Sweet • Sour • Savory

Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Homemade Vanilla Bean Paste

Vegetarian, vegan, technique, Spices, Preserve, Frostings & FillingsTove Balle-PedersenComment
Homemade Vanilla Bean Paste

Homemade Vanilla Bean Paste

When I first moved to California, one of the things I had a hard time finding, was vanilla beans. In Denmark I never used vanilla extract, only real vanilla beans or vanilla sugar. So I always got vanilla beans sent to me in Care Packages. Eventually I discovered vanilla bean paste, and used that for most things, except for vanilla wreaths and our Christmas dessert Risalamande. Here I wanted the truer delicate vanilla flavors from the beans. Around the month of December you can find ok vanilla beans, but they aren’t as thick and plump, as the onc’s I got from Denmark. Somehow I got dragged into a vanilla cult, and now i buy the most beautiful thick and plump vanilla beans to a reasonable price online. Access to great vanilla beans, made me want to try making my own vanilla bean paste without any extract, and this recipe from Karas Couture Cakes is the most clean recipe i have found.

Makes about 250-300 ml (8½-10 fl oz)

Ingredients:

  • 16 whole vanilla beans

  • 250 g water

  • 300 g sugar

  • 50 g glucose

Directions:

Cut off the ends of the beans, you can save these, dry them and use them for vanilla sugar.

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Chop the beans into a 1/2-inch (~1cm) long pieces. Using a food processor, spice grinder or Vitamix blender, grind the beans with about half the sugar. Work in batches, so you don’t overheat machinery or the vanilla and sugar mixture. You are looking for a grey/brown sandy looking mixture.

In a medium saucepan mix the rest of the sugar, water and glucose, and heat it to a boil, let it boil for a few minutes. Add the vanilla sugar mixture to the saucepan, and let it boil for another 2 minutes, before removing from the heat.

Strain the vanilla through a fine meshed sieve, and use a flexible spatula to massage as much of the paste through the sieve. You can save this pulp and use it to make extract or vanilla sugar. I didn’t do that as I allready had some extract brewing and didn’t need more.

Pour the vanilla bean paste into clean scolded glass containers, and close the lids tightly when completely cooled. Store the vanilla bean paste in a dark place like a pantry.

DO NOT REFRIGERATE

Use vanilla bean paste in cakes, custard, ice cream, and where you would use vanilla sugar or extract.

Enjoy!

Fastelavnsboller - Lent Buns

Cake, Desserts, HolidayTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
Fastelavnsboller, Lent Buns.

Fastelavnsboller, Lent Buns.

Fastelavnsboller comes in many shapes and sizes. There are the pastry kind, filled with custard, or a fruit jam, the choux pastry kind, filled with a custard or another whipped cream-based filling, or the ones made with an enriched dough baked with remonce and/or custard. This one is a mix of the two latter ones. It’s basically an enriched dough with remonce and filled with a raspberry whipped cream.

Back in Denmark this year have been crazy, and the newest trend is selling the most fancy fastelavnsboller. There are huge lines to the bakeries to get your hands on these cakes, maybe the Corona restrictions made people want to have some extra special, I don’t know. Here is my contribution to this craziness.

Makes 15-18

Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 500 ml milk

  • 150 g butter, salted

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 50 g fresh compressed yeast, or 4 teaspoons dry yeast

  • 800 g all-purpose flour (hold some back, to see if the dough need it all)

  • 150 g sugar

  • 1 teaspoon ground cardamom

  • 1 pinch of salt

Remonce:

  • 75 g butter, salted, room-temperature

  • 75 g sugar

  • 75 g marzipan or almond paste (with over 60% almonds)

Raspberry whipped cream:

  • 500 ml heavy whipping cream

  • 4 tablespoons raspberry jam

  • 2 teaspoons chambord (raspberry liqueur)

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 1 tablespoon confectionery (powdered) sugar

Directions:

Remonce:

Mix the sugar and marzipan well. Add butter little by little until it’s just incorporated. Be careful not to over mix or the remonce will be runny when baked.

Dough:

In a large bowl mix most of the flour, I save about 1 cup, with the rest of the dry ingredients including the dry yeast if using.

In a saucepan heat milk and butter until finger warm, you want all the butter melted, remove pan from heat. Mix in the fresh compressed yeast, if using, and vanilla bean paste.

Mix in the milk/butter mixture and knead the dough in a stand mixer on medium for about 10 minutes until you have a soft, shiny elastic dough. The remaining flour should be added while kneading, if needed. Let the dough rise in a covered bowl for about 90 minutes until it doubled in size.

Divide the dough in two, roll each portion into a rectangle and divide it into 9 squares.

Preheat the oven for 400℉ (200℃).

Put a teaspoon remonce in the center of each square. Fold the four corners up to the center and press to seal all edges, letting the air inside escape. Put fastelavnsboller onto a parchment paper lined baking sheets with joint side down. Leave to rise covered for about 30 minutes. Brush with egg wash  and bake for about 10-12 minutes until golden. Let the bun cool completely, before cutting and filling.

Raspberry whipped cream:

Mix the raspberry jam with the liqueur and vanilla bean paste in a little bowl and set aside. Whip the heavy whipping cream with the sugar until you have s medium stiff cream. Gently fold in the raspberry mixture, and put the cream into a piping bag with a star tip.

Cut the top of the buns, and pipe some raspberry cream inside, place the top back on, put a little dot of cream on the top as decoration and sprinkle with freeze-dried raspberry or confectionary/powdered sugar. Serve the fastelavnsbolle with a nice cup warm tea or coffee.

Enjoy!

Cinnamon Custard Rolls

Breakfast, Brunch, Cake, DessertsTove Balle-PedersenComment
Cinnamon Custard Rolls

Cinnamon Custard Rolls

I totally forgot about custard cinnamon rolls, until I stumbled upon a picture of them when browsing on Pinterest. Then I decided to try to make my version, with a vanilla custard, using some of my newly purchased plumb vanillas beans. Honestly the custard could be eaten, directly out of the saucepan, maybe with some berries. But it worked perfectly in the cinnamon rolls too. Transporting me back to my childhood. These cinnamon rolls is a great updated version to the traditional cinnamon rolls, making them a bit more fancy.

I would recommend to remove the rolls from the oven a bit earlier than I did, to prevent the custard from getting browned.

Makes 18-20 rolls.

Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 50 g live yeast ( 4 teaspoons dry yeast)

  • 175 g butter, salted

  • 500 ml milk

  • 175 g sugar

  • 2 teaspoons cardamom

  • 1 teaspoon salt

  • 800-850 g all-purpose flour

  • 1 egg, for egg wash

Vanilla Custard:

  • 200 ml milk

  • 1 vanilla bean, the seeds (or caviar) from (or use 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste or extract)

  • 3 tablespoons sugar

  • 2 egg yolks

  • 3 teaspoons cornstarch

Cinnamon Remounce:

  • 150 g butter, salted and room temperature

  • 100 g brown sugar

  • 2 tablespoons cinnamon

Chocolate Icing:

  • 85 g confectionary (powdered) sugar

  • 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa

  • about 2 tablespoons varm water

Directions:

Dough:

Mix the dry ingredients in a bowl and set aside.

Warm the milk in a saucepan until finger-warm, remove pan from the heat. Melt the butter in the warm milk. Crumble the yeast into the warm milk and stir to dissolve. 

Add the liquid to the dry ingredients, and knead the dough for 3 minutes, to form an elastic dough. 

Let the dough rise for about 60 minutes until doubled in size. 

Cinnamon Remounce:

Mix all the ingredients with a hand mixer, until smooth and creamy, set aside.

Vanilla Custard:

if using a vanilla bean, split the bean and scrape the seeds (caviar) out. Mix the seeds with some of the sugar, this will help separating the seeds, and spread them throughout the custard. Place the empty bean in the milk in a small saucepan, and heat the milk until it is warm, but not boiling. Remove from heat, and let sit to cool down and the bean to infuse the milk with additional vanilla flavor. When milk is room temperature, remove bean from the milk. Whisk egg yolks, sugar, vanilla seeds, and cornstarch into the paste, and add it to the milk. Heat the milk mixture up over medium heat, while whisking until it thickens and starts boiling. Transfer the custard into a shallow bowl, and cover it with plastic wrap. Place the the wrap directly on top of the custard, so it won’t form a skin. Let the custard cool in the fridge until you need it.

Making the Rolls:

Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface, and roll it to a large rectangle (16x16 inches/40x40 cm).

Spread the filling in a thin layer onto the dough, leaving a thin edge closest to yourself, without filling.

Roll the dough into a large log, pinching edges together to seal. Cut the log into 20-24 slices. Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.

Place the slices fairly close together. Cover and leave to rise for another 30 minutes. 

Preheat the oven to 400℉ (200℃) - I used convection when baking these, heat oven to bake 420℉ (215℃) if you don't have a convection oven.

Brush the rolls with egg wash.

With a little spoon make a little dent/well in the middle of the cinnamon roll. Place about a teaspoon of the custard in each well.

Bake the rolls for 10-14 minutes until golden brown. 

Leave them to cool in the pan. 

Chocolate Icing:

Mix sugar ans cocoa with just enough water for it to form a tragic paste.

Frost the cinnamon rolls before serving.

Enjoy!

Danish Pancakes version 2 - Crepes

Brunch, Desserts, DinnerTove Balle-PedersenComment
Danish pancakes.

Danish pancakes.

Danish pancakes are thin like crepes, and is kinda of a dessert. But in my family we occasionally had pancakes for dinner. Maybe not an healthy option, but it was not on a regular basis.

I like my pancakes to be soft like the ones my mom made, but if you want the edges to be a little crispy (the edges mostly) then add a tablespoon regular beer, like a Pilsner. My mom didn’t do that, maybe because we rarely had any beer in the house, so I don’t do that either.

Right now this is my favorite recipe for Danish pancakes. I often make a double portion, and save the extra in the freezer, for an easy treat another day. When freezing fold each pancake in quarters, with parchment paper between each pancake, so you easy can defrost one or two at a time.

Makes 10-12.

Ingredients:

  • 4 eggs

  • 400 ml milk

  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste or extract

  • 4 tablespoons sugar

  • 165 g all-purpose flour

  • 1 pinch salt

Directions:

Add all the ingredients to the blender and blend it until a smooth batter. If you don’t have a blender, just whisk it by hand, until you get a lump free batter.

Heat a skillet over medium heat. Brush the skillet with a small amount of butter. Using a ladle, pour just enough batter to cover the bottom of the pan, tipping it to coat evenly. Place pan back on heat and cook until batter is set and turned light brown. Flip the crepe with a spatula and cook the other side for additional 30 seconds to 1 minute. Transfer cooked crepe to a plate and continue with the rest of the batter, brushing the pan with more butter as needed and stacking finished crepes on top of each other.

Serve the crepes with sugar, jam, or even ice cream.

Enjoy!

Pleated Christmas Heart Cookies

Christmas, Cookies, HolidayTove Balle-Pedersen2 Comments
Pleated Christmas heart cookies

Pleated Christmas heart cookies

The pleaded or weaved heart is quintessential Christmas for Danes. The pleaded Christmas heart is said to contributed to the Danish Storyteller H.C. Andersen. The oldest known heart is kept at The H.C. Andersen Museum in Odense. As a child we learned to make pleaded Christmas hearts, and we placed them on the Christmas tree. Last year I saw someone make cookies like the pleaded hearts, I knew I wanted to make some. I took offset in the checkerboard cookies, and replacing the cocoa with food coloring.

Ingredients:

Dough:

  • 340 g butter, salted and room temperature

  • 200 g confectionary sugar (powder sugar)

  • 90 g almonds, bleached and grounded

  • 2 egg yolk

  • 2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

  • 500 g all-purpose flour

  • Red food gel coloring, for the red part of the dough

DIRECTIONS:

Cream the butter until soft and creamy. Add the confectionery sugar, mix until fully combined, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed. Add the ground almonds, egg yolks, vanilla and flour, and mix until just blended. Be careful not to over mix the dough. Remove half of the dough, and mix the other half with red food coloring, until you get a bright red. I used Christmas red Wilton gel color, and I had to use most of the little jar, to get the right color. Wrap the doughs in plastic film and places dough in the refrigerator for about 30 minutes, so the butter firms up, making it easier top work with.

Divide each color in 2, rolling one half into a log with a 1-inch (3 cm) diameter. The other half form it into flat squares. Cover the log and square in plastic wrap, and put it back in the refrigerator. Roll each flat square of the dough out between 2 pieces of parchment paper, to a little under ⅓-inch (9 mm) thickness. Place the dough on a baking sheet, and place it back in the refrigerator for about 1 hour.

Assemble the cookies:

Remove one of  the doughs from the refrigerator, peel off the paper from both sides and set the dough onto a fresh sheet of parchment. Using a sharp knife, slice the dough lengthwise into square strips about ⅓ inch (9 mm) wide. Place the dough strips in the refrigerator, while repeating the other dough.

Remove dough strips from the refrigerator. Lay a strip of the white dough lengthwise on the baking sheet, then lay a strip of red dough next to the white, another strip of white and finally another red, so you now have 4 strips alternating colors. Press the three strips gently together so that they stick to one another. You can brush the sides with some diluted apricot preserve, to help the dough glue together.

Do this with the rest of the strips, so you end up with logs of striped cookie dough.  Place the logs on top of each other, so the red dough and white dough alternates and you have  4x4 colors per log.

Gently press the logs together on all sides. Wrap the log with plastic wrap, a place in the refrigerator.   Make more logs with the remaining dough.

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Take out the round logs, an cut them in half lengthwise. Firmly press 1 red and 1 white half log on top of the 4x4 colored logs. Placing them on to sides next to each other. Now you have a pleated hearty, when you cut the log in slices.

Chill the logs for at least an hour before slicing.

Preheat the oven to 375℉ (190℃). Line baking sheets with parchment paper.

Slice into cookies about ¼ inch (6 mm) thick. Set the hearts about ½-inch (1 cm) apart on the baking sheet and bake for about 7-8 minutes, until the withe parts are very lightly browned. If your oven is baking unevenly rotate the sheet halfway through. Cool on the parchment paper on a wire rack. 

Store the completely cooled cookies in an airtight container.

Enjoy!