Wednesday 15 June 2011

Vanilla Panna Cotta with Mixed Berries Compote


Definitely Amanda's favourite dessert Panna Cotta actually means cooked cream in Italian. It is very easy to do and the secret is not to boil the cream whilst cooking it. You can serve panna cotta with a mixed berries compôte or even with honey or a nice caramel sauce. Panna cotta is not only famous in Italy but is also very popular everywhere all over the globe. Before gelatin became widely available commercially old Italian recipes used to use boiled fish bones instead of the gelatin for panna cotta but nowadays the gelatin that we buy are pork or beef gelatin. We used icing sugar as it dissolves quicker but you can use regular or caster sugar. We also used a vanilla pod but you can also use a tsp of vanilla essence if you do not have it. As berries are in season at the minute we bought some nice delicious fresh strawberries, blueberries and raspberries hence the mixed berries compôte. :) So here is what you will need...

For the panna cotta
  • 500ml single cream/panna/fresh cream
  • 150g icing sugar 
  • 1 vanilla pod, cut in half lengthwise and seeds scraped
  • 3 gelatin leaves
For the compôte

  • 200g mixed berries (we used strawberries, blueberries & raspberries)
  • 75g caster sugar
Method

  1. Put the gelatin leaves in a bowl with cold water and leave to soak for about 5 minutes.
  2. Put the cream, sugar and vanilla pod & seeds in a pan and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Keep heating until steam comes out, but do not boil. Take the gelatin leaves and squeeze the water out of them. Add them to the pan until dissolved.
  3. Turn off the heat and strain the mixture through a fine sieve.
  4. Pour the cream into 4 moulds or small glasses. Set aside so they cool down at room temperature. When cool put them in the fridge for at least 5 hours.
  5. To prepare the compôte, put the berries and sugar in a pan and heat until the sugar dissolves and berries break down. Set aside and leave to cool.
  6. To serve the panna cotta, carefully run a sharp knife around the mould/glass and tip upside down on a saucer and spoon some compôte on the panna cotta.  
Enjoy!!
R&A

Sunday 12 June 2011

Pizza Caponata


This is one of my favourite pizza toppings. I missed the tinned caponata from Malta so I got my parents to send me some. As soon as it arrived I put Pizza Caponata on the menu :) As for all pizza toppings use as much or little ingredients as you want. I was introduced to this pizza topping when I used to work at Ir-Rokna Restaurant & Pizzeria which in my honest opinion does the best pizzas on the island using the traditional wood burning stone oven. Well, this is my Pizza Caponata. If you are doing your own dough just click here and follow the making the pizza dough steps...any problems feel free to let us know :)) So this is what I put on my Pizza Caponata...
  • Tomato sauce (not too much)
  • Grated mozzarella
  • Tuna chunks
  • Hard boiled eggs
  • Caponata
  • Anchovies
  • Green or black olives
  • Dried oregano
How to...
  1. Just spread a little tomato sauce, then the caponata followed by the anchovies, tuna, olives and eggs.
  2. Sprinkle the grated mozzarella cheese and oregano.
  3. Bake in a hot oven for about 15-20 minutes or until cheese is golden.
Enjoy!!
R&A