Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, did they ASK you to bring dessert? If they didn't, then don't bring dessert and just bring a normal host gift. I hate it when I have meticulously planned my menu and a guest shows up with some awful thing that I then have to serve instead of what I had planned.
There is no evidence that OP was planning to bring some awful thing, and it's clearly two days past the event. so what is the point of your comment?
Anonymous wrote:OP, did they ASK you to bring dessert? If they didn't, then don't bring dessert and just bring a normal host gift. I hate it when I have meticulously planned my menu and a guest shows up with some awful thing that I then have to serve instead of what I had planned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I just made an absolutely finger-licking tiramisu for my husband's birthday. The whipped cream/mascarpone version is easy to make. I haven't tried making the beaten egg white version, since I didn't want the hassle of pasteurizing the egg whites, but it makes for a dessert that's much lighter in calories, with protein! If you're finishing the dessert that day, you can perhaps get away without pasteurizing the eggs first.
Unfortunately, it needs to chill for several hours, so you might not have the time for a Christmas Eve dinner.
Recipe, please?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would bring Italian cookies from a bakery plus a homemade chocolate cake with chocolate icing along with ice cream. Everyone loves chocolate cake.
I would do the chocolate cake or tiramisu but not the cookies. I don't know anyone who actually likes Italian cookies from the bakery.
Anonymous wrote:Old school - Spumoni ice cream!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Invited to friends. What would be a good dessert? I think it's pasta and meatballs. Feel like we should make something since it's Christmas Eve.
Pasta and meatballs are not an Italian dinner so take whatever you want for dessert.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would bring Italian cookies from a bakery plus a homemade chocolate cake with chocolate icing along with ice cream. Everyone loves chocolate cake.
I would do the chocolate cake or tiramisu but not the cookies. I don't know anyone who actually likes Italian cookies from the bakery.
Anonymous wrote:Invited to friends. What would be a good dessert? I think it's pasta and meatballs. Feel like we should make something since it's Christmas Eve.
Anonymous wrote:
I just made an absolutely finger-licking tiramisu for my husband's birthday. The whipped cream/mascarpone version is easy to make. I haven't tried making the beaten egg white version, since I didn't want the hassle of pasteurizing the egg whites, but it makes for a dessert that's much lighter in calories, with protein! If you're finishing the dessert that day, you can perhaps get away without pasteurizing the eggs first.
Unfortunately, it needs to chill for several hours, so you might not have the time for a Christmas Eve dinner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would bring Italian cookies from a bakery plus a homemade chocolate cake with chocolate icing along with ice cream. Everyone loves chocolate cake.
I would do the chocolate cake or tiramisu but not the cookies. I don't know anyone who actually likes Italian cookies from the bakery.
Anonymous wrote:Cannoli cake if you want to bake. Or a simple chocolate tort. Or a lemon ricotta cake that you can just sprinkle powder sugar onto.
Costco has good cannoli kits if you want to bring.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, have you actually found this in the dc area? Share your secret! This isn’t something I’d ever try to make myself, so I only get them when I go back home to CT.Anonymous wrote:Sfogliatelle