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Roasted-garlic soufflé

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I used olive oil in stead of butter, and soy milk instead of wholemilk, and I also took the soufflé out of the oven a little bit too early, which all might explain why it is not quite as 'photogenic' as I hoped it would be. It is light as a feather, though, and there is a delicious smell of garlic everywhere ....

I used olive oil in stead of butter, and soy milk instead of wholemilk, and I also took the soufflé out of the oven a little bit too early, which all might explain why it is not quite as ‘photogenic’ as I hoped it would be. It is fluffy and light as a feather, though, and there is a delicious smell of garlic everywhere …. It does not ‘deflate’ or collapse, and leftovers can be reheated gently

3-4 large heads garlic, left whole, plus 4 garlic cloves, crushed

1-2 tblsp olive oil

½ l whole milk

1 medium onion, sliced

3 large thyme sprigs, or mix of thyme, oregano and rosemary

2 bayleaves

1 whole clove

10 black peppercorns

1 green chili, sliced

7 tblsp butter

75 g plain wheat flour

4 large eggs, separated

4 additional egg whites

200-300 g crumpled or grated goat’s cheese (I guess other cheeses such as gruyère and parmesan will do if you do not like goat’s cheese)

1 pinch grated nutmeg

Heat oven to 200°C.

Cut the tips off the whole heads of garlic, place them on a large sheet of foil and drizzle each with 1 teaspoon oil. Wrap them together in foil and bake till very tender, 50 minutes to 1 hour. When they are cool enough to be handled, squeeze the garlic out of the skins.

Meanwhile, bring milk, crushed garlic cloves, onion, herbs, bay leaves, clove, and peppercorns to the boil in a medium saucepan, remove from heat, cover and leave to infuse for 30 minutes.

Butter a gratin dish (the one on the photo measures 22 cm x 30 cm and is 7 cm deep) thoroughly  with 1 tablespoon butter.

To start the roux/bechamel, melt remaining 6 tablespoons butter in a heavy medium saucepan and whisk in the flour. Cook over low heat, whisking constantly, 5 minutes.

Strain milk mixture through a fine-meshed sieve, then add to roux, bringing it to the boil, whisking, then simmer, whisking, for a couple of minutes.

Remove from heat and whisk in the eggyolks one at a time.

Whisk in roasted garlic, 1 teaspoon salt, and a pinch of pepper.

Fold in the cheese.

Beat egg whites with a pinch of salt until they stay in the bowl when you turn it upside down. Then stir one-third of the egg whites into the bechamel/yolk mixture to loosen it and then fold in the remaining whites.

Transfer mixture to gratin dish and bake at 200°C for 20 to 30 minutes. It should go quite brown and crisp on top.browned on top.

Serve with a salad or a soup (or both).

 

Ris à l’amande (or risalamang)

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risalamandeRis à l’amande is – despite the French-sounding name – a Danish dessert traditionally eaten on Christmas Eve. Usually, it is served in a large bowl and each guest helps her- or himself to an unsightly blob with some cherry sauce poured over. I have never found that particularly appetizing, especially after an already rich meal and since the dessert in itself does not have much flavour. I have therefore attempted to add a bit more flavour, and to serve it in a more attractive way. If you prefer the ‘blob’ serving method, just skip the part with the gelatine and tian rings. For a more traditional flavour, use porridge rice instead of risotto rice, sugar instead of marcipan, and halve the amount of vanilla.

When we eat this on Christmas Eve, one whole almond is concealed in the dessert, and the person who gets the almond gets a present.

2 dl risotto rice

1 l wholemilk

2 vanilla pods, quartered lengthwise enabling the grains to be distributed in the porridge.

150 g macona almonds – skins removed – and chopped (not too finely)

5 dl whipping cream

50 g grated marcipan

2 tblsp. Amaretto (almond liqueur) (can be substituted by milk or cream)

5 gelatine leaves

Soak the gelatine leaves in plenty of cold water.

 

Bring rice, milk and vanilla to the boil and simmer gently, stirring slowly but fairly constantly for about 20 minutes. NEVER turn your back on it! It burns on the bottom easily and if that happens, you have to start over. After about 20 minutes you will have thick porridge and the rice should be done. Transfer the porridge to a large bowl removing the vanilla pods.

In a small pot, heat the amaretto to the point of almost boiling, and take it off the heat. Melt the drained gelatine leaves in it till there is no trace of the gelatine. Mix a large spoonful of the porridge thoroughly into this mixture and then place it back in the porridge, stirring thoroughly.

Add the marcipan and the chopped almonds and let the porridge cool.

Whip the cream to a not too solid foam and mix into the cooled-off porridge, distributing the whipped cream evenly in the mixture.

If you wish, arrange the dessert in the required number of tian rings and leave to set overnight.