There's an article on PubMed on the frequency of salmonella in eggs. There's a lot of highly technical statistical stuff that's over my head but I definitely understood the part that said "The expected value of this distribution is approximately one SE-affected egg in every 20,000 eggs annually produced." Heck, even if it's 10 times that I'm perfectly comfortable with those odds. Bring on the chocolate mousse! 😋
@@chrispeterson1247 There's a lot of things we've done as a "standard method" which you wouldn't even suggest or think about today. But your method of choice is your method of choice and up for everyone to decide for themselves in the end.
@@Scott-tq7ko Lamo no it’s still the right way. You wanna be chefs watching TH-cam crack me the fuck up. Come to work with me you will be in tears, pissing your panties crying from your mommy after the first 10 minutes 🤣🤣🤣🤣
For those who don't wanna whip the egg whites by hand, I highly recommend getting one of those electric hand mixers. They're cheap unlike a proper stand mixer, offer more control, and are obviously much easier than tiring your arm out for nearly ten straight minutes. Worth the cheap price and storage space if you like making desserts or any regular whisk heavy foods at home semi-frequently
It is weird how basically every food youtuber seems unaware of the existence of these things. It's either a 400 dollar tool or a 5 dollar tool. No inbetween.
Came here to say the same, I have a 9-speed Smog one and it has paddles, whisks and dough mixers as attachments. Wasn’t that cheap but it’s basically 2/3 of a stand mixer, you just have to be a bit more hands-on
Just get one that comes with both beaters and whisks. Beaters for cookies and cake dough, whisks for everything else, though it really doesn't matter THAT much. I've been using whisks for awhile and I've made bangin' cookies.
This is wild. Your channel quickly became the most practically useful one I watch. On at least three occasions, I've watched a video of yours, then actually made the recipe within a week or so. No other channel gets that kind of turnaround from me. Now? I had already decided to make chocolate mousse this weekend, and then *after* that but *before* I do it, this video swoops in with a recipe. Ridiculous. Thanks!
If you’re gonna separate eggs like he does, I would recommend first cracking each egg individually in a small bowl before transferring to the big one. That way if one of the yolks breaks, it won’t contaminate the whole bowl of whites.
I truly believe that YSAC is the only food youtuber out there that seems to know electric hand mixers exist. Everyone thinks you need either a stand mixer or to whisk painstakingly by hand.
Im gonna try all 3! They all look amazing. And I have no issue with raw egg yolks. I've been making my family's handed down recipe for Chocolate ice-cream for 20 years which uses 12 raw egg yolks and have eaten it for over 35 years, and it has never done anyone in my family any harm at all. These recipes look incredible. Thank you so much for sharing.
You can also pasteurize eggs yourself if you have a sous-vide thingy, or (the way I did) a reasonably accurate cooking thermometer and some patience juggling the heat to keep the water around the 62C or so for the 60-ish mins that you need without going over and cooking the eggs.
14:08 I thought that video was already perfect, but then you guys kissed in such a cute way that it made my heart melt in the very same manner the chocolate on a low heat did
What great dessert choices for when you want to treat yourself to decadence but, don't have the time to spend in the kitchen. They're perfect for this time of the year and all the grill'n weather ahead. Thanks you guys
A fun fact: you have a higher chance of salmonella from raw flour than from raw egg! Flour isn't treated in the same way eggs are, so there's literally nothing to remove bacteria from it until you cook it. So you can actually make safe to eat 'raw' cookie dough by heat treating the flour yourself before making a normal recipe.
I once saw my chef eating cookie dough out of the bowl, I asked him if it was dangerous because of the raw eggs. With a mouth full of cookie dough, he laughed at me like I was a nerd and walked away. From that day on, I never looked back.
LOL, this exact thing happened to me with one of my elementary school teachers, she had a cake and cupcake business on top of teaching. i was a wee little child who had a cookie dough obsession with a person in a position of power telling me it could do no harm. :D
Hey Brian, can I suggest something? When you are listing the ingredients on the video, can you also make a list on the side? Its much easier to be able to see everything at the same time on the screen while making the recipe . 1:47
What a "treat" to have you mix up some quick deserts! My chickens are laying overtime right now so the timing was perfect. Thanks a bunch!! Love your channel.
8:49 okay, my mum called these "chocolate crinkle cookies" and they were a hit at C&E- my mum used to do an open house as we called it wherever Ukrainian relative visited and ate sweets and shared holidays with us. Ty for the mems!
love to see that cookie recipe! we would call them chocolate crinkle cookies, or just crinkles! they really are experienced like a blend between a cookie and a brownie, they're quite wonderful! it's nice to see how you've tackled it in this video! definitely an upgrade to the chocolate-iness level compared to the usual recipe i use, i'll be giving your recipe a try next time i want to make choccy crinkles!
My mom and I made a bunch of homemade food goodies for Christmas in 2022. In 2023 we bought a used stand mixer. It sat for over a year until I finally started using it and NOW I JUST CAN'T STOP. 😅
Loved the nespresso pod idea! I don't drink coffee and never know what to do when a recipe calls for it. Having a pack of pods handy would make things much easier.
Beautiful - three great recipes. To increase the margin for error even further on the separating the eggs issue, crack them into a mug or similar first individually. That way if they're old or the yolk breaks for some other reason, you haven't accidentally already added it into the whites.
I made a "fit" version of the flourless cake, and also one with Brian's recipe with no modifications, honestly both are great! My fit version has about 33% fewer calories and 10 grams of protein per slice. Basically substituted the 330 grams of chocolate with 200 grams of sugar-free dark chocolate + 100 grams of a whey /casein chocolate protein powder (Syntrax), 100 grams of the butter with 105 grams of Greek Yogurt (added to the chocolate/butter pan), and the sugar with 114 grams of erythritol + 150 grams of allulose, and added an extra 50 grams of buttermilk to the yolk bowl.
I tried the mousse recipe today, Bri. The flavor was on point. But my egg whites never whipped up to a meringue-like consistency. Maybe it was because I pasteurized my eggs with a Joule first. I’ll try again, though, because it was delicious.
Broseph! Love the cookies! In the recipe in the video description, it calls for incorporating the melted chocolate later, while the video says to incorporate it into the butter+brown sugar (and then eggs). Which do you recommend? Second, there's no recipe on your site, so I can't corroborate there.... Is there a cookbook on the way??? I kid, I kid.
These recipes really are no-fail - for the mousse, when I folded the meringue together with chocolate/cream/yolk mixture, because I over-whipped the heavy cream and left the meringue out for too long, the mousse was grainy and not nearly as fluffy as I would have liked. Still, I added some whipped cream and chocolate shavings to top it and it was still incredible! Maybe next time I can make more airy and cloudlike 😉
Wow, really excited to make the mousse. Ive been making one for a few years but the recipe doesn’t utilize the egg whites, so this seems way less wasteful. Normally I just use them the next day for a sad yolkless breakfast
I've been wanting to bring my aunt something next time I visit. She has similar digestive problems with gluten and dairy. I've tried a few types of gluten free flour with...less than acceptable results. The only dessert I've thought was passable was a peach fruit cobbler i tried last year with a nut and oat crumble on top. Fresh peaches were the star of the show, and i just had to add some good cream to my serving! It's truly exhausting trying to dream up the perfect recipe with so many restrictions, all while trying not to ruin the dish with less than acceptable substitutions.😣
Worth saying the "traditional French way" of making chocolate mousse uses unwashed eggs, as is standard in most European countries. The risk profile is different because... science. The British food standards agency, for example, says it's fine to eat unwashed raw eggs that pass their safety standards. Most American eggs are chemically washed, which come with a higher risk when eaten raw. This is not a concern the old school French chefs would've had, but it's worth mentioning today. Check the food advice specifically in your country when it comes to eggs.
@@jam9859 No, not at all. I would happily eat the very chocolate mousse Brian made in the video, but I'm relatively young and healthy. Just think it's important for people to understand the risks so they can make their own informed decision.
Big tip I saw from Ethan Chlebowski about the Chocolate Crinkle. These are the perfect cookie for turning into an ice cream sandwich, it’s like the sophisticated version of the ice cream sandwiches I had growing up in the best possible way
I let the chocolate catch on the pan the first time trying to make the mousse and I didn’t get the white fluffy things fluffy enough. My kids still loved them so will try again now I’ve learnt my lessons
One comment one question- I finally nailed the Good Brownies recipe when I stopped heating the butter and chocolate over the stove (even on low, low heat it broke multiple times) and started doing the whole recipe in a bowl in the microwave and I frankly think it’s both easier and more foolproof so I’d recommend doing that for all these recipes as an alternative (or frankly for me, an upgrade). Start at 30 seconds, then do 10-20s pulses until you hit the right consistency or do it at 50% power. Question- I’m the non sweet baker and so I do not have a springform pan. What do I make that mousse in?
A quick google search reveals this from the CDC: "CDC estimates Salmonella bacteria cause about 1.35 million infections, 26,500 hospitalizations, and 420 deaths in the United States every year." I would suggest, "modern eggs are meticulously sterilised" is a slight overstatement. Those numbers are still a bit too high for me to feel comfortable with the risk. Although, here is a number I imagine is extremely low: people who have experienced salmonella poisoning from eggs - and still continue to eat them raw.
@@BrianLagerstrom to be fair, I think you handled the warning within your video with a level of transparency that most content creators fall short of. I just think it's a needless risk for a person of your skill set to expose others to. I would hate to think a recipe I put out in the world was the reason somebody ended up very ill or worse. And you know what I'm thinking? "Hey Bri, why don't you experiment with a different method for making meringue?' I actually watched a French chef create rose nougat using potato starch. Just sayin' 🙂
Yes, I read that too. Salmonella in American eggs is a real risk. But you seem to be able to easally get pasteurised eggs don't you? Never saw that stuff in a (North West) European shop.
I still put 3 raw eggs into my banana and milk protein shake every other morning, im 50 now, since I was 18, so there's that... eggs have been brown, white, large, extra large, costco, wal mart, local mkt, 99 cents store, you name it.
Confused at the coffee pod in the first recipe. The pods are just coffee grounds, they won’t dissolve like instant would. Are you getting the texture of grounds in the cake? Seems weird.
Also, it’s rarer but salmonella can be inside the egg. It comes from chickens that have the microbe inside the ovary. So the egg is formed with salmonella within it, instead of the contaminated outer shell. Again, rarer, but not impossible.
Hi Guys, I recently ran across an interesting recipe for folks who need to use up extra eggs and-or are doing low carb. Hard-Boiled Egg Chocolate Pudding 10 Hard Boiled Eggs, 14oz,1 3/4 cups Cream (or other dairy or coconut milk), Half Cup Sugar or other sweetener, 1 tablespoon vanilla, half cup cocoa powder (I used carob), pinch instant coffee, pinch salt. You blend this up til smooth and either refridgerate or freeze into Fudgesicles. Happy egg collecting Jim Mexico
In the UK we can get cartons of pasteurised egg yolks and whites in some supermarkets or as a shelf stable until opened then refrigerate product from Amazon
Bri. Bri! Bri!! Dude, you're killing us. The contrast between your "teaching/instructing" voice and your eating the food, honest feedback vibe is insane. It's like I'm sitting with my professor then suddenly he's gone and I'm with my bro. 😂 I love it though. It's one of the reasons I keep coming back. It just keeps me wanting to learn more and more from you. Love the show and I've bought many of the products you endorse because I've grown to trust you
I need to try the cookies and the cake! For a quick and easy chocolate mousse, blended silken tofu with melted dark chocolate is the absolute best thing I have ever tried. I was skeptical, but you can’t taste the tofu and it’s great for people like me who can’t eat (much) dairy (also nice when vegans come over).
Hi Brian, loved the video, I'd love to try the flourless less cake but my oven only goes down to 150 °C, any tips on the bake time? Or am I out of luck?
Yumms. Ha, our mousse recipes are virtually identical, except I've never added butter, and I add in a bit of gelatine. I often also make white chocolate mousse-also VG.
For those who don't want to use the raw eggs, I imagine that mixing the chocolate with the whipped cream would be plenty fluffy? I'm not sure how stable it would be, though. I'm excited to try these recipes, especially the first one.
So, not everyone has a stand mixer, but I think literally every kitchen across America (and possibly the world) has a $15 hand mixer. You should demonstrate that as the alternative instead of hand whisking, which no one but the most masochistic person would ever do, LOL. Great recipes as always, I want to make the cookies and the mousse!
As a european i find it odd how much cooks talk about salmonella outbreaks while its rarely a topic here. According to google (so take it how you will), the US has around 1.35 million cases each year, while countries like Japan, France and Germany have a few hundred to like 17k cases a year.
Yes, it is about vaccinating the chickens and to leave the natural layer on the eggs that actually form a barrier against strange bacterias. Standard procedure in the EU. And the shops don't cool them because the risk of contamination rises when the egg becomes moist due to the condenstaion occuring when a cold egg hits the ambient temperature. Most people do keep their eggs in the fridge when the buy them though, although it's not really needed when the temp is normal (as in not extremely hot).
So to the point about salmonella and eggs, just know: if you're buying the standard store bought mass produced eggs (which go thru an extremely rigorous cleaning method, it's worth looking up and watching), it's believed between 1 in 20,000 to 1 in 35,000 is contaminated with salmonella (the U.S. actually has the lowest salmonella rates in the modern world at a 0.005% infection odds per egg). The odds do go up if you're buying farm fresh or locally produced eggs simply because they don't fall under the same cleaning standards and scrutiny as the mass produced eggs. But short answer is you're *extremely* unlikely to contract it from most eggs.
Came here to make a similar comment. Like, the salmonella risk (from what I gather) is way higher with chicken than it is with eggs. There's still a risk though. You gotta do your research and assess for yourself.
Making the flourless cake, I decided to listen to Brian about the egg/yolk separation, the first egg yolk broke as soon as it touched the bowl. So I decided to go back to "my truth", and it all went perfect.
it's ground, but I recommend instant if you have it. that said, I've never noticed a grainy texture from using the ground and I've used it in MANY cakes. It just imparts a nice coffee flavor.
oh, man, my grandma used to make a cookie like that. We called them "earthquake cookies" when we were kids. Will definitely give that, and to be honest probably both of the other recipes, a whirl. Thanks.
If you're scared about "raw eggs" look for pasteurized eggs in your local supermarket. They are heated in warm water baths using controlled time and temperature, to destroy any bacteria that might be present, but the process does not cook the eggs.
That raw egg disclaimer was one of the most reasoned, thorough and responsible explanations I've seen from a TH-camr. Kudos
It’s always done with the shell method in every restaurant Iv every worked in for the last 24 years, in 5 different countries. lol.
There's an article on PubMed on the frequency of salmonella in eggs. There's a lot of highly technical statistical stuff that's over my head but I definitely understood the part that said "The expected value of this distribution is approximately one SE-affected egg in every 20,000 eggs annually produced." Heck, even if it's 10 times that I'm perfectly comfortable with those odds. Bring on the chocolate mousse! 😋
@@chrispeterson1247 There's a lot of things we've done as a "standard method" which you wouldn't even suggest or think about today. But your method of choice is your method of choice and up for everyone to decide for themselves in the end.
@@chrispeterson1247 And "sear your steak first to seal in the juices" was gospel for decades, until proven to be totally wrong.
@@Scott-tq7ko Lamo no it’s still the right way. You wanna be chefs watching TH-cam crack me the fuck up. Come to work with me you will be in tears, pissing your panties crying from your mommy after the first 10 minutes 🤣🤣🤣🤣
For those who don't wanna whip the egg whites by hand, I highly recommend getting one of those electric hand mixers. They're cheap unlike a proper stand mixer, offer more control, and are obviously much easier than tiring your arm out for nearly ten straight minutes. Worth the cheap price and storage space if you like making desserts or any regular whisk heavy foods at home semi-frequently
It is weird how basically every food youtuber seems unaware of the existence of these things. It's either a 400 dollar tool or a 5 dollar tool. No inbetween.
Came here to say the same, I have a 9-speed Smog one and it has paddles, whisks and dough mixers as attachments. Wasn’t that cheap but it’s basically 2/3 of a stand mixer, you just have to be a bit more hands-on
Just get one that comes with both beaters and whisks. Beaters for cookies and cake dough, whisks for everything else, though it really doesn't matter THAT much. I've been using whisks for awhile and I've made bangin' cookies.
I have one but will use my KitchenAid like I always do 😊 but definitely an essential in every kitchen.
Or get a stick blender with a whisk attachment 🙂
This is wild.
Your channel quickly became the most practically useful one I watch. On at least three occasions, I've watched a video of yours, then actually made the recipe within a week or so. No other channel gets that kind of turnaround from me.
Now? I had already decided to make chocolate mousse this weekend, and then *after* that but *before* I do it, this video swoops in with a recipe. Ridiculous.
Thanks!
Agreed! I have an entire section in my digital cookbook entitled, 'Weeds & Sardines' from the old days!
Brian is The People’s Chef
If you’re gonna separate eggs like he does, I would recommend first cracking each egg individually in a small bowl before transferring to the big one. That way if one of the yolks breaks, it won’t contaminate the whole bowl of whites.
I just want to reiterate, I love these videos. Quick recipes, no bs, tips and tricks and my style of humor. Thank you for sharing your talent.
I truly believe that YSAC is the only food youtuber out there that seems to know electric hand mixers exist. Everyone thinks you need either a stand mixer or to whisk painstakingly by hand.
Real, lol.
I know they exist and I love cooking lol
Im gonna try all 3! They all look amazing. And I have no issue with raw egg yolks. I've been making my family's handed down recipe for Chocolate ice-cream for 20 years which uses 12 raw egg yolks and have eaten it for over 35 years, and it has never done anyone in my family any harm at all. These recipes look incredible. Thank you so much for sharing.
❤💯
Hey Brian
Would be epic to see your favourite version (if you have one) of the key lime pie 🍋🟩
Ohhh I second this
do 3 versions! good, better best!!!!!
You can also pasteurize eggs yourself if you have a sous-vide thingy, or (the way I did) a reasonably accurate cooking thermometer and some patience juggling the heat to keep the water around the 62C or so for the 60-ish mins that you need without going over and cooking the eggs.
14:08 I thought that video was already perfect, but then you guys kissed in such a cute way that it made my heart melt in the very same manner the chocolate on a low heat did
I've made more of your recipes than any other "foodtuber" so thanks for always making your's accessible!
What great dessert choices for when you want to treat yourself to decadence but, don't have the time to spend in the kitchen. They're perfect for this time of the year and all the grill'n weather ahead. Thanks you guys
A fun fact: you have a higher chance of salmonella from raw flour than from raw egg! Flour isn't treated in the same way eggs are, so there's literally nothing to remove bacteria from it until you cook it.
So you can actually make safe to eat 'raw' cookie dough by heat treating the flour yourself before making a normal recipe.
Or just don't and eat the raw dough if you're not a googoo gaga baby.
I once saw my chef eating cookie dough out of the bowl, I asked him if it was dangerous because of the raw eggs. With a mouth full of cookie dough, he laughed at me like I was a nerd and walked away. From that day on, I never looked back.
LOL, this exact thing happened to me with one of my elementary school teachers, she had a cake and cupcake business on top of teaching. i was a wee little child who had a cookie dough obsession with a person in a position of power telling me it could do no harm. :D
For what it's worth, flour is a much bigger problem with raw cookie dough.
Hey Brian, can I suggest something? When you are listing the ingredients on the video, can you also make a list on the side? Its much easier to be able to see everything at the same time on the screen while making the recipe . 1:47
I am a chocoholic and have been eating raw eggs in batter and desserts all my life - never had a problem! Thanks so much for these!!!🥰
I see you are a man of class with the Claussen's in the fridge. That's how I know I can trust your palette.
What a "treat" to have you mix up some quick deserts! My chickens are laying overtime right now so the timing was perfect. Thanks a bunch!! Love your channel.
8:49 okay, my mum called these "chocolate crinkle cookies" and they were a hit at C&E- my mum used to do an open house as we called it wherever Ukrainian relative visited and ate sweets and shared holidays with us. Ty for the mems!
love to see that cookie recipe! we would call them chocolate crinkle cookies, or just crinkles! they really are experienced like a blend between a cookie and a brownie, they're quite wonderful! it's nice to see how you've tackled it in this video!
definitely an upgrade to the chocolate-iness level compared to the usual recipe i use, i'll be giving your recipe a try next time i want to make choccy crinkles!
My mom and I made a bunch of homemade food goodies for Christmas in 2022. In 2023 we bought a used stand mixer. It sat for over a year until I finally started using it and NOW I JUST CAN'T STOP. 😅
Loved the nespresso pod idea! I don't drink coffee and never know what to do when a recipe calls for it. Having a pack of pods handy would make things much easier.
Beautiful - three great recipes. To increase the margin for error even further on the separating the eggs issue, crack them into a mug or similar first individually. That way if they're old or the yolk breaks for some other reason, you haven't accidentally already added it into the whites.
I made a "fit" version of the flourless cake, and also one with Brian's recipe with no modifications, honestly both are great! My fit version has about 33% fewer calories and 10 grams of protein per slice. Basically substituted the 330 grams of chocolate with 200 grams of sugar-free dark chocolate + 100 grams of a whey /casein chocolate protein powder (Syntrax), 100 grams of the butter with 105 grams of Greek Yogurt (added to the chocolate/butter pan), and the sugar with 114 grams of erythritol + 150 grams of allulose, and added an extra 50 grams of buttermilk to the yolk bowl.
Hell yeah. Nice one
I tried the mousse recipe today, Bri. The flavor was on point. But my egg whites never whipped up to a meringue-like consistency. Maybe it was because I pasteurized my eggs with a Joule first. I’ll try again, though, because it was delicious.
The ending was too cute.
without the dance?
Brian, you have such a nice voice for narration. I love your cooking tutorials. I use them often. 👨🍳
That cake looks great, gotta give it a try next weekend.
Broseph! Love the cookies! In the recipe in the video description, it calls for incorporating the melted chocolate later, while the video says to incorporate it into the butter+brown sugar (and then eggs). Which do you recommend? Second, there's no recipe on your site, so I can't corroborate there.... Is there a cookbook on the way??? I kid, I kid.
Video is correct. Need to check on that. Sorry
@@BrianLagerstrom I am on my second batch, so.... Thank You!
These recipes really are no-fail - for the mousse, when I folded the meringue together with chocolate/cream/yolk mixture, because I over-whipped the heavy cream and left the meringue out for too long, the mousse was grainy and not nearly as fluffy as I would have liked. Still, I added some whipped cream and chocolate shavings to top it and it was still incredible! Maybe next time I can make more airy and cloudlike 😉
The flourless chocolate cake is my favorite. I used to sell slices of this cake on campus. People went nuts for this cake. It's just the best!
I am making an after dinner dessert for friends…Thursday. You have given me great choices. Saved me!
Wow, really excited to make the mousse. Ive been making one for a few years but the recipe doesn’t utilize the egg whites, so this seems way less wasteful.
Normally I just use them the next day for a sad yolkless breakfast
lol, I like that. “A sad, yolkless breakfast” 😂
Those chocolate cookies are called "crinkles" here in my part of the world. Looks delicious. Thanks for the recipes!
would love a video focused on Gluten Free + Dairy Free, my wife is allergic to both and its tough coming up with ideas for dishes she can eat!
I've been wanting to bring my aunt something next time I visit. She has similar digestive problems with gluten and dairy. I've tried a few types of gluten free flour with...less than acceptable results. The only dessert I've thought was passable was a peach fruit cobbler i tried last year with a nut and oat crumble on top. Fresh peaches were the star of the show, and i just had to add some good cream to my serving! It's truly exhausting trying to dream up the perfect recipe with so many restrictions, all while trying not to ruin the dish with less than acceptable substitutions.😣
Worth saying the "traditional French way" of making chocolate mousse uses unwashed eggs, as is standard in most European countries. The risk profile is different because... science. The British food standards agency, for example, says it's fine to eat unwashed raw eggs that pass their safety standards. Most American eggs are chemically washed, which come with a higher risk when eaten raw. This is not a concern the old school French chefs would've had, but it's worth mentioning today. Check the food advice specifically in your country when it comes to eggs.
You’re one of the ones that bakes flour, aren’t ya? And won’t eat a medium steak😂
@@jam9859 No, not at all. I would happily eat the very chocolate mousse Brian made in the video, but I'm relatively young and healthy. Just think it's important for people to understand the risks so they can make their own informed decision.
@@jam9859 You must be a ton of fun at parties.
And also worth noting that all chickens in EU is vaccinated against salmonella.
Big tip I saw from Ethan Chlebowski about the Chocolate Crinkle.
These are the perfect cookie for turning into an ice cream sandwich, it’s like the sophisticated version of the ice cream sandwiches I had growing up in the best possible way
They all look fantastic!. I've been using my hands to separate eggs for decades; because any contamination is on the outside!
I let the chocolate catch on the pan the first time trying to make the mousse and I didn’t get the white fluffy things fluffy enough. My kids still loved them so will try again now I’ve learnt my lessons
Out if interest, if you wanted to make some of these less sweet tasting, would you recommend using purer chocolate or less sugar?
I’d sub in monkfruit sweetener
Or use a slightly darker choc but with a touch more butter
I cannot wait until this legend releases his cookbook!
I love seeing you and Lauren together! So cute! ❤️
Hi Brian, for the FLOURLESS CHOCOLATE CAKE can we substitute espresso instead of coffee powder?
Can’t decide which one to try next! Thanks Bri and Lorn!
Thanks for that cookie recipe! I love textural contrasts (along with temperature ones).
One comment one question-
I finally nailed the Good Brownies recipe when I stopped heating the butter and chocolate over the stove (even on low, low heat it broke multiple times) and started doing the whole recipe in a bowl in the microwave and I frankly think it’s both easier and more foolproof so I’d recommend doing that for all these recipes as an alternative (or frankly for me, an upgrade). Start at 30 seconds, then do 10-20s pulses until you hit the right consistency or do it at 50% power.
Question- I’m the non sweet baker and so I do not have a springform pan. What do I make that mousse in?
Put a square of parchment over the bottom half of the mold then attach the other half and trim the rest
A quick google search reveals this from the CDC: "CDC estimates Salmonella bacteria cause about 1.35 million infections, 26,500 hospitalizations, and 420 deaths in the United States every year."
I would suggest, "modern eggs are meticulously sterilised" is a slight overstatement. Those numbers are still a bit too high for me to feel comfortable with the risk. Although, here is a number I imagine is extremely low: people who have experienced salmonella poisoning from eggs - and still continue to eat them raw.
Like I said not up to me if you decide to eat or not.
@@BrianLagerstrom to be fair, I think you handled the warning within your video with a level of transparency that most content creators fall short of. I just think it's a needless risk for a person of your skill set to expose others to. I would hate to think a recipe I put out in the world was the reason somebody ended up very ill or worse. And you know what I'm thinking? "Hey Bri, why don't you experiment with a different method for making meringue?' I actually watched a French chef create rose nougat using potato starch. Just sayin' 🙂
Yes, I read that too. Salmonella in American eggs is a real risk. But you seem to be able to easally get pasteurised eggs don't you? Never saw that stuff in a (North West) European shop.
I still put 3 raw eggs into my banana and milk protein shake every other morning, im 50 now, since I was 18, so there's that... eggs have been brown, white, large, extra large, costco, wal mart, local mkt, 99 cents store, you name it.
Sous vide is the best way to pasteurize eggs at home for ice creams, etc.
hey bri, can we get some more recipes that are for more advanced bakers?
You and Lorn are so adorable 😍
Confused at the coffee pod in the first recipe. The pods are just coffee grounds, they won’t dissolve like instant would. Are you getting the texture of grounds in the cake? Seems weird.
Also, it’s rarer but salmonella can be inside the egg. It comes from chickens that have the microbe inside the ovary. So the egg is formed with salmonella within it, instead of the contaminated outer shell. Again, rarer, but not impossible.
7:30 bro was not playing around when it comes to these COOKIES 😤
Hi Guys, I recently ran across an interesting recipe for folks who need to use up extra eggs and-or are doing low carb. Hard-Boiled Egg Chocolate Pudding 10 Hard Boiled Eggs, 14oz,1 3/4 cups Cream (or other dairy or coconut milk), Half Cup Sugar or other sweetener, 1 tablespoon vanilla, half cup cocoa powder (I used carob), pinch instant coffee, pinch salt. You blend this up til smooth and either refridgerate or freeze into Fudgesicles. Happy egg collecting Jim Mexico
In the UK we can get cartons of pasteurised egg yolks and whites in some supermarkets or as a shelf stable until opened then refrigerate product from Amazon
Bri. Bri! Bri!! Dude, you're killing us. The contrast between your "teaching/instructing" voice and your eating the food, honest feedback vibe is insane. It's like I'm sitting with my professor then suddenly he's gone and I'm with my bro. 😂 I love it though. It's one of the reasons I keep coming back. It just keeps me wanting to learn more and more from you. Love the show and I've bought many of the products you endorse because I've grown to trust you
Back with banger recipes! Thanks Bri! Hope to see you dancing at the end creds soon.
In the cookies, if you wanted to make it for the holidays, how much peppermint flavor do you think would be good?
Brian, why not mix sugar with egg whites in the cake recipe? Wouldn't it make it more airy and delicate?
It looks like I could make some substitutes for that flourless choc cake, in order to make lo-carb? Just curious what your thoughts are.
I need to try the cookies and the cake!
For a quick and easy chocolate mousse, blended silken tofu with melted dark chocolate is the absolute best thing I have ever tried. I was skeptical, but you can’t taste the tofu and it’s great for people like me who can’t eat (much) dairy (also nice when vegans come over).
this is a dessert video, i like that.
Made the flourless chocolate cake over the weekend. It was a major hit.
oh my love the mousse looks delicious af .
I've been eating raw eggs literally all my life. Never once had a problem.
Me too!
Hi Brian, loved the video, I'd love to try the flourless less cake but my oven only goes down to 150 °C, any tips on the bake time? Or am I out of luck?
You can use a sous vide to pasteurize any egg if you are concerned about raw eggs and have the equipment
You and Lorn are precious!
Hey Bri - if I don’t like things TOO chocolatey, can I just skip the dark chocolate chips for the cookies? If not, anything you can suggest?
yes you can definitely skip the chips. they'll still be good. if you don't like TOO chocolatey, the cake probably won't be your favorite.
Sorry that one is going to be super hard to make less chocolatey. Check out my chocolate chip cookie video
Would LOVE all your GF recipes. I'm super excited to try that flourless cake
Yumms. Ha, our mousse recipes are virtually identical, except I've never added butter, and I add in a bit of gelatine. I often also make white chocolate mousse-also VG.
How did I miss this! I need these recipes in my life!
For those who don't want to use the raw eggs, I imagine that mixing the chocolate with the whipped cream would be plenty fluffy? I'm not sure how stable it would be, though. I'm excited to try these recipes, especially the first one.
It would be delicious but it would be chocolate whip frosting or ganache instead of mousse with no egg
So, not everyone has a stand mixer, but I think literally every kitchen across America (and possibly the world) has a $15 hand mixer. You should demonstrate that as the alternative instead of hand whisking, which no one but the most masochistic person would ever do, LOL. Great recipes as always, I want to make the cookies and the mousse!
You quickly became my favourite cooking channel.
An Instant Pot is great for pasteurizing your own eggs.
Hey Bri! Would love to see you make a jambalaya recipe on here. One of my favorite Cajun dishes 🙏
Excellent walk through. I plan to make all three asap
As a european i find it odd how much cooks talk about salmonella outbreaks while its rarely a topic here. According to google (so take it how you will), the US has around 1.35 million cases each year, while countries like Japan, France and Germany have a few hundred to like 17k cases a year.
Seems like we should start vaccinating our chickens
Yes, it is about vaccinating the chickens and to leave the natural layer on the eggs that actually form a barrier against strange bacterias. Standard procedure in the EU. And the shops don't cool them because the risk of contamination rises when the egg becomes moist due to the condenstaion occuring when a cold egg hits the ambient temperature. Most people do keep their eggs in the fridge when the buy them though, although it's not really needed when the temp is normal (as in not extremely hot).
What a lovely couple.
The chocolate version of molasses cookie is wild. Never would of thought of that.
So to the point about salmonella and eggs, just know: if you're buying the standard store bought mass produced eggs (which go thru an extremely rigorous cleaning method, it's worth looking up and watching), it's believed between 1 in 20,000 to 1 in 35,000 is contaminated with salmonella (the U.S. actually has the lowest salmonella rates in the modern world at a 0.005% infection odds per egg). The odds do go up if you're buying farm fresh or locally produced eggs simply because they don't fall under the same cleaning standards and scrutiny as the mass produced eggs. But short answer is you're *extremely* unlikely to contract it from most eggs.
Came here to make a similar comment. Like, the salmonella risk (from what I gather) is way higher with chicken than it is with eggs. There's still a risk though. You gotta do your research and assess for yourself.
Put melted chocolate on top of the chocolate mousse, so good!
Making the flourless cake, I decided to listen to Brian about the egg/yolk separation, the first egg yolk broke as soon as it touched the bowl. So I decided to go back to "my truth", and it all went perfect.
Godspeed egg sheller
To stabilise your eggwhites better, add a eighth of a teaspoon of cream of tarter.
Thank you for your lovely compliment. I hope my recipe was able to help you in your cooking
Or a pinch of salt.
Love you guys !
Is it ground coffee or instant coffee in the cake? You say „instant“ and use a pod, so i assume it‘s ground coffee ..?
it's ground, but I recommend instant if you have it. that said, I've never noticed a grainy texture from using the ground and I've used it in MANY cakes. It just imparts a nice coffee flavor.
oh, man, my grandma used to make a cookie like that. We called them "earthquake cookies" when we were kids. Will definitely give that, and to be honest probably both of the other recipes, a whirl. Thanks.
I make a version of those cookies - they're called Chocolate Crinkles ☺️
Chokolate Desserts, soo excited to try every recipe out. Thank you for your effort
let me know how they turn out!
Can I make the flourless cake in a square brownie pan if I don't have a springform pan? (These recipes look amazing and very doable, btw!)
Def yes
Thank you!!
Oh man, I want to make all three of these but I think I have to start with those cookies! Thanks for giving me a reason to indulge my sweet tooth!
add a thin layer of cake mix cake at the bottom of the mousse and you've got a (pretty much) bullet proof mousse cake
I envy your plastic-wrapping skills. Mine never looks like that! Is there a special technique or brand/type that you use?
Y'all are adorable!
Thank you ❤
Edit: can it be any type of chocolate, and for the cake do I have to use coffee powder?
You can skip coffee powder
If you're scared about "raw eggs" look for pasteurized eggs in your local supermarket. They are heated in warm water baths using controlled time and temperature, to destroy any bacteria that might be present, but the process does not cook the eggs.
Sup man! Good to see you doing well since highschool. Take care ❤️