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Mont Blanc

By John, 20 February, 2022
Region
Italy
Description

"Mont Blanc chestnut dessert"This is a wonderful and comparatively simple dessert from the mountains of northern Italy, but it requires a food mill to get the proper texture and look. I made this one for a feast that focused specifically on Italy's Piedmont and Valle d'Aosta regions. The city of Val d'Aosta and the region are at the foot of that famous Alpine mountain on the border between Italy and Switzerland. It is traditionally topped with whipped cream to resemble the snow-capped mountain. In the photo it is surrounded by Marrons Glace and foil-wrapped gianduia (chocolate hazelnut candies) from Torino.

Some recipes put this on a base of Swiss Broyage, which is nice but it adds over an hour of cooking time to whip and dry the meringue.

To get the rugged traditional appearance, sweetened chestnut paste is passed through a potato ricer, forming long threads of paste. You might be able to reproduce that look by forcing it through a colander, but I've never tried that.

Yield
6 Servings
Preparation time
15 minutes
Cooking time
0 minutes
Total time
15 minutes
Ingredients
500 g Sweetened Chestnut Spread (Clement Faugier, 1 can - NOT the unsweetened puree)
1 c Whipped Cream
1⁄4 Swiss Broyage ((optional))
Instructions
  1. Whip the cream and sweeten it to taste.
  2. In another bowl, whip up the chestnut spread to aerate it and break up lumps.
  3. Put the chestnut puree into a food mill. Above a cake plate, turn the food mill to force the chestnut spread onto the plate. Use a circular motion with a shrinking radius to build your mountain. At this point you can cover it with plastic wrap and chill until needed.
  4. Top with the whipped cream and garnish as you like.
Notes

Clement Faugier makes chestnut puree and sweetened chestnut spread. There are other makers, but the Clement Faugier is the easiest to find, and you can order it online.

You can use the puree but you will have to sweeten it and add some vanilla. Both products are starchy and tend to get waxy in the can, so you must break it up before use. I do this in a KitchenAid mixer.

If you don't have a food mill, you can try forcing the spread through a colander, but I expect it would be hard to control the shape of the mound, and reshaping it would ruin the rugged appearance. You could try a pastry bag, but I think it would take a long time. 

Book traversal links for Mont Blanc

  • Mom's Half-Wheat Bread
  • Up
  • Nesselrode Pudding

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