No Reviews
You must be logged in to post a review.
A perfect mousse-like dessert for the holidays or any time!
Use a handheld electric mixer to beat together 1 cup milk, the eggs, egg yolk, sugar, and salt in a large bowl, and then beat in the flour and cocoa powder. Beat in the chestnut puree until smooth.
Transfer to a medium saucepan and bring to a boil over medium heat, whisking constantly. Turn off heat and gently whisk in the remaining 1 cup milk and the vanilla. Strain through a fine mesh sieve to remove any lumps.
Cool to room temperature, then refrigerate to chill (about 2 hours). Whip the cream to stiff peaks and gently fold it into the custard (don’t over-mix, a few white streaks are fine). Serve chilled, garnished with bittersweet chocolate shavings, if desired.
6 Comments
Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Faith (An Edible Mosaic) on 11.30.2011
@katejudy311 — I haven’t tried it, but Nutella would probably be delicious! You could probably reduce the sugar if you decide to use Nutella.
katejudy311 on 11.19.2011
I am in the middle of Ohio with no chance of finding chestnut puree, do you suggest anything for a substitute? I love nutella…
Faith (An Edible Mosaic) on 11.17.2011
Thanks for the sweet comments, ladies!
Linda & Xochi, I bought my chestnut puree at an Arabic grocery store in Brooklyn called Sahadi’s; you might be able to find it at other Arabic grocery stores nationwide. It’s actually a product of France though, so it might be available at other specialty food stores as well. If all else fails, you can definitely make it at home. You need unsweetened chestnut puree for this recipe; I found a recipe online that looks pretty good http://easteuropeanfood.about.com/od/crossculturaldesserts/r/sweetened-chestnut-puree.htm), but be sure to omit the sugar and vanilla since we just want the plain, unsweetened puree for this dish. Hope this helps!
Jenna on 11.17.2011
this sounds amazing!!
Xochi Elizondo on 11.17.2011
I am from Southern Ca. where can I find chestnut cream?