Saturday, August 25, 2012

White Gold Passion Cake

Great synergy of passionfruit, vanilla and white chocolate.
















I still had some passionfruit left in the freezer from last year so decided to test out "Rose's Heavenly Cakes" for the first time with this recipe. As usual the recipes are crystal clear and flavour combinations are truly complimentary without making one ingredient stand out too much. She also seems to have the right sugar balance for my taste which is always a concern with American authors in particular.

The construction is a vanilla genoese split in half, passionfruit syrup brushed over it, passionfruit curd filling in between the two layers with a white chocolate and cream cheese frosting on the outside. Nothing terribly difficult but you do need a lot of passionfruit and plan ahead.

The thing I was happiest about was trying out Rose's genoese recipe which worked beautifully. Had no problems rising but I was worried it would burn once it rose over the top of the tin.
The centre did sink quite a bit so next time I might bake it for longer even though I already baked it longer than the maximum time recommended. When I cut off the crust before assembly it was still very moist so I could have baked it longer and I don't think it would have burnt.

The only problem I found with Rose's recipe was the advice on buying fresh passion fruit. She recommends buying fruit that "purple and wrinkled all over." I was sure that off the vine they are not wrinkled so I bought a few a did a taste test. For the three below none of them were very wrinkly and actually the smoothest one (on the right) was the sweetest. As I suspected the remaining ones simply became more wrinkled the longer they sat in my fruit bowl. Presumably they were drying out. Every fruit that I bought whether brown and wrinkly, dark purple and dimpled or reddish purple and smooth all tasted ripe. The real difference seemed to be their weight with the heavier ones naturally containing more seeds and juice.




Sunday, August 19, 2012

Decadent breakfast

Dark Chocolate and Cherry Bread















I had an amazing breakfast this morning of Dark Chocolate and Sour Cherry Bread spread with a little creme fraiche and jam with a coffee. Of course I had to do some work last night to make it happen!

The recipe came from "La Boulangerie" by Gregoire Michaud who bakes at the Four Seasons Hotel in Hong Kong. The book is definitely not for the inexperienced baker with some instructions being very brief indeed but if you have experience shaping and handling moist doughs you should be fine and there are some excellent flavour combinations in the book, just like the one above.

The information at the start of the book is fantastically detailed giving you ways to calculate the temperature of the water you should use to arrive at the target fermentation temperature taking into account the friction of the mixer. There's also lots of info on steam and how to control it in the home setting, glutenin, gliadin and metabolic pathways for your yeast. Some of the highlights for me are looking through the recipes and seeing some innovative shaping methods and the fact that all recipes are for instant dry yeast.

I halved the quantity to make two boules and although my wife was a bit confused about whether it's meant to be sweet or savoury it turned out well with surprisingly good structure, open crumb and good oven spring. If you're not sure how to categorise it think of it as being like a chocolate croissant.

My only criticism of the recipe is that it seems a little salty but my scales are not that accurate for small measurements and I usually measure my salt by volume. Of course grams are the way to go for accurate measurements because flaked salt will be less dense than table salt giving vastly different results than if you were to go by volume measurements.

Next will be the Pecan and Raisin Boule then the Portobello Mushroom Country Bread!

Friday, August 17, 2012

Crepes

No it's not a pancake! Crepes are very thin and have the perfect balance between topping and base which is definitely not the case in a pancake. I used to like them best one of the traditional ways which is with lemon juice and sugar but I've recently become wary of the amount of sugar needed and prefer to roll then up with poached blueberries or strawberries with a little ice cream for a great chaud-froid sensation.

Ingredients  
125 g plain flour 
15 g caster sugar 
Pinch of salt 
2 eggs 
325 ml milk 
100 ml double cream 
Vanilla extract, few drops 
20 g clarified butter 

Whisk the flour, sugar, salt and eggs well. 
Add the milk gradually, whisking well to make a thin batter. Stir in the cream. 
Leave batter to rest for an hour (essential). 
Stir in vanilla. 
Heat a crepe pan over low to medium heat. Brush with a little clarified butter and ladle in a little batter swirling it round to just coat the pan. 
When holes appear on the surface after about 1 minute turn it over for another 45 seconds. 
Eat warm! 

To keep for another day interleave them with grease proof paper. Reheat each one for a few seconds in the microwave