp, a uniform toast > color, and rather blistered all round. The forms, naturally, get > terribly hot: a pointed pliers is the easiest tool with which to lift > them out of the pan. Hold the form with the pliers and give a gentle > push with a fork to slip the fried cannolo off the form. Drain the > cannoli on paper towels. Put the forms aside to cool. When cooled, > rewrap, and continue frying until all are done. > > Cannoli, when cooked and left unfilled, will keep crisp a day or so in a > tin or a dry place. > > If you want to make more than 18 cannoli, the recipe doubles easily using > > 2 cups of flour > 1/2 teaspoon salt > 1 1/2 Tablespoons sugar > 2 tablespoons soft unsalted butter > 2/3 cups of white wine. > > If you are rolling on a pasta machine, which is ideal for this > particular dough, start at the highest number and bring it down to #3. > > Filling: Put the ricotta in a bowl and fold in the whipped cream, adding > the sugar as you fold. Chop the chocolate bits or nuts very fine and > fold all but about a teaspoonful. Add the vanilla. > > Using a spatula or a broad knife, fill the cannoli first from one end > and then from the other. Press the filling in gently to make sure the > center is full. Scrape each end to smooth out the cream and decorate the > ends by dipping them in the remaining chocolate bits or nuts. > > The cannoli should not be filled too long before serving, as that > softens the pastry. The filling, however, can be chilled, and both parts > of this elegant dessert can be made ahead of time and assembled shortly > before the meal. > > Dust with confectioner's sugar. > > > SOURCE: The Romagnolis' Table > > > > I have made cannoli with marsala wine, not white wine. I'm going to give your recipe a try the next time I decide to make it. Do you drain your ricotta cheese overnight? I put it in a strainer over a bowl in the fridge overnight. I think it makes the cheese less wet and the cannoli outsides stay crispier longer. I also never heard of mixing the whipping cream with the cheese. Interesting. I just mix my cheese with powdered sugar and a little vanilla and teeny pieces of chocolate. I never actually had a recipe for the cheese filling. The Sicilian grandmothers on my block taught me to make them when I was a kid. -- Janet Wilder Way-the-heck-south Texas Spelling doesn't count. Cooking does. |
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![]() "Janet Wilder" > wrote > I have made cannoli with marsala wine, not white wine. I'm going to give > your recipe a try the next time I decide to make it. > > Do you drain your ricotta cheese overnight? I put it in a strainer over a > bowl in the fridge overnight. I think it makes the cheese less wet and > the cannoli outsides stay crispier longer. I'm going to try the Marsala in the future. We do drain the ricotta at least a couple of hours. |
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Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> It has been a while, but we decided to make these again. > > > Cannoli Alla Siciliana > > Ingredients: > Pastry > 1 cup flour > 1/4 teaspoon salt > 1 scant Tablespoon sugar > 1 Tablespoon soft unsalted butter > 1/4 cup white wine > > Vegetable oil for frying > > Filling > 2 cups ricotta > 1 cup whipped heavy cream > 3 Tablespoons sugar (or more if you wish) > 2 Tablespoons candied fruit, or 3 Tablespoons cocoa and 2 > Tablespoons chocolate bits (Jimmies) or 2 Tablespoons > finely chopped nuts. > 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla > > Confectioner's sugar > > Pastry: Place the flour in a mound on a pastry board or counter. Make a > well in the center, and put in kthe salt, sugarm and dabs of the soft > butter. Add the wine, and with a fork start stirring in the center. > Keep on until most of the flour has been absorbed, and you have a paste > yyou can work with your hands. > > Knead the paste until it is smooth and has picked up almost all the > remaining flour. Roll it out no thicker than a noodle, and cut it into > 3 1/2" X 3 1/2" squares, if you are using 5-inch-long, 1-inch-diameter > cannoli forms. The diagonal of the squares should not be longer than > the forms, so adjust the size of the squares to the length of the forms. > > Place the cannoli forms diagonally on the squares. Wrap the pastry > around the forms, 1 corner over the other, and press the corners to hold > them together. If the corners don't stick with pressure, mositen a > finger with water, apply it to the contact point, and press again. > > Cover the bottom of a frying pan with about 3/4 inch of vegetable oil > and heat it to 375°. If you don't have a thermometer, drop a bit of > dough in. If it immediately starts to blister and turn a toast color, > the temperature is right. Because connoli cook very fast and swell in > size during the process, you may find 3 is a good number to cook at a > time. Put them in the hot oil, turning them carefully when one side is > done. Remove them as soon as they have become crisp, a uniform toast > color, and rather blistered all round. The forms, naturally, get > terribly hot: a pointed pliers is the easiest tool with which to lift > them out of the pan. Hold the form with the pliers and give a gentle > push with a fork to slip the fried cannolo off the form. Drain the > cannoli on paper towels. Put the forms aside to cool. When cooled, > rewrap, and continue frying until all are done. > > Cannoli, when cooked and left unfilled, will keep crisp a day or so in a > tin or a dry place. > > If you want to make more than 18 cannoli, the recipe doubles easily using > > 2 cups of flour > 1/2 teaspoon salt > 1 1/2 Tablespoons sugar > 2 tablespoons soft unsalted butter > 2/3 cups of white wine. > > If you are rolling on a pasta machine, which is ideal for this > particular dough, start at the highest number and bring it down to #3. > > Filling: Put the ricotta in a bowl and fold in the whipped cream, adding > the sugar as you fold. Chop the chocolate bits or nuts very fine and > fold all but about a teaspoonful. Add the vanilla. > > Using a spatula or a broad knife, fill the cannoli first from one end > and then from the other. Press the filling in gently to make sure the > center is full. Scrape each end to smooth out the cream and decorate > the ends by dipping them in the remaining chocolate bits or nuts. > > The cannoli should not be filled too long before serving, as that > softens the pastry. The filling, however, can be chilled, and both > parts of this elegant dessert can be made ahead of time and assembled > shortly before the meal. > > Dust with confectioner's sugar. > > > SOURCE: The Romagnolis' Table > MMMMmmm. Those look good. It's also nice to see mention of one of the Romagnoli's books. -- Jean B. |
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