Showing posts with label Newman's Own Organics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newman's Own Organics. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Taste This Angel Food Cake



Spouse and I have recently gone on a bender with the chocolate from Newman's Own Organics. He snapped up the Milk Chocolate; I've waltzed with the Orange Dark, which I whistled over in the One Sassy Tart post. Remember that our willingness to consume large quantities of choc is all for the sake of research -with the view that life is too short to waste on lifeless and heartless imitators.

If you've got a dozen eggs and a good orange, may I make a recommend? Try this at home: a chocolate version of an angel food cake that was considered a favorite of OSCAR-winner Paul Newman's.

Toothfully, we thank the Newman's Own Organics team for another wonderful way to use their product.


DAD'S FAVORITE CHOCOLATE ANGEL FOOD CAKE


This cake is light as air, low in fat, and very easy to make. The trick is to prepare all the ingredients in advance.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

1 cup all-purpose flour

11/4 cups sugar

12 egg whites

1/2 tsp. salt

1 Tbsp. lemon juice

3 tsp. vanilla

11/2 3-oz. dark orange chocolate bars or 3 1.2 oz. Newman's Own Organics Dark Orange Chocolate bars

1 Tbsp. orange rind


Grate 11/2 3-oz. or 3 1.2-oz. Newman's Own Organics' chocolate bars on a cheese grater.

Sift 1 cup all-purpose flour. Then sift flour three more times with 1/4 cup sugar and 1/2 tsp. salt. Sifting onto wax paper makes it easier. Separate 12 egg whites (easily done by cracking egg into hand and allowing whites to run through fingers). Allow egg whites to reach room temperature (15 minutes). Beat whites until frothy. Add 1 Tbsp. lemon juice. Beat until soft peaks form. Sprinkle sugar lightly onto whites 1/4 cup at a time and continue beating at medium speed. Sift 1/4 cup flour/sugar mixture over whites and gently fold in by hand. Add

3 tsp. vanilla and 1 Tbsp. grated orange rind. Alternate flour/sugar mixture and grated chocolate until incorporated. Make sure to fold in gently to avoid reducing volume of egg whites.

Tip: I find it best to use your hand with your fingers spead to fold in the ingredients. It's more effective than using a spatula.

Pour into clean, dry tube pan and bake for 45 minutes until lightly browned. Knife inserted into center should be clean when removed.

Remove from oven and invert pan. Allow to cool 1/2 hour to 45 minutes. Run knife around edges and center of tube to remove.

Serve with strawberries and lightly sweetened whipped cream or for real decadence serve with hot chocolate fudge sauce and ice cream.


Mama Mia adds: You can finely chop the chocolate if grating gets out of hand. Sometimes when you get down to those last little hunks of choc, well, you know, it can be hard to grate all the way. Keep going. The results are worth it!

(Photo taken with Cosmos from our yard, atop Grandmother Mimi's antique marble turtle table, by John H. Ostdick)

Monday, November 16, 2009

A Rose Gets in a Jam



Remember our discussion about edible flowers? In the post "Please Don't Eat the Daisies," Jeanne told you which flowers are safe to use in foods. If you raise your roses organically, without synthetic fertilizers or herbicides, why not play with them? I said I would ask a certain woman I was interviewing as to whether she ate the flowers from her garden.

To my delight, Nell Newman gave me a wonderful tip.

"I do refrigerator jam, where you make a sugar syrup. I cut up strawberries, I put them in a pan, I put some sugar in, I put a little bit of water and maybe a little tiny bit of lemon juice in, and I just simmer it, I don’t jell it, and I turn it off. If I’ve got a good rose, I’ll take one rose bud and pull the petals off and just chiffonade them into the warm jam and push it under and mix it up. It makes the color even more red with the essence of rose, and it’s so delightful. It's lovely."

She makes it sound so beautiful, like life in an English tearoom, somehow. Nell is the president and co-founder of Newman's Own Organics, and she's chief taste tester for the more than 150 products her company makes, all with certified organic ingredients. She spends a lot of time visiting farmers markets and talking with growers; she's passionate about the natural world and living a "slow food" lifestyle, taking the time to sit down with the family and have a nice meal - cherishing the food as much as you cherish the people you serve it to. (By the way, you can learn more about "slow food," there's an organization.)

We talked about roses in particular, and she is old school when it comes to a good rose.

"I only plant roses that smell good. I am appalled that the rose industry has bred the scent out of every rose. It’s mind-boggling. They’ve actually finally now bred the scent out of the purple rose. It’s taken them 40 some-odd years."

Bloomin' idiots.


(Photo by John H. Ostdick)

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

One Sassy Tart



It's a glorious day when the baking you want to do can be justified as "research" for an upcoming story assignment. I love rooting out details that enrich a story - I really love tasting the details, smelling the details, finding the essences that makes a story authentic.

Imagine my grinning jaw when I decided to test the "Drowning Pool of Praline in a Chocolate Tart" recipe tucked in the back of Paul Newman's book In Pursuit of the Common Good. The subtitle is: Twenty-five Years of Improving the World, One Bottle of Salad Dressing at a Time. Aha! So what's a sweet tart like this doing in a place like that?

Written with his partner A. E. Hotchner, Newman's book is a wonderful, witty read packed with delicious anecdotes and quotes like this one:

"Whenever I do something good, right away I've got to do something bad so I know I'm not going to pieces." The book reminds us that the famous salad dressing started out as a lark, a way to poke fun at how traditional dressings hit the stores in a tightly controlled and competitive marketplace.

This is not a book review, the subject is a sassy tart - and the reason I got into book was that I was scheduled to speak with Nell Newman, Paul's daughter, who co-founded Newman's Own Organics with Peter Meehan. The tart recipe contains one of her signature products - Orange Dark Chocolate - 100% premium organic chocolate.

Research time!

The buttery crust has a shortbread-style crunch that plays well opposite the chewy caramel - and the orange note in the chocolate a delightful counter to the caramel sweetness. This is an elegant dessert best served tableside, not for a tailgate, because you don't want it softening up. I've included the recipe's history here, exactly as it was provided to Dueling Margaritas (and we thank you!).

A DROWNING POOL OF PRALINE IN A CHOCOLATE TART


Our (Newman's Own Organics) organic chocolate came up the big winner when Kaija Keel of Los Angeles used it to win the $50,000 Grand Prize in the Ninth Annual Newman's Own/Good Housekeeping Recipe Contest. Kaija, a professional artist, created this heavenly dessert by combining her own creativity with the recipes handed down by her grandmother. She named it A Drowning Pool of Praline in a Chocolate Tart as a salute to Paul Newman's 1975 film. Kaija donated her prize money to the Delta Society in Los Angeles, an organization that trains therapy animals for the critically ill and physically challenged. She and her dog Garbo are enthusiastic volunteers. The Delta Society will use the prize to expand its training programs to reach even more people.


Tart Shell

3/4 cup butter ( 1 1/2 sticks) softened

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour

1/3 cup confectioners' sugar



Praline-Chocolate Filling

2 bars (3 ounce each) Newman's Own Organics Chocolate, (Sweet Dark Chocolate or Sweet Dark Chocolate or Sweet Dark Chocolate with Orange Oil), broken into pieces

3/4 cup heavy or whipping cream

1 bag (9 1/4 ounce) caramels, unwrapped

1 1/2 cups pecans, toasted and coarsely chopped


Preheat oven to 375 F.


Prepare Tart Shell

Pulse together all tart shell ingredients in a food processor until they form moist crumbs. Sprinkle crumbs in 9-inch tart pan with removable bottom. Press together to form crust on bottom and up sides; prick dough all over with fork. Line tart shell with foil and fill with pie weights, dried beans, or uncooked rice. Bake for 25 minutes. Remove foil and weights and bake for another 15-20 minutes until golden. Press crust with back of spoon if it puffs, and loosely cover dark spots with foil.


Prepare Praline-Chocolate Filling

Combine chocolate and 1/4 cup cream in 1-quart saucepan. Melt, stirring frequently over medium-low heat. Pour chocolate mixture, reserving 2 tablespoons, in bottom of cooled crust; spread evenly. Chill 20 minutes (chill reserved 2 tablespoons also).

In 2-quart saucepan over medium-low heat, heat caramels and remaining 1/2 cup cream until melted and smooth, stirring occasionally. Sir in pecans and quickly pour over chocolate layer. Spread evenly.

In 1-quart saucepan, over low heat, heat reserved chocolate mixture 1 to 2 minutes, stirring until melted, or microwave 10 seconds. Using a fork, drizzle in zigzag pattern over top of tart. Chill at least 1 hour. Store in refrigerator.

Makes 24 servings

Mama Mia's note: The bars are available in 3.25 oz. and 2.25 oz. sizes, so buy 2 bars if you're using the bigger bars for the chocolate sauce, or 3 bars if you're using the smaller size bar. Depending on your fridge, you may need more than an hour to "set" the tart, so make this recipe ahead of your serving schedule. We popped it in the freezer a few minutes to finish the job.

Zoot alors, Jeanne, you must "research" this recipe.

PS: Can't show you the tart. We "researched" it fully. Thus you get the alternate photo from my kitchen.