Is there anything better than chocolate to create a romantic mood with food on Valentine's Day? I wanted to come up with a chocolate panini recipe that truly was a proper dessert - not just chocolate between two pieces of bread. It wasn't easy - a chocolate sandwich is the kind of thing you dream about as a kid (along with Cookie Crisp cereal - whose mom let them eat that?!) but most of us rarely, if ever, actually make. Except if maybe you count a Nutella sandwich. Those are good, but you can hardly call it a special occasion romantic dessert. No, I was looking to make something decadent, a little bit refined, but still relatively easy to prepare. I think my Chocolate Raspberry Croissant Panini fits the bill! Want to skip ahead? Click here for the final recipe.
Chocolate Raspberry Croissant Panini...for Two! - Attempt #1
- Bread: Croissant
- Condiment: Raspberry preserves
- "Meat": Semi-sweet chocolate
- Cheese: None
- Goodies: Crème anglaise
THE PREPARATION: I started with the crème anglaise. If you're not familiar with creme anglaise, it's a thin dessert custard sauce made with sugar, egg yolks, cream and vanilla. It's

In a medium bowl, I whisked together 3 egg yolks with 1/4 cup of sugar and set it aside. Then I heated 1/2 cup of whole milk, 1/2 cup of heavy cream and good vanilla (as my favorite Barefoot Contessa, Ina Garten, would say!) over medium heat in a heavy saucepan, stirring constantly until the milk began to simmer. Then I gradually stirred the milk into the egg mixture - I "tempered" the eggs by pouring just a little of the milk in first to raise the temperature (I could hear Ina say, "You don't want scrambled eggs!".
I cleaned my original saucepan, scraping off the inevitable cooked-on bits, and transferred the now-custard back in. I heated the custard over low heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon to try and keep the custard from cooking onto the pot. I took it off the heat once it was slightly thickened and I could draw a line on the back of a spoon (I watched Bobby Flay do this on "Iron Chef" the other night - Alton Brown mentioned this was called napé). Then I strained the custard into a small bowl and let it cool for about 10 minutes.
THE CONSTRUCTION: While the crème anglaise cooled, I got started on preparing the actual sandwich. I cut an opening along the inside of the croissant to create a little pocket to hold the chocolate and raspberry preserves. I spread 2 teaspoons of the preserves within the pocket and then lay about an ounce of semi-sweet Ghirardelli chocolate on top of the preserves (as a Bay Area native, my heart belongs to Ghirardelli...Scharffen Berger would have been great as well!).
With the panini grill at medium height, I grilled the croissant at 350 degrees for 10 minutes until the chocolate had melted.

I gave a lot of thought to how I wanted this chocolate sandwich to look on the plate - after much deliberation I decided I wanted to see a drizzle of chocolate on the croissant but not on the plate. So once the croissant was done grilling, I transferred it to a piece of parchment paper and did my drizzle on the parchment. Over on the dessert plate, I spooned 3 tablespoons of my crème anglaise to create a little pool in the middle (alas, there was quite a bit of extra crème anglaise, but oh well - it's not like you can just make 3 tablespoons of it!). Then I centered the chocolate-drizzled croissant amidst the vanilla pool. Finally, I picked out a particularly luscious raspberry from the bunch and placed it where the two ends of the croissant met.
THE RESULTS: A winner right out of the gate! It turned out just as I'd hoped: grilling on the panini press made an already-flaky croissant extra crispy on the outside, while heating the gooey

Click here for the final recipe!
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