Bakeland. Marit Hovland

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Bakeland - Marit Hovland

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icing on top of each cookie, reserving a little icing. 4. With a toothpick, randomly scrape away some of the icing from each cookie. 5. Apply some more icing where you want the Oreo crumbs to stick, maybe around the edge of the scrapes you made in the previous step. Use toothpicks, or put the icing in a piping bag. 6. Immediately sprinkle the crushed Oreo cookies over the icing. Shake gently to remove the crumbs that don’t stick. 7. Make short transverse lines by dragging a sharp knife across the white icing. 8. Now the cookies are ready to be eaten or to be stored in an airtight container.

      Variation: A simpler alternative to the decoration is to spread icing on the cookies first, then put the tempered chocolate in a piping bag and draw stripes on the cookies.

       CHOCOLATE ROCKS WITH FRUIT AND NUT FILLING

      makes 100 chocolate rocks

      Stones that have been rocked back and forth by waves at the water’s edge become smooth, and feel soft to the touch. These chocolate rocks, filled with nuts and dried fruit, look just like the real thing, but are much tastier!

       Chocolate shells

      2 Oreo cookies

      7 oz (200 g) white chocolate, chopped

      6 Tbsp (90 ml) sweetened condensed milk

      pinch of salt

      ⅛ tsp unsweetened cocoa powder

      Crush the Oreo cookies by removing the white filling, placing the cookies in a plastic bag, and using a rolling pin.

      In a saucepan over low heat, combine the chocolate, condensed milk, and salt, stirring constantly. Remove the saucepan from the heat as soon as the mixture is smooth. Stir in half of the crushed Oreo cookies.

      Follow the instructions on the next page to shape the rocks.

       Filling

      ¼ cup (30 g) salted peanuts

      ¼ cup (30 g) salted cashews

      2 Tbsp (20 g) dried sweetened cranberries

      Follow the instructions for the filling on the next page. You can also make chocolate rocks without a filling, but the white chocolate on its own is very sweet. You can substitute other kinds of nuts and dried fruit as well.

      Tip: Use the rocks as decoration on a cake—maybe the chocolate cake on page 33 or the nut cake on page 105.

      1. Divide the white chocolate mixture evenly into 3 small bowls. Leave bowl 1 as is. For bowl 2, stir in the rest of the crushed Oreo cookies. For the last bowl, stir in the cocoa powder. 2. Cover the bowls with plastic wrap or aluminum foil. Let them stand at room temperature for 30 minutes. 3. Place a sheet of parchment paper on a pastry board and lay out the nuts and cranberries. 4. Scoop out a small piece of one of the chocolate mixtures and flatten it. Place a nut or a cranberry in the middle and press it in. Roll the chocolate with your hands so it takes the shape of a rock. Repeat with the remaining chocolate mixtures, nuts, and cranberries. 5. Leave the rocks on parchment paper to harden for a few hours at room temperature. 6. Store the rocks in an airtight container until you’re ready to serve them.

       MINT-GLAZED HAZELNUT COOKIES

      makes 18 cookies

      Look up! Maybe you’ll see an interesting cloud in the sky today. Clouds soar by in all shapes and sizes. Allow your imagination to soar along with them and decorate these soft hazelnut cookies in cloud patterns with the help of a kitchen sponge.

       Hazelnut cookies

      1½ cups (250 g) hazelnuts

      1⅔ cups (200 g) icing sugar

      1 Tbsp all-purpose flour

      1 egg white

      1 Tbsp lemon juice

      Preheat the oven to 350ºF (180ºC). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

      Grind the hazelnuts using a nut grinder. In a bowl, combine the ground hazelnuts with the icing sugar and flour. Add the egg white and lemon juice. Work the dough well with your hands until the ingredients are combined.

      Dust some icing sugar on your pastry board and roll out the dough with a rolling pin until it is approximately ¼ inch (7 mm) thick. Cut the dough into approximately 2-inch (5 cm) squares, or use cookie cutters. Transfer to the prepared baking sheet and bake for 10 minutes on the middle rack of the oven. Transfer the cookies to a wire rack to cool.

       Mint glaze

      1 egg white

      2 tsp lemon juice

      approximately 1⅔ cups (200 g) icing sugar

      few drops peppermint oil

      In a bowl, stir together the egg white, lemon juice, and icing sugar. Add peppermint oil to taste—it’s very strong, so add just a little at a time! Transfer to a piping bag.

       Decoration

      blue liquid gel food coloring

      water

      Mix a few drops of food coloring with a little water. For further instructions, see page 47.

      Tip: A great way to roll out an even dough is to find two items of the same height you want your dough (here, ¼ inch/7 mm)—for example two pieces of wood, or two magazines or books. Place these on either side of the dough so that the rolling pin rolls on them. That way, the dough will be the same thickness all the way across.

      1. Apply the glaze to the cooled cookies. It works best to draw the outline of the glaze first, then fill in the middle. Let the glaze dry for a couple of hours before you make the clouds. The longer you let it dry, the less careful you have to be with the sponge. 2. Cut a new, clean kitchen sponge into small pieces. Make sure to use a natural sponge, not an antibacterial one, as they contain harmful chemicals. 3.

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