Sunday, December 20, 2009

Panforte



This recipes has been lightly adapted form my book Sweet As... (New Holland Publishers).
I love panforte for Christmas, but here in NZ is ever so expensive, and I prefer the home made version anyway, as it is full of nuts and fruit. It took me a while to develop this recipe, I tried with different spices in different doses until I found the one which worked better for me (always use fresh spices though, otherwise the taste will not be the same), and instead of using candied melon most of the time I use candied papaya, which is easier to find in New Zealand. This time I found both, mixed together, so I was very happy. Also, this time I had some rice paper, usually I do without.


This could be a vegan cake, except for the fact that I use honey (and some vegans don't).
For the vanilla sugars (white and icing) I just keep them in a jar with a stick of vanilla


Ingredients
2 tbsp Honey
2 tbsp vanilla flavoured white sugar
2 tbsp vanilla icing sugar, plus more for dusting
1-2 tbsp water, if required
150g (5 and 1/2 oz) citrus peel
200g (7 oz)candied melon and or papaya
150g (5 and 1/2 oz)almonds (or a combination of almonds and hazelnuts - like I did this time)
100g (3 and 1/2 oz) plain flour
1 tsp powdered coriander
1 tsp powdered cinnamon
1/4 (one quarter) tsp powdered nutmeg

Partly fill a small saucepan with hot water and set over a medium heat. In a bowl put the honey, vanilla sugar and icing sugar with 1-2 tablespoons water, depending on the thickness of the honey. Set the bowl over the pan of simmering water and stir the honey until runny. Remove the bowl from the heat and add the citrus peel, papaya, almonds and all the other dry ingredients. Line the base and sides of a 20cm (8 inch) round baking tin non-stick baking paper, add one sheet of rice paper and fill the tin with the mixture, cover with another sheet of rice paper then one sheet of baking paper, and gently press down the cake evenly in the tin. Bake in a oven preheated to 160°C (325°F) for 25 minutes, then remove the top sheet of baking paper and bake for further 20 minutes. Remove from the oven but leave in the baking tin and cover with a thick layer of vanilla icing sugar. Serve cold in small slices as it is quite filling.




Photos by Alessandra Zecchini ©
Recipe Copyright © 2004 Alessandra Zecchini

6 comments:

  1. I've never tried panforte, but yours look good !

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  2. Let me know if you will make it :-)

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  3. I've never tried panforte, is it an Italian Christmas cake?

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  4. @ Jo: Well, Panforte is not exactly a Christmas cake, it is a traditional cake from Siena but often it is given as a present for Christmas.

    here more info http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panforte

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  5. Ever since you taught us how to make panforte, Judit makes in every one and then (particularly when we go to a skitrip with others) and it always causes a fight: who gets more? This has become an absolute favorite of ours!!!

    ReplyDelete

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