Bleeding Espresso

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YAY! It’s finally here – February 5th is World Nutella Day. Concieved as an excuse to eat Nutella guilt free and spread the word (pun intended) on its chocolate-y hazelnutty goodness, Michell Fabio at Bleeding Espresso and Sara Rosso at Ms. Adventures In Italy host this incredible event, exhorting followers to submit Nutella recipes, so we can share the resulting goodies the world over. A third cohort – Shelley Rhuele – formerly of At Home in Rome (a now defunct blog, but which is still online and is very much worth a read of the archives) was also a co-founder, but sadly she no longer participates as she no longer blogs from Italy, having moved back Stateside.

This is my first year actually making something for the event so I thought I’d start with something simple. I adapted a favorite banana bread recipe (courtesy of Family Circle) and came up with the following:

Nutella and Nutella Streusel-Topped Nutella Banana Bread

Now who among you isn’t drooling already? Anyone? Anyone?

Yes, Esther, I know you have been drooling since last night! My old high-school buddy Esther, who lives all the way in Wisconsin and has no patience whatsoever, has been hopping up and down wanting to know what I made for today’s event. So here it is my old friend, without further ado - drum roll please…..

Bread Ingredients:

(Makes 3 mini-loaves per original recipe, but I used a single 9″ round cake pan. First, this tastes more like cake anyway, second, what’s with all the extra stuff to wash?)

  • 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 cup mashed bananas (3 small overripe bananas, about 1 pound)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, melted

I changed this up a bit by adding

  • 1/2 cup Nutella
For the Streusel:
  • 1/2 cup all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup packed brown sugar (recipe called for light brown, I used what I had)
  • 1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, softened
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Once again, I changed this up by adding

  • 1/3 cup nutella, plus
  • Nutella for decorative icing – as much or as little (gasp!) as you like

Mix all the dry ingredients together in a medium bowl, and the wet ones (mashed banana, eggs, butter) in a large bowl, beating until smooth.  Then slowly add the dry ingredients to the wet, beating again until smooth, adding 1/2 of the 1/2 cup of Nutella at the end, beating just enough to incorporate. Pour batter into greased pan. sprinkle top with drizzles of remaining Nutella, pushing them into the batter just enough so they are no longer visible on top.

For the streusel mix all the ingredients together in a bowl until crumbly making sure the Nutella is well broken up and evenly distributed. Sprinkle streusel over the batter in the pan, and bake in a 350º oven for 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool pan on a rack for 10 minutes before inverting to remove from pan.

This is bread so it's healthy, right? Wait, isn't the cacao bean a vegetable? Hazelnuts are good, right? Further rationalizations are offered at $1.00 each, please contact blogger directly.

For the decorative icing I put a big ole blob of Nutella in a baggie, cut off a small tip at the corner and “pastry-bagged” the squiggle you see in the picture. Hey, go nuts! The design is up to you.

The result is so good it’s hard not to eat every last crumb in one go:

Read the rest of this entry »

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Michelle over at Bleeding Espresso has a regular weekly feature called “Love Thursdays” on her blog that she writes from Badolato, Calabria (in Italy for those of you that are geographically challenged).

She’ll usually post a photo of something heart shaped that isn’t usually heart shaped or thought to be heart shaped. Like a christmas ornament or a grape tomato or a pebble or some other love “related” photo or story that usually involves “P,” her other half.

It is really very sweet and not icky at all. Plus she gets a post out of it every Thursday. As far as post topics go, Michele is the queen of finding stuff to write about.

One night, inspired by one of Michelle’s “What’s Cooking Wednesday” features (I told you she was the queen of blog topics, right?), I set to making an artichoke pasta dish that I now rightly call “Carbonara Michelle” since one of her recipes inspired it (I’ll post that recipe someday too, just not today).

As a second course, I butterflied a chicken breast and lo and behold, this is what happened:

I heart chicken.....

I heart chicken.....

I immediately thought of Michelle and her “Love Thursdays” and took photos and emailed them to her on a lark. I didn’t think she’d actually use them! But she did because she’s extremely cool like that and has mentioned me on her blog more than once. Also because she knows a free post topic when it falls on her lap. So today, she posted my chicken photos, giving me yet another plug on her very widely read blog. Michelle is a true pal, and I owe her.

To boot, I now have a topic for today thanks to her, because it only seems fitting that I now post the recipe for said chicken.

Which I hereby dub “Chicken Bleeding Espresso.” But I promise, folks, that there is absolutely NO espresso in this chicken.

I didn’t think I was going to post this recipe and don’t have a “Cast of Characters” shot so you’ll just have to take my word for it:

  • One boneless skinless chicken breast (multiply by number of servings)
  • A few cloves of garlic
  • A good sized drizzle of olive oil
  • A fat dollop of brown mustard (teaspoon of Guildens is fine)
  • A few sprigs of fresh thyme
  • A few squeezes of fresh lemon juice
  • A few turns fresh coarsely ground black pepper

Method:

Butterfly the chicken breast (by cutting in half horizontally) and set aside.

Crush the garlic in a press and into a small bowl, and mix with the oil, the mustard and the thyme leaves (take the leaves off the stem by running your fingers down the stem in reverse, and chop them roughly to release the oils), the lemon juice and the pepper. Brush the chicken breast all over with this mixture and let sit for 20 minutes – not in the fridge. The chicken needs to be close to room temperature when you cook it.

I heart Bleeding Espresso!

I heart Bleeding Espresso!

Cook the chicken using your favorite dry method – on a barbeque, in a hot iron skillet, under a broiler or whatever your method of choice. The chicken is done when it is no longer soft to the touch – a few minutes (3 or 4? never timed it) for each side*.

When done, this is what you get:  

Now go check out Michelle’s “Love Thursday” for this week and you get to see the now world renowned Chicken Bleeding Espresso as a vehicle of love….(too corny? too bad)!

 

* Folks, my blogged recipes are not for beginners. If you don’t know how long to cook a butterflied chicken breast, you need to start somewhere else, not here.

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