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Cooking Couese

Easy No-Churn Ice Cream and Frozen Custard

We’re showcasing three delicious recipes for creamy, frozen treats that all have one thing in common: no ice cream machine necessary. We have chosen these recipes for their straightforward methods using common household appliances, as well as their great flavor. In each of these recipes you will learn a different technique that can be used to make countless variations. We will show you how to make a creamy Old-Fashioned Vanilla Frozen Custard using a stand mixer to incorporate air before freezing, Mint-Cookie No-Churn Ice Cream using a blender, and No-Fuss Banana Ice Cream that uses a food processor and contains nothing more than bananas, heavy cream, and flavorings...with no added sugar!

Cooking Couese

Pasta with Summer Tomato Pesto

Fresh basil pesto is what comes to mind when most of us think of pesto. But there exists a lesser-known authentic non-basil pesto: pesto alla trapanese from Trapani, Sicily, that’s made with fresh tomatoes. It’s southern Italy’s answer to northern Italy’s basil pesto. As with other types of smooth pasta sauces, this pesto is best with pasta strands—spaghetti and linguine are our favorites. This recipe comes together quickly, and since sauced pasta waits for no one, be sure that your serving bowls and utensils are ready before you begin cooking.

Cooking Couese

Crème Brûlée and Other Custards

With any recipe containing few ingredients, the devil is in the details. Custards are a good example of this. Here we demystify that process by answering important questions like why you should bake custard in a water bath, and why should you strain custard. We will also teach you the science behind these desserts, why custard thickens, as well as how to avoid a lumpy custard (and how to fix those lumps when they do happen) so that you can be successful every time. As always, we will share with you our picks for the best ingredients and essential equipment, including the best saucepan, whisk, and kitchen torch. You’ll understand how to temper the egg mixture to avoid curdling, and learn to make a water bath, or bain marie. By the end of this online cooking class, you will be able to prepare several classic custard-based recipes such as Crème Brûlée, Flan, and Pots de Creme.

Cooking Couese

Ultimate Homemade Ravioli

This elegant dish has become a popular offering on Italian trattoria menus. It features a multitude of flavors—squashy, sweet, savory, buttery, herbal, and nutty—working together to create complexity, and contrasting textures—silky filling and pasta, crunchy nuts—to add interest. The butternut squash must first be cooked to drive off excess moisture and render it soft and velvety; we use a microwave to expedite and simplify the squash-cooking process. Grated Parmesan cheese in the filling not only adds flavor, it also acts as a binder that holds the filling together. The browned butter sauce is simple, but very rich. This dish is best served in small portions either as a first course or a pasta course before the main dish. This recipe uses fresh pasta from the Fresh Pasta recipe. If you haven't already done so, you'll need to make the fresh pasta. You will need a food processor and pasta machine in order to prepare the pasta. To be as efficient as possible, make the pasta dough, prepare the squash filling while the dough rests, then roll out the dough while the squash is in the refrigerator. By the time the dough has been rolled out into thin sheets, the filling will be cool enough to use.

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