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Recipe: Penn & Teller's Bleeding Heart
Just in time for Halloween, Jumping Bean brings you Penn & Teller's Bleeding
Heart! Mwaah ha ha ha!(It is rather long, but VERY descriptive and detailed) The
title says it all. It's the perfect coup de grace for your intimate dinner at
home. As your guests sip their coffee, you unveil a glistening pink gelatin heart
on a pedestal cake stand. Then you whip out a carving knife and stab it. Dark,
gooey blood issues majestically from the wound. You cut dainty slices off the
lobes of the heart and flip them onto dessert plates. Just hold each portion of
heart under the oozing gash until it is nicely sauced with gore, add a dollop
of whipped cream, and serve. Ingredients - 4
cups of water
- four 3-oz. boxes or two 6-oz boxes of peach (pink; think
of lung tissue) or strawberry (redder; think of livers and hearts) gelatin dessert
mix.
- 4 envelopes unflavored gelatin
- one 12-ounce can unsweetened
evaporated milk
- 1/2 cup grenadine syrup
- 1 cup light corn syrup
- one
small bottle (0.3 fl. oz.) red food coloring
- 3 drops blue food coloring
- one
1-gallon food-storage bag (the plain kind without the zip closure)
- 6 1/2
cup heart-shaped gelatin mold or cake pan
Preparation 
- Boil
the water. Put the packaged gelatin dessert and unflavored gelatin in a bowl and
pour the boiling water over it, stirring constantly. Cool to room temperature
(very important or the next step may present problems). Stir in the condensed
milk. Note how it already is acquiring the color of freshly skinned flesh.
- Pour
the mixture into the gelatin mold. Cover the bottom of the mold (this will be
the top when you serve it) with a layer about half an inch think. Refrigerate
until it gels firmly.
- Meanwhile, prepare a nice bladder of blood
.
Stir together the corn syrup, grenadine, and food colorings. For the bladder,
take the gallon-size food-storage bag and turn it inside out. Pour the blood mixture
into one corner of the bag and twist it closed so that no air bubble is caught
between the sauce and the twist. Tie a knot in the twisted plastic. Adjust the
position of the knot so that when the bag lies on the counter, it's about 1 1/2
to 2 inches high, and tighten the knot. With a pair of scissors, snip off the
frilly extra plastic outside the knot. - When the gelatin on the bottom
of the mold is stiff and firm, position the bladder of blood in the mold, with
the point of the bag just inside the point of the heart. Make sure there is at
least 3/4" of space between all sides of the bag and the walls of the mold
(this will ensure that your guests don't see clues ahead of time). Pour in the
remaining gelatin until the mold is as full as you can handle. Don't worry if
you see a little of the blood-bladder grazing the surface of the gelatin, as longs
as it doesn't project too much; the side you are looking at now will be the bottom
when you serve it.
- Refrigerate until gelled firmly to the texture of fine,
lean organ meat. It takes about 4 hours.
To unmold,
put about 2 1/2 inches of hot, but not boiling water in your sink. Set your mold
in the water so that the water comes just below the edge
of the mold for 15 to 20 seconds; the time depends on the thickness of the mold
pan. Remove the mold from the water, and run the blade of a knife around the edge
of the gelatin. Invert your serving platter, ideally a white pedestal cake plate,
on top and hold it firmly in place. Then use both hands to turn over the mold
and the plate. Remove the mold; you may need to tap or shake the mold slightly
to free the gelatin. Presentation The blood looks
prettiest when it flows over white plates, doilies, and table linen, which it
may stain permanentlybut what the hell, it's the effect that matters. To
serve, use a nice, big Psycho-style chef's knife and stab the side of the gelatin
about one third of the way up from
the pointed end of the heart. Twist the knife slightly, and blood will
start to ooze out. Bare your teeth like a Marine jabbing with bayonet, and widen
the wound. When the blood is coming at a good slip, grab a dessert plate, and
cut a slice from one of the lobes of the heart. Flip it onto the plate, and drizzle
it with blood by holding it under the edge of the pedestal. Add whipped cream
and serve. This
dish delights all five senses: 1. Sight: red, glossy, and elegantly surreal
when the blood starts to flow. 2. Taste: sweeeet. 3. Smell: classic artificial-fruity
4. Touch: cold and wiggly. 5. Hearing: the screaming of guests. A
Note About Safety Be careful not to serve pieces of the food-storage
bag to your friends. They could choke to death. We want to help you become a more
exciting host, not a criminally negligent klutz. If, on the other hand, you're
deliberately trying to murder your guests, please think up your own modus operandi.
We developed this with Jell-O brand gelatin dessert, Knox unflavored gelatin,
Carnation unsweetened condensed milk, Karo syrup, Rose's grenadine, and Baggies
food-storage bags.
This is not product placementwe haven't received truckloads of free Jell-O;
it's our attempt to use ingredients we know people can find easily in grocery
stores everywhere. This is not to say that we'd reject any research and development
supplies the above mentioned companies might graciously bestow now that we've
given them such a big plug. Relelated Links Penn
& Teller's How to Play With Your Food© 1992 by Buggs & Rudy Discount
Corp. http://www.britta.com/HW/HWr.html#heart
Even better, there's a recipe for Dried Scabs! http://www.britta.com/HW/HWr.html#scabs
Mwahh ha ha ha! Drink RecipesFood Recipes
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