Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by The Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own and they are responsible for the content of their blogs and their recipes. The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of food bloggers. To comment on the original post, click here. Fill with candy.Ĭarol Ramos blogs at The Pastry Chef's Baking. To unmold the large basket, lift the plastic liner from the container and peel it away from the pretzels. Shape small nests or wreaths on sheets of wax paper. Arrange the sticky pretzels against the sides of the container to resemble a basket or a nest. It’s okay if some of the pretzel shows through the chocolate.įor a large basket or nest, scrape the pretzels into the lined bowl or box. Use a rubber spatula to turn the pretzels gently in the chocolate until they are lightly coated, adding as much as the rest of the chocolate as necessary. In a medium bowl, pour most of the chocolate over the pretzels. Melt the chocolate in the top of a double boiler over barely simmering water. Then get your guests to eat them before the bloom has time to appear.įrom " A Year in Chocolate" by Alice Medrichģ ounces semisweet or bittersweet chocolateģ cups or more thin pretzel sticks, salted or unsaltedĢ-quart bowl or box, lined with plastic wrap, for a large basket or nest The second way is more quick and dirty: Prepare the baskets at the last minute, refrigerate until just barely set and use immediately. That means when you melt it, you bring the chocolate to a certain temperature (there are different temps for dark, milk and white chocolate but generally around 113 degrees F.) then cool it down to a certain temperature (again, there are different "working temps", depending on the type of chocolate you're using but think somewhere in the mid- to high 80s F.) before working with it. The first and most foolproof way is to temper your chocolate properly. My favorites are Cadbury mini eggs and I think the only reason I made the baskets was so I could have an excuse to eat the mini eggs.įor anyone who's worked with chocolate, you'll know one risk of melting and cooling chocolate is what's known as chocolate "bloom." That's the grayish/white stuff (aka cocoa butter) that rises to the surface of your chocolate once it cools and re-solidifes. Once the chocolate has set, carefully peel away the cupcake liners and fill the nests with your favorite Easter candy – jelly beans, chocolate eggs, pastel M&Ms, etc. I didn't measure out the pretzel sticks but simply mixed enough in until all the pretzels were coated. Three ounces of chocolate only made four baskets for me so you might want to double the recipe if you need more. A 3.5-ounce bar of Valrhona is $2.99 at Trader Joe's and a similar-size bar of Lindt or Godiva costs even less at Target and sometimes CVS – trust me, it's worth the money to buy good chocolate. Since there are only 2 ingredients in the baskets, you should buy the chocolate you would most enjoy eating on your pretzels. Please, please, please use good, high quality chocolate. If that happens, simply warm it up very, very slightly until it's more liquid and easier to work with again. If the chocolate gets too cold, it'll clump on the pretzels and be more difficult to work with. It's OK to combine it with the pretzels while the chocolate is still warm and to start forming the baskets. Second, do not let the melted chocolate get too cold. It'll make the baskets easier to make and not too big. A couple of tips to make this easier: First, break up some of the pretzel sticks so you have them in varying lengths. I only wanted small "baskets" but instead of using the wax paper method like Medrich's instructions say to do, I formed these in cupcake paper liners so they'd be easier to shape. Although I think my version is more accurately called "birds' nests" rather than baskets, just in appearance. If you like chocolate covered pretzels, here's a way to have your, er, basket and eat it, too. In the midst of all that, if you want something quick and simple to make with your kids or just for something pretty to put at individual places on the company table, try this simple recipe for chocolate Easter baskets from " A Year in Chocolate" by Alice Medrich. As Easter draws near, you might be busy putting together the Easter ham and its fixings, dyeing Easter eggs or cleaning the house for Easter company.
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