Great Big Fortune Cookies with Pomegranate Granita

Recipe courtesy Gale Gand

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Picture of Great Big Fortune Cookies with Pomegranate Granita Recipe Photo: Great Big Fortune Cookies with Pomegranate Granita Recipe
Rated 4 stars out of 5
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Total Time:
38 min
Prep
30 min
Cook
8 min
Yield:
8 servings
Level:
Intermediate
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This is a good Valentine's Day dessert for the non-chocoholic. Pomegranate is said to be the true "love apple" that Adam and Eve had in the Garden of Eden. To juice them, use a juicer or place the kernels in a blender and blend briefly. Strain the juice to remove any seed fiber.

Ingredients

Granita:

Fortune Cookie:

Directions

To make the Granita: In a bowl whisk the liquids together. Take off 1/2 cup of the liquid, add the sponged gelatin and warm it to melt the gelatin. Combine all the liquids and pour into an 8 by 8-inch pan. Freeze overnight. Scrape the next day into a freezer container.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

To make the Fortune Cookie: Cut a stencil out of a plastic coffee can lid in the shape of a 6-inch disk.

Whip the egg whites until stiff and chill.

In a mixer, cream the butter; then add the sugar and continue mixing. Add the flour and blend in; then add the vanilla and blend again. Add the chilled egg whites and mix on low until well incorporated and the batter is smooth.

With a small offset spatula, spread batter through the stencil onto a silicone baking mat- or parchment paper-lined cookie sheet, about 4 per cookie sheet. Bake until light golden brown, 7 to 8 minutes.

Quickly remove the pan from the oven and 1 at a time place a fortune across the center with a bit hanging out. Fold cookie circle in half over fortune; then in half again with flaps only slightly overlapping each other, bringing the opposing sides together and pinch. Let cool. Serve next to a frozen bowl of granita

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Read all 2 reviews

  • on February 22, 2005

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    The batter is simply delicious. The consistency was exactly that of a fortune cookie and tasted great. However, my cookies broke as soon as I tried to fold them. I had just removed them from the oven. They weren't even slightly brown, but I think that I over-cooked them. Anyone else have this problem?

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  • on February 08, 2005

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    God, I miss the message boards here! In any event, did you spread them super thin? Tuille cookies need to be spread paper thin, almost to the point where you can see through the batter. This is what givss them that crispy, snappy crunsh when they cool. I haven't tried them yet, hence the medium rating, but I'll let you know when I do :

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