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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Thursday, October 3, 1991 at 1:31:14 PM UTC-4, wrote:
> cultures (was Joy of Cooking) > > For all who have have asked that I post the recipe for Ostia here it is. I > really hope you can find all the ingredients. > > 2-4 boxes of hosts > > 3-4 lbs walnuts --you may need more depending on the honey and the size of the > walnut chunks > 3 lbs honey > 1/2 lb Hershey's chocolate (either plain or almond) can also use 1 lb of > chocolate if you are a real chocoholic--I am > cinnamon to taste > > Note: I find the hosts at a local Italian specialty store. They come from > Germany and look just like a large communion host--about 3 inches across. > They are made from flour and water and pressed in special iron form. I > really don't know if you can substitute anything else. I am here at work > and if anybody tries this recipe and can't find the hos We used to make our > I will send the German address so they can be ordered. > own hosts from an iron that was specially made and purchased in Italy by > some very close friends. But, this is a real miserable chore and gets your > stove top very messy. > > By the way, the word Ostia means host in Italian > --at least in our southern Italian. > > Hand chop the walnuts to a medium-small chunk--should look about this big > _ > [_] maybe a little smaller > If you can buy them already chopped that is okay also. > > In a large and heavy pot pour the honey. (I usually use a non-stick or > stainless steel pot--not aluminum or cast iron finishes.) Gently bring the > honey to a boil until it foams decrease the heat a little and then skim off > the sticky foam that forms around the edges until you have all of it or at > least the majority of it. > > Break the hershey bar into pieces and add to the hot honey. Stir until the > majority of the cholocate is melted--it will never really stir into the honey. > > Add the chopped walnuts and cinnamon. Use as much as you want. I usually use > about 1/4 cup cinnamon because we like the taste. You may need to use more > walnuts if > the mixture is runny. It should be very thick with very little hot honey > running off the spoon. Stir well until everything is mixed. Turn the heat > down to the lowest setting that will keep the mixture warm and be careful > to not let the mixture scorch--which it will readily do if the heat is too > high. You need to keep the mixture warm while you are working and making the > cookies. > > On one side of a host gently spread approximately 1 tbs of the mixture covering > the majority of the host. Place another host on top, then invert the cookie > and place on a flat pan such as a cookie sheet. (The ostia lookes like a white > host sandwich.) > Continue in this manner,lining up the cookies on the pan until one layer is > made. > Cover with wax paper. Then continue making the cookies and the layers until you > have about 4 or 5 layers. Cover the last layer with wax paper. Place a > heavy something on top of everything--I use two thick encyclopedia books. This > is to keep the ostias from curling. The hot honey mixture makes the hosts curl > up. > > Now, if you can stand it at this point, let the cookies "cure" for about > 1 week. I am really being optimistic about this. We love them so much > they hardly get to cure for 2 days. They do not need to be covered and do > not put them in a cookie jar or any other covered container as the hosts > become very soft and the honey begins to run. They will keep for a few months > so you can make them quite a bit in advance of when they are needed. We cut > the finished cookie--either with a very sharp knife or a pair of scissors-- > into fourths as the it is rich > > This recipes makes a bunch of cookies--about 150 or so. So for just starters > I would cut it down to 1 lb of honey, 2 lbs of walnuts, cinnamon and just one > regular Hershey bar. I hope you all have good luck and enjoy! > > Diane M. Ferrell > Pueblo, CO You can order the hosts from Amazon. They are called Oblaten and are made in Germany |
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On Wed, 30 Mar 2016 09:10:02 -0400, S Viemeister
> wrote: >On 3/30/2016 9:00 AM, wrote: >> On Thursday, October 3, 1991 at 1:31:14 PM UTC-4, wrote: >>> cultures (was Joy of Cooking) > >Responding to a post from a quarter-century ago - is this a record? Possibly ![]() |
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On 3/30/2016 2:06 PM, Je�us wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Mar 2016 09:10:02 -0400, S Viemeister > > wrote: > >> On 3/30/2016 9:00 AM, wrote: >>> On Thursday, October 3, 1991 at 1:31:14 PM UTC-4, wrote: >>>> cultures (was Joy of Cooking) >> >> Responding to a post from a quarter-century ago - is this a record? > > Possibly ![]() > No one wants you here as it is, leave. |
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