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KatieB
 
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Default Candied Walnuts for Salad?

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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sf
 
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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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Curly Sue
 
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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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KatieB
 
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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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sf
 
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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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cazile
 
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Default


"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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