Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'White Chocolate Strawberry Cordials' imprimido.

Receta White Chocolate Strawberry Cordials
by Shannon Millisor

So, I stepped out of my comfort zone a

little here. I don't think I've made cordials in 10 years but they sounded like

fun so I went for it. I was aiming for something red, white, and blue for this

post but we are rolling with red and white. I actually also made blueberry

cordials just like these but it's been 5 days and the fondant is still only

half way set up so they just aren't ready. How do I know this? I try one each

day. :) Now don't get me wrong, they taste really yummy, but you can still see

some of the fondant that hasn't turned to liquid so it's not that pretty.

These on the other hand have completely

turned to that delicious cordial liquid. The strawberries add a different touch

than cherries do. I'm a little wild like that sometimes, mixing up the fruits

so you don't get what you think you will :). So the ingredient list is short

but the directions are sort of long, only because these are very specific to

make. I will tell you if you use milk or dark chocolate you will need to temper

it or buy chocolate coating or something. When I use white chocolate I don't

both tempering it because fat bloom and sugar bloom are both white! So, you

can't really seem them on the white chocolate :) Tricky, yes?

Fat bloom is the swirls of white you see

on chocolate that hasn't been tempered or has been stored at the wrong

temperature. Sugar bloom is the speckles of white you see on chocolate that has

come into contact with moisture such as humidity or being in the refrigerator

to long. Both are completely safe to eat, they just aren't pretty. My point is

that you don't need to worry about either of those on white chocolate for these

purposes. This is also why after the quick refrigerator to harden the

chocolate, you store it at room temperature in an airtight container. These were featured on Southern Sundays, check out the post with the other feature and linkups here.

This is day 2 of waiting for the cordials to setup. Note the white fondant on the left that has not completely turned to liquid yet. It was day 4 before I was satisfied with the liquid as you can see in other pictures :).

So, are you ready to make some cordials?

White Chocolate

Strawberry Cordials

Makes 12

Ingredients:

- ¼ cup

strawberries, chopped small

- ¼ cup

+ 2 tablespoons water

- 1 ½

tablespoons light corn syrup

- 1 cup

sugar

- pinch

salt

- 8-12

ounces white chocolate

Directions:

1. In a

non-stick skillet cook strawberries over medium heat for about 1-1 ½ minutes

until soft. Remove from heat, set aside.

2. Combine

the water, corn syrup, sugar, and salt in a saucepan over high heat. Stir the

mixture with a wooden spoon until it begins to boil then clip a candy

thermometer on the side of the pan. Cook the mixture to 240F without stirring,

then remove from heat. Pour the mixture onto an ungreased cookie sheet but do

not stir or scrape it.

3. Leave the

cookie sheet to cool for about 20 minutes on a flat surface, it will help to

put it on a wire rack so that the air can flow underneath it. After 20 minutes

the pan should feel slightly warm and be ready to work.

4. Pushing

one side of the pan up against a wall may be necessary to help when you are

scraping the mixture. Using a metal scraper (I used a plastic scraper though,

oops) work the fondant in the pan folding it over on itself over and over to

mix it. The fondant will start to become opaque pretty quickly because

this is a small amount. The mixing could take up to 10-15 minutes before it is

complete. When the mixture is bright white and starts to crack then you are

done mixing, set aside.

5. Line a 12

somewhere so I used mini muffin pans and liners instead.

Basic

fondant recipe adapted from Confessions

of a Chocolatier

This recipe may be linked up to: