Baking
Espresso-Banana Napoleons
France's classic layered dessert of puff pastry, pastry cream and icing fell out of favor for a while, but it recently experienced a revival. This contemporary version features phyllo instead of puff pastry, an espresso-flavored pastry cream and bananas, which were used in many treats in 1997.
Chocolate Cherry Charlottes
You might wonder why we freeze the chocolate filling for these charlottes before baking them. The coldness prevents the chocolate from overcooking in the oven.
Chocolate Souffles
Adapted from Pierre Gagnaire
The French, who invented soufflés, understand that the whole point is that everything that rises falls. Soufflés should not be overcooked; they should be slightly creamy in the middle.
By Pierre Gagnaire
Lemon Cream Tart
This takeoff on key lime pie, made with lemons and a vanilla cookie crust, is deliciously tangy and refreshing. In the nineteenth century, fresh milk would not keep long without refrigeration, so Florida cooks used sweetened condensed milk in their key lime pies.
By Greg Patent
Creamy Lime Pie
Pay de Limón
At our cooking classes in Oaxaca, I guide our students through the markets, buying tastes of the thick cream (it's like milky butter with a cheesey flavor and unctuous texture), the perfumey, greenish-yellow key limes and exotic tropical fruit like guanabana, chirimoya, guava, black zapote and papaya. In order to offer more than a simple taste of these traditional foods after one trip to the market, I combined that incredible cream and lime into a simple pie for our class meal, serving it with an assortment of pureed fruits. Even with our American homemade cream (or crème fraîche) and less-tart hybrid Persian limes, the pie makes a lovely special-dinner finale.
By Rick Bayless, Deann Groen Bayless, and JeanMarie Brownson
Chocolate Cognac Truffle Tartlets
The recipe makes about 36 truffles; 12 are used for the tartlets. The extras can be kept frozen for other special occasions. Start this recipe the day before serving the tartlets.
Spicy Sugar Cookies
Salt and pepper are predominant flavors in these sophisticated cookies (they're too spicy for children). Try pairing them with a tangy sorbet.
Walnut-Raisin Cookies
(NOCELLI)
Walnuts star in several important specialties of the region of Liguria, including these easy-to-make cookies named after the Italian word for walnut, noce.
Spiced Apple Pie with Raisins
Apple cider vinegar makes the crust extra flaky. Offer eggnog ice cream (or vanilla ice cream sprinkled with nutmeg) alongside.
Blueberry Cobbler
As a child, I was a picky eater and this cobbler was especially hard for me to take, since it's sort of an ugly dish. After being threatened with a trip to the doctor for vitamin shots, I did start eating more, and the cobbler turned out to be one of my favorites. It's a classic North Carolina recipe and is one of my mom's signature dishes. It's so simple and takes no time to make.
By Kathy Spivey and Donna Spivey
Mocha Ice Cream Tart
Kids and adults alike will get a kick out of this tower of ice cream. It makes a spectacular-yet easy-dessert for summer birthday celebration.