It's that time of the month again ... Daring Bakers' time...
But before I tell you all about the deliciously crispy cannoli I wanted to mention a few other bits that have been going on around here.
First and foremost the website got a face lift. I would probably go as far as saying it got a new face all together. I was going for that bright and airy feel where imagery is all that matters so, if you are getting the updates through the RSS feed do drop by the site and let me know what you think.
In other news... it's Black Friday and the Holiday Sale is on its way in the shop. I will be retiring some of the prints currently in the shop so, if you've been eying a print or two get them before they're all gone.
And now that we have all the announcements off the way we can get back to the story behind the crisp, banana-mascarpone filled cannoli...
I must admit that I, frustrated by the last DB challenge, felt a little relief when I opened the Daring Kitchen's forum and saw the following words: "Sorry all, we're not baking this month...". In my head I was already making plans for the free weekends I will have due to the absence of DB challenge this month.
"Yay!" I thought to myself and kept on reading, curious to find out why is it we're not baking this month. My initial "Yay!" pretty quickly turned into "Oh, no!" when I read that not only there will be a DB challenge this month, but we will be frying cannoli. What an unexpected turn of events!
The November 2009 Daring Bakers Challenge was chosen and hosted by Lisa Michele of Parsley, Sage, Desserts and Line Drives. She chose the Italian Pastry, Cannolo (Cannoli is plural), using the cookbooks Lidia's Italian-American Kitchen by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and The Sopranos Family Cookbook by Allen Rucker; recipes by Michelle Scicolone, as ingredient/direction guides. She added her own modifications/changes, so the recipe is not 100% verbatim from either book.
Two potential obstacles to completing the challenge were the lack of cannoli forms, since I've never had the pleasure of making cannoli before, and the deep-frying of the shells.
The latter was resolved pretty quickly with the suggestion by our hostess to bake them rather than deep fry them, but what to do about the cannoli forms on such a short notice without spending a fortune?
Four cannoli forms at Sur la Table were going for $12 which is definitely the quickest way to get them, but if you're planning to bake more than 4 cannoli at a time it will cost you a pretty penny.
After a little research I found out that before the stainless steel forms came about wooden dowels were used to make the cannoli and that's what I decided to use as my cannoli forms.
A short trip to my local Home Depot and $13 later I was holding in my hands 18(!) 6-inch dowels which required a bit of sanding, cleaning, and seasoning. Seasoning was quite amusing; it's not often you get to deep-fry some wooden sticks.
Once the wooden dowels were well seasoned I was all set and ready to make some cannoli.

The recipe was simple enough to follow and I've actually used 1/4 of the amounts listed in the original recipe for each type of cannolo I've made. The hardest part was rolling that dough out. Apparently when you roll this dough out you get an unbelievable core workout that could not be even compared to the one you get from your regular visits to the gym. I had sore muscles for about 2 days after I've baked the cannoli and I only had 1/2 of the dough to roll out.
I made a few ingredients substitutions: regular sugar became vanilla sugar and white wine vinegar became red wine vinegar, just because I had those ingredients already in my pantry.
For the filling I've made my own mascarpone and ricotta cheese and instead of mixing in the traditional ingredients I decided to add a ripe banana, hence - banana-mascarpone filling.

The chocolate cannoli were definitely my favorites. I loved how the kitchen smelled when I was making and rolling out the chocolate dough; just heavenly. I think the next time around I will be making only chocolate cannoli.
makes 22-24 4-inch cannoli
Note: The equivalents from this recipe were prepared using this conversion site
Note: If you want a chocolate dough, substitute a few tablespoons of the flour (about 25%) with a few tablespoons of dark, unsweetened cocoa powder (Dutch process) and a little more wine until you have a workable dough.
Note: If you want chocolate ricotta filling, add a few tablespoons of dark, unsweetened cocoa powder to the above recipe, and thin it out with a few drops of warm water if too thick to pipe.
comments
Home made mascarpone and ricotta cheese well done and the chocolate cannoli looks perfect. Bravo on a great effort, and the banana/choc filling sounds delicious. Cheers from Audax in Australia.
love the pictures of this delicious shells. the filling sounds divine and I would love to give it a try.
You have a thing for italian desserts too? :)
Looks really tasty. Nice redesign of the site by the way, which reminds me, I finally uploaded that series in the fog to my website.
Audax, thank you for that chocolate tip.. they are the best.. :)
wic, the filling is quite easy to do.. and I did not add any sugar either; bananas are pretty sweet on their own.
Jerome, well... I don't discriminate the desserts by their country of origin. :)
Thanks... still working out some quirks.. though...
Great... I will definitely take a look at it.. :)
I am loving the two colors together. So gorgeous! Banana Mascarpone with the Chocolate Cannoli sounds divine! Stunning photos as well. Job well done!
WOW wow wow..your cannoli turned out gorgeous and your photos are magazine quality! I LOVE the addition of banan in the mascarpone filling..so unique! Thanks so much for deep frying with me this month, and your website looks phenomenal!
Wow, yours came out so perfect! And you made chocolate ones too: very impressive.
Your baked cannoli look beautiful! I have some dough left over and I'm gonna bake them as they look just as good and require less danger than the frying.. :) Good job!
Thank you all so much for such wonderful comments.
amber, before you bake them.. make sure your oven is more or less clean.. otherwise get ready for lots of smoke or even a little open flame fire. :)
You did a wonderful job on your cannoli. They are so beautifully perfect!
Natalie @ Gluten a Go Go
Can you tell me how long and what temperature you baked the unfulled cannoli's
Custom Search
subscribe
stay in touch
recent entries
random entries
most commented
browse archive
recent comments
2012-01-30 09:45:05
Marie: wonderful colors.
2012-01-16 01:35:59
Wolfram: Wishing you a very merry Christmas full of love, joy,...
2011-11-28 22:39:56
Natalie: Frida, thank you :)...
2011-11-27 22:01:20
Jerome: So light and airy, I like the earthy component. Where...
2011-11-22 11:20:05
Frida: Wonderful and delightful image.
favorites
blogroll