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Panna Cotta

Panna Cotta.jpg

Ingredients

Cooking Spray

1-1/2 Cups Whole Milk

3 Teaspoons Powdered Gelatin

1 Teaspoon Orange Zest

1 Teaspoon Lemon Zest

1 Each Vanilla Bea, Cut and Scraped

1/3 Cup Sugar

1-1/2 Cups Light or Heavy Cream

1 Pinch Salt

(Optional) Fruit for Top

Jeff White Standing Shot.jpg

Chef Jeff White

Directions

1.     Bloom the gelatin: Pour the milk into the saucepan and sprinkle the powdered gelatin evenly over top.  Let soften for 5 minutes or until the surface of the milk is wrinkled, gelatin grains look wet, and slightly dissolved.

2.     Dissolve the gelatin over low heat:  Set the saucepan over low heat and warm the milk gently, stirring frequently. The milk should never boil or simmer; if you see steam, remove the pot from the stove and let it cool down. The milk should get hot, but not so hot that you can't leave your finger in the pot for a few seconds. The gelatin will dissolve quickly as the milk warms; it melts at body temperature so this step should go quickly.

3.     Check to make sure the gelatin is dissolved:  After about 2 minutes of warming, rub a bit of the milk between your fingers to make sure it's smooth or dip a spoon in the milk and check the back for distinct grains of gelatin.

4.     Add Orange and Lemon Zest, then add Vanilla Bean

5.     Dissolve the sugar: Stir the sugar into the milk and continue warming until it dissolves.  It shouldn't take more than 5 minutes total to dissolve both the gelatin and sugar.  Be sure to not let the mixture boil still.

6.     Whisk in the cream: Remove the saucepan from the heat.

7.     Strain mixture into bowl catching any whole ingredients remaining.

8.     Spray containers with oil to help release after the Panna Cotta is set.

9.     Pour into the ramekins and chill: Divide the mixture evenly between the prepared ramekins and put in the refrigerator to chill. If serving straight from the cups, without unmolding, chill for 1 to 2 hours. If you want to unmold the Panna Cotta, chill for at least 4 hours.

10.   Prepare to unmold: Fill a large bowl partway with warm to hot water. Wipe a dessert plate with a damp paper towel (a damp plate lets you reposition the Panna Cotta more easily if it doesn't fall in the right spot).

11.   Release the Panna Cotta edge from the cup: Run a thin knife carefully around the sides of a ramekin. Don't slide the knife all the way into the cup; just release the top edge of the pudding from the edge of the cup. Dip the ramekin in the warm water up to its rim, and hold it there for about 3 seconds.

12   Unmold on a plate: Invert the ramekin over the plate and shake gently to help the panna cotta fall out, or press gently on one side to help nudge it out.  It should fall out on the plate easily. (If it does not, return to the warm water bath in increments of 2 seconds.)  Reposition on the plate if desired.  Serve immediately, or refrigerate, lightly covered, for up to 5 days.  The gelatin gets stronger as it sits, so this will be a bit rubbery by days 4 or 5, but you can mitigate this by letting the panna cotta sit at room temperature for about half an hour before serving.

13.   (Optional) If you have a fruit to top the Panna Cotta, add the fruit here.

Servings ~ 6

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