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24

MY

ROUSES

EVERYDAY

MAY | JUNE 2017

the

Coffee

issue

anyone else who might be sensitive to caffeine.

You can always do a little math. If you’re adding one cup

of coffee to a batch of brownies that makes 16 servings,

it equals a half-ounce, or one tablespoon, per brownie.

If you use a quarter cup of coffee in the same batch —

still enough to flavor it — it would be less than one

teaspoon per serving. It’s the cook’s call. As always, it’s

best to inform guests, or make a coffee-free version of

your coffee baked beans for the kids.

Coffee has always been served with dessert and sweets,

and now it’s used in more and more dessert recipes,

too. Coffee cuts the sweetness in baked goods, and it

deepens the flavor of chocolate.

Some classic desserts include coffee, such as French

Gateau L’Opera. The French assemble the thinnest

possible layers of coffee-soaked sponge cake, ganache,

buttercream and chocolate glaze into the gateau.

Classic Italian tiramisu is easier for the home cook to

tackle. While a custard mixed with mascarpone chills,

ladyfingers are split and soaked in a mixture of coffee and

rum, brandy or coffee-flavored liqueur such as Kahlua,

then assembled with the custard and whipped cream.

Affogato is another Italian concept, gelato “drowned” in

espresso. It’s perfect for casual entertaining. Divide a pint

of vanilla, chocolate, mocha or coffee ice cream or gelato

into four serving bowls, and drizzle with a cup of espresso.

Serve immediately, maybe with a crisp cookie. To make it

for one, use two scoops of gelato and one shot of espresso.

Ina Garten makes a coffee-flavored chocolate cake with

a little coffee in the buttercream for the frosting. You

can also make coffee shortbread bars, or biscotti, with a

little finely ground espresso.

If a recipe calls for ground coffee, it should specify which

grind. If it doesn’t, plan on using the finest, powdery

grinds for something like cookies or buttercream, so the

grounds aren’t obvious. Coarser grinds are good for rubs.

One final note: Since hot coffee left to sit can become bitter,

taste that little bit left in the pot first. If it tastes okay, pour it

into a jar and refrigerate.Tomorrow, try it in a recipe.

You could start with red-eye gravy.

IN THE GARDEN: Sacred Grounds

Adding organic matter like leftover coffee grounds to your soil will improve its structure. Coffee grounds release nitrogen into the soil

as they decay, providing mineral nutrients like magnesium and potassium, which are essential for healthy plants. Mix them into your

compost, work them into the soil around your plants, or scatter them over mulch, flowerbeds or shrubs. Rouses Produce Director Patrick

Morris says coffee grounds are an old farmer’s trick for building up fields. “They help improve the soil tilth, balance the pH, and give it

some substance.” Morris likes the idea of adding coffee grounds to compost. “Coffee grounds are a green composting material. They’re

made of beans, which are an organic material and completely biodegradable, and reusing them instead of adding them to a landfill is

sustainable gardening.” Container gardeners can add coffee grounds directly to the dirt in their vegetable pots. Rouses Local Produce

Buyer Larry Daigle says they work especially well with green onions (scallions), which he grows old-school style in a pot by his back door.

Daigle’s approach makes perfect sense, says Morris. “The grounds aren’t compact, like clay dirt, so they allow a lot of aeration in the soil,

and they add nitrogen, which is great for scallions.”

—Marcy, Rouses Creative Director