International Recipes
Italian Recipes
Chestnut Crunch (Croccanti di Marroni
Posted by FootsieBear at recipegoldmine.com 10/2/2001 3:13 pm
Source: Italian Library
Something rather different, and not baked - this recipe was published by
Giovanni Vialardi in 1854, and derives from the mountains of Cuneo and the Val
di Susa in Piemonte, where chestnuts were a staple winter food. The marrone
(marron, for the French) is larger, much more highly valued than the regular
chestnut.
2 1/4 pounds marroni
1/2 cup sweet butter
3/4 cups granulated sugar
2 tablespoons whipping cream
1/4 pound amaretti, crushed
2 ounces raisins
3 eggs, separated (save the whites for something else)
1/2 teaspoon powdered cinnamon
Bread crumbs for dredging
Grated lemon zest
Olive oil for frying
1 egg
Salt
Boil the chestnuts until tender, then peel them, and press the nut meats
through a strainer (you can also use a food mill with a fine-holed disk; were
you to use a blender the texture would be different).
Combine the mashed chestnuts, cinnamon, butter, a half cup of sugar, cream,
amaretti, three yolks, the raisins and a pinch of salt together in a bowl; the
mixture will be stiff. Spread it on your work surface to a thickness of about
3/4 of an inch (2 cm) and let it cool.
In the meantime, grate the zest of a lemon and mix it into the remaining
sugar. Beat the remaining egg, and heat the oil for frying. Cut the chestnut
mixture into 1-inch x 1-inch diamonds, roll them in the bread crumbs, dredge
them in the egg, roll them again the bread crumbs, and fry them until golden
brown. Drain the pastries on absorbent paper and dust them with the sugar and
lemon zest mixture.
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