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Classic Cannoli

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Photo by Chelsie Craig, Food Styling by Kate Buckens

Victoria Granof, who developed this cannoli recipe, typically makes hers with sheep’s-milk ricotta. If you can find it, skip the goat cheese and cow’s-milk ricotta and use a total of 27 oz. sheep’s-milk ricotta. Alternatively, if you don’t want to use goat cheese, use a total of 27 oz. cow’s-milk ricotta. But try not to make this with supermarket ricotta if you can avoid it. Remember, the higher-quality ingredients you can find, the better the cannoli will be.

Ingredients

Dough

5

½

tsp. ground cinnamon

½

tsp. kosher salt

2

cups 00 flour, plus more for surface

2

Tbsp. plus 1 tsp. chilled vegetable shortening or high-quality lard

2

large eggs

2

Tbsp. apple cider vinegar

2

Tbsp. (or more) dry or sweet Marsala or white wine

Filling

lb. fresh cow’s-milk ricotta

2

oz. fresh goat cheese, room temperature

1

cup superfine sugar

1

.5 oz. semisweet chocolate, chopped, or mini chocolate chips

Kosher salt (optional)

Assembly

Vegetable oil (for frying; about 8 cups)

All-purpose flour (for surface)

Candied orange peel, finely chopped raw pistachios, and/or finely chopped chocolate (for serving)

Powdered sugar (for dusting)

Special Equipment

A deep-fry thermometer; a 4"-diameter cookie cutter; 4 cannoli tubes; a large disposable pastry bag; large round piping tip (optional)

Preparation

  1. Dough

    Step 1

    Whisk sugar, cinnamon, salt, and 2 cups 00 flour in a large bowl to combine. Add shortening and work into dry ingredients with your fingers until mixture is crumbly and no pieces of shortening are larger than a lentil. Separate white from 1 egg and place into a small bowl; set aside. Place yolk in another small bowl and add whole egg; lightly beat to combine.

    Step 2

    Make a well in the center of dry ingredients and pour in egg yolk mixture. Using a fork, gradually work in dry ingredients, mixing in a circular motion to nudge dry ingredients into well, until a thick paste forms (you will not have mixed in all of the dry ingredients). Add vinegar and wine to paste in well and continue mixing in dry ingredients until fully incorporated and dough becomes hard to mix (if dough gets too hard to mix, knead in bowl with your hands to work it in). Transfer dough to a lightly floured surface and knead until dough is very supple, about 3 minutes. Wrap in plastic and chill at least 1 hour.

    Step 3

    Do Ahead: Dough can be made 12 hours ahead. Keep chilled.

  2. Filling

    Step 4

    Press ricotta and goat cheese through a fine-mesh sieve into a large bowl by scraping firmly with a rubber spatula. Mix in sugar and chocolate until just combined (you want the mixture to stay aerated and fluffy). Taste filling and add a two-finger pinch of salt if you think it needs it.

    Step 5

    Cover bowl and chill filling at least 1 hour to give sugar time to dissolve.

    Step 6

    Do Ahead: Filling can be made 12 hours ahead. Keep chilled.

  3. Assembly

    Step 7

    Pour oil into a medium saucepan fitted with thermometer to come 2" up the sides. Heat over medium-high until thermometer registers 375°.

    Step 8

    Meanwhile, divide dough in half; rewrap one half and chill until ready to use. Roll out remaining half on a lightly floured surface to an 11" round about 1/16" thick. (You want it thinner than pie dough but not as thin as phyllo—too thick and it’ll become challenging to chew; too thin and the dough won’t develop its characteristic bubbled surface.) Punch out rounds with cutter (you should have 5). Reroll scraps to yield 1 more round.

    Step 9

    Lightly beat reserved egg white to loosen. Working one at a time and covering remaining rounds with plastic wrap, roll out 4 rounds to about 5x3½" ovals; prick each one in several places with a fork. Using your fingers, lightly wipe some egg white over the edge of one long side. Wrap ovals loosely around cannoli tubes, overlapping long side with egg wash over the other long side; gently press seam to flatten and adhere. Transfer to a rimmed baking sheet as you go.

    Photo by Chelsie Craig, Food Styling by Kate Buckens

    Step 10

    Line another rimmed baking sheet with a double layer of paper towels. Fry shells with tubes, gently encouraging them to move around in the oil to color evenly, until deep golden brown, 4–5 minutes. Transfer to prepared baking sheet. Let cool slightly, then slip shells off of tubes. Let tubes and shells cool completely. Repeat process 2 more times, frying 4 at a time, to yield 12 cannoli shells total.

    Step 11

    Fill pastry bag with filling and snip off end (or use large round tip). Pipe into shells, working from the center to one end, then turning shell around and piping from the center to the opposite end.

    Photo by Chelsie Craig, Food Styling by Kate Buckens

    Step 12

    Decorate exposed filling on each end with candied orange peel, pistachios, and/or chocolate. Generously dust cannoli with powdered sugar. Consume immediately!

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  • NOTE: I have not used this specific recipe, but it looks pretty straightforward and similar to others. In reading through it I saw a missing tip that I received when making my first cannoli: Strain the cheese in cheesecloth overnight (or at least a few hours) to remove excess water. That may have helped a user or two with the filling texture.

    • JFlo

    • Silicon Valley, CA

    • 6/18/2021

  • I was intrigued. I love cannolis. But this sounds like WAYYYYY too much work. I usually don't mind if a recipe calls for a reasonable amount of my time (and $) if I know the end results will be worth it, but from most of the reviews it sounds like not. I love cannolis, but I'd rather pay someone else to do this much work and enjoy my free time. Walk in the park and dessert anyone?? 🙂

    • Ferment4Life

    • Halifax, NS

    • 6/16/2021

  • Waay too much sugar in the filling! Made homemade ricotta and had to trash it. Very disappointing filling recipe.

    • Anonymous

    • 5/9/2021

  • Too much sugar in ricotta filling. Dough is way too dry.

    • Anonymous

    • Toronto

    • 2/14/2021

  • I cant see whether chocolate matches the filling.. does it really adds to the filling? Id rather add something lime-y, some lime zest or something like that. Anyway Ill try the recipe with the possible brazillian ingredients soon

    • Kelly Higa

    • São Paulo, Brazil

    • 12/6/2020

  • This recipe just did not work for me :( but the shells did taste nice after fried. The part of the dough stuck over the closure would always bubble up. The ricotta mixture ended up too loose too... not as stiff and holding its shape as I expected it to.

    • Anonymous

    • London, UK

    • 12/30/2019

  • My mother-in-law and I made these over the weekend. The ingredients were easy to find and the process was a lot of fun. My in-laws are Italian and have historically been very particular about food so I was hesitant to serve them at dinner. As it turns out, everyone loved them! Will def make again.

    • Anonymous

    • Bay Area, CA

    • 11/15/2019