Biba Caggiano's Semifreddo di Nocciole Al Cioccolato
- 2 ounces shelled hazelnuts
- 7 large egg yolks
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1/4 cup hazelnut liqueur
- 2 cups heavy cream
- Butter for greasing pan
- 13 cup milk
- 4 ounces semisweet baking chocolate, cut into chunks
- Preheat a broiler or a toaster oven.
- Spread the hazelnuts on a baking pan and toast until dark brown and the skins have blistered.
- Put the nuts in a large kitchen towel or a plastic bag and rub them against each other to remove the skins.
- Put the skinned, toasted nuts in a food processor or electric blender and process until finely chopped but not pulverized.
- Set aside.
- Place the egg yolks and sugar in the top of a large (about 3-quart) double boiler or in a bowl that can sit in a saucepan of simmering water without touching the bottom.
- Beat the egg yolks and sugar until pale yellow and thick.
- Beat in the liqueur.
- Place the pan over the bottom of the double boiler or the saucepan containing simmering water.
- Using a large wire whisk, continue beating the mixture until it has warmed, doubled in volume and is thick.
- Do not overcook, or the eggs will scramble.
- This is a zabaglione.
- Remove from heat and set the bowl in a pan of ice and water.
- Stir with a whisk until the zabaglione cools completely.
- Whip the cream until nearly stiff and fold into the zabaglione.
- Fold in the chopped hazelnuts.
- Butter the bottom and sides of a 6-cup loaf pan and line with plastic wrap, allowing the plastic to overhang the sides.
- Spread the mixture in the pan, cover with the overhanging plastic wrap and freeze overnight.
- One hour before serving unmold the semifreddo onto a chilled serving dish, remove the plastic wrap and return to the freezer.
- Put the milk and chocolate in the top of a double boiler and cook over simmering water, stirring constantly, until the chocolate has melted and the sauce is smooth.
- Serve the semifreddo sliced, with warm chocolate sauce.
hazelnuts, egg yolks, sugar, hazelnut liqueur, heavy cream, butter, milk, chocolate
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/4473 (may not work)