![]() ![]() It's highly likely that your curd will be ugly - I've made this curd multiple times and each time it has been ghastly. It might seem like nothing is happening in there, but be patient! It'll thicken up on you REAL fast.Īt this point you might be thinking, good lord what a hideous color. Place on low heat and cook for about 10 minutes, until bubbling and thick. Wipe out the saucepan if necessary, and then pour this mixture back in. Slowly add a cup of the warm liquid to the eggs and whisk, then add this mixture back to the bowl with the rest of the liquid and mix well. Temper the curd**: lightly whisk the eggs and egg yolks in a small bowl. Add the butter to the liquid and stir until totally melted. Run this mixture through a food mill or mesh sieve and place a bowl underneath to collect the liquid. Your house will now smell even more amazing than it did before. Simmer for about 10 minutes, until all the sugar is dissolved and the cranberries begin to pop. Prepare the curd: while the tart shell is cooling down, place a saucepan over medium heat and add the cranberries, sugar, orange peel, and orange and lemon juices. Prick with a fork all over (also known as "docking"), and place in the freezer for 30 minutes to firm up. Our dough didn't, but if yours looks a little crumbly, add a teeny bit of cold water at a time until the dough comes together.įorm and freeze the crust: press the dough into the tart pan, using about half for the bottom and about half for the sides. I just used my hands at this point, so much easier. Add the nut/flour mixture and mix well to combine. Add the sugar and butter to a mixing bowl and cream for 1-2 minutes using a wooden spoon, until mixture is pale and thick. Add the rest of the flour and salt, and pulse a few more times to fully incorporate. Pulse until the mixture looks like cornmeal. Prepare the crust: to your food processor, add the hazelnuts and ½ cup of the flour. It's also okay if not all of the skin comes off - bits here are there are totally fine. Take out of the oven, allow to cool for a few minutes, then once they can be handled, remove the skins by placing the hazelnuts between a towel and rubbing vigorously. Pop in the oven for 10-15 minutes, until the skins go all dark and crackly. ![]() ![]() Roast the hazelnuts: preheat the oven to 325 and place the hazelnuts on a baking sheet. My wish for you this holiday season is to be surrounded by people who make you feel loved, who make you feel your best, who embrace your weird eating habits and eat sliced veggies and guac right alongside you. Okay, ex-rabbinical student tangent over. In a world that appears to be crumbling, this is the stuff that will keep it from disintegrating completely. Maybe that's really hard to do - maybe it feels like there isn't anything good, and maybe there isn't, but there is a strange beauty in being grateful for really tiny things, like, say, a morning cup of coffee, or corgis, or being able to get out of bed. Alyssa is the optimist in our work relationship, with me being what I'd like to think is a realist but is probably at least semi-cynic, so while I would like to say that Thanksgiving this year feels erroneous because everything is awful and Thanksgiving is actually a pretty problematic holiday, what I'm going to say is that, horrific holiday history aside, it feels important to recognize and take stock of the good in our lives. The sheer amount of madness circulating through the news is disorienting, and it can be really fucking hard to see anything remotely positive. Like, hello, how amazing does that sound.Īlright, here is where I get a bit woo-woo: totally unoriginal thought, but it really does feel like the world is crashing around us. Thinking back to the cranberry curd I made, I figured it was time to complete the original recipe, which calls for pouring it into a roasted hazelnut crust and baking it into a tart. Alyssa and I have been thinking about recipes for what seems like a year - we've already covered some buttery, carby sides, and now we're ready for some dessert. Thanksgiving is literally tomorrow, but in the blog world it feels like it's been Thanksgiving for WEEKS. It was SO unreal, like we actually couldn't believe how good it was. So, one day we decided to make cranberry curd to put on top of some vanilla ice cream - I found this recipe from The New York Times and just paid attention to the curd portion. We also both love ice cream almost as much as we love our boyfriends, so evenings usually end drunkenly with an empty container of Talenti (we are nothing if not classy). Key to these dinners is dessert - we both love to cook, so we're constantly trying new things in the kitchen. ![]()
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