Showing posts with label honey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label honey. Show all posts

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Renaissance Spanish donuts

Donuts

Oranges of Xativa which are Cheesecakes

Toronjas de Xativa que son almojavans 
The book of cooking, Ruperto de Nola (Robert) Logrono, 1529

I experimented with a lot of versions of this recipe and finally settled on the one below.  These are essentially delicious renaissance sweet cheese donuts - I chose to form them into rings, which although it means they no longer resemble oranges, are definitely an acceptable shape according to the recipe which says that they can be formed into "whatever shapes and ostentations you wish". 

Original manuscript recipe
You must take new cheese and curd cheese, and grind them in a mortar together with eggs. Then take dough and knead those cheeses with the curd cheese, together with the dough. And when everything is incorporated and kneaded take a very clean casserole. And cast into it a good quantity of sweet pork fat or fine sweet oil. And when the pork grease or oil boils, make some balls from said dough, like toy balls or round oranges. And cast them into the casserole in such a manner that the ball goes floating in the casserole. And you can also make buñuelos (fritters) of the dough, or whatever shapes and ostentations you wish. And when they are the color of gold, take them out, and cast in as many others. And when everything is fried, put it on plates. And cast honey upon it, and on top of the honey [cast] ground sugar and cinnamon. 
However, note one thing: that you must put a bit of leaven in the cheeses and in the eggs, and in the other put flour. And when you make the balls, grease your hands with a little fine oil, and then [the balls] go to the casserole. And when it is inside, if the dough crackles it is a signal that it is very soft, and you must cast in more flour [into the dough] until it is harder. And when the fritter is made and fried, cast your honey on it, and [cast] sugar and cinnamon on top as is said above.

Redaction
renaissance donuts

150g new cheese (mozarella will do)
150g ricotta
2 eggs (~60g each)
2 cups of flour
1 tsp instant yeast*
cinnamon
sugar
honey
vegetable oil

Method

Grate the mozarella and grind in a large mortar with the ricotta and eggs. Stir in the yeast and allow to rest a little.
Measure the flour into a bowl and make a well in the centre**. Stir in the cheese and egg mixture to make a soft dough. Tip out onto a board and knead for 5 or six minutes.

Allow to sit somewhere warm for approximately an hour.

Form into balls and using your thumb press a hole in through the middle. Allow to rest for 20 minutes or so.

Fry at 190° C until golden brown. Drizzle with honey while hot and sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar.  Best eaten hot.

 

Notes
*As well as experimenting with instant yeast I also made this recipe using a sour-dough starter. It worked well but as is typical with sour-doughs, it took basically a whole day to make.

**The recipe says to mix the wet ingredients with a dough – I did make a version mixing the wet ingredients with a simple water and flour dough. The resulting 'donuts' were pretty good but it was very awkward to mix the two. As the final results were almost identical, I have settled on using the flour.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Doucettes - Honey and saffron tarts

Doucettes: From the Harlein collection in the British Library, manuscript 279 (which is 15th century), recipe XV in the "Vyaunde Furnez"/"Dyuerse Bake Metis" section. 

This recipe is one of the most classic and popular tarts ever served at medieval events, and for good reason - when made well they are glorious - lightly sweet and delicate honeyed tarts with a beautiful golden tint. In this recipe I am not going to get into the pie crust itself - that discussion is for another day, but am giving you a nice easy recipe for the contents.  Give it a try!  I use honey rather than sugar because I love that special flavour you get from honey, but you can make it with sugar instead. 

Doucettes -- Take Creme a gode cupfulle & put it on a straynoure; (th)anne take (y)olkys of Eyroun & put (th)er-to, & a lytel mylke; (th)en strayne it (th)orw a straynoure into a bolle; (th)en take Sugre y-now, & put (th)er-to, or ellys hony forde faute of Sugre, (th)an coloure it with Safroun; (th)an take (th)in cofyns, & put in (th)e ovens lere, & lat hem ben hardyd; (th)an take a dysshe y-fastenyd on (th) pelys ende; & pore (th)in comade in-to (th)e dyssche, & fro (th)e dyssche in-to (th)e cofyns; & when (th) don a-ryse wel, take hem out, & serue hem forth."

Doucettes
Doucettes decorated with almonds

Doucettes  -- Take a good cupful of cream and put it through a strainer, then take yolks of eggs and add them to it, and a little milk, then strain it through a strainer  into a bowl. Then take enough sugar, and add it, or honey in stead of sugar, then color it with saffron; then take your coffins(crusts), and put them in the oven empty, and let them harden, then take a dish fastened to the end of your baking peel and pour your filling into the dish, and from the dish into the coffins, and when they rise well, take them out, and serve them forth.

Redaction by Kiriel (for one disposable pie tray)

2 large egg yolks
125mls cream
75ml milk
2 tsp honey
3 strands of saffron

Pre-bake a pie shell. Stir the egg yolks,cream, milk and honey till well blended (don't whisk or beat). Grind your saffron in a mortar and pestle (adding just a quarter of a teaspoon of milk into the pestle can help extract the colour) and add the powder to the liquid ingredients. 

Pour into the hot pie shell and bake in a moderate oven for about 20 minutes to half an hour, until the mixture is set.  If you are unsure about the set, give the tart a very gentle shake - it should wobble just a little. This isn't a very sweet tart, and if you like things to be sweet, you could up the honey a touch. *

What to do with the 2 egg whites? I make macaroons or marzipans!




* ps I am told these freeze and defrost perfectly!