Monday, August 12, 2013

Gooseberry Clafoutis with a Brown Sugar Streusel...... RESD DESSERT!

Who doesn't love Gooseberries?? They are after all God's personal little gifts of love from Nature to us. This week I'll be sharing the stunning dessert we served up at the first RESD event earlier this month.
This is definitely a winner and should be tried while gooseberries are still in season.
We plated up individual little Gooseberry Clafoutis with a gooseberry puree and a brown sugar streusel made from scratch. I personally prefer all Clafoutis with nice warm custard or homemade ice cream. As you know I’m always saying that repetitive flavours are the way to go, whenever you’re making any dish. Clafoutis are a very famous French Custard dessert that calls for some flour to the custard mixture before it gets poured over the chosen fruit. When baked it has a tendency to puff up almost like a soufflĂ© and as it cools it will shrink back a little.

Gooseberry Clafoutis with a Brown Sugar Streusel

For the Clafoutis you’ll need:

·         Butter, softened to butter ramekins

·         500 ml full cream milk

·         135 g sugar

·         7.5 ml vanilla – one fresh vanilla pod deseeded

·         9 eggs – we used duck eggs

·         2 ml salt

·         180g Flour

·         Icing sugar, for dusting

method:

1.       Pre heat oven to 190 ̊C.  Spread baking dish (ramekins) with butter; set aside. Combine milk, sugar, vanilla, eggs, and salt in a blender. Blend for a few seconds to mix ingredients, then add flour and blend until smooth, about 1 minute. For silky smooth custard stain the mixture through a sieve to remove any small lumps.

2.       Pour batter into buttered ramekins, and then distribute gooseberries evenly over top. Bake until a skewer inserted into batter comes out clean and a golden brown crust has formed on top and bottom of Clafoutis, about 30 minutes. Dust with confectioners' sugar before serving.

 
 
For the Streusel you’ll need:

·         62.5ml Butter

·         125ml  Flour

·         62.5ml Demarera sugar

·         ½Tsp  Ground Cinnamon

·         125ml Oats

METHOD:

1.        Rub the ingredients together until it resembles a crumble topping and bake on a baking sheet in the oven at 190 ̊ C for 15 – 20 minutes. Once cooked crumble the Streusel on top of the Clafoutis and serve.
 
If you don't want to make the streusel, just serve the Clafoutis with a warm custard or even a scoop of good quality vanilla ice cream....

Monday, August 05, 2013

RESD Event - Duck Confit for the main course by Madelein Cloete


As you all know by now this past weekend we had our RESD event at the prestigious Château de Nates. It was truly a night to remember! I thought it only fit to share one of the excellent recipes we served up, Duck Confit. Strange to many but delicious to thousands, we tend to forget that a 100 years ago duck was a regular and a staple in the Afrikaans home on Sundays. I don’t know why duck fell out of fashion (and has become the symbol of Chinese take away) as it is such a healthy and delicate choice of poultry. Here is a true Parisian favourite and a delicacy on note. Madelein Cloete from The Professional Cooking Academy prepared this for the main course.

Duck Confit

You’ll Need:

  • 4 duck leg portions with thighs attached
  • 20 ml fine salt
  • 5 ml freshly ground black pepper
  • 10 garlic cloves
  • 4 bay leaves
  • 8 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 7.5 ml whole black peppercorns
  • 5 ml fine salt
  • 4 cups melted duck fat / olive oil (healthier option)

Method:

Lay the leg portions on a platter, skin side down. Sprinkle with 15 ml of the salt and black pepper. Place the garlic cloves, bay leaves, and sprigs of thyme on each of 2 leg portions. Lay the remaining 2 leg portions, flesh to flesh, on top. Put the reserved fat from the ducks in the bottom of a glass or plastic container. Top with the sandwiched leg portions. Sprinkle with the remaining teaspoon kosher salt. Cover and refrigerate for 12 hours.

Preheat the oven to 110 ̊C.

Remove the duck from the refrigerator. Remove the garlic, bay leaves, thyme, and duck fat and reserve. Rinse the duck with cool water, rubbing off some of the salt and pepper. Pat the duck leg dry with a paper towel.

Put the reserved garlic, bay leaves, thyme, and duck fat in the bottom of a roasting tray. Sprinkle evenly with the peppercorns and salt. Lay the duck on top, skin side down. Add the olive oil. Cover and bake for 6 to 10 hours, or until the meat pulls away from the bone.

Remove the duck from the fat. Strain the fat and reserve. Pick the meat from the bones and place it in a stoneware container. Cover the meat with some of the strained fat, making a 1/4-inch layer. The duck Confit can be stored in the refrigerator for up to one month.

The excess oil can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator and used like butter for cooking. The tinge of duck taste in the oil is wonderful and I use the oil to roast potatoes, cook green beans, and pan-fry steak.

 I know what you’re thinking…… this will take forever to make! But style and taste come at a cost and dishes like these are fit for royalty! It is well worth the time and effort.

You can order an entire range of Duck products (Fresh Meat, Duck Eggs, Duck Fat, Duck Livers and loads more) from Elsa, at E-Duck Farms. Contact Elsa on 0820450482

For more of my recipes, follow my SWEETMAFIA-SA Blog by just logging onto my website www.sweetmafia-sa.com