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Homemade Nutella Recipe

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For those who are intrested:

Homemade Nutella Recipe

http://www.ohnuts.com/blog/2011/01/homemade_nutella_recipe_1.html

If you ask me, Nutella should be considered one of the four main food

groups. This chocolate-hazelnut spread has it all: healthy fat and protein

from nuts, heart-healthy antioxidants from the dark chocolate, a touch of

sweetness to fulfill that...um...sugar requirement...okay, so it's not quite

ready for a starring role on the food pyramid. Who cares, when it tastes so

good?

The problem with traditional Nutella--in addition to its addicting

flavor--is that it's loaded with modified palm oil. If you're like me, and

you want your guilty pleasures to come with a little less guilt, you'll be

thrilled to know that you can make homemade Nutella with just four

ingredients and about 15 minutes! Stock up on hazelnuts and be prepared to

have Nutella at every meal, because things are about to get intense...

Homemade Nutella Recipe

yield: about 1.5 cups

2.5 oz (about 2/3 cups) roasted unsalted hazelnuts

3/4 cup sweetened condensed milk

3 oz (about 1/2 cup) unsweetened chocolate, finely chopped

3 tbsp honey, agave nectar, or other liquid sweetener

a food processor

The first step is to toast the hazelnuts. If you use the roasted unsalted

hazelnuts from Oh Nuts, they technically don't need to be toasted, but I

think toasting nuts, even pre-roasted ones, adds a depth of flavor that's

important to the finished product.

So place your nuts in a preheated 350 degree oven, and toast them until

they're brown and fragrant, about 10-12 minutes. Be sure to stir them every

3-4 minutes to keep them from burning. Once they're toasted, set them aside

until they're no longer hot.

The food processor is going to do most of the work in this recipe, so

prepare yourself for a lot of food processor pictures. Start by adding the

cooled, toasted hazelnuts to the processor bowl.

Turn the food processor on, and after a minute or two you'll be left with

very finely ground hazelnuts. Wonderful for sprinkling on pastries, but

that's not what we're going for, so keep processing.

After another minute, the nuts will start to clump together around the

blade, and you'll find you have a smooth paste like this. Add a touch of

salt, and you've create a tasty hazelnut butter! But you didn't come to this

tutorial to learn how to make hazelnut butter, you came for Nutella, so turn

that processor back on....

Success! After about 5 minutes, your hazelnuts should be processed into a

liquid. Scrape down the sides and the blade and process until there are no

lumps remaining. Set the hazelnuts aside while you prepare the chocolate

portion of the recipe.

The chocolate will need to be melted, so you can either use a microwave-safe

bowl, or use the double boiler method on the stovetop. Whichever you choose,

combine the chopped chocolate, condensed milk, and honey in a bowl.

If you're using a double boiler, put the bowl on a pan of simmering water on

the stovetop, and heat it, stirring frequently, until the chocolate melts

and the mixture is smooth. If you're using the microwave, be sure to stir

the mix after every 30 seconds to prevent overheating, and stop once

everything is melted together.

Now look, you've barely done any work and the Nutella's almost finished.

It's magic! The final step is to add the warm chocolate mix to the bowl of

the food processor that contains the liquefied hazelnuts.

Process the mix for 1-2 minutes more, until it smooths out, loses a little

graininess, and gets shiny and smooth. The more you mix the stiffer the

Nutella gets, so be sure to stop while it is still nice and spreadable.

If you'd like, you can taste it and add a pinch of salt or an extra squirt

of honey to suit your taste. I'm usually too busy licking it off the spatula

to make any final tweaks, though. Store your homemade Nutella in an airtight

container in the refrigerator for up to one month.

I would list all the ways you can eat homemade Nutella, but that list would

go on for hours. Here's just a sampling: on apples, bananas, or

strawberries, with pretzels, spread on toast, with or without peanut butter,

folded into a warm crepe, smeared on a cupcake as a quick frosting, stirred

into warm milk to make hot chocolate, spooned over ice cream, swirled into

brownie batter, or spread on croissants for the best wake-up you can

imagine.

'Lower the noise in your life and you will hear God more clearly.'

~Sugar

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