Cassata Siciliana

I remember eating my first cassata, in a neighborhood restaurant in Catania, Sicily in 2005. Tyrone and I had flown in from Rome, rented a car, and found a hotel room close to the center. The individually sized, four-inch cake was beautifully decorated with candied fruit and garlands of white icing. I chipped off the sugary coating to discover a layer of marzipan around a tender, citrus-flavored spongecake and ricotta and candied fruit. Originally made at Easter by nuns or by Jews for Purim, the cake is often too sweet for my taste, so I cut the sugar in all components. There’s a special cassata pan with sloping sides which I haven’t bought because I like two layers of cake around the filling.

Of the ten or so cakes I call my “favorites,” cassata does not withstand much variation. The cake layers must be genoise (8 warm eggs, whipped until fluffy with 1 cup sugar, then sift/fold in 200 grams of cake or all purpose flour and 6 Tbs of clarified beurre noisette plus 2 tsp vanilla). Fill two 9″ cake pans whose bottoms are lined with parchment and greased. Bake at 350 for about 30 minutes until the cakes start to shrink from the sides of the pan. Turn out and let cool on racks.

And the filling must be ricotta and candied fruit: 2 lbs of whole milk ricotta, drained overnight in cloth or sieve, mixed with 1/2 cup each very small dice orange and citron (preferably Sicilian, no preservatives) rind, 1-2 Tbs powdered sugar, and 100 grams of bittersweet chocolate diced into pieces the same size as the candied fruit. If you can find sheep’s milk ricotta, that is more authentic and flavorful. I use Trader Joe’s “Dark Chocolate Lover’s Bar,” 85% and divided into two thin slices, which makes it easy to dice. The chocolate contains vanilla, but so does the cake.

I make the covering from marzipan (1 lb almond flour, 1 lb powdered sugar, 1/2 c corn syrup (or 2 egg whites instead of corn syrup) 1 tsp matcha tea,1-2 tsp almond extract: blend, knead, chill, then roll out into a circle large enough to cover the cake and sides. It’s an odd color green, but tea mitigates the sweetness of the marzipan, and it’s natural. You could use food coloring or you could make the marzipan from finely-ground pistachios, which are of course naturally green.

When you are ready to assemble the cassata, cut a thin layer from the tops and bottoms of the two layers. DO NOT skip this step. Genoise gets its moisture from syrup and baked tops and bottoms are gluey when wet. Make the syrup: boil 1 cup water with 1/2 cup sugar; let cool then add 5 Tbs (3 ounces) of citrus liqueur (Cointreau, Colombier, Limoncello, etc.) Sometimes I add a bit of desiccated lemon, lime, or orange powder (or lemon juice) to make the syrup more acidic. Find the plate you’ll assemble the cake on.

Hold a cake layer in one hand and drizzle 1/4 of the syrup over one side. Place on the plate, and drizzle with another 1/4 cup. Place the entire ricotta filling over the bottom evenly (a small angled spatula is useful). Then hold the other cake layer in one hand and drizzle with half the remaining syrup. Place it on top of the ricotta filling and finish by drizzling the remaining syrup evenly over the top layer. When I first started making syrup-moistened cakes, I experimented with using less syrup, a mistake. Use all the syrup.

Cover the cake with the thin sheet of marzipan (use powdered sugar to keep it from sticking) rolled to a 15 inch round about 1/8 inch thick (or thinner, if you can manage it). Freeze the trimmings for another use, for example, to make a layer inside another layer cake, or for stollen, or just eat it. If you want to decorate the cake with fondant and more candied fruit cut into shapes, it will look more like the cassatas in Sicily.

Cake (that serves at least 12) remains delicious for a week in the refrigerator and should be served cold.

Salted Caramel Hot Fudge Sundae with Caramel Corn

We discovered this dessert at the JG Grill (now named something else and with a different chef) in the St. Regis resort in Deer Valley, Utah, reachable by funicular so getting there felt like an adventure. The dessert hits various flavor and texture notes and the components can be made separately over several weeks. Of course Salted Caramel Ice Cream, Hot Fudge Sauce, and Caramel Corn can also be purchased, but they are not difficult to make. For each component, adjust the salt to your taste.

Salted Caramel Ice Cream

For the ice cream (you will need a powerful blender), I use (about) 8 ounces of raw cashews, 3/4 cup of sugar, 3 cups of half and half, 2 TBS of cream cheese, 1/2 tsp guar gum. Simmer the cashews in filtered, lightly salted water until soft, about 1/2 hour; they give the ice cream more body (and protein). Let cool and drain. Burn the sugar into caramel in a medium saucepan until it’s the color of mahogany. Remove from heat. Add two cups of half and half and let the mixture sit over very low heat until the caramel is dissolved, stirring now and then. This might take 30 minutes. Whisk in room temperature cream cheese. (It’s OK if it’s a bit lumpy.) Add 1/2 tsp. salt and 1 tsp. vanilla and 1/2 tsp. guar gum. (You can also emulsify the ice cream with six egg yolks, cooked into a custard with the cream and caramel, and leave out the guar gum and the cream cheese.) Drain the cashews and put them in a blender along with the last cup of half and half; blend on high until perfectly smooth. Add the caramel mixture and blend again until smooth. Taste to see if it needs more salt. Chill until very cold. Then churn in an ice cream maker, and pack into containers–this makes 1 1/2 quarts. Remove container from freezer 15 minutes before scooping the ice cream. Lasts at least a month in the freezer.

Caramel Corn

For the caramel corn, you’ll need 3 quarts of popped corn (made from about 1/3 cup raw kernels). I use a hot air popcorn maker. There are different ways to make caramel coating for the corn. Here’s one, adapted from the NYT: combine 1/2 cup corn syrup, maple syrup, or other invert sugar (agave, honey, golden syrup, brown rice syrup, etc.), with 1/3 cup sugar, 2 TBS molasses, and 6 TBS of butter in a medium saucepan. Simmer for about 8 minutes or until it thickens. Add 1/2 tsp salt, 1 tsp vanilla extract, and 1/4 tsp baking soda. With utensils, combine the hot caramel (which will burn your bare hands) and the popped corn as completely as possible. Spread the corn on parchment-or silicone-covered cookie sheets and bake (convect is best) at 300 for about half an hour, stirring occasionally. The corn will crisp upon cooling and it stays crisp for about a week, if kept air tight.

Hot Fudge Sauce

For the hot fudge, combine 1 cup heavy cream, half and half, or evaporated milk; 2 TBS butter; and 1/2 cup sugar; and 1 TBS molasses; 1/2 tsp salt and simmer until smooth. Whisk in 1/2 cup Dutch process cocoa, turn off heat, then whisk in 4 ounces chopped bittersweet chocolate. This reheats well in a microwave or water bath and lasts several weeks (if you can avoid taking a spoon and just eating it).

To serve, place a few tablespoons of warm fudge sauce into the bottom of coupes or bowls, add scoops of ice cream, then top with caramel corn (and more fudge sauce and whipped cream if you like). At the JG Grill, the fudge sauce was on the bottom of the bowl, a surprise that encouraged scraping.