Stars of pastry #13 - The Tiramisu
The Tiramisu
Is a popular coffee-flavoured Italian custard dessert. It is made of ladyfingers dipped in coffee, layered with a whipped mixture of eggs, sugar, and mascarpone cheese, flavoured with cocoa. The recipe has been adapted into many varieties of cakes and other desserts. Its origins are often disputed among Italian regions such as Veneto, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Piedmont, and others.
History
Most accounts of the origin of tiramisu date its invention to the 1960s in the region of Veneto, Italy, at the restaurant "Le Beccherie" in Treviso, Italy. Specifically, the dish is claimed to have first been created by a confectioner named Roberto Linguanotto, owner of "Le Beccherie". Other sources report the creation of the cake as originating towards the end of the 17th century in Siena in honour of Grand Duke Cosimo III. Regardless, recipes named "tiramisu" are unknown in cookbooks before the 1960s. The Italian-language dictionary Sabatini Coletti traces the first printed mention of the word to 1980, while Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary gives 1982 as the first mention of the dessert.
Tiramisu may have originated as a variation of another layered dessert, Zuppa Inglese (
Italian dessert layering custard and sponge cake).
It is mentioned in Giovanni Capnist's 1983 cookbook I Dolci del Veneto. Among traditional pastry, tiramisu also has similarities with many other cakes, in particular with the Charlotte, in some versions composed of a Bavarian cream surrounded by a crown of ladyfingers and covered by a sweet cream; the Turin cake (dolce Torino), consisting of ladyfingers soaked in rosolio and alchermes with a spread made of butter, egg yolks, sugar, milk, and dark chocolate; and the Bavarese Lombarda, which is similar in the preparation and the presence of certain ingredients such as ladyfingers and egg yolks. In Bavarese, butter and rosolio are also used, but not mascarpone cream nor coffee.
On July 29, 2017, Tiramisu was entered by the Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies on the list of traditional Friulian and Giulian agri-food products in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region.
Traditional tiramisu contains a short list of ingredients: finger biscuits, egg yolks, sugar, coffee, mascarpone cheese and cocoa powder. In the original recipe there is no liquor or egg whites. It was first made in Italy in the 1960s.
The original shape of the cake is round, although the shape of the biscuits favors the use of a rectangular or square pan, spreading the classic image "to tile". However, it is also often assembled in round glasses, which show the various layers, or pyramid. Modern versions have as a rule the addition of whipped cream or whipped egg, or both, combined with mascarpone cream. This makes the dish lighter, thick and foamy. Among the most common alcoholic changes includes the addition of Marsala. The cake is usually eaten cold.
Another variation involves the preparation of the cream with eggs heated to sterilize it, but not so much that the eggs scramble. Over time, replacing some of the ingredients, mainly coffee, there arose numerous variants such as tiramisu with chocolate, amaretto, berry, lemon, strawberry, pineapple, yogurt, banana, raspberry, coconut, and even beer. Although these are not considered true Tiramisu as these variations only share the layered characteristic of Tiramisu; these examples more closely resemble variations of trifle (
dessert made with fruit, a thin layer of sponge fingers or sponge cake soaked in sherry or another fortified wine, and custard).
Numerous variations of Tiramisu exist. Some cooks use other cakes or sweet, yeasted breads, such as panettone, in place of ladyfingers. Other cheese mixtures are used as well, some containing raw eggs, and others containing no eggs at all. Marsala wine can be added to the recipe, but other liquors are frequently substituted for it in both the coffee and the cheese mixture, including dark rum, Madeira, port, brandy, Malibu, or Irish cream and especially coffee-flavoured liqueurs such as Tia Maria and Kahlúa. Disaronno is also often used to enhance the taste of tiramisu.
My favorite variation is the Tiramisu strawberries limoncello
Recipe
Ingredients (8 people)
400g strawberries
Limoncello to soak biscuits
Twenty biscuits in the spoon
4 tablespoons lemon juice
4 eggs
150g of powdered sugar
400g of mascarpone
Preparation
Separate the whites from the yolks.
In a bowl, beat with a fork to start and then with the electric mixer the egg yolks with the sugar.
Mix the mascarpone with the lemon juice, then add it to the egg yolks, whipping the mixture (by hand this time, but vigorously).
Beat the egg whites firmly. Add them gently to the egg-sugar-mascarpone mixture.
Rinse and cut strawberries. Cut them in two or small cubes according to the presentation mode chosen (for the jars I had cut them in two, in the gratin dish it was in small cubes).
Pour Limoncello in a deep plate. Soak the cookies quickly on each side.
Proceed to the assembly: alternating a layer of biscuits with a layer of strawberries then cream.
Refrigerate at least two hours before tasting.
You are truely a star of pastries, these look so deliciously beautiful. Great post pastry star, keep shining.
Ahan so yummy and tasty especially cake and strawberry limencello. my mouth filled with water.
Keep on sharing.@lndesta120282
Totally agree with you that cake made the mouth water.
Excellent your publication is very succulent, i loved your recipes now i hope you post more
Wow
I This This is very yummy 😊😊
@indesta120282
very lezat
I like it
looking very yummy 😋 😋 😋 tasty delicious love to eat it.
Good post my friend..
Very tasty
very cool!