Every cancer patient credits their care to a flock of smart and compassionate health care professionals. Most of them we see; some, we don't.
I've seen a lot of great doctors over the past year -- my gynecologist, my primary care physician, my breast surgeon, my neurosurgeon, and a number of radiologists. I count myself very lucky to have ready access to so many physicians of their caliber, especially since I live in a pretty rural (some might call it BFE) area. At the top of the list of my post surgical treatment are my oncologists, my medical oncologists and the radiation oncologist. They were the brains of this outfit.
If the doctors were the brains, I have to say that the nurses and other professionals I saw on a day-to-day basis have been the heart and soul of my cancer care. Always pleasant, always patient, always attentive. Never stressed, never hurried, never curt.
And best of all, always, always. always ready with a hug.
I never doubted their professionalism, but it was the warmth they generated that made my compulsory visits more than pleasant.
And what better way is there for me to show my appreciation than to cook for them? Although I've always thought of myself as more of a cook than a baker, I have mastered a few desserts. (I've also learned the hard way that there's no free wheeling with baking, like I do cooking.)
The Radiation Team
One the last day of my radiation treatment, I delivered homemade cannoli to my radiation team. (I missed getting my doctor into the picture.) Because the technologists always made great small talk as I got my treatments, I learned that Josh (the guy on the left) loved cannoli. "You just can't get good ones around here," he said. "Oh, yes, you can," I thought to myself. "You just wait and see."
I haven't made cannoli very often -- it's messy, a tad tedious and a bit time-consuming. But oh-so-good. I bought the molds back in my twenties when I was way more adventurous (or bold and foolish) than I am today. I hung on to them though, along with the butter molds, just in case the right opportunity came up -- and Josh's hankering for a cannoli was it.
The recipe I used came from Alex Guarnaschelli; how could you not trust someone with a name like that?!? They're really not all that hard to make. If you don't want to go to the trouble of buying the molds, you can buy pre-made cannoli shells on-line, although I've never done it.
Italians traditionally put lots of different things in the sweetened ricotta filling for cannoli: chocolate, citron, nuts. I like the filling best with just some chocolate chips, the mini ones, and the open end of the cannoli edged with chopped pistachios. (I never was a big fan of citron.) My best piece of advice if you're going to make cannoli is to wait until just before serving to fill them -- and don't forgo the dusting of sugar and the pistachios. Great finishing touches.
* The recipes I used for both Cannoli and Chocolate Chip Cookies are below.*
My Chemotherapy Nurse
The first time I met my chemo nurse, Michele, she hugged me. I saw her a lot, so I got lots of hugs. She never fails to greet me with a smile. I've never seen her down, even when I knew she was having troubles of her own. She offered me good advice and reproached me when I didn't do what I was supposed to -- like drink two gallons of water a day during chemo days.
How am I supposed to thank someone who does her job with such grace? Cookies!
I brought two dozen chocolate chip cookies one day, my go-to chocolate chip cookie recipe, the one with jello pudding in it. (Mr. Rosemary prefers his CC cookies soft and chewy and this recipe brings me the closest to meeting his thumbs up.)
She was beyond the moon about them. So I kept bringing them -- every month. One visit, though, I just didn't get around to making them, and I could see her disappointment. Another time, I didn't have any vanilla pudding mix in the pantry, so I substituted chocolate pudding. Mistake. Michele's not really a chocolate lover, she told me.
"But you love the chocolate chip cookies," I reasoned.
"It's not the chocolate chips; it's the cookie!"
My chemo treatment ended 10 months ago, but I still see Michele monthly for an infusion of Zometa, a bone strengthening drug. She gave me a reprieve right before Christmas, though. "We'll have so many treats around here, then; you don't have to make them."
But when I showed up without cookies, she told me she wished she hadn't given me a pass. Don't worry, Michele, I'll keep bringing the cookies.
All the people I've met at the Cancer Center at Clarion Hospital have been just super. I'm still thinking about things I can do to express my appreciation -- in the meantime, there's cannoli and cookies.
Homemade Cannoli
from Alex Guarnaschelli
Makes 2 dozen
For the shells:
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1 egg yolk
1/2 cup dry white wine
For the Filling:
2 cups ricotta cheese, preferably whole milk
3/4 cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon allspice
1/4 cup heavy cream
1/4 cup mini semisweet chocolate chips
1 lemon
1 quart canola oil, for frying
Flour, for rolling
1 egg, lightly beaten, for egg wash
Confectioners sugar, for dusting
Chopped pistachios, for decorating the cannoli ends
For the shell dough: In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, sugar and salt. Work the butter pieces into the flour with your fingers until the mixture becomes coarse and sandy. Add the egg yolk and the white wine and mix until it becomes a smooth dough. Spread a piece of plastic wrap on a flat surface and place the dough in the center. Wrap the plastic loosely around it and press the dough to fill the gap. Flattening the dough will mean less rolling later. Let it rest in the fridge for a few minutes while you make the filling.
For the filling: In a medium bowl, whisk the ricotta until smooth. Sift in the powdered sugar, cinnamon and allspice. Mix to blend. In a separate bowl (or in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment), beat the heavy cream until fairly stiff. Using a rubber spatula, gently fold the cream into the ricotta mixture. Stir in the chocolate chips. Zest the lemon and add it to the ricotta. Refrigerate for a half hour to an hour.
To roll and fry the shells: In a medium pot with a heavy bottom, heat the canola oil to 360 degrees F. Meanwhile, sift an even layer of flour on a flat surface. Flour a rolling pin. Roll the dough until it is very thin (about 1/8-inch thick). Cut the dough into fourths and work in small batches. Use any glass or small bowl that has a 3-to-4-inch diameter. Cut rounds, tracing around each one to assure the dough has been fully cut. You should have about 24 circles. Wrap each circle around a cannoli mold. Use a little of the egg wash on the edge of each round to seal it shut and to assure it won't slide or fall off the mold before pressing it closed over the mold. Flare the edges out slightly from the mold. Flaring will allow the oil to penetrate each cannoli shell as they fry. Use a pair of tongs to hold the edge of the mold as you submerge and fry the shell in the oil until crispy, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove from the oil, and holding the mold in one had with your tongs, gently grip the shell in your other hand with a kitchen towel and carefully slide it off the mold. Set aside to cool. Repeat with all of the circles.
To fill the cannolis: Don't fill the cannoli until just before serving. (The shells will get soft and no one likes a mushy cannoli.) Just before serving, use a pastry bag without a tip to pipe the ricotta into the cannoli molds. Fill the cannoli shells from both ends so the cream runs through the whole shell. Dust with powdered sugar. Dip the open edges in finely chopped pistachio nuts.
My Chemotherapy Nurse
Vanilla Pudding Chocolate Chip Cookies
Adapted from Two Peas and Their Pod
Makes 3 dozen cookies
1 cup butter flavored Crisco
3/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup granulated sugar
3.4 oz. package vanilla instant pudding mix
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cups mini semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup chopped walnuts
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or silicone baking mat and set aside.
Using a mixer, beat together butter and sugars until creamy. Add in pudding mix, eggs, and vanilla extract. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and mix until just combined. Stir in the chocolate chips.
Drop cookie dough by rounded tablespoons onto prepared baking sheet. Bake for 10-12 minutes, or until slight golden and set. Remove cookies from oven and let cool on baking sheet for two minutes. Transfer to a cooling rack and cool completely.
I had wondered why you had not been around for so long. I'm sorry you had to go through all that but grateful to hear you're doing well today and had a great team of doctors and nurses to help and supportive family and friends - that's key!
ReplyDeleteI love cannoli and in fact so e of the best I've ever tasted were while visiting my daughter at Boston University some years back and we went to Mike's Pastries. OMG they were incredible. I've yet to make them myself although have wanted to for years. This may just be the push I need.
Thanks for sharing your story and recipe. So glad you're doing well. Take care��
I love cannoli, too, and was glad to have the excuse to make them! I can see you making a video of these, Vicki. Thanks for visiting again and for your good wishes.
DeleteI make cannoli but have never attempted to make the shells myself. I buy them from a bakery shop then make my own filling. My hat is off to you for doing it all from scratch. Kindness repaid with your homemade goodies had to be very much appreciated.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad I can handle cannoli shells, Karen. Puff pastry is another story -- I'll buy! Yes, the staff enjoyed them, and I enjoyed making them. (Now I should make them for my family, shouldn't I?!?)
DeleteWhat a wonderful thing to do for your care staff, Rosemary! I've never made cannoli but yours look very professional!
ReplyDeleteThe're really not that hard to make; kina like work with phyllo. Everyone's impressed with how they lo. But the best par is the taste!
DeleteWhat a lovely idea, Rosemary ~ your caretakers sounds like gems, and so are you!
ReplyDeleteANd I can't stop now, Sue! A pretty god habit, think, though.
DeleteWhat a nice tribute to your health care team! Sounds like you were in excellent hands. And speaking of excellent, wow, cannoli! Really good looking -- terrific recipe. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks, John. I love cannoli and love to make them. These guys gave me a great excuse to make them. (And they tasted wonderful!)
DeleteIt's so good to see you blogging and cooking again, Rosemary! Did I ever tell you I was an oncology nurse? I stopped working after child #2 was born. I worked heme-onc, so gave chemo to mainly leukemia and lymphoma inpatients. I know we loved when our patient families brought in treats---I'm sure the nurses, etc. loved your baked goods! P.S. I'm so glad you're on your way to a full remission!! xo
ReplyDeleteI'd remembered that you were a nurse, Liz, but not that you were an oncology nurse. I knew you were a special person! Having had cancer is a life-changing experience, but I've found hundreds of silver linings. My caretakers are platinum.
DeleteI hope you are feeling better, what a lovely thing to do for the staff. These do sound so lovely.
ReplyDeleteThese people are so good -- today I went to pick up my turkey and pumpkin roll, something the staff does every year for all their patients. Gnenerous, caring people.
DeleteYour cannolis look awesome, Rosemary! Straight out of the best Italian bakery! You must really have appreciated your caretakers, because I know the amount of work goes into making them. Definitely a labor of love! I hope you are doing better. So good to see you cooking/baking more! I'm sending you a big, huge hug through the computer screen! :)
ReplyDeleteHello, Rosemary. Just came to your lovely blog from your comment at Kitchen Riffs. So sorry you had to go through all this. I admire your attitude and the way you took care of your caretakers! I've never made cannoli and have probably only had it once in my life. If I discover a cannoli fan in my life, I'll have to buy some molds and give your (and Alex's) recipe a go! I hope you are feeling well.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the good wishes -- I'm doing well but I'm struggling with this damn inertia to get back to blogging. I will. And do try making cannoli -- so much better than bakery bought, even the best of them. Thanks for visiting.
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