Praline Baskets
- 1 pound blanched almonds, about 2 1/2 cups
- 1 13 cups sugar
- 1/2 pound, plus 2 tablespoons, butter
- 7 tablespoons cold milk
- 5 1/2 tablespoons flour
- Put the almonds into the container of a food processor and blend until coarse-fine.
- The ideal consistency would be like that of whole peppercorns.
- There should be about three cups.
- Put the ground nuts in a saucepan, preferably with a round bottom, and add the sugar and butter.
- Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until the butter is melted and the ingredients are evenly blended.
- Take care that the mixture does not burn.
- Remove from the heat and stir in the milk.
- Stir in the flour.
- Let stand until cool.
- Chill thoroughly.
- When chilled, the mixture should be easy to shape into round balls.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
- Divide the mixture into 14 or 16 portions, one portion at a time.
- Shape each portion into a round ball.
- It is important that you work with only two or three portions at a time.
- As the balls are shaped, arrange them, spaced neatly and well apart, on rectangles of parchment paper.
- Cover with a second sheet of parchment paper and roll each portion into circles measuring about five inches.
- Remove the upper sheet of parchment.
- (If parchment paper is not available, arrange the balls, two or three at a time, on a buttered baking sheet and flatten them into five-inch circles with the fingers.)
- Place in the oven on the center shelf and bake eight to 10 minutes or until golden or caramel brown.
- Do not burn.
- At this point, you must act quickly but cautiously.
- Remove the rounds from the oven and let stand briefly.
- The important thing is to allow the rounds to cool for a few seconds or to the precise moment when a metal spatula can be slid beneath each one.
- If they are allowed to stand too long, they will become brittle and cannot be shaped or molded.
- Quickly transfer one round at a time into a round-bottom glass or metal container with a capacity of approximately one and one-half cups.
- Press down to mold the round into a ''basket.''
- Quickly proceed to the second and third round, pressing them into shape.
- The rounds must remain warm as you shape them.
- If they break slightly, they may be repaired with the fingers, provided they are still warm enough to be malleable.
- The baskets will become firm as they cool.
- As they become firm, remove them and set them aside to be filled as a dessert.
- They may be filled with a chilled pudding or custard mixture, with scoops of ice cream, with fresh fruit or berries and so on.
- If desired, the inside of each basket may be brushed with melted chocolate before filling.
blanched almonds, sugar, butter, cold milk, flour
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/11200 (may not work)