Ingredients:
- 8 large eggs, separated
- 5 TBS sugar split into 2 TBS and 3 TBS
- 4 TBS potato starch
- 5 1/2 oz coarsely chopped walnuts (150g)
- 3.5 oz raisins soaked in rum or water (100g)
- 3.5 oz chopped dry figs soaked in rum or water - use kitchen sheers (100g)
- 2 TBS vegetable oil or walnut oil, or melted butter
- Preheat the oven to 400F (200 C)
- Use kitchen sheers to chop figs into small bits
- In a small bowl, combine raisins and figs, add some rum and/or water so that the dried fruit plumps up
- Mix 2 TBS of sugar with vegetable oil. The sugar will dissolve.
- Make meringue from egg whites and 3 TBS sugar
- Optionally add a pinch of creme of tartar to the egg whites
- Beat egg whites until they are starting to stiffen
- Sprinkle the 3 TBS sugar over the egg whites
- Continue beating until stiff and shiny.
- Prepare a spring baking pan. 10 inch works well, 8 inch will give you a taller cake but you have to be careful not to under-bake, because the batter will be thicker.
- Lightly oil the bottom and the sides of the pan
- Line the pan with parchment paper
- Sift the potato starch over the meringue and fold carefully.
- Drain the liquid from the dry fruit.
- Add dry fruit, nuts, and sugar-oil mixture to the meringue.
- Fold carefully.
- Transfer the batter to the baking pan.
- Bake at 400F for 5 minutes
- Reduce the temperature to 350F and bake for another 20-25 minutes. Check after 20 minutes - if the toothpick comes out clean, the cake is done.
- Cool on a rack, spread with icing of your choice, chill, and eat.
- Pastry cream
- Ingredients
- 3-6 egg yolks (use 5-6 for a richer pastry creme)
- 1 whole egg (optional if you use 5-6 egg yolks)
- 5-6 TBS sugar (3 TBS per cup of milk)
- a pinch of salt
- 2.5 - 3 TBS corn starch or potato starch. I prefer potato starch because it handles higher heat than corn starch.
- 1 tsp vanilla extract, 2-3 TBS lemon juice, and/or other flavoring agents
- 2 cups milk
- 2-3 TBS butter
- Method:
- Heat milk on medium heat in a pan - I use a ceramic wok, it works well for whisking needed later
- While the milk is heating, mix other ingredients except butter in a heat-safe bowl. Make sure there are no starch lumps left.
- When the milk starts to bubble, turn the heat off.
- Temper the egg mixture with half the milk - drizzle the hot milk into the bowl while whisking continuously.
- Add the egg mixture to the pan with the milk.
- While whisking continuously, bring the mixture to the boil.
- When the first bubbles show, turn the heat down and boil and whisk for another 2 minutes to cook the starch fully. It is important that the mixture is at or close to gentle boil, otherwise the starch will not do its job.
- Turn the heat off and mix in the butter and vanilla.
- Transfer the cream to a bowl and immediately cover the cream with plastic wrap so that the wrap touches the top of the cream. This is to prevent a film from forming.
- Let the cream cool down to the room temperature, then put it in the fridge for a few hours to cool down completely.
- Creme anglaise and butter
- Use any recipe you like to make creme anglaise. Then keep stirring it until it cools to the room temperature. Whisk in cold unsalted butter - up to 2 sticks if you want the icing to nicely harden.
- You can also spoon creme anglaise over the cake.
- This is what I do:
- Whip 4 egg yolks with 1/3 cup sugar until pale and ribbons form.
- Slowly whisk in 3/4 cup of boiling milk
- Cook in a double boiler until it thickens - the back of a spoon will be coated
- Stir to cool to the room temperature. A cold water bath speeds this up.
- If creme anglaise is too warm, the butter will melt and the icing will have a hard time to harden.
- Whisk in cold unsalted butter. A stick is enough, two will yield a very hardened icing.
- Whipped cream
- Whip some heavy cream and a little sugar, 1 TBS suffices.
- Add a splash of grand mariner, or a coffee liquer, or rum for extra flavor
- Bavarian
- Make creme anglaise (see the recipe above)
- Add 1 pouch of gelatine mixed into 1Tbs of boiling water.
- Add 1/2-1 cup of heavy cream whipped with 1Tbs of sugar. If desired, add additional flavoring such as 1 tsp of rum extract, reduction of 1 cup of wine (reduce to about 2Tbs), vanilla extract,...
- Mix well and refrigerate until set.
- Spread on the cake.
- The more cream you use, the lighter and softer the icing is. Because of gelatine, Bavarian does not melt down if the cake is left in a warm place for a while.
- Coffee icing
- 4 oz softened unsalted butter
- 4 oz icing sugar
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 TB instant coffe
- 2 TB boiling water
- Cream the butter, sugar, and egg yolk. Dissolve the instant coffee in the boiling water.
- Mix together. Chill for a while if needed, but watch that it does not harden.
- Spread over the cake and let cool.
- Chocolate mousse:
- 1 cup whipping cream (250 ml)
- 2oz dark chocolate (40-50g)
- Sugar to taste - 1 TBS for me
- Whip the cream and the sugar, melt the chocolate.
- Temper the chocolate with a spoon or two of cream, fold melted chocolate into the cream. Spread over cake, cool.
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