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I am looking for a recipe for glazed or candied walnuts suitable for a
salad, say a beet and goat cheese salad. The recipes I found searching this newsgroup all had cinammon or such...I am looking for nuts that are not super sweet, have a little salt, and good crunch. Seems that you can find nuts like I want in restaurant salads on occasion. I have tried to invent them myself without success. |
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On 20 Feb 2005 04:57:11 -0800, "KatieB"
> wrote: > I am looking for a recipe for glazed or candied walnuts suitable for a > salad, say a beet and goat cheese salad. The recipes I found searching > this newsgroup all had cinammon or such...I am looking for nuts that > are not super sweet, have a little salt, and good crunch. Seems that > you can find nuts like I want in restaurant salads on occasion. I have > tried to invent them myself without success. Why not follow a recipe you found that looks easy and just omit the cinnamon (increase salt if you wish)? Otherwise, go to http://www.foodnetwork.com and type candied walnuts into the search box... there are 14 and this is one of them: Candied Walnuts Recipe courtesy Laura Werlin, The All American Cheese and Wine Book, Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 2003 Show: Sara's Secrets Episode: American Wine and Cheese Party These versatile nuts go beautifully with fresh or aged goat cheese, blue cheese, or gruyere. 1/4 cup powdered sugar 1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper 1/8 teaspoon salt 4 ounces walnuts (about one heaping cup; dont use pieces) Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. In a medium sized bowl, mix together the sugar, cayenne and salt. Bring a small saucepan of water to boil. Add the walnuts and blanch them for 3 minutes. Drain well and then immediately roll the walnuts in the sugar mixture until thoroughly coated. The sugar will melt slightly. Transfer the walnuts to a baking sheet or pan and bake, stirring occasionally, until they are a deep golden brown, about 10 minutes. Watch carefully because the sugar can burn easily. Let cool completely before serving. Or you can do a google search using "candied walnuts recipe". Don't forget to put RECIPE at the end of your search term! Try http://fooddownunder.com/cgi-bin/recipe.cgi?r=26501 or From a BBC recipe 4oz granulated sugar l/4fl oz orange juice 4oz walnut halves ½ tsp salt ½ tsp cayenne pepper Place the sugar and the orange juice in a saucepan and stir over a low heat until the sugar has dissolved. Bring to the boil and keep boiling until the syrup has reached a golden brown colour. Take off the heat and stir in the walnuts, salt and cayenne. Place the walnuts onto a non-stick baking sheet using two warm wet spoons to prevent sticking. Allow to cool completely. HTH sf |
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On Sun, 20 Feb 2005 10:23:13 -0800, sf > wrote:
>On 20 Feb 2005 04:57:11 -0800, "KatieB" > wrote: > >> I am looking for a recipe for glazed or candied walnuts suitable for a >> salad, say a beet and goat cheese salad. The recipes I found searching >> this newsgroup all had cinammon or such...I am looking for nuts that >> are not super sweet, have a little salt, and good crunch. Seems that >> you can find nuts like I want in restaurant salads on occasion. I have >> tried to invent them myself without success. > >Why not follow a recipe you found that looks easy and just >omit the cinnamon (increase salt if you wish)? > >Otherwise, go to http://www.foodnetwork.com and type candied >walnuts into the search box... there are 14 and this is one >of them: > >Candied Walnuts >Recipe courtesy Laura Werlin, The All American Cheese and >Wine Book, Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 2003 >Show: Sara's Secrets >Episode: American Wine and Cheese Party > >These versatile nuts go beautifully with fresh or aged goat >cheese, blue cheese, or gruyere. > >1/4 cup powdered sugar >1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper >1/8 teaspoon salt >4 ounces walnuts (about one heaping cup; dont use pieces) > >Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. > >In a medium sized bowl, mix together the sugar, cayenne and >salt. > >Bring a small saucepan of water to boil. Add the walnuts and >blanch them for 3 minutes. Drain well and then immediately >roll the walnuts in the sugar mixture until thoroughly >coated. The sugar will melt slightly. Transfer the walnuts >to a baking sheet or pan and bake, stirring occasionally, >until they are a deep golden brown, about 10 minutes. > >Watch carefully because the sugar can burn easily. > >Let cool completely before serving. That's about how I make them (minus the cayenne). Sometimes I add more sugar after spreading them on the baking pan because I like plenty of crunch. I use a teflon liner for the baking pan for easier clean-up. Sue(tm) Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! |
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On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 09:29:43 -0800, sf > wrote:
>On Mon, 21 Feb 2005 04:54:34 GMT, >(Curly Sue) wrote: > >> I use a teflon liner for the baking pan for easier clean-up. > >I still haven't bought one (I'm still using waxed paper), >but wonder why every time I do something like that. Do you >use it when baking cookies too? > >sf Yes, I also have a silicon liner. I use the teflon ones more (they came in a package with several sizes and shapes), including lining metal pans when I roast meat (for some reason I can't explain, I don't line glass or pyrex). Mine are getting a bit banged up, mainly in areas where I tried cutting right on the liner (I thought I was careful). Also, they are curling at the edges. I put them right in the dishwasher. I have a couple of round ones for cake pans, but I don't make layer cakes enough to have tried them. I haven't made a comparison between the teflon and silicone mats. The teflon ones are more flexible so they can be used to line more types of pans (eg. you can drape it over the edge whereas the silicone mats will probably stay absolutely flat longer. The only place I see the teflon ones now are at KitchenKapers whereas the silicone mats are all over the place. Sue(tm) Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself! |
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I looked through the 12 recipes and will undoubtedly try one or two.
Thanks for pointing the way. However, what I was really looking for was a recipe that someone in the group had tried and liked. |
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On 21 Feb 2005 15:25:11 -0800, "KatieB"
> wrote: > I looked through the 12 recipes and will undoubtedly try one or two. > Thanks for pointing the way. However, what I was really looking for > was a recipe that someone in the group had tried and liked. Belive me, when you "candy" something - it's just sugar, water and time. You don't NEED a recipe. I was just trying to help. sf |
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![]() "KatieB" > wrote in message ups.com... >I looked through the 12 recipes and will undoubtedly try one or two. > Thanks for pointing the way. However, what I was really looking for > was a recipe that someone in the group had tried and liked. > Here's a favorite of mine that I found on www.epicurious.com. The balsamic vinegar gives a nice kick. Nonstick vegetable oil spray 1/4 cup (packed) golden brown sugar 6 tablespoons olive oil 3 tablespoons balsamic vinegar 1 cup pecan halves Spray sheet of foil with nonstick spray. Stir sugar, 1 tablespoon oil and 1 tablespoon vinegar in heavy medium skillet over medium heat until sugar melts and syrup bubbles, about 3 minutes. Mix in pecans. Stir until nuts are toasted and syrup coats nuts evenly, about 7 minutes. Turn nuts out onto prepared foil. Using fork, separate nuts and cool completely (coating will harden). |
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