Homemade Nutella: Foodie Gift #11

Okay…I love hazelnuts, I love chocolate, sugar ain’t so bad, I’m okay with vanilla as well.  Soooooo….I’m loving this recipe for homemade Nutella-like butter which is amazingly close to the original product in texture and in taste. I could not believe it when I found it–Nutella has been a favorite treat for many members of our family for many years, and to be able to make it so easily is going to allow me to make a lot of people very happy this Christmas!

 

I found the original recipe on site hosted by a woman named Jessica Su, who provided a post with two variations on the her basic recipe for this chocolate hazelnut spread. On her blog,  SuGoodSweets, she gives some nice background and info on Nutella, as well as providing excellent instructions on how to make these. The first is very simple, and I think it tastes much more like Nutella than the other. The only tweaking I did was to cut way back on the oil. By the time everything was mixed up in the food processor, I only needed to add a teaspoon or two of oil to have it at the right consistency. The second recipe requires making caramel and then pulverizing it after it hardens–this is the sweetener for this variation. This second batch had a nice dark chocolate taste to it, but the texture was a bit grainy because of not being able to completely break down the caramel. It’s a good and interesting option, but if you are looking for something close to the original Nutella, recipe 1 would be the way to go.

 

Here are the recipes, as they appear on SuGoodSweets:

 

Chocolate-Hazelnut Spread (easy version)

Yield: about 12 ounces (1 1/2 cups)

2 cups whole raw hazelnuts
1 cup powdered sugar
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
up to 1/4 cup vegetable or nut oil (I only used a teaspoon or so)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place hazelnuts in a single layer on a shallow baking pan. Toast until the skins are almost black and the meat is dark brown, about 15 minutes. Stir the nuts halfway through baking to ensure an even color.
  2. Since the skin is bitter, you’ll want to discard them. Wrap the cooled hazelnuts in a clean kitchen towel or paper towel, and rub until most of the skins have come off. Don’t fret if you can’t get off all the skins.
  3. Process nuts in a food processor, scraping down the sides of the bowl occasionally, until they have liquefied, about 5 minutes. First, you will get coarsely chopped nuts, then a fine meal. After a little while, the nuts will form a ball around the blade, and it will seem like you only have a solid mass. Keep processing. The heat and friction will extract the natural oils, and you will get hazelnut butter!
  4. When the nuts are liquified, add in the sugar, cocoa and vanilla. Slowly drizzle in enough oil to make a spreadable consistency. Since the mixture is warm, it will be more fluid now than at room temperature.
  5. Transfer the spread to an airtight container, and store in the refrigerator for1-2 months. For best results, stir the chocolate-hazelnut spread before using.

Chocolate-Hazelnut Spread (caramel base)

Caramel instructions from Chocolate and the Art of Low-Fat Desserts by Alice Medrich

Yield: about 12 ounces (1 1/2 cups)

1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup water
2 cups whole raw hazelnuts
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/8 tsp salt

  1. Preparation: Line a baking sheet with foil. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
  2. Make the caramel: Combine the sugar and water in a 3- to 4-cup saucepan. Do not stir again during the cooking. Cover and bring sugar and water to a simmer over medium heat. Uncover and wipe down the sides of the pan with a wet pastry brush or a wad of paper towel dipped in water. Cover and cook for 2 minutes, or until the sugar is completely dissolved. Uncover and cook until the syrup turns a pale amber. Test by spooning a drop or two of the syrup onto a white saucer. Swirl the pan gently, continuing to cook and test the color until the syrup darkens to a medium amber color.
  3. Pour the caramel immediately onto the lined baking sheet. Tilt sheet to spread caramel as thinly as possible. Let harden completely, about 15 minutes.
  4. Toast the nuts: Meanwhile, place hazelnuts in a single layer on a shallow baking pan. Toast in the oven until the skins are almost black and the meat is dark brown, about 15 minutes. Stir the nuts halfway through baking to ensure an even color.
  5. To get rid of the bitter skins, wrap the cooled hazelnuts in a clean kitchen towel or paper towel. Rub until most of the skins have come off, but don’t worry if some remain.
  6. Make the nut butter: When the caramel is completely cool, break it into pieces and pulverize in a food processor. Try to get the caramel as fine as possible at this stage (it won’t get finer once you add the nuts).
  7. Add the nuts and process until they have liquefied, about 5 minutes. Scrape down the sides of the bowl occasionally. Be patient; the nuts will go from a fine meal, to forming a ball around the blade, to nut butter. Add the cocoa, vanilla and salt and process until smooth.
  8. Transfer the spread to an airtight container, and store in the refrigerator for 1-2 months. For best results, stir the chocolate-hazelnut spread before using.

Notes:

  • Please use whole raw nuts, and toast them yourself to intensify the flavor. Pre-toasted or pre-chopped nuts are often spoiled.
  • To further intensify the nut flavor, use unrefined nut oil (for version 1), which is tan in color. Refined nut oils have the color and flavor removed. Peanut oil is especially cheap in Chinese supermarkets. I bought 20 ounces for $2.38! There’s a lesson: if you’re looking for a “gourmet” ingredient, try an ethnic market.
  • To make any standard nut butter, use this procedure but omit the powdered sugar, cocoa, vanilla and extra oil. Add 1/2 tsp salt and 2 tbsp granulated sugar. Try making your own cashew butter: you may never go back to peanut butter again!

Well, there you have it…and her last note on making other nut butters inspired me to try some of these…check out Foodie Gift #12!

Ice Box Nutella and Peanut Butter Graham Cracker Sandwiches

The secret  is this:  Almost everything is improved by the presence of Nutella.  You know the stuff, right?

 

 

I was first introduced to the creamy, hazelnutty, chocolately heaven-in-a-bottle way back in the day when I was an exchange student in La Belle France.  There was a bakery where you could actually bring your bread and have them spread it with Nutella for the equivalent of about fifty cents.  I loved France.

 

My kids, for better or for worse, are growing up with the omnipresent monster-sized jar of Nutella in the house.  Thankfully, our local(ish) warehouse store carries cranium sized jars of my favorite fix-it-all ingredient. 

 

I think Nutella really can fix it all.  Got a cake or bowl of ice cream that needs pizzazz?  Warm a little Nutella up and drizzle over the top.  Oh my yes!  Out of butter, jam or marmalade for your toast?  Do I even need to say it?  Are you going somewhere last minute or having an impromptu play group at your house or having last minute company? 

 

Try this quick frozen dessert that I make around here.  It’s not fancy.  It’s not polished.  But all that taken into account, I have never had someone refuse one of these.  I’ve also never had someone fail to nicely ask for seconds and/or eyeball the one their kid was eating and ask several times whether they really wanted to finish it.  Please try these.  I think you might even thank me.

 

 

Okie dokie.  The recipe below is for the Nutella Peanut Butter Graham Cracker Sandwiches, but you can see that I used vanilla wafer cookies for some of them.  I’m crazy like that.  Use whatever cookies you have on hand and it’ll still be delicious.

 

 

Ice Box Nutella Peanut Butter Graham Cracker Sandwiches

 

Ingredients:

  • One box graham crackers, any flavor
  • One jar Nutella (I don’t recommend any Nutella substitutes.  They’re specifically not so good.)
  • Natural peanut butter (None of the corn syrup in my p.b. please.)  You can use crunchy or smooth!

 

This couldn’t be simpler.  Spread Nutella on one whole graham cracker.  Spread peanut butter on another cracker.  The thickness is up to you.  Just remember you’ll be attempting to put your teeth through the frozen version of this and plan accordingly!  Gently sandwich together and set in a freezer safe container with a lid.  Continue on until you’ve run out of crackers, Nutella or peanut butter. 

 

Now comes the hard part.  Do not eat them immediately. Put the lid on it and stick it in the freezer for at least an hour.  Longer is fine, not necessary, but fine. 

 

How do we like this recipe?

 

An emphatic 14 thumbs up out of a possible 14.  If the dogs had opposable thumbs they’d hike them for this, too.  They’re snuck more than their share out of the hands of kids who were momentarily distracted.  Danged dogs.  I’ll just say one more thing about this dessert.  We NEVER have any leftovers.  No matter how many I make.  You’ve been forewarned.