Yummy Yum

Yummy Yum Yummy Yum

You Can Make Crème Brûlée at Home With Four IngredientsCrème brûlée is an impressive end to any meal. The ingredients—wh...
01/03/2023

You Can Make Crème Brûlée at Home With Four Ingredients
Crème brûlée is an impressive end to any meal. The ingredients—which mainly consist of eggs, sugar, and heavy cream—are simple, but the technique of brûléeing the top with a torch adds a dramatic flair. You may be intimidated by the idea of handling an open flame in your kitchen, but this recipe from the Institute of Culinary Education (ICE) is perfect for beginner cooks.

According to Roger Sitrin, ICE’s lead recreational chef-instructor, pulling off perfect crème brûlée at home isn’t as difficult as it looks. “It’s one of those things that’s so impressive when you bring it to the table, yet it’s so simple to do,” he tells Mental Floss. “You can do it well ahead of time, and it sits in the refrigerator well.”

To make crème brûlée in your kitchen, you need only four ingredients: heavy cream, granulated sugar, egg yolks, and vanilla bean. Start by simmering the cream, vanilla, and sugar together in a sauce pan. Temper the yolks in a separate bowl by slowly whisking in the hot mixture, being careful not to let them scramble. Finish the custard by straining it through a fine mesh sieve, pouring it into oven-safe dishes, and baking it in a water bath to set before chilling in the fridge.

The final step in the recipe is the part most home cooks dread. To top your custard with a golden-brown, crackable crust, cover it with a thin layer of sugar and caramelize it with a kitchen torch. The key to achieving an even color is to be constantly sweeping the flame across the surface. Your work is done when the top of the custard is brown and bubbling all over.

If wielding a torch makes you nervous, set the dishes on a sheet pan and remove anything flammable from your surrounding area before lighting up. You can also use your oven’s broiler, though it can be harder to achieve even caramelization this way.

The Institute of Culinary Education is one of the largest culinary schools on Earth, with campuses in Los Angeles and New York City. In addition to their course in the culinary arts, they also offer training programs in hospitality and hotel management. You can check out their curricula here.

How to Make Crème Brûlée
Serves 4

2 cups heavy cream
6 tablespoons granulated sugar
½ vanilla bean, split and scraped
4 large egg yolks
Granulated sugar for finishing

Combine heavy cream, sugar and vanilla bean in a sauce pan and bring to a simmer. Whisk yolks in a bowl and temper with hot mixture. Strain through a fine mesh strainer and skim foam from surface if necessary.
Pour the custard mixture into shallow, ovenproof dishes. Remove excess foam with a torch if necessary. Bake in a water bath at 350ºF until set. Cool and place in freezer about 1 hour or in refrigerator overnight.
Cover tops of custard with ⅛-inch layer of granulated sugar then caramelize with the torch.

Korean Food Is More Popular Than Italian, Chinese, and Mexican, According to Social MediaOne of the most affordable ways...
01/03/2023

Korean Food Is More Popular Than Italian, Chinese, and Mexican, According to Social Media
One of the most affordable ways to feel like a world traveler is by ordering takeout. Many famous cuisines—from Chinese to Italian—are just as popular abroad as they are at home. But the most popular type of food worldwide may be surprising even to people with adventurous palates.

As Time Out reports, Korean dishes are the most widely beloved cuisine on Earth—or at least on the internet. The travel firm The Bucket List Company ranked the world’s culinary offerings by measuring social media engagement with posts tagged with various cuisines. Korean outperformed every competitor, including such global successes as Italian, Mexican, Japanese, and Indian.

Many cuisines on the list below are easier to find in America than Korean food. There were 45,000 Chinese restaurants operating in the U.S. in 2016, making them more abundant than all the McDonald’s, KFCs, Pizza Huts, Taco Bells, and Wendy’s combined. Despite this, Chinese ranks No. 6 on the list. Korean restaurants may be less common in the country, but interest in the cuisine is growing. In 2021, its popularity grew by 90 percent, according to the analytics company Spoonshot.

Korean food’s rising international profile may be due in part to its popularity on social media. Chefs like Maangchi on YouTube and on TikTok have risen to internet stardom by making Korean dishes. If the trend continues, japchae may one day be easier to find around the world than spaghetti and meatballs.

The 10 Most Popular World Cuisines on Social Media
Korean
Italian
Mexican
Japanese
Indian
Chinese
Thai
Vietnamese
Filipino
Turkish

17/02/2023
Why Eating Chocolate Feels So Good, According to ScienceLike pizza, chocolate is one of the few foods that invites (almo...
13/02/2023

Why Eating Chocolate Feels So Good, According to Science
Like pizza, chocolate is one of the few foods that invites (almost) universal affection. Cheap candy bars taste good; so do premium chocolate bars, chocolate cake, chocolate ice cream, and chocolate cookies. Recently, scientists at the University of Leeds wanted to find out why.

The answer? Lubrication.

In a new study published in the journal ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, researchers examined how chocolate dissolves in the mouth—or in this case, on an artificial, 3D printed silicone tongue. As the chocolate is ingested, the fat in the substance coats the tongue, often mixing with the saliva present to create a perfect goo that we interpret as a pleasant sensation. It’s why chocolate “feels” good to eat, aside from whatever taste stimulation it provides.

To arrive at this conclusion, researchers at the university’s School of Food Science and Nutrition and the School of Mechanical Engineering relied on tribology, or the study of how surfaces interact in motion. Using 15 silicone tongues with tiny papillae and pig stomach mucosa as a stand-in for saliva, researchers observed how chocolate dissolves. Fat on the outer surface of the chocolate coated the tongues, leaving a fatty film on the silicone. Once dissolved, cocoa particles hit the tongue, offering further sensation. Fat inside the chocolate seemed to make less of a difference.

Why is that last detail important? It could be that chocolate with a lower fat content could still prove satisfying. "With the understanding of the physical mechanisms that happen as people eat chocolate, we believe that a next generation of chocolate can be developed that offers the feel and sensation of high-fat chocolate yet is a healthier choice," study co-author Dr. Siavash Soltanahmadi said in a statement. "Our research opens the possibility that manufacturers can intelligently design dark chocolate to reduce the overall fat content."

Tribology could also be used to examine the mouthfeel of butter, cheese, and other foods, with an eye on creating more health-conscious variations that are still pleasing to the tongue.

Address

Хуртова 11
Kyiv
42011

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Yummy Yum posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Yummy Yum:

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram