
But in his cookbook called “Café Firenze” (2009, Brio Press), co-written with Jacopo Falleni, the majority of you voted for me to try out the Panna Cotta Con le Fragole (cooked cream with balsamic strawberries) with 42 percent. A

I was excited to try the panna cotta recipe because I love panna cotta and have been looking for a decent recipe. I tried a panna cotta recipe from another cookbook a long time ago and the texture came out grainy and rubbery.
You can see in the photo of the finished product that Fabio’s panna cotta recipe actually turned out beautifully, at least in appearance. So how easy was it? And how did it taste? Let me break it down as you see how it went in the test kitchen.




Now, here’s where I had problems again with the recipe. It doesn’t say how long to let the panna cotta set in the refrigerator. My guess was 2 hours or probably until it firms up and just giggles a bit. But I actually just let it sit overnight and I continued the recipe the next day by making the balsamic strawberry topping.


I diced a few more fresh strawberries, placed them on top of my panna cotta and poured the balsamic vinegar mixture over everything. The recipe didn’t say to garnish the dish, but in the photo in the cookbook I saw that Fabio added a cinnamon stick and a sprig of mint with a pinch of brown sugar. So I did the same thing, even though he didn’t tell me to.

Panna Cotta Con Le Fragole
(excerpted from “Café Firenze Cookbook”)
3 C heavy cream
21 diced strawberries
1 C whole milk
3 C balsamic vinegar
1/2 C sugar
2 C granulated sugar
1 Tbsp vanilla extract
1 C of pureed strawberry (just blend 1 cup of strawberry with a little water)
1 Tsp lemon zest
1/2 oz unflavored gelatin (four sheets)
For the cream gelatin:
In a bowl bloom gelatin with milk, combine cream and sugar and heat in a saucepan until bubbles appear around the edges. Add lemon zest and vanilla, add the cream to the milk and whisk. Strain and Divide among ramekins or glassware. To serve from ramekin, set in hot water, run a knife around the edge and turn out into dish.
For balsamic strawberries:
Whisk the sugar gradually into the balsamic vinegar (grains of sugar may remain at bottom of mix, either strain mix or heat on stove top until melted.) Stir in some of the strawberry pureed until flavor is well balanced and desirable. Pour over the diced strawberries and topped onto the gelatin.
Again, the above recipe is retyped word for word as presented in the cookbook. See what I mean about lack of directions?
My tips and warnings about this recipe:
- Do not follow the blooming directions with the gelatin sheets. Instead, follow the packet instructions, or in my case I soaked the sheets in the milk first and then removed it, ringing out excess milk, and then placed the sheets in a small non-stick saucepan and melted them (it happened really fast). Then it was ready to use.
- Use the smaller amount of sugar for the cream, and save the larger amount for the balsamic vinegar, even though it’s not clearly explained in the recipe.
- I don’t understand the call for 3 cups of vinegar. You end up making a big pot of sugar vinegar when you only need to pour just a few drops on top of the panna cotta. I would end up making just 1 cup of balsamic vinegar and cut the sugar and strawberries to match.
- Pour the cream mixture into a measuring cup when done because it’s easier to pour the mixture into the individual glasses that way.
Ease of cooking: Other than the lack of instructions or clear explanations in the recipe, the process was pretty easy. It’s basically like making milk Jello and warming up sugar balsamic vinegar to pour on top. Pretty easy and fast.
Taste: The panna cotta itself was great! The best texture I’ve made of a panna cotta ever, and the lemon zest and vanilla gave it a nice flavor. The texture was like anything I’ve had at a restaurant. The problem is once you pour the balsamic strawberries on top, it totally ruins the panna cotta. The balsamic vinegar, even with the sugar, is too strong a flavor to eat with the panna cotta. I rather just top the panna cotta with the strawberry puree blended with some simple syrup.
Overall grade: C-. I gave the recipe an F for the pour instructions, but an A because the panna cotta tasted so good, which resulted in a C average. But I took it down a notch to C- because I didn’t like the balsamic vinegar as a topping.
Don’t forget to vote on my next Test Kitchen with the poll on the upper right hand column. This month’s featured cookbook is my latest purchase – “Bobby Flay’s Throwdown!” cookbook. The cookbook includes recipes from Flay and challengers from past Throwdown episodes. I selected four recipes, and I will use the winning recipe from the episode you select. Since it’s the holidays, I included a couple of desserts that sounded like a nice fit for the season. So who’s ready for a throwdown?!
Previous Test Kitchens:
Noodles with Spicy Cabbage and Pork
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