Sunday, June 2, 2013

Passion fruit & lime Bavarian


A very light and refreshing cake perfect for the summer. Recipe adapted from tartine


Classic genoise (make one 9-inch cake)
4 large eggs, around 200g
100g sugar
60g unsalted butter
1tsp vanilla essence
100g cake flour

Lime Syrup
3/4 c. sugar
3/4 c. water

Lime zest, grated from 3 limes
1/2 c. lime juice (around 6 limes)

3 tbsp contreu

Bavarian Cream
2/3 c. passion fruit purée
2 large egg yolks
1/3 c. sugar
pinch of salt
1 1/2 t. unflavored gelatin
2 T. water
1 1/2 c. heavy cream, very cold


Topping1 1/2 c. heavy cream, very cold
1 1/2 T. icing sugar
1 c. unsweetened large-flake dried coconut

Make 2 classic genoise - slice each into 2 to have 4 layers & use only 3
Preheat oven to 175C fan with rack at bottom.
Prepare pan with parchment at botttom, by buttering and flouring the bottom & sides.
Prepare clarified butter by heating butter in small saucepan till milk solids drop to the bottom. Pour through a fine sieve into medium sized bowl to remove the solids. Add vanilla to this and leave aside to keep warm.
In a large mixing bowl set over a pan of simmering water, heat the eggs and sugar until just lukewarm, whisking constantly.
Place the bowl on your stand mixer fitted with the whip attachment and whip it until very thick and tripled in volume.  This will take about 5 minutes on high, followed by 3 minutes on medium and 1 minute on low to stablise the bubbles.  While the whipping is happening, sift the flour.
Remove about 3/4 cup egg mixture and whisk in the warm-and-liquid beurre noisette.
Sift half the flour mixture over the remaining eggs and fold in gently with large ballon whisk.
Repeat with rest of flour, then fold in the butter mixture.
Pour batter into prepared pan and bake until the cake is golden brown and the cake starts to shrink away from the sides of the pan a bit.  This should take 20-30 minutes.  Loosen cake from sides of pan and turn it out on a rack to cool upright.  When ready to use, trim top and bottom crusts

To make the lime syrup, combine the sugar and water in a small, heavy saucepan and bring to boil, stirring with a wooden spoon. When the sugar has dissolved, remove the pan from the heat and chill until cool to the touch, about 30 minutes. Whisk the lime zest and juice & liquer into the syrup.

To make the Bavarian cream:
Pour water to a depth of about 2 inches into a saucepan, place over medium heat, and bring to a simmer. Combine the egg yolks, sugar, passion fruit juice, and salt in a stainless-steel bowl that will rest securely in the rim of the saucepan over, not touching the water. Whisk together and then place over the saucepan and continue to whisk until the whites are hot to the touch (120F), about 7 minutes. This is thebombe.

Meanwhile, in a small dish, sprinkle the gelatin over the water and let stand for a few minutes to soften. When thebombe is ready add the gelatin and whisk well to dissolve. Remove the bowl from over the hot water and whisking to cool the mixture evenly.
In a mixing bowl, whip the cream with a whisk or a mixer fitted with the whisk attachment until it holds medium-stiff peaks. Scoop about one-third of the cream into the bombe and whisk together to lighten the bombe. Gently fold in the rest of the whipped cream with a rubber spatula.

To assemble
Fit 1 cake layer into the bottom of 9inch cake ring. Moisten the layer evenly with 6-8tbsp of lime syrup.
Pour half of the cream onto the first layer of cake. Top with the second layer, being careful as the filling is very liquid. Brush this layer with half of the remaining lime syrup and then immediately pour the remaining Bavarian cream over it. Carefully top with the last layer and moisten it with the remaining lime syrup.
Cover with clingfilm and chill in refrigerate overnight or in freezer for 2-3hrs.
When you are ready to finish the cake, remove the cake ring.

To make the topping, using the mixer or a whisk, whip the cream until thickened. Add the sugar and whip until the cream holds soft peaks. Using an offset spatula, frost the top and sides of the cake with the whipped cream, and then sprinkle the top and sides with the coconut. Return the cake to the refrigerator for about 2 hours before serving to allow the coconut flakes to absorb the moisture from the cream and soften.
Serve the cake cold. It will keep in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.

Serves: 12-16

Monday, April 8, 2013

Creme brûlée (adapted from Justin Quek)

400ml cream
130ml whole milk
1 vanilla pod
6 egg yolks
75g sugar

1. Split vanilla bean and boil with milk. Cover and seep for 10mins.
2. Add to rest of ingredients by whisking
3. Pour into 6 ramekins via sieve
4. Bake at 100C for 60mins
5. Chill for at least 3hr
6. Brûlée with light brown sugar just before serving

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Molten chocolate cake with brandied cherries


Molten chocolate cake, serves 4 (adapted from Jean-Georges)
125g butter; plus a little for buttering the molds
112g bittersweet chocolate, preferably Valrhona
2 eggs
2 egg yolks
1/4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons flour
Pinch of salt
Brandied cherries
Cocoa powder

1. In the top of a double boiler set over simmering water; heat the butter and chocolate together until the chocolate is almost completely melted. (Alternatively, use microwave) While that’s heating, beat together the eggs, yolks, and sugar with a whisk or electric beater until light and thick.
2. Beat together the melted chocolate and butter and salt; it should be quite warm. Pour in the egg mixture, then quickly beat in the flour; just until combined.
3. Butter and lightly flour four 4-ounce ramekins with cocoa powder. Divide the batter among the molds. Half filled the ramkin, place 5 cherries in middle and top up with batter. (At this point you can refrigerate the desserts until you are ready to eat, for up to several hours)
4. Preheat the oven to 450°F (220°C). Bake the molds on a tray for 6 to 7 minutes if at room temperature or 8-10mins if from fridge. the center will still be quite soft, but the sides will be set.
5. Invert each mold onto a plate and let sit for about 10 seconds. Unmold by lifting one corner of the mold; the cake will fall out onto the plate. Serve immediately.

Earl grey tea creme brûlée

Smooth, deeply scented and flavored by earl grey tea and absolutely delicious


Makes 6 servings, adapted from Pierre Herme.
450ml whole milk
1 tbsp loose earl grey tea
4 large egg yolks
75g sugar
80ml cream

1. Centre rack in oven and preheat to 220F/100C
2. Bring milk to boil in saucepan. Stir in the loose tea, remove from heat, cover and infuse for 4 mins. strain milk to remove tea leaves.
3. Place the rest of the ingredients in a mixing bowl. Drizzle in the milk while whisking continuously.
4. Pour custard into ramekin via fine sieve to remove bubbles.
5. Bake for 45-60mins or until knife inserted in the centre comes out clean.
6. Chill for at least 2 hours before serving.
7. Sprinkle light brown sugar over chilled custard and caramelise sugar just before serving.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Ultimate hot chocolate

Rich, dark, chocolately and absolutely delicious.

400g whole milk
160g water
115g dark chocolate (valrhona caraibe or noir) chopped
25g cocoa powder (valrhona)
Mini marshmellows or 25g sugar

Bring milk, water and sugar to a boil.
Add chocolate and cocoa powder. Whisk to dissolve while heating till first bubble appears.
Take off heat and blend for 1 min.
Serve with 10-12 mini marshmellows if no sugar added

Serves 2-3 ppl