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Chocolate Pudding Recipe Italian Style

Posted by on Thursday, 13 November 2008 21:35
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Chocolate Pudding Recipe Italian Style Chocolate Pudding Recipe Italian Style

Budino al Cioccolato

Chocolate might not be the first flavor that comes to mind when considering Italian desserts. It's more likely that the phrase "Italian dessert" will bring to mind the light Marsala-flavored custard, Zabaglione, over fresh fruit, or perhaps the espresso kick of tiramisu or the light fruit flavors of a granita. Chocolate tends to be more of an accent rather than a focal point in Italian desserts - a light dusting of bitter cocoa powder as a foil to sweet mascarpone cream or perhaps a drizzle of tempered dark chocolate on crunchy-crumbly hazelnut biscotti.

In Budino al Cioccolato, however, chocolate stands front and center. Italian for pudding Budino al Cioccolato is Italian Chocolate Pudding. Like most desserts, budino can mean different things to different people. Some budinos are akin to French baked custards, like pots de creme. Some are cooked on the stove top. Some recipes have crumbled cookies added as the thickener.

My favorite type of budino is the kind that is like a flourless cake - a thin crisp crust, moist cake and a gooey, almost liquid center. There are budino recipes for everything from vanilla to butterscotch to lemon, but, in a nod to America's love affair with chocolate, I give you Budino al Cioccolato.

 


Chocolate Pudding Recipe Italian Style
Prep Time: 30 min Cook Time: 30 min Total Time: 1 hr Servings: approx 12
Ingredients:
  • Vegetable spray for greasing the pan
  • Individual cupcake liners - the metallic kind are cool
  • 1/4 cup cocoa powder
  • 4 oz (1 stick) unsalted butter
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 8 ounces best quality bitter-sweet chocolate
  • 4 large eggs, room temperature
  • 1 and 1/3 cups granulated sugar
  • 1/3 cup neutral vegetable oil (for added moistness/tenderness)
  • 1/2 cup cornstarch
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt (maybe a bit more, to taste)
How To Make At Home:

Preheat the oven to 300 degrees F.

Put the cupcake liners in the greased pan, and preheat the pan, too.

Combine the butter and cream in small saucepan over medium-high heat.

Chop 5 ounces of the chocolate and put it in a medium bowl. Cut the remaining 3 ounces into 1/4 ounce chunks and reserve.

When the cream mixture comes to a simmer, pour it over the 5 oz of chocolate and mix gently to incorporate the ingredients. Let cool. (This is a ganache).

In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, sugar, oil, cocoa powder and cornstarch until the sugar has dissolved.

Pour the cooled ganache into the egg mixture and gently mix just until the batter is smooth. Scoop about 1/4 cup of the batter into each mold (about 3/4 of the way up the sides).

Tuck a 1/4 ounce chunk of the reserved chocolate into the center of each cupcake.

Bake until the edges are set and the center still looks a little moist, about  30 minutes.

Cool the pan on a rack for 10 minutes and then unmold the budinos.

Dust them with powdered sugar, and serve warm.

Read 10468 times Last modified on Tuesday, 11 December 2012 18:16

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27 comments
  • Comment Link Posted by: Dalton S on Monday, 29 April 2013 15:31

    Could you use fat free milk instead of heavy cream

  • Comment Link Posted by: Jenni on Tuesday, 27 March 2012 20:08

    @William (sorry this is late) and @Anna--yes, they can be reheated with no problem. I would reheat them, covered, in a low oven (about 300F) for ten minutes or so. To make certain they heat all the way through, if you're storing them in the fridge, take them out a couple of hours before reheating so they can come to room temperature.

  • Comment Link Posted by: Anna on Wednesday, 07 March 2012 21:57

    Can these be reheated/ will they be okay to eat the next day?

  • Comment Link Posted by: William P on Sunday, 15 January 2012 13:43

    Can these be reheated? I have a wine dinner to do dessert for and I love this recipe.

  • Comment Link Posted by: Susan on Tuesday, 22 November 2011 20:29

    As I'm Scottish, I just need to clarify a few ingredients - when you say "cornstarch" do you mean "cornflour" that we Brits use to thicken our gravy, is "heavy cream" the same as "double cream" and what type of oil would be a "neutral oil". I'm keen to try to make these but want to make sure I have the right ingredients!

    Hi Susan, thanks for the email. According to Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornstarch, they are the same.



    According to whats cooking america,

    Double cream is the British term for heavy or whipping cream in the United States, but it is a little thicker than our whipping cream. It contains about 48% butterfat.


    And what I mean by neutral oil is something like canola or vegetable oil, not olive oil.

    Hope this helps and please let me know how the chocolate pudding turns out for you. - RG



  • Comment Link Posted by: Rachel on Friday, 09 September 2011 12:24

    I forgot to say Thank-you! Which was why I meant to post... ahem.... Thanks!!

    You are welcome - RG

  • Comment Link Posted by: Rachel on Friday, 09 September 2011 12:23

    Oh my gosh these were sooooo good! I made them this evening. I messed up and cooked them a bit too long (and then they cooled down while I drove to my friend's house) so they were less like pudding and more like very moist chocolate cake but oh my gosh they tasted SO GOOD. I still have chocolate and cream left over so I'll try again soon and see what they are like when they are more pudding-y.

    Hi Rachel, thanks for letting me know. - RG

  • Comment Link Posted by: Jan on Saturday, 06 August 2011 03:26

    Can this be made ahead of time and warmed up? Or do they have to be baked and served immediately? Thx!

    Hi Jan, I guess you could reheat them after but I don't think they will be as good. Let me ask my pastry chef friends what they think and report back. - RG

  • Comment Link Posted by: nick on Saturday, 21 May 2011 05:10

    wow, this recipe was soooo AMAZING! got me a high mark for hospitality
    thx so much

    you are welcome nick - RG

  • Comment Link Posted by: MOHAMMED MUMTAZ on Tuesday, 14 December 2010 09:57

    this recipe really great, as i am pastry chef i can judge the taste, thank you and keep up doing great job.

    Thank you Mohammed. - RG

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