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- Newsgroups: rec.food.recipes
- From: mark@uvmark.uucp (Mark Baldridge)
- Subject: Cannoli
- Message-ID: <1993Jul26.144524.50749@uvmark.uucp>
- Organization: VMARK Software, Inc.
- References: <CAL78n.6Dt@ansoft.com>
- Date: Mon, 26 Jul 93 14:45:24 GMT
-
-
- I took an Italian bread and pastry course a few years ago from the owner of
- a bakery in our area that has articles describing his "Best Cannoli in the
- Metrowest region"
-
- Filling:
-
- 2 lb tub of Ricotta cheese
- 1 cup sugar (I use 1/2 cup to 2/3 cup because I otherwise I find it too sweet)
- 2 tsp vanilla
-
- The *secret* to making a good cannoli filling is to drain the ricotta. The
- gunk you get in the stores has too much water in it. Put it in the
- refrigerator in a colander overnight, or up to a day ahead of using it.
- You will get as much as a cup of liquid out of it, so prepare accordingly.
-
- Now, for those mud pie fanatics, add the sugar to the drained ricotta (no
- in a bowl silly, not in the colander) and mush it up with your hands. Oh, all
- right, I suppose you can stir it up with an implement, but that takes all of
- the fun out of it. Also add the vanilla. If you let this set and disolve
- the sugar and then stir it up again, voila, Cannoli filling.
-
- Here, I assume you have cannoli shell ready. My recipe for these is not handy.
- Filling the shells is best left to the last moment, since the remaining liquid
- in the filling will make the shells soggy. You can shove the goo into the
- shells with a spoon from one or both ends. They can be decorated with
- chocolate flakes, shaved almonds dusted in cinamon sugar, or for the purist,
- simply immediately eaten. John the Baker used ground peanuts for 1/8" nugget
- sized nuts to sprinkle on the filling that sticks out the end of the shell.
- (He also used green food coloring on them??)
-
- Mark
-
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-