Ingredients

  • Yogurt Panna Cotta
  • 1 can nonfat sweetened condensed milk (14 oz)
  • 1 gelatin packet
  • 1 container 2% Greek-style plain yogurt (17.6 oz)
  • 1 1/2 cups boiling water
  • 1 cup nonfat milk
  • 4-5 oranges (other citrus fruits can be substituted or used in combo with oranges)
  • Honeycomb
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • 1 pinch salt
  • 1 tablespoon water
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda

Method

  • Set water to boil. In a small bowl, mix gelatin with 2 Tbsp of cold water.
  • In a large bowl add condensed milk. Add 1 cup of hot water to condensed milk and whisk until smooth. Add plain yogurt and nonfat milk and whisk again until smooth.
  • Add 1/2 cup hot water to gelatin mixture. Stir until smooth. Add to yogurt mixture. Whisk until smooth.
  • Ladle into small containers, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate.
  • Prepare oranges. Cut each end off, then place the fruit on one of the cut ends. Cut peel from the top to bottom away from the flesh all around. You can then section the oranges (you can watch Merrill do this in the blood orange/feta/mint video!), or just cut them crosswise. If you have sectioned the oranges, squeeze as much juice as possible from the remaining orange parts and reserve. The panna cotta will be quite sweet so it pairs well with tart fruit, but you can add some honey to the juice if the oranges are not sweet.
  • To serve: Run a sharp knife around edges of container and invert into small bowls or onto small plates. Arrange orange pieces around custard. Spoon reserved orange juice all around. Right before serving, scatter honeycomb pieces on top.
  • Measure baking soda and have a small strainer ready. Get a large cookie sheet ready by either putting a silpat on it or by greasing it up very, very well. Keep a candy thermometer handy.
  • Mix sugar, honey, salt, and water in a small pot. The pot should be a heavy pot so that it heats evenly. Thin pots make it hard to control the heat at the crucial final steps and caramel can burn easily. Heat until the mixture reaches 290 degrees and take off the heat. (The mixture will have turned caramel brown at this stage.) Immediately add the baking soda sifted through the strainer to avoid any clumping. Stir the molten mixture just until the soda has been incorporated, then dump the whole thing onto the cookie sheet. Don't touch it - it will burn you badly. Let it cool completely.
  • Break apart into large sections. You can put sections into a small bowl and break into even smaller sections using a spoon. This can keep in an airtight container and is an addictive snack if it is left lying around.
  • Note: Ame also included small mochi balls (like the kind you see served with frozen yogurt nowadays), which was another amazing texture. You can add them if you can find them, but this is still wonderful without them.