Candy Thermometer
Fresh Strawberry Ice Cream
Don't let the unexciting name of the recipe fool you—this ice cream is unusually good.
Active time: 40 min Start to finish: 4 hr
Caviar Parfaits
This sophisticated appetizer from Aqua in San Francisco is nice for a special occasion.
Caramel-Dipped Apples
Everything's ready: The pumpkin is carved, the costumes are made, and the front yard is looking absolutely frightful. All that's missing from this Halloween scene is something sweet—for the kids, of course.
How about caramel apples? You could make them, and then the kids could help with the decorating. That would be a great way to introduce them to one of your childhood favorites. After all, you’re much too mature these days to take a big, sticky bite out of a succulently sweet caramel apple, but the kids will devour them. And at least they’ll be eating apples — even if they are coated with delicious caramel, and even if they are decorated with chocolate and nuts and sprinkles.
Our resident candy expert and senior food editor, Sarah Tenaglia, developed an easy recipe for the caramel, and she outlined straightforward steps to follow while making it. She also came up with all sorts of decorating ideas.
Perfect. Now you have everything you need for Halloween — for the kids, of course.
Making the caramel requires the use of a clip-on candy thermometer, which should be tested for accuracy before starting. Attach it to the side of a medium saucepan of water, and boil the water for three minutes. The thermometer should register 212°F; if it doesn’t, take the difference into account when reading the temperature.
French Toast Santa Fe
Active time: 20 min Start to finish: 25 min
It seems like people have been making fun of the railroad for as long as we can remember, but no one jokes about the French toast that used to be served on the Santa Fe line. The train might have run late, but when indulging in a breakfast like this, who cared?
Chocolate-Chunk Soufflé Cakes
Tocqueville presents this elegant soufflé-like dessert with mint ice cream and mint syrup.
No-Churn Pistachio Ice Cream
Because the oil in the pistachio paste separates from the solids, it is necessary to blend the contents of the entire can of paste in a food processor until it is creamy and light in texture.
By Pierre Gagnaire
Light Tiramisu
Whole eggs, angel food cake, light cream cheese and light sour cream bring the calorie count of this Italian dessert way down.
Orange Marmalade Ice Cream Sandwiches with Almond Florentines
We call for English-style bitter orange marmalade (made with Seville oranges and often called Dundee) because other types made the ice cream too sweet and too soft. It's available at specialty foods shops and some supermarkets. This recipe makes about a dozen more florentines than you'll need for the sandwiches, but it's a good idea to have extra in case one or two break — and the cookies are delicious even without the ice cream.
Active time: 1 1/2 hr Start to finish: 7 hr (includes freezing)
Toffee McGreevey
By Dawn McGreevey
Peanut Butter-Chocolate Bark Triangles
Arrange in boxes lined with waxed paper. Try simple take-out cartons tied up with raffia and decorated with small pinecones.
Parisian Passover Coconut Macaroons
The secret to these macaroons' texture is the Italian meringue, composed of egg whites and a boiling sugar syrup. When baking these for Passover, dust the sheets with matzo cake meal; you can use flour at other times.
By Faye Levy
Crispy Artichoke Flowers with Salsa Verde
These twice-fried artichokes, or carciofi alla giudea, are made using a technique created by Jewish cooks in Rome. The first frying is done at a lower heat and simply cooks the artichokes. The second frying, in hotter oil, causes the leaves to spring open and gives them their crisp finish.
Active time: 40 min Start to finish: 55 min
Bon Ton-Style Fried Chicken
Bilko's spice mix is a closely guarded secret, but Donna King shared with us its fundamental ingredients as well as the basic technique—a long marination, at least 24 hours. This results in some of the juiciest chicken we've ever eaten. The chicken must also rest five or ten minutes after being dredged in the seasoned flour to, as King told us, "get doughy." The Bon Ton recipe calls for Ac'cent (monosodium glutamate) in both the marinade and the dredging mixture. We tested it with and without, and the chicken mainly tasted saltier with the Ac'cent, which some people preferred.