Going Gourmet With Your Hot Chocolate
Chef Christoper Brooks Whips Up Gourmet Versions Of This Cold Weather Favorite
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Play CBS Video Video Heavenly Hot Chocolate A cup of hot chocolate offers warm comfort in the cold of winter. Chef Christopher Brooks shows Jeff Glor how to give hot chocolate a gourmet makeover.
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Chef Christopher Brooks showed how to prepare very special versions of an old favorite. (CBS)
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News Tools Recipes Galore Searching for a new dish? Get cooking with recipes presented on "The Early Show"!
He prepared two very special versions: A hot chocolate with Valrhona and Cointreau, and a white hot chocolate with espresso. Plus, learn how to make homemade marshmallows and banana bread to accompany your gourmet treats.
Hot Chocolate with Valrhona and Cointreau
French Valrhona chocolate traces its origins back to 1922 in the Rhone.
Ingredients:
1/3 cup grated Valrhona chocolate
1 cup of milk
1 shot of Cointreau (optional)
Preparation:
Put the chocolate and milk in a saucepan and heat over medium heat, stirring or whisking to blend properly. Once blended, add a shot of Cointreau and mix into the hot chocolate. Then drop in some marshmallows and serve with banana bread and a side of whipped cream.
Makes 1 cup
White Hot Chocolate with Espresso
White hot chocolate is something that not everyone has tried, but it is truly delicious. For this recipe the chef recommends Callebaut white chocolate, but if you cannot find it, your favorite white chocolate will do.
Ingredients:
1/3 cups of grated white chocolate
1 cup of milk
1 shot of espresso
Preparation:
Put the white chocolate and milk in a saucepan and heat over medium heat, stirring or whisking to blend properly. Once blended, add a shot of espresso and mix into hot chocolate. Then drop in some marshmallows, or serve on the side. Banana bread and a side of whipped cream make great companions to the chocolate.
Makes 1 cup
Homemade Marshmallows
Ingredients:
¼ cup cornstarch
1/3 cup of confectioners' sugar
2 egg whites
1 envelope unflavored gelatin
½ cup of hot water
1 cup of superfine (bar) sugar
1 tablespoon of light corn syrup
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
Preparation:
First sift the cornstarch and confectioners' sugar together. Grease an 8 inch square pan with flavorless oil, such as canola. Line the bottom with parchment paper. Alternately, add a tablespoon of the cornstarch mixture to the pan, and toss it around so the pan is thoroughly coated.
Whisk the egg whites in the bowl of an electric mixer until they form soft peaks.
Pour ¼ cup of the hot water into a small bowl, and sprinkle the gelatin on top. Stir and leave in a warm spot until the gelatin has dissolved. It will look clear rather than grainy. If it sets, simply reheat it by standing it in a dish of hot water.
In a medium frying pan with a heavy base, mix the remaining ¼ cup of water and the superfine sugar. Heat over a medium heat, and stir until the sugar begins to dissolve. When the water looks completely clear, stir in the corn syrup, the liquefied gelatin and the vanilla extract; it will be a creamy white color.
Now with the electric mixer running, pour this mixture into the egg whites and beat for another 15 minutes, or until the mixture is pure white and very stiff. Turn into the prepared pan, smooth it out as best you can with a spatula, and sift about 1 tablespoon of the cornstarch mixture on top. Let it set for about 2 hours.
Sprinkle the remaining cornstarch mixture on a clean cutting board. Using a wet knife, cut the marshmallow mixture in 2-inch squares, and ease them out of the pan onto the cutting board. Cut each square into four equally sized pieces, and toss them in the cornstarch mixture until they are dusted on all sides. Let them sit on a wire cooling rack or something similar to dry them out for another couple of hours. Store in an airtight container.
Makes 64 marshmallows
Banana Bread
Ingredients:
4 very ripe bananas
2 ½ cups of sugar
2 teaspoons of baking soda
3 cups flour
1 cup (2 sticks) butter at room temperature
4 eggs
½ cup of sour cream
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 cup broken walnuts (optional)
Preparation:
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees, and set a rack in the center. Thoroughly grease three 3 inch by 7-inch loaf pans or two 9-inch by 5-inch loaf pans, and line the bottoms with parchment paper.
Mash the bananas with a fork, sprinkling them as you go with the with two teaspoons of sugar (the sugar helps develop the flavor.) Set aside. Mix the baking soda with flour and set aside.
In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Mix in the eggs one at a time, adding 1 tablespoon of the flour mixture with each one. Mix in the sour cream and vanilla extract and the remaining flour mixture. When thoroughly blended, stir in the mashed bananas and the walnuts if you are using them.
Turn the batter into the prepared pans, and bake. In 3 inch by 7-inch pans, the banana bread will take 30 to 40 minutes to bake. Larger pans will take 50 to 60 minutes to bake. To test for doneness, poke a skewer into the center, and when it comes out clean the banana bread is ready. Cool in the pans on a wire rack for 15 to 20 minutes; then remove from the pans to finish cooling.
Makes 3 small or 2 large loaves.
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- Hi Val,
Another interesting read is a paper called "The Oiling of America". Sorry I don''t have more information on it than that (my copy is at home) but I found it online. Seems much of our diet information is controlled by the food industry and their "paid for" research, along with the pharmacies and then the doctors just fall in line like so many sheep. - Reply to this comment
- Hi Val ,
I work in Science and I had a quick look at the site you mentioned and I have mixed views about it.
Firstly - the brain needs sugar to survive although there is a backup system - keto acids which are derived from protein. The are a CHRONIC starvation response - they are the reason why starving people have fruity breath. In times of nutrition the body can make glucose in the liver. AT least in a very very quick search there is no evdience suggesting a link between ketos and brain function.
Secondly, the sample size is way too small - hence the reason why it is in a obscure journal (impact factor 1.8 - med quality journals 4-6, top 13) the larger the numbers , the larger the effect and the stronger the conclusions . Also - for an effect to be great - it needs to be replicated in other locations. The other thing is that radically changing your diet will change who we are - we are what we eat. Without an analysis of what the subjects'' normal diet was - it''s hard to draw conclusions.
Honestly - with the amount of conflicting nutritional information (red wine , chocoate) and the lack of any genetic factors (my bias) I have trouble believing it. - Reply to this comment
- Good recipe - I''m totally OFF calorie counting!
Have you heard of the new research on calorie restriction and the warnings being posted all over the place?
I just heard about this, and being a calorie counter and the one responsible for my family''s nutrition, I take it pretty seriously.
Basically, it says that calorie restriction causes brain function loss - and very quickly!
http://www.dietingscience.com
It doesn''t seem like hype because real scientists did the research.
Have you seen this or news like it???
Your feedback welcomed.
Val - Reply to this comment
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




