Monday, 23 May 2011

Home made Nutella

Not the most amazing pic but it's real life home made Nutella-type spread in a jar, look!


I know this doesn't look good; two consecutive posts concerning chocolate.  There is tons of other stuff I could be writing about, I'm just not very fired up about them though. And as this is a blog, and I'm not being paid, it has to be a bit enjoyable for me.

In Italy Nutella comes in glass jars you can use, when you've scoffed the lot, as glasses to drink out of. They come in pretty patterns. I think you could get them here at one point too, but I don't see them anymore.

I used to eat Nutella out of the jar, on a spoon. I can't believe this now as I find it quite disgustingly sweet. The ads sell it to you as having slow release energy thanks to the 1.5 hazelnut you get in every serving...we have Nutella in our house but I loathe it now. It's laden with sugar.

So when I saw Annie Rigg's book about Edible Presents and saw there was a recipe for Chocolate and Hazelnut spread in it, I jumped.

You probably can do this without a food processor, but I don't.

Makes 1x 450g jar

75g blanched hazelnuts
100g 70% cocoa chocolate
100ml condensed milk
1-2 tablespoons of hazelnut oil
a pinch of salt
3-4 tablespoons of hot water (if you even need this much)

The recipe asks for you to use sterilised jars. I use them straight out of the dishwasher, if it's good enough for Nigella, it's good enough for me.

Toast the hazelnuts; you can do this in an oven or in a dry frying pan. Until they're golden. Cool slightly and then  grind to as smooth a paste as you can get in your food processor.

Melt the chocolate, condensed milk and hazelnut oil, very gently, in a saucepan. When the chocolate has melted and it's all mixed up nicely, pour this into the food processor, add the pinch of salt (I always use ground up rock salt in sweet things) and blend. Add as much hot water as you need to give it a thick, spreadable consistency. Don't panic if, like me, you see it has gone really runny. It firms up in the fridge. That said, you shouldn't overdo it, I'm just saying don't go into a tizz if you have (you can always use it as super luxurious ice cream topping if it does go wrong).

Spoon into a jar and keep in the fridge. Rigg says it keeps for up to two weeks. I doubt it will last that long.

Now, I didn't want to interrupt the recipe further up, with my tales of hazelnut essence, but I bought some from Bakery Bits.  I was wary because, unlike the excellent other 'essences' I have from there (Aroma Panettone and Aroma Veneziana are exceptional) which have natural oils in them, the ingredients listed seemed decidedly un-natural. Stupidly I thought it was like extract of hazelnut or something (this is probably impossible to do). Anyway, the jury's out on whether it's nice or not but my verdict is: disappointing. Its aroma is rather synthetic and artificial. I liked it at first, but you need to go really easy on it as it can become very overpowering; and I'm not sure I'd use it again. My partner's nose is far more sensitive and he found it overwhelming.

This recipe doesn't call for essence of any kind, but because I had it I added a few drops - about four. My seven year old loves this spread but says it's too 'hazelnutty' which is probably accurate. I think this essence is good for when you really need to convey 'this is made of hazelnuts' without actually adding that many real nuts and that isn't the case for this spread, or anything I'm likely to make.

This spread is, anyway, delicious and whilst still not a health food, is a damn sight healthier than shop-bought.

Mmmmm. Eat on toast, or on a croissant or straight out of the jar with your fingers.

8 comments:

Lynda said...

Sounds delicious.

So would you not use essence at all or just not that one?

Annalisa Barbieri said...

Hello Lynda. It is delicious and really so easy to make.

I'd not use any essence at all. The recipe doesn't call for it and I just used it because I had it.

I'm not sure there is a better essence than the one from BB (and at £8 a bottle!) but I just think perhaps hazelnut essence is one of those things that's hard to get right.

Next time I will try it without any and the time after that with even less. As it is I only used a few drops but perhaps even those were too much.

Analytical Armadillo IBCLC said...

yum yum yum!!!

John-Paul Flintoff said...

Yes, this could be the solution to the problem I have: what to eat on toast now that my wife has decided (well, five months ago) that I'm not to have refined sugar. Hurrah for home made nutella!

Anonymous said...

Just been to the food coop on campus and saw some organic hazelnuts which reminded me of this recipe.

I bought the lot - 250g. I can make several jars and give some away but how long do you think a jar will last?

Re blanching is this just throwing the nuts into boiling water and for how long?

Thanks for the recipe!

Annalisa Barbieri said...

Hello Anonymous. Blanched just means that they have no skin on. You can buy them like this but if you've got them skinned then I'd put them in boiling water for a minute and then the skins should pop off. Dry them before toasting them in the oven. I've kept mine for a couple of months in the fridge but I say one month to be sure. Have fun!

Jayne said...

Thank you Annalisa
Jayne
PS - hope I didn't seem rude posting as anonymous!

Annalisa Barbieri said...

Not at all. You must post how suits you..