A note on white chocolate:
Real White Chocolate has as one of its main ingredients cocoa butter - in fact, that is what it is, typically with vanilla, emulsifiers, sugar and a touch of salt thrown in. If you don't see cocoa butter in the first 3 ingredients on the label, find another brand. White chocolate chips usually do not contain an appropriate amount of cocoa butter. The cocoa butter is what gives this dessert component it's richness and staying power (plus whatever health benefits it has to offer).
A few notes on whipping cream:
To successfully whip cream every time, do the following:
1. 10-15 minutes before starting, place the whipping cream in the freezer.
2. If there is room, put the metal (usually aluminum) in the freezer too. If you don't have the room, half fill the bowl with ice cubes and let it sit on the counter. Dump the ice, drain and wipe dry before adding cream.
3. Cream of Tartar will help you keep those hard earned stiff peaks keep more than an hour, and at higher temperatures. It doesn't take much, though how much depends on other ingredients.
White Chocolate Mousse
1. Acquire:
a. 2 Pints of whipping cream
b. 4 bars of white chocolate (do not use chips!!! - see above).
c. Sea salt
d. Vanilla
e. Cream of tartar
2. Place cream in freezer for 15 minutes and place ice in mixing bowl to prep
3. Melt white chocolate in small pot (see option 2 below)
4. Whip cream until the peaks are very stiff cream of tartar, ¼ teaspoon of salt and 1 teaspoon of vanilla. Option: add 2 oz of Kahlua or Baileys Irish Cream.
5. Slowly blend chocolate mix into the cream. When the mixture stands on its own (starts to break into fragments), you are done.
6. Place in a container and refrigerate until ready to serve.
Options:
1. Raspberry melba sauce:
a. Take 1 package of Birdseye frozen raspberries in a sweetened sauce and put it blender with 1 tablespoon of lemon juice and 4 oz of a berry brandy (your choice, blackberry works well).
b. Pour sparingly over your dessert.
c. (For extra points, press the pureed mix through cheese cloth to remove the seeds.)
2. Bittersweet chocolate:
a. Take a small non-stick pot (or double boiler if you have one, break up bittersweet chocolate bars (as needed, 4 should be sufficient) and place in pot. Turn burner (preferably gas) on to lowest flame. Hold pot over the flame (off the burner), or insert in double boiler so it heats slowly and uniformly to melt the chocolate, stirring at least once a minute (push unmelted chocolate down into the melted chocolate to speed melt). Keep warm and melted until serving where you can drizzle it over the mousse and Raspberry sauce. If you have a food warmer, that can be used, or turn the oven on to 350, the heat on the stove top should be sufficient to keep the chocolate melted.
A surefire winning presentation is the following:
- Place your favorite frozen fruit around the bottom and sides (about 2/3s way up) a sherry snifter.
- Add the white chocolate mousse to cover the fruit
- Drizzle melted bittersweet chocolate over the mixture
- Cover with the Raspberry melba sauce.
- Place in frig until ready to consume.
Next recipe: Roast Beef ala John (apologies)
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