Tuesday, January 16, 2018

Two Pourable Chocolate Sauces to the Rescue




Things were getting pretty dire around here. There was no chocolate sauce for the ice cream, always vanilla, customarily eaten by one of the inhabitants here. This situation is almost as bad as running out of popcorn during the NFL divisional championships, and something had to be done.
For a couple years now, for the family standard chocolate sauce, I have relied on a favorite sauce of mine made with copious amounts of butter, sweetened condensed milk, corn syrup and chocolate chips. It is fudgy, smooth, and rich. Problem is, after being zapped repeatedly in the microwave to reheat it, it becomes remarkably caramel-like and you need a very strong arm to pry it from its jar. From time to time I would intercede and add milk to thin it down. Clearly the solution was to find a chocolate sauce that didn’t stiffen up when cold.
And so last week I inquired of you readers if anyone had a good recipe and, by golly, you did. Kristine Bondeson and Sheila Cookson came to the rescue. The two recipes are actually quite different. Each has its own unique virtue, and I will share both.
Sheila’s recipe came from her friend Kathie. Sheila said, “This is a favorite of mine…I don’t think it will stiffen in the fridge although it doesn’t last long enough to find out.” This is the sauce to make when you need sauce in a hurry. It is quite sweet, and goes together in a flash and remains pourable when cold.
Kristine’s recipe takes a little longer, is richer, and she says, “It’s just so good. Too good. Awfully hard on the hips.” When her son was in high school, she’d find a finger swipe mark in the sauce if she left it out, so she took to putting it away in the fridge. “Although it may not pour as well the second day, it does not crystallize and stays nice and creamy.” I found that it needs to be warm to pour, and could easily be thinned with a little more milk to keep it soft when cold. Perfect.
Generally, I don’t put my chocolate sauces in the fridge. Around here they are consumed quickly enough that they never grow mold, even though they reside in the kitchen cupboard. Click here to continue reading.

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