Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Sea Salted Chocolate Dipped Macadamia Nuts


If the benefits of traveling (for pleasure) weren't so incredible, the process of unpacking and regrouping would be a fate worse than having a root canal (coming from someone who has had one). Being able to extend the zen-like benefits of a vacation stay upon returning back home is the only reward for enduring any or all of the travel hiccups that happen along the way. You know the ones, the flight delays, the sneezing passenger, the flight delays, the reclining their seat passenger sitting in front of you, and oh, did I say the flight delays? Being able to fly home first class on this recent trip (was the lucky recipient of someone's frequent flyer miles), seemed to make those hiccups almost disappear. Am still wondering how the guy sitting next to me managed to walk off the plane after having six, maybe seven gin and tonics. At least all of that alcohol stopped him from sneezing.

Some new cookbooks arrived (yippee) while I was away for a few days, giving me a plausible reason to delay unpacking my overpacked, overweight suitcase. Whether the books arrived or not, I am pretty certain I would find another reason to delay the inevitable unpacking.


Before I left for a trip to visit a very close friend in warm, sunny Arizona, I had made some Sea Salted Chocolate Dipped Macadamia Nuts. Normally dipping nuts in chocolate isn't such a big deal, possibly not even blog posting worthy. But double dipping macadamia nuts in chocolate and sprinkling them ever so lightly with sea salt just seemed to take them from being ordinary to being extraordinary chocolate dipped nuts. Thus making them blog worthy, not only for inspiration but for staying connected.


When dipping anything in chocolate, use real chocolate. When dipping macadamia nuts in chocolate, use real chocolate. There is a reason why I am being a little redundant (redundancy is usually, almost always a good thing) about real chocolate. There is what I call 'real' and 'fake' chocolates out there. There are many 'real' chocolate options: Ghirardelli (US), Callebaut (Belgium), Valrhona (France), Scharffenberger (US), and Guittard (US). And then sometimes even local chocolatiers will sell the 'real' chocolate they use. Then there are the 'fake' chocolate options, sometimes called 'candy' melts. Besides taste (and cost), there is also a difference between the two are in its' ingredients. 'Real' chocolate contains cocoa butter while the 'fake' chocolate contains vegetable fat. What I am trying to say here is that when buying chocolate to melt for dipping nuts or making candy, be a chocolate snob (the best and only kind of snob there is) and use the 'real' stuff.

Microwaving is probably the easiest way to melt chocolate (power level set on high and microwaving in 1 minute bursts, checking at each interval). The other option is melt in a bowl over a pan of simmering water, making sure the bowl doesn't touch the water. In both options, you need to have some patience. Wait until the chocolate has fully melted before stirring until smooth. 


Using a fork, single (whole) or small clusters of the macadamia nuts are dipped in the melted chocolate.


After the nuts have been dipped once, allow the chocolate to set before dipping a second time. You might think a single dipping is enough. But once you taste them double dipped, your definition of 'enough' will shift. Trust me, it will.


In order for the fine sea salt to adhere to the chocolate, work in batches. After double dipping 10 to 12 macadamia nuts or nut clusters, sprinkle on some fine sea salt, ever so lightly.

Waiting for the chocolate to set is the hardest part of making these Sea Salted Chocolate Dipped Macadamia Nuts. They could not be easier to make and could not be more decadent. Perfect for serving after dinner, perfect for giving as a gift, and perfect for rewarding yourself for any reason (like unpacking your bags). 
Recipe
Sea Salted Chocolate Dipped Macadamia Nuts

Ingredients
2 1/4 cups roasted and lightly salted macadamia nuts
1 1/4 pounds of milk chocolate discs, divided (used the milk chocolate discs from Graham's, a local chocolatier)
fine sea salt

Directions
1. Line a long baking sheet or cutting board with parchment paper. Set aside.
2. Melt 3/4 pound of milk chocolate discs (in microwave or over simmering water, either method works).
3. Dip macadamia nuts in melted chocolate and place on parchment paper. Note: Dip nuts individually or in small clusters (2-3 nuts).
4. Allow dipped nuts to dry.
5. Melt remaining 1/2 pound of milk chocolate discs (in microwave or over simmering water, either method works).
6. Dip dried macadamia nuts for a second time. 
7. Sprinkle ever so lightly with fine sea salt while nuts are still 'wet'. Note: After the second dipping of 10-12 macadamia nuts, sprinkle with sea salt. Repeat.

To work off some of the liquid calories consumed on this trip, we went on several early morning hikes. As warm as the southern Arizona sun was, the lack of humidity made hiking in 80 to 90 degree weather bearable. Stopping to take photos along the way (really so I could catch my breath), made it easier to hike in an elevation higher than the one I live in. There is something simultaneously energizing and calming about hiking in the outdoors, particularly when the views are so spectacular as well as so different than the ones I see everyday. How anyone could ever get 'enough' of taking in views of the mountains, of water, or of the desert, I could not even begin to imagine.

No matter how many times I walk or hike a trail one thing is for certain. It may retain its' familiarity but it never looks or feels the same. Sometimes the changes are as subtle as the depth of color of the sky. Sometimes they are significant as changes to the seasonal landscape. And depending on where my head is on any given day, things missed in both the landscape and in my life are often seen with such clarity I sometimes wonder out loud 'how could I have missed this?'. John Muir, the 'patron saint of the American wilderness' once said 'I only went out for a walk and finally concluded to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in.' And I couldn't agree with him more.