Showing posts with label Dessert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dessert. Show all posts

Renaissance Dessert (Italian) - Mostaccioli a la Romana - Almond "Cakes"

 

Renaissance Dessert (Italian) - Mostaccioli a la Romana - Almond "Cakes"


"Epulario e segreti vari" (1602-1636) by Giovanni Del Turco



This recipe was inspired by Elisabetta Carli's recipes found on the "Coquinaria Art" website.


According to Elisabetta Carli, this is a variation of mostaccioli found in both Scappi and Messisibugo. Scappi refers to Mostaccioli a la Romana in his varied menus but does not give a recipe that I was able to locate. Don't you just love mysteries? He mentioned it so often I wanted to do it. I wish I could have access to the "Epulario e segreti vari", but I have been unable to find a copy as yet.


I cannot take credit for this recipe, I simply recreated what the author had already done. It is delicious and lasts a LONG time. I am still nibbling on it. I will provide both variations of the recipe. The original can be found on the "Coquinaria Art" website along with some additional information.


Mostaccioli alla romana 1


1 cup sugar (I used golden sugar)

1 1/4 cup flour

1 cup almond flour

3 egg yolks

2 tsp. cinnamon


Note: I found this to be a little bit dry, so I added enough water to make a batter.


1. Mix the sugar, flour, cinnamon, and almond flour, until well mixed.

2. Add egg yolks and if needed an additional tablespoon or two of water. You want a batter-like consistency.

3. Oil a 9x9 pan and spread the batter into it.

4. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 20 minutes

5. When cool, cut into diamond shapes.


Mostaccioli alla romana 2


3/4 cup sugar

1 1/2 cups almond flour

6 tbsp. dried fruit

3 egg yolks

3/4 cup flour

2 tsp. spice mix (cinnamon, clove, and coriander) or to taste


Prepare as above.


GTOD Vigil Recipe - Pressmetzen zu Ostern


Pressmetzen Zu Ostern, Precedella, Torten von Epffel and Sugared Mint Leaves


I'd like to send thanks to Volker Bach for the inspiration for the festive centerpiece of the Vigil Feast.  Shortly after I was asked to do the Vigil daybard, he shared a memory for an Easter Feast from 2021.  I knew that I needed to make this pastry and the Dockenmilch.  If you have not visited culina vetus you are doing yourself a disservice. The breadth of the material found there is staggering. 


The cookbook of Balthasar Staindl from Dillingen in 1544 entitled “How to bake the Pressmetzen at Easter”.

Pressmetzen zu Ostern (from Balthasar Staindl)

ccxxii Make a good gentle egg cheese (like a custard) and do not burn it. Put it on a draining board so that it sinks down (drains) well, then take the egg cheese and stir it apart with a spoon, add more eggs, a little sweet cream, also grate manchet bread into it, yellow it (with saffron), season it, add sufficient raisins. Then take manchet bread (semmel) dough from a baker, roll it out wide, put the above mentioned egg cheese on it, and wreath (kräntzel) it around and around (make a plaited edge). Bake it in an oven, but before you put it into the oven, add figs, put almonds on top. Anoint the wreath outside with yellowed (saffron-dyed) egg yolks and put it back into the oven briefly. These flecken (tarts) are blessed for Easter.

Pressmetzen zu Ostern (from Balthasar Staindl)

Ingredients:

2 1/2 cups flour
1 packet or 2 tsp. yeast
1/2 cup melted butter
1/2 cup lukewarm milk
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 tsp. salt 
1 egg

Stir together yeast, flour, sugar and salt.  Mix butter, milk and egg together. Add wet ingredients to the dry ingredients. The dough will be very sticky and "shaggy" at this point. Work the dough until it is smooth and pliable ( about five minutes).  Place into a lightly oiled bowl, cover and let it rise for 30 minutes.

Ingredients: egg cheese ( Ayerschotten ):

1 1/2 cups heavy cream
6 egg yolks or 3 large eggs
Pinch salt
1 tbsp sugar

Whisk eggs with milk, sugar and salt. Put in a saucepan and heat slowly stirring constantly until the liquid starts to boil.  Continue to stir until the whey separates from the egg cheese allow to cool to room temperature. Place a cheesecloth in a strainer, add the egg cheese, weight with a plate and add some cans to the top in order to press the cheese.  You want it as dry as possible before you add the remaining ingredients. Note: this can be made a day ahead. 

Other filling ingredients:

2 eggs
~1/3 cup breadcrumbs
1-2 tbps. sweet cream 
Pinch of saffron
1 tbsp. sugar
3/4 cup raisins
1/2 cup chopped almonds
1/4 cup chopped figs
1 egg yolk

Once the egg cheese is dry,  stir in remaining eggs,  breadcrumbs and sweet cream into the egg cheese. Fold in the raisins, color with saffron and sugar to taste.

Roll out the dough into a rectangle and spread the egg cheese filling on top. Fold the dough over and twist into a ring on a baking sheet lined with baking paper. Let this rest for another 20 minutes. Sprinkle with chopped figs and almonds. Bake in the hot oven for 20 minutes. Brush with egg yolk. Bake again for about 15 minutes.

Finalized Recipe - Eine Sauce aus Sauerkirschen - Sauce of Cherries - Cod Pal Germ 551

Here is another tried and true, well respected recipe that was located in two separate books. The first "Hienach volgt vonn dem kochenn vnd hat gemacht meyster Eberhart ein koch herczog Heinrichs zu Landshut." translated to "Hereafter follows (a text) about cooking,and Master Eberhart, a cook of Duke Henry of Landshut made it".  The second book, "Cod Pal Germ 551".  This is very similar to a cherry pudding recipe that I made often in the past so I find no need to test the recipe in advance.  The methodology is simple, with the exception of keeping it saucier then a pudding, the recipe is the same. 

Here is the finalized recipe that will be part of the "desserts" served in the second course of the 12th Night Feast


Item wiltu machen ein gutte salsenn von weichselnn,
so thue die weichsell in einen hafen vnd
secz die auff ein glut vnd laß sie siedenn vnd
laß dann wider erkaltenn vnd streich sie durch ein
tuch vnd thue sie dann wider in den hafenn vnd
secz sie auff ein glut vnd laß sie wol sieden
vnd rurr sie, piß sie dick wirt, vnd thue dann
honig dar an vnd geribens prot vnd negellein vnd
gut gestu:ep vnd thue sie in ein feßlein. Sie
pleibt dir gut drew oder vier iar.

1 A sauce of tart cherries

If you would make a good sauce of tart cherries, put the cherries into a pot, set it on the embers and let them boil. Cool them, pass them through a cloth, put them into a pot again, set it on the embers again and let them boil well. Stir it until it grows thick and add honey and grated bread and cloves and good spices enough. Put it into a small cask and it stays good for a year etc.

Ingredients

Tart Cherries
Honey
Grated Bread
Cloves
Good Spices - "Common Spice Powder"

Recipe

1 pound cherries
~ 1/4 cup honey
~ 1/4 cup bread crumbs
Pinch of cloves
1- 2 tsp. Good Spices - "Common Spice Powder"
**Pinch of salt for modern taste

I plan on using frozen cherries that have already been cleaned and stoned.  Place these in a pot on the stove and bring to a boil.  As they are frozen they should create their own "juice" but if you are afraid that it may burn add a tablespoon or so of water to get the process started.  Once the cherries have cooked until they are soft, remove them from the fire and allow them to cool.  Place them in a blender and blend, then strain through a sieve back into the pot and set them to boil again.  Add honey, and bread crumbs, pinch of salt and spices until you get the desired thickness.  This sauce can be made ahead of time, heated and served at the event.