Rustic Chocolate Raspberry Almond Valentine Cake for SRC and #chocolatelove, plus, Bad Boy First Love Part Three

February 6, 2012 at 6:25 pm | Posted in Cakes, Dessert, Fruit, Holiday, Secret Recipe Club | 80 Comments
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First I’d like to start this post with a huge WOOHOO to the Super Bowl XLVI Champs, the NY Giants!  Way to go, Big Blue!

February is definitely a chocolatey month to me, so when I was assigned the blog The Pajama Chef by The Secret Recipe Club for February, my cursor went straight to CHOCOLATE in Sarah’s cloud of categories.  Don’t get me wrong, Sarah’s blog is filled with loads of fantastic recipes of all sorts (Dying to try THESE!), but chocolate has been occupying 99.8% of my brain the past few weeks, so I knew I wouldn’t be happy unless I chose something with chocolate.

I had this whimsical, rustic Valentine cake in mind already, but I didn’t think I would get so lucky to find this great one bowl chocolate cake recipe from Martha Stewart which Sarah calls ‘Chocolate Cake that Changes Everything’.  I think I have to agree! It’s so deep, dark, moist and super chocolatey. Sarah made hers in a 13 x 9 -inch pan, but I decided to make it as Martha’s original recipe states..in two 8-inch cake pans.  I had serious plans for this chocolate cake!

One Bowl Deep Dark Chocolate Cake with Fresh Raspberry Buttercream

        Notice the one broken heart?  Everyone needs to be represented on Valentines Day.

I ended up doubling the recipe and baking four separate 8-inch layers because after the first two were baked, I felt they were a little too thin to be torted, plus, I had lots of homemade fresh, raspberry buttercream and chocolate ganache.  I sliced about 1-inch off the tops, then spread each layer with a milk chocolate ganache peppered with a smashed assortment of Valentine colored Jordan Almonds.  They’re not just for weddings, you know.  I LOVE candy coated nuts.  I used to subsist on Boston Baked Beans in my early 20’s.

Oh Nuts, my favorite place for all things nuts, fruits, candy etc, sent me my choice of 1 lb of Jordan Almonds to play around with – and play I did!  I chose a Valentine mix, and after smashing  some of the Jordan Almonds to smithereens, I stirred them into the ganache while it was still liquid.  This way, you get bits of almonds and candy shell with each bite.  Oh, but I’m not done yet.  The ganache was then topped with that deep pink fresh raspberry buttercream I mentioned above.

I try to avoid food color at all costs, and a fresh raspberry reduction made that possible.  Look at what a beautiful, deep, pink hue it gave the buttercream!  I was originally going to make swiss or italian meringue based buttercreams for the filling and frosting, but with this decadent, deep chocolate cake and all the tempered chocolate hearts I painted, plus chocolate shards and the ganache, I felt it the cake would be far too rich with all the butter.  This is why I made a confectioner’s based buttercream reducing the powdered sugar, for both the raspberry filling and a super, silky dark chocolate frosting – another recipe courtesy of Martha dearest.

I hit a few disasters, both of them with my tempered chocolate decor.  The transfer sheets I used for the hearts did not adhere properly to the chocolate, the red color washed out  (poorly made).  I ended up painting about 20 chocolate hearts with tinted cocoa butters and melted milk and white chocolate.  The cake was supposed to be topped with long, thin chocolate curls and loops.  I wrapped chocolate coated  and tined acetate around a rolling pin to set.  I used two bowls to support the rolling pin while the chocolate set.

Just my luck, when it was set, I accidentally dropped it on the table.  Those shards on top of the cake are the remains *sniff*.  SO, a cake that was supposed to be eclectic and whimsical is now ‘rustic’.

Now onto Part Three of My Bad Boy First Love.  Part One is HERE.  Part Two is HERE.

I couldn’t believe what was happening – this was going to end up being the best and now worst night of my life.  I could already feel my tear ducts conferring with me.  Should we?  Shouldn’t we?  Remember, you don’t wear mascara, so no scary, psycho mime or clown face if we let the waterworks go.

He opened the door and jumped out of the car.  Oh great, I’m so repulsive he couldn’t even stay in the car with me.

Then I saw it.  While we were kissing, I was on another planet.  Meanwhile, on earth, I had still been holding my giant lemonade filled with loads of shaved ice, water, sugar and lemon halves, in my right hand, perched on my knee. Being completely immersed in his awesomeness, wrapped up and taken to all kinds of kissy-face nirvana over and over, my wrist had slowly keeled over and the whole lemonade had spilled onto his lap.  I stared at the remaining lemon halves and bits of ice on driver’s seat, almost mocking me.  I heard the trunk open.  There was a little shuffling, then he slammed it shut.

He came back to the front and started wiping down the seat with towels.  He had changed into shorts he had in his trunk, along with the towels, for spontaneous ocean dips before or after work.  He gave me a huge smile while wiping everything down to let me know it was ok.  I couldn’t stop apologizing as I grabbed one of the towels and helped him clean the seat and floor of the Beetle.

“Wow, I forgot you were still holding the lemonade!” he exclaimed

“Me too!..I’m SO SO sorry!” (for the 10th time) *this is what you do to me, nothing existed but every bit of you..my body was no longer connected to me, it was part of you*

He stopped, leaned in and gave me a kiss.

“You’re SO sweet, such a sweetheart”

I am?

“Don’t worry, baby, it was accident, but man was it cold!’  He laughed, I laughed.  I was no longer feeling worried or down, although I’m pretty sure something most definitely went ‘down’.  Now, what should we name our first child?  Dreamboat Jr has a nice ring to it.

He put some dry towels down on his seat and got back into the car.  With the interior light on I noticed scar..a healed wide open gash above his left knee on his thigh.  I ran my finger over it..

“How did you get that?”

“Some guy got me with his switch blade in a fight outside L’Amours (a rock club in Brooklyn that closed down in 2004) last March.  A bunch of idiots were giving one of my buddies a hard time over a chick, so we went after them” (bad boy – check one)  He was so nonchalant about it, no different then saying – I went to the store to buy peanut butter.

“OMG, did you call the police, is he in jail now?”

He looked at me quizzically and with amusement.  “Why would I call the cops?  I was just lucky the blade got me there instead of here” He patted his chest.

“BUT, he stabbed you!  You could have bled to death!, He should be in prison!” I almost squealed

He laughed and flashed me his gorgeous smile.  “I just wrapped it in a ripped t-shirt to stop the bleeding, then cleaned it out and taped it when I got home” (tough guy – check)

I was flabbergasted.  That wound most definitely had needed stitches. He was enjoying my wide-eyed innocence over the situation, but he didn’t understand.  Where I come from (or where most people come from!), if someone gets stabbed, not only does the stabber get locked up, but a trial ensues and lawsuits would be hitting the switch blade guy, his family, his friends, friends of friends, and anyone associated with him, like paint balls at a target in full view.

God forbid it affects Chip’s tennis swing and there would be hell to pay if he had to sit out the JV football season even though he sat most of the time anyway because he sucked or wasn’t big enough to play football.  In High School, everyone makes the team, because that’s what they’re supposed to do so no one is left out.

I still remember 5’3″ guys strutting down the hallways in their football jerseys, thinking they were so damn cool, when realistically, the only time they got into a game was in a blowout with 30 seconds to go in the 4th quarter.

I digress.

While I was thinking of names for our second child, I realized, he was not only ‘baaaaaaaad’ in such a good way, he was also wicked tough and incredibly brave.  Nothing seemed to rattle him.  You’d never find this guy hiding under a table if a fight broke out.  Pinch me.

In order for the chocolate hearts to stick, you need a textured frosting.  The sloppier, the better, although I didn’t use enough myself to really push them in.

He took out a joint and asked if I minded if he took a hit or two and did I want one too? (bad boy, check two).  Of course I didn’t mind..he could do just about anything and I probably wouldn’t mind.  OK, I never liked pot..the few times I tried it, all it did was make me laugh a lot (only good part of it), eat a lot, induce paranoia, then put me to sleep.  What the heck, I thought..one or two hits wouldn’t kill me.

After our 5-second stoner interlude, he pulled me close to him and wrapped his arms around me….”Hug me..I’m still a little cold” he whispered into my ear.

We hugged each other tight..and remained that way for a while, my face nestled in the crook of his neck..inhaling him, while he kissed my head and stroked my back and hair.  I could stay like this forever. (The stanza ‘we danced so close and danced so slow, I swore I’d never let you go’ kept running through my head when I typed this paragraph.  Bon Jovi, NJ – kill me now.)

Soon, we were back to kissy face…for what seemed like hours.  The DJ’s soothing, late night voice broke the kiss for a moment when he announced that it was quarter to 4 in the morning.  Holy sh*t, my mother usually woke up at 5 or 6 am.  I needed to get home quick!  I didn’t want to..I wanted to stay with him forever.  He was 18, maybe he could adopt me or become my guardian, kind of like that weird Elvis and Priscilla thing.

I had a hard time saying it.

“I..I umm..have to get home, my Mother will probably be really worried if she wakes and I’m not there”  I omitted any sentences that included ‘curfew’ and ‘we snuck out after curfew’.

One Bowl Deep Dark Chocolate Cake with Fresh Raspberry Buttercream
“I know, baby..just so hard to let you go..but I don’t want your Mother worrying” – he caressed my cheek with such tenderness, I wanted to cry.

He turned the key in the ignition..a few coughs and chokes.  Turned it again, more coughs and chokes.  He waited a minute, then tried again.  More long coughs and chokes.

Great, not only did I soak his jeans and freeze his lap with mega-iced lemonade, but now the spill has caused his Beetle, the one he brought back to life all by himself, to die.

Oh wait, the engine isn’t in the seat or on the floor.  OK, maybe the mad heat between us, for hours, caused the Bug to not coöperate.  Helloooo, Christine.  I waited for more 70’s tunes to start blasting on the radio.

“Well..looks like I need to walk you home, sweetheart” (I loved when he called me that – it’s something older people usually called me, which just accentuated his maturity).

He gave me yet another huge smile, locked up the car, and took my hand.  He wasn’t bothered in the least.  It was at least a 3 mile walk.

“You’re just going to leave your car here?  Maybe we should find a pay phone and you can call a tow..”

“Nahh..she does this every so often, just needs a jump, I’ll get one later”

She?  Yep, the bitch hated me.  I was stealing her man. I looked back at her uneasily..expecting her to start-up on her own, Black Sabbath blaring – and try to run me down.

Those thoughts were gone in a second as he wrapped his arms around me and pulled me into yet another amazing kiss.  Then we held hands and walked.  Then we’d look at each other and start kissing as we were walking.  Then we’d stop and hug and kiss, ad infinitum. This is what went on the entire walk back to my Seaside cottage, this is what also disgusts people when they see it or read about it, as in ‘get a room already’, but when you’re IN IT, it’s awesome and you don’t give two sh*ts.


We finally made it back to the cottage..where my friend was probably tucked snuggly in bed and my Mother was probably starting to stir.  It was almost 5 am. It took us forever to say goodbye.  He took both of my hands in his and said ..

“I’ve never felt like this before with anyone” *OMG*

“Neither have I” *Yeah, with only a few kisses and one ‘sort of’ BF under my belt, Miss Lisa big talker*

We kissed some more…hugged for a while…sort of rocking.  This was so nice, I wished we could fly away together.  Then I heard a toilet flush inside the cottage.  Uh Oh.

Can I see you tomorrow night after I get off of work?” *YES! YES! YES!*

“Sure, I would like that”

“Carousel, ok?”

“ok”

I watched him walk away, god he even walked sexy.  When he turned the corner, I did something like THIS (again) – starting at 2:53.

BUT, when I opened the door, my world changed forever, still floating, there she was..My Mother, red in the face.  I could almost see the steam spewing from every orifice as she screamed at me.

“WHERE WERE YOU?  I WAS GOING TO CALL THE POLICE…I LOOKED FOR YOU ON THE BOARDWALK…” and on and on and on and on…

I ran to my room and slammed the door.  The yelling woke my friend up, but just briefly. I put the covers over my head to drown out her yelling..I didn’t want to lose one modicum of every moment with him.  I could still smell him on me.

Keep checking back for Part Four of Bad Boy First Love – I’m thinking the 14th, but aiming for sooner.  In case you were wondering…there will also be a Part 5 and it will be the last installment.  I had no clue it was going to go this far..seriously..but so much more to tell!

Now for the linky’s.  First one is for this month’s Secret Recipe Club.  Click the blue froggy to see a gallery of amazing dishes from all of our blog assignments!

This month also happens to be #chocolatelove in the lovebloghop I’m a member of. Link up any chocolate recipe from the month of February 2012. Don’t forget to link back to this post, so that your readers know to stop by the #chocolatelove event! The twitter hashtag is #chocolatelove.  Click below to see a ton of beautiful and decadent chocolate creations!

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One Bowl Deep Dark Chocolate Cake with Jordan Almond Ganache and  Fresh Raspberry Buttercream

   I forgot to trim the top layer, so the heavy, moist cake with all that chocolate on top squished down the other layers.  Did it matter when we ate it?  Ummm..NO.

Rustic Chocolate Raspberry Almond Valentine Cake

2 recipes Martha Stewart’s One Bowl Chocolate Cake – Making 4 8-inch layers – omit frosting in this recipe

Martha Stewart’s Dark Chocolate Frosting

Jordan Almond Milk Chocolate Ganache
9 ounces good quality, chopped milk chocolate
1 cup heavy cream
1 tablespoon Framboise (optional)
2/3 cup Oh Nuts whole Jordan Almonds, preferably in Valentine colors (red, white and pink), smashed to bits in a ziplock using a mallet

Fresh Raspberry Buttercream
Adapted from Making Life Delicious
24 ounces fresh raspberries
2 sticks unsalted butter
1 teaspoon lemon juice
big pinch of kosher salt
3 1/2 to 4 1/2 cups powdered sugar

DIRECTIONS:
1.  Make the milk chocolate – Jordan Almond ganache.  Place the chopped milk chocolate in a medium-sized bowl.  Boil the cream on the stove until it’s bubbling.  Pour over chopped chocolate and let it sit for a few minutes as is, then stir until uniform.  Stir in bashed to smithereens Jordan Almonds and Framboise, if using.  Cover and place in the fridge for several hours.

2.  Make the cakes. Cut about 1/2 inch off the tops of all four layers of cake. Wrap each layer tightly in plastic wrap, and chill until ready to assemble cake.

3. Make Dark Chocolate Frosting, cover and set aside.

4. Make the fresh raspberry reduction for the buttercream.  In a medium to large saucepan, cook down the raspberries until they’ve broken down and released their juices..they will be  floating in their own liquid – super saucy.  If you use frozen, this will take longer.  Strain cooked down raspberries in a fine meshed sieve into a bowl, pressing down on them to get every bit of liquid out.  You should have about 1 cup raspberry juice.  Place this back in a clean saucepan, and cook down until reduced to 1/2 cup.  It should be thick – like chocolate syrup, and will be dark blood red.  Set aside until completely cool (I put it in the fridge).

5.  Make the fresh raspberry buttercream.  In a bowl, beat the two sticks of butter until creamy.  Add in 2 cups of powdered sugar, the reduced raspberry sauce, the lemon juice and huge pinch of kosher salt.  Beat until creamy and uniform in color.  Add as much powdered sugar to get a nice, thick, but still creamy consistency.  I only used a little less  than 3 1/2 cups.  If you end up adding too much, drizzle in a couple of tablespoons of milk or cream until you reach desired consistency.

6.  Assemble Cake.  Place one layer, cut side up, on a cake plate or board (I glue down the first layer of all cakes with a dab of buttercream so it stays put).  Spread about 1/2 cup of thickened ganache within 1/8-inch of the edge.  Top with about 1 to  1 1/2 cups of the raspberry buttercream.  Top with next layer and press down.  Repeat above.  Do the same with one more layer, then top with last layer, pressing down.

7.  Frost cake sloppily, meaning thick with swirls or lines, so the hearts can stick – don’t smooth it out.  Use the icing spatula to make swirls or lines all around it.

8.  Top with homemade or any chocolate hearts and decorations you like, placing them around the cake too – pressing them lightly into the frosting.  Top with a few Valentine Jordan Almonds.  Chill for a bit for easier cutting.  Enjoy!

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Biscuit Joconde Imprime/Entremet – Peanut Butter and Chocolate all Decked Out

February 1, 2011 at 1:22 am | Posted in Cakes, Daring Bakers, Dessert, Puddings/Custards | 111 Comments
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“You’re going to love the January Daring Bakers Challenge”.  That’s what Lis, the co-founder of The Daring Kitchen, said to me one day last December.  I was tied up in cassoulet, confit and a computer crash at the time, so the thought of baking anything was a welcome diversion, especially something I would love.  I’m very late in posting this – 4 days to be exact.  The freezer makes a great pause button.

The January 2011 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Astheroshe of the blog accro. She chose to challenge everyone to make a Biscuit Joconde Imprime to wrap around an Entremets dessert.

On reveal day, I think I squealed.  An entremet!   Plus, an entremet with a joconde (a decorative design baked into a light sponge cake providing an elegant finish to desserts/torts/entremets – formed in a ring mold,  Add a ‘La’ and joconde is the French name for the Mona Lisa – did she sponge off of people?  Bah Dum Bump) and decor pattern paste!  Ok, let’s go back a little further.  Once a year (I think), the Food Network televises the World Pastry Championship.  I watch in awe as tall toque topped teams of pastry chefs from many different countries compete to hold this honor… from the individual chocolates (bonbons and pralines) and plated desserts, to the sugar sculptures and chocolate showpieces, it’s all pretty amazing, but there’s one round that always holds my attention completely – the entremet.

A compilation of two of the three joconde imprimes I made.  Obviously, number three (bottom left) was the only one salvageable.

These pretty cakes of mousse, creams, genoise’s, feuilletines, dacqouise’s et al, are stunning works of art.  The flavors and fillings are always above and beyond your typical creative juices and they really are legitimate pieces of art!  The chefs, with their industrial strength, electric spray guns, (LOVE when pastry chefs find uses for the stuff you find at Home Depot or your local hardware store.  Joe with the dirt under his nails and half arm tan standing behind Pierre in his Burberry jacket with buffed nails, both purchasing a blowtorch), blasting bombes of mousse with chocolate and cocoa butter, while another pulls sugar into perfect, delicate flowers, gently placing them atop the shiniest caramel mirror you’ll ever see.  This is heaven to me.

Salted Peanut Dacquoise

Now, could I make an entremet that comes even a little, itty bit close to those?  Probably not, as my kitchen isn’t equipped with any electric spray guns, and I’m not equipped with those kinds of skills, but, I do have acetate, and chocolate transfer sheets!  It’s like playing grown-up when you’re a child – I was going to the land of make-believe to take on the role of a French pastry chef.  Oui Oui!

Naturally, as you’ve all come to expect on this blog, a few things went wrong before I could start building my entremet.  THE SQUIRRELS ATE MY JOCONDE PASTE RIGHT OFF THE DANG SILPAT.  Let me explain.  My freezer simply wasn’t freezing the design laden paste as hard as I felt it needed to be, so..since we’ve been hammered with snow and freezing weather the past 2 weeks, I decided to cover the baking sheet with the paste and my hard fought scraped out designs, and plant it on the snow outside.  Since when do squirrels like chocolate, seriously?  An hour later I go to get it and squirrels scatter, the top baking sheet covering pushed over, and only a minuscule corner of chocolate paste swirl left.  There were some chocolate, squirrel paw prints across the silpat..OK I though about it for a second, but only a second!

I really, really, really – REALLY wish I had  designed my joconde to match the chocolate transfer design on the hearts.  Easy scribbles with the wooden spoon handle, and the shoes would have matched the purse.

I didn’t freak, since I had plenty of paste left over for another try.  Again, I carefully scraped out a few designs on it, getting creative using biscuit cutters, a potato masher etc. I noticed everything was frozen solid on the second shelf of my freezer, so I moved everything and jammed the baking sheet there (yep, jammed, baking sheet doesn’t fit, so you find a way) and went on to make the sponge.  No snafu’s, no caveats, no problem!  I spread the sponge on top of the paste and into the oven it went.  Everyone said the baking time in the recipe that was provided to us by our host, was wayyy too long, as in crispy joconde too long, as in…divide baking time in half too long.  I obsessed and only baked it 6 minutes, not wanting to inch close to burnt spots – this sponge is all about the aesthetics, man!  The damn sponge tore when I gently pulled the silpat off.  SHEEET!

I had just enough paste left to make one more, but I had to make the sponge again. Not spending time on intricate designs again – Lisa meet wooden spoon handle, wooden spoon handle, Lisa.  Squiggle, squaggle, sqwawggle.  Good enough.  If this one doesn’t work, I might actually give up on one of my most favorite challenges ever.  It tore a little (I’ve come to the conclusion that I need new silpats, they’ve been used to the point of silicone revolt and retreat), but I had enough to line the mold.  I had to piece together more than one strip, but it wasn’t too bad.  Not my original vision, but, hey, it’s amazing how quickly that changes when you have squirrels with refined palates.

Now that I’ve taken up almost a whole page with squirrel sabotage and other disasters, on to the good stuff.  My original vision for my entremet was ‘exotic’ fruit, sort of leaning toward tropical.  In fact, I even made some of the components for that first vision, but a peanut butter- milk chocolate theme struck like lightning and I couldn’t let it go.  I kept recalling this amazing peanut butter and milk chocolate mousse parfait created by The Dessert Truck in NYC.  Let’s just say, if you’re a fan of peanut butter, this is one of those desserts that haunt your senses forever once you’ve tried it.  Initially, I was going to add a fruit gelee insert and/or topping to add a peanut butter and jelly aspect to it, but then decided peanut butter and chocolate PLUS fruit gelee would sort of distract the palate from sinful and rich.  I was feeling the contrast in texture, but not so much in flavor.  I wanted pure peanut butter – chocolate goodness.  A chocolate gelee mirror was my last minute, final decision, after mulling for days and days over fruit or caramel (remember when Greg Brady didn’t choose Marsha or his GF for head cheerleader?).  Below are the components of my chocolate peanut butter entremet.

  • Biscuit Joconde
  • Milk Chocolate Ganache
  • Salted Peanut Dacquoise
  • Peanut Butter Milk Chocolate Feuilletine
  • Milk Chocolate Cremeux
  • Cocoa Genoise
  • Peanut Butter Mousse
  • Cocoa Glace (A nice, shiny chocolate ganache is great too.  Equal parts chopped chocolate and heavy cream, with a touch of light corn syrup.)

I was all over the place as far as the amount of ingredients for each component goes.  I used base recipes, changed them around, and hoped it was the perfect amount without any leftovers.   However, the genoise and chocolate cremeux (set with gelatin, which is not usually the norm, but it needed to be to carry the weight of the other components.  Didn’t affect the texture in a negative way) leave some leftovers, but is that really a bad thing?  Cocoa genoise – chocolate cremeux parfaits!  Also, the peanut butter mousse is a little different in that the heavy cream is not whipped and folded in.  However, it’s so light and creamy, you would never know it.  As rich as this entremet sounds, it’s actually quite light and not too sweet.  Wait, how could I forget the finale?

Asbestos handmade caramelized sugar corkscrews, ground salted peanut brittle (Equal parts sugar and water..cooked to a light caramel.  Stir in ground salted peanuts and cook until deep amber.  Spread on a parchment or silpat lined baking sheet and cut before it sets completely, or break apart when set), and tempered chocolate, which I poured and spread on a transfer sheet of gold scribbles, then cut out hearts, hearts because this baby was made with L-O-V-E .  A dusting of cocoa, and voila, my first, complete entremet.

By the way, below – can you tell which are the challenge recipes and which are not?  I’m metrically stunted – conversions make me cringe.

Milk Chocolate – Peanut Butter Entremet with Joconde Imprime
Makes one 8 – inch round entremet, joconde makes more

*Joconde Sponge

YIELD: Two ½ size sheet pans or a 13” x 18” (33 x 46 cm) jelly roll pan

¾ cup/ 180 ml/ 3oz/ 85g almond flour/meal – *You can also use hazelnut flour, just omit the butter
½ cup plus 2 tablespoons/ 150 ml/ 2⅔ oz/ 75g confectioners’ (icing) sugar
¼ cup/ 60 ml/ 1 oz/ 25g cake flour *See note below
3 large eggs – about 5⅓ oz/ 150g
3 large egg whites – about 3 oz/ 90g
2½ teaspoons/ 12½ ml/ ⅓ oz/ 10g white granulated sugar or superfine (caster) sugar
2 tablespoons/ 30 ml/ 1oz / 30g unsalted butter, melted

*Note: How to make cake flour: http://www.joythebaker.com/blog/2009/09/how-to-make-cake-flour/
*Cut out a 6 to 7 – inch circle of extra joconde, to use as a base to this entremet.  Set aside, covered, or refrigerate, until ready to use.

Patterned Joconde-Decor Paste
YIELD: Two ½ size sheet pans or a 13” x 18” (33 x 46 cm) jelly roll pan

14 tablespoons/ 210ml/ 7oz/ 200g unsalted butter, softened
1½ cups plus1½ tablespoons/ 385ml/ 7oz/ 200g Confectioners’ (icing) sugar
7 large egg whites – about 7 oz / 200g
1¾ cup/ 420ml/ 7¾ oz/ 220g cake flour
Food coloring gel, paste or liquid

COCOA Décor Paste Variation: Reduce cake flour to 6 oz / 170g. Add 2 oz/ 60 g cocoa powder. Sift the flour and cocoa powder together before adding to creamed mixture.

Milk Chocolate Ganache
1/2 cup chopped milk chocolate
1/4 cup heavy cream

Salted Peanut Dacquoise
recipe by Nancy Olson via Food & Wine
1/3 cup sliced almonds
1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar
2 large egg whites
1 Tablespoon granulated sugar
1/2 cup salted roasted peanuts, coarsely chopped

Milk Chocolate Peanut Butter Feuilletine
1/2 cup creamy peanut butter
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
6 ounces good quality milk chocolate, chopped
*1 cup paillete feuilletine (OR rice krispies, or corn flakes, or crushed sugar cones) Although I suggested cornflakes as an acceptable substitute for paillette feuilletine, to me the taste and texture are quite different (they’re crushed french lace crepes called gavottes and are sweet with a caramel tone).  I purchased mine online, HERE.

Milk Chocolate Cremeux
1 1/2 teaspons powdered gelatin or two leaves gelatin
2 Tablspoons water
1 cup milk
1 cup heavy cream
5 egg yolks
3 Tablespoons sugar
3/4 cup good quality milk chocolate, chopped and melted

Cocoa Genoise
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 Tablespoon cocoa powder
6 eggs
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup butter, melted
Cocoa simple syrup (1/2 cup each sugar and water cooked until sugar is dissolved, 1/2 teaspoon cocoa powder added or 1T liqueur of your choice)

Peanut Butter Mousse
inspired by the NYC Dessert Truck dudes

2 teaspoons powdered gelatin or about 2 1/2 leaves gelatin
1/4 cup cold water
2 1/2 cups heavy cream
5 large egg yolks
5 Tablespoons sugar
1/2 cup salted smooth peanut butter

Cocoa Glace
– courtesy of Daring Bakers, from the Yule Log challenge, Dec ’09

1 1/2 teaspoons powdered gelatin or 2 leaves gelatin
1/4 cup heavy cream
5 Tablespoons granulated sugar
1/4 cup water
1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder

FOR THE JOCONDE SPONGE:
1.In a clean mixing bowl whip the egg whites and white granulated sugar to firm, glossy peeks. Reserve in a separate clean bowl to use later.
2.Sift almond flour, confectioner’s sugar, cake flour. (This can be done into your dirty egg white bowl)
3.On medium speed, add the eggs a little at a time. Mix well after each addition. Mix until smooth and light. (If using a stand mixer use blade attachment. If hand held a whisk attachment is fine, or by hand. )
4.Fold in one third reserved whipped egg whites to almond mixture to lighten the batter. Fold in remaining whipped egg whites. Do not over mix.
5.Fold in melted butter.
6.Reserve batter to be used later.

FOR THE JOCONDE PATTERN PASTE:
1.Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy (use stand mixer with blade, hand held mixer, or by hand)
2.Gradually add egg whites. Beat continuously.
3.Fold in sifted flour.
4.Tint batter with coloring to desired color, if not making cocoa variation.

FOR INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO PATTERN THE JOCONDE AND PREPARE THE MOLD, CLICK HERE.

FOR THE MILK CHOCOLATE GANACHE:
Place the chopped chocolate in a stainless steel bowl. In a saucepan, heat cream over medium high heat until it just starts to boil. Immediately remove from heat and pour over chopped chocolate. Let sit for 2 minutes, then stir until uniform. Let sit until it reaches a soft, spreadable consistency.

FOR THE SALTED PEANUT DACQUOISE:
Trace a 7-inch circle onto a sheet of parchment paper and lay it on a baking sheet. In a food processor, pulse the almonds with the confectioners’ sugar until they’re finely ground. In a bowl, using an electric mixer, beat the egg whites at medium speed until soft peaks form. Add the granulated sugar and beat until the whites are stiff and glossy, about 2 minutes. Using a rubber spatula, fold in the almond mixture. Spread the meringue on the parchment to fill the circle. Sprinkle the chopped peanuts on top. Bake for about 20 minutes, until lightly browned and firm. Turn oven off, prop the door open with a wooden spoon, and let dry in the oven for about an hour or two.

FOR THE MILK CHOCOLATE PEANUT BUTTER FEUILLETINE:
In a medium bowl set in a saucepan of simmering water, heat the peanut butter with the butter and milk chocolate, stirring constantly, until smooth and melted. Remove from the heat and fold in pailette feuilletine. Spread the mixture on top of the salted peanut dacquoise. Transfer to the freezer and let cool completely.

FOR THE MILK CHOCOLATE CREMEUX:
Bring the milk and the heavy cream to a boil in a saucepan. Meanwhile, whisk together the yolks and sugar; temper the yolks into the warm milk-cream mixture. Cook the custard, whisking constantly, until it coats the back of a spoon and registers 182 degrees on a thermometer. Add the melted chocolate and mix with an immersion blender. Stir in the melted gelatin and let cool until it thickens somewhat.

FOR THE COCOA GENOISE:
Preheat the oven to 375°F. Sift together the flour and cocoa powder. Place a heatproof mixing bowl over a pot of gently simmering water, combine the eggs and sugar, whisking constantly, until the mixture is lukewarm. Remove the bowl from the simmering water, and whip until cool. Fold in the dry ingredients, and then fold in the melted butter. Pour the batter onto a Silpat-lined sheet pan and bake for 6 minutes, or until done. Cut out one 6 to 7-inch round.  Save the rest for other preparations, or just snack on it.

FOR THE PEANUT BUTTER MOUSSE:
1. In a bowl, dissolve the gelatin in the water and let stand for 5 minutes. In a saucepan, cook the cream over moderately high heat until it bubbles around the edge. In a medium bowl, whisk the egg yolks with the sugar. Gradually whisk the hot cream into the egg yolks. Pour the mixture into the saucepan and cook over moderately low heat, stirring constantly, until thickened, 3 minutes. Remove from the heat and whisk in the peanut butter. Melt the gelatin for 15 seconds in the microwave, then stir into peanut butter mousse base.  Let sit, stirring occasionally, until it thickens slightly.

FOR THE COCOA GLACE:
Soften the gelatin in cold water for 15 minutes.  Boil the rest of the ingredients and cook an additional 3 minutes after boiling.  Add gelatin to the chocolate mixture. Mix well.  Let cool while checking the texture regularly. As soon as the mixture is smooth and coats a spoon well (it is starting to gelify), use immediately.

NOTE – This sets very quickly, so make it as soon as you remove the entremet from freezer for the last time.

ASSEMBLE ENTREMET:
1. Line an 8-inch cake ring or springform pan with acetate or parchment paper – make sure it’s at least 2-inches in height above the edge of cake ring – the peanut butter mousse will spill over, if not.  Line with strip of biscuit joconde, cut about 1-inch shorter in height than the top of the cake ring.

2.Place the circle of joconde biscuit at the bottom of the cake ring.  Spread or pipe with all the ganache then press the dacquoise – feuilletine disk on top of it. Pour partially set chcolate cremeux on top then freeze for about an hour.

3.  Remove entremet from freezer.  Brush both sides of the cocoa genoise with cocoa simple syrup then press on top of the chocolate cremeux.  Pour thickened peanut butter mousse on top of genoise. Freeze for another hour or two.

4.  Remove from freezer and pour cocoa gelee, slowly, over the top.  Let set, then refrigerate until ready to serve.

By the way, just found out the Peanut Butter Exhibition is up and running again, so I couldn’t resist, and entered this emtremet. Be sure to check it out and join up! Click the badge below to read about it and enter.

This was definitely a challenge, but so enjoyable and well worth the awe appeal, taste and layers of texture.  Surprise friends and/or family with one of these beauties at your next holiday, birthday celebration, or dinner party!  To see some of the most gorgeous entremets created by my fellow Daring Bakers, click on the links to their blogs, HERE.  Au Revoir, until next time!


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Tiramisu x Two – Going Caramel Latte PLUS free lotion!

February 27, 2010 at 11:53 pm | Posted in Daring Bakers, Dessert, Giveaway | 68 Comments
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Wow, this is a first – I think.  No  goofy, sarcastic or play on words, ‘title’, just the name of the dish.  It’s really no big deal, but I loved this challenge so much, I felt the flavors I came up with deserved a headline.  UPDATEL: Just changed the title, so all of the above no longer applies.  Silly, indecisive me.

I’ll never forget the first time I had Tiramisu.  It was an ex-boyfriend’s mother’s birthday and we went to this great Italian restaurant in the city to celebrate it with his family.  For the life of me, I can’t remember the name of the restaurant, but I remember the Tiramisu.  I’m not a coffee drinker and in fact, I don’t really flip over the flavor of coffee in general, but wow, one bite of this creamy, cakey layered confection in front of me, and I was blown away.  Mind you..to this day, this is the only way I enjoy the flavor of coffee.

The February 2010 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Aparna of My Diverse Kitchen and Deeba of Passionate About Baking. They chose Tiramisu as the challenge for the month. Their challenge recipe is based on recipes from The Washington Post, Cordon Bleu at Home and Baking Obsession.  Thanks, Deeba and Aparna!

This challenge was so much fun.  I’ve made Tiramisu before (well, Tiramisu soup, but no need to get into that right now), but never made each component from scratch.  What a brilliant idea by Aparna and Deeba!  We were required to make our own savoiardi (lady fingers) , mascarpone cheese, and of course..the zabaglione.  However, there was an interesting addition to this recipe – vanilla pastry cream.  I’d never seen vanilla pastry cream in any tiramisu recipe (unless you count those ‘quickie’ recipes that use instant vanilla pudding..YIKES!! Sorry to those of you who use those recipes – I understand you’re short on time, but the time it takes to stir that sh*t up with milk is just about the same time it takes to make a pastry cream..seriously!), so this was definitely interesting, and I couldn’t wait to taste it.

Due to my somewhat aversion to coffee, I decided to lighten up the coffee flavor a little by melting milk chocolate into the hot espresso.  I 86’ed the sugar because milk chocolate is more than sweet enough.  Now, I could have just blew off the coffee completely and dipped my lady fingers in something other than espresso, like a fruit juice/syrup, tea or check out what other Daring Bakers dipped and flavored their Tiramisu’s with!  However, I really wanted to remain true to the spirit of Tiramisu, and I feel that spirit lies in that first bite I took at that nameless restaurant.  In fact, I remained so true, I didn’t think a tablespoon or two of chocolate liqueur would hurt either.  Of course, if kids are going to eat this..nix the chocolate liqueur and well, maybe the espresso (unless you want to stunt their growth – remember that one??).  Go with the fruit syrup/juice or whatever IS NOT coffee or liqueur.

Now that I decided on my dipping liquid..I also wanted to flavor the zabaglione, mascarpone, pastry cream, whipped cream amalgamation.  What better than a caramel sauce or syrup to make both a Milk Chocolate-Caramel LATTE Tiramisu (or would MACCHIOTO be better suited?  I like that word.) and a White Chocolate- Caramel Latte Tiramisu.  I knew one day I’d be able to take advantage of all those cool coffeee shop concoctions that sound so great but I never get to enjoy, due to my anti- coffee gene.  Well, the name of one anyway.  OK, my tiramisu contains espresso, chocolate, caramel and umm.., cream instead of steamed milk, but isn’t that close to what they call a latte?

In the end, I decided to just swirl some of the homemade caramel sauce into the creamy filling and leave it at that, in hopes of a pretty swirl throughout this luscious block of heaven (didn’t happen).  As I type this entry, my Tiramisu was just put into the freezer (it’s Feb. 27th, 2:57 am and I JUST finished it –  once again proving that the last minute is my new BFF) to set quickly.

If you’d like the master recipe for Tiramisu,  including savoiardi and mascarpone cheese, click HERE.  To make my versions of the master recipe….

For the Milk Chocolate Caramel:

1. Omit the sugar and melt about 1/2 cup chopped milk chocolate into the espresso instead. Stir in 1 tablespoon of chocolate liqueur.

2. Grind the first layer of savoiardi biscuits with more milk chocolate and a little espresso to make a sort of crust.  Press into pan then top with a third of the cream, drizzle and swirl in caramel, and repeat two more times, ending with cream, dipping and layering the remaining savoiardi biscuits as directed in the recipe.  Drizzle and swirl the caramel into each layer of cream prior to topping with savoiardi.

3.  Top with cocoa and powdered sugar.

For the White Chocolate Caramel:

1. Omit sugar and stir 1/4 cup white choclate powder into the hot espresso.

2. Make a white chocolate ganache by heating the 1 cup of heavy cream in the recipe and pouring it over 6 oz chopped white chocolate – stirring until uniform. Chill completely, then beat until stiff peaks form.  Fold into the zabaglione-pastry cream-mascarpone filling and layer as directed in recipe.

3. Drizzle top with caramel and chocolate.

BTW..I’m eating the White Chocolate Caramel Tiramisu right now, right as I clicked ‘publish’ at umm..11:55 pm – later than I thought I would have this up.  The hell with my tardiness – YUM.

Finally, does anyone want a free bottle of really great skin lotion?  As cooks and bakers, we wash our hands quite a bit, which can lead to dry skin.  When I was contacted by Cat Doss, a representative for Skin MD natural, asking me if I wanted to try their shielding lotion and offer one to one of my readers, naturally I jumped at the chance 1) Because I’m a skin lotion junkie, and 2) Because I love to give away goodies to my readers.  This stuff is really, really good – makes your hands as soft as a baby’s butt and protects them. Just leave a comment and I’ll pick a winner via random integer a week from today.


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