Archive for February, 2012

Recently, in honor of World Nutella Day… Giada Antonucci (friend, Italian student, and baking-partner-in-crime) and I got together to concoct a recipe that I dreamt up using Nutella (that most delicious, creamy chocolate & hazlenut Italian spread).

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Annual World Nutella Day was just around the corner, and I got to thinking that rather than just celebrate it by merely dipping my spoon into the nearest Nutella jar (as I’d done when I discovered this day last year), I, too, wanted to participate in the Nutella recipe challenge.

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Next came the question: What to do, what to make? And so the recipe came to me:  Nutella-filled Red Velvet Cake Pops… I’d sampled cake pops only once, but never made them…  and thus began the baking shenanigans — If there was a mistake to be made, we made it — truly worthy of a Lucy & Ethel episode!

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So, first, the disclaimer:  Try this at home at your own risk, and you may very well end up with a messy kitchen and completely blowing your diet, but very happy taste buds!

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First thing, we had to procure the cake pop molds (we found ours at Bed Bath & Beyond), then get savvy on how to mix the perfect cake pop batter (an extra egg added to the standard cake mix; substitute milk for water, cutting the amount in half, and add one packet of dry pudding mix, in a complimentary flavor (to our red velvet cake mix we added chocolate pudding).

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Then be sure to spray the cake pop molds with a spray that contains flour (not just any old vegetable spray, as it will mess up the consistency of the pops). We used Baker’s Joy.

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Next challenge:  Spoon the mixture into the mold — no pouring possible — the stuff is just too thick! (Of course, starting with this phase, we made pretty much every possible mistake we could: First off we deposited our batter, forgetting to spray. Do over! Note to selves: Cake pop molds are a pain in the beep to wash :-(

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Once done, you clamp the two halves of the mold together and pop into the oven for the suggested baking time. Naturally, we overfilled our first batch. Luckily, cake pop molds are built with an overflow hole for just this type of snafu. An easy fix: just scrape off the excess after baking… providing us with perfect mini samples — we were able to instantly confirm (via scientific dipping method) that red velvet cake + Nutella = yummmm!

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Despite the late hour (Friday evening, after a long day and an even longer work week) we knew instantly that we were on to something good.

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Now with our cake pop baking techniques down pat, we moved on to our next challenge:  Getting the Nutella into the center of the cake pops. To say it was a challenge is an understatement. Cake pops are tiny little deals, and even if we’d had a pastry sleeve, which we didn’t, it still would have been una faccenda difficile (a difficult feat).

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.injecting nutella with syringe

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After trying to use a paper envelope and then a plastic baggie (both unsuccessful), we finally ended up using a mini syringe filled (with sufficient difficulty, given the small aperture involved and the inherent thickness of Nutella… a bigger syringe would be much easier to wield). In our particular case, were able to inject 20-30 mm of Nutella into each cake pop.

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inserting sticks into red velvet nutella-filled cake pops

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Next phase/Challenge:  Getting the sticks into the pops. We used a combination of the sticks included in the cake pop kit and bamboo skewers cut in half. We dipped them into melted chocolate and then stuck them into one side of the cake pop spheres. Then we popped them into the freezer for for about 10 minutes fast ‘curing’.

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Next, the final phase: Covering the pops with frosting/glacé. We wanted to use a vanilla or white chocolate frosting, but after messing those up (wrong melting techniques, etc), our potential frosting ingredients had dwindled down to a bag of Nestle chocolate chips, which we melted in the microwave, adding, per package instructions, a tablespoon of vegetable oil.

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frosting red velvet nutella-filled cakepops

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But this was not the easy-peasy dipping sauce we’d hoped for. We ended up having to be very hands-on — basically frosting individually each cake pop versus dipping it(!)

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finaL PRESentation red velvet nutella-filled cake pops

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Mamma mia! What an arduous task! Four-plus hours after we’d started, at midnight, (and with the aid of a nice bottle of Italian red — we found San Giovese goes well with red velvet cake and Nutella ;-) ) — we had finished with a yield of about 50 cake pops.

Whew!!! The result, despite our Lucy & Ethel-esque baking escapade, was delicious, as verified by our enthusiastic taste-testers the next morning at the Saturday Italian Conversation & Study Group!

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Afterthoughts:  If you want to try a similar omaggio (homage) to Nutella, go for it. If you avoid our first-timer mistakes, it should be a much quicker process. Should you want the same yummy flavors without the detailed work necessary to make cake pops, we suggest you make a simple red velvet cake and frost it with Nutella — same flavors and way less work!

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Your thoughts:  Have you tried Nutella? Have you used it in any baking recipes? Plan to try your hand at our crazy Red Velvet Nutella-filled Cake Pops? Love to hear your comments in the “Leave a Reply” section below… Buon  appetito!

 

 
 
Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

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Come si dice “I love you” in italiano? (Come si dice? = How do you say?) is always una buona domanda (a good question), especially around il giorno di San Valentino (Valentine’s Day).

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La risposta (the answer) depends on who you’re saying “I love you” to.

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Per evitare di fare brutta figura (to avoid making an ungainly gaffe), watch my short video below, and be in the know!

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Buon San Valentino a tutti i miei lettori! Vi voglio bene!

(Happy Valentine’s day to all my readers! I love you!)

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P.S. Want to send a free online Italian Valentine’s card to someone special? Check out www.kisseo.it!

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Do you have a favorite romantic phrase in Italian? Or is there one you’d like to know? Let me hear from you below!

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Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

Che significa Montelupo Fiorentino? E che cos’e?

(What does Montelupo Fiorentino mean? And what is it?)

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If you guessed that Montelupo Fiorentino means Florentine Mountain Wolf, you’re right! If you thought it might be the name of an Italian sports team, as in the Florentine Mountain Wolves, I’m with you – I think it’d make a great name for a little league calcio (soccer) team… but that’s not the right answer. Montelupo Fiorentino, as it turns out, is the name of a beautiful town of 11,000 located about 18 km (12 mi) southwest of Firenze (aka Florence).

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Nestled in the gently rolling Tuscan hills, this small town, which originated with the construction of a medieval castle, boasts a long history of beautiful ceramics. In fact, the town’s economy is based on its production of Chianti wine and its ceramics industry. The Montelupo region is also very interesting from an archaeological point of view. Digs from the 1970s unearthed many prehistoric artifacts and also proved the existence of Etruscan and Roman settlements in the area.

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Montelupo Fiorentino is also a great locale for a vacation… it is in fact the town nearest to Tenuta San Vito (the San Vito Property) which hosts the Farmhouse-Villa where we’ll be staying at during the upcoming Photo-Cultural Tour to Tuscany that I’m leading in March. And there’s plenty special about that… the fact that it’s set amidst lush organic olive groves and vineyards, and that it has the distinction of being one of Italy’s first organic agri-tourism establishments (dating back to the 1960s). The Tenuta San Vito boasts beautifully restored lodging, a restaurant, wine and olive oil tasting, and grounds that feature hiking, horseback riding, tennis, archery, and golf.

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The tour, led by myself and Joanna Herr, an award-winning photographer, will feature an amazing 12 days that weave instruction in language, cooking, and photography, and the exploration of some of Italy’s most beautiful medieval towns, excellent company, a small-sized group, and a relaxed, flexible itinerary. The tour takes place March 17-28, 2012. See trip itinerary>>

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Are you interested in this trip? There are just a few spots left – get in touch with me today! Email: jodina@ItalianoWithJodina.com. Phone: 760.201.7594.

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Are you interested in future trips? I hope to offer more trips in the future, and the more interest I have, the sooner they will happen! So please, sign up for my list:

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And as always, your comments are welcome in the comments section below!

 
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