Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chocolate. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 October 2010

Double Chocolate & Hazelnut Mousse with Salted Caramel Hazelnut Shards

Double Chocolate & Hazelnut Mousse

This month's "We Should Cocoa" blog challenge hosted by the Chocolate Log Blog is to use chocolate and hazel or cob nuts. I decided to do a Double Chocolate and Hazelnut Mousse decorated with lightly salted caramel shards of roasted whole hazelnuts. The bottom layer is a rich dark chocolate mousse enhanced with Frangelico, an Italian hazelnut liqueur.  This is then topped with a milk chocolate layer into which I folded in some crushed hazelnut praline.

Originally I thought of having the top layer made with a caramel mousse made with Caramac bars (remember them?) But these can be a bit difficult to find these days - no idea why because everyone who I ever speak to about these all claim to love them but simply can't find them any more!  Then I considered doing a coffee mousse top layer as both chocolate and coffee sit well with hazelnuts and are a classic combination bewtween themselves.  However as my husband is not overly fond of coffee flavoured desserts and someone has to help me eat my creation, I opted for the double chocolate option!

Rough recipe follows but as is my style I kept forgetting to measure things out so that I could correctly relay the info! The quantity made 4 large dessert glass fulls but for a dinner party this would easily serve 6 - 8 in more delicate portions!

For the dark chocolate mousse layer:
6ozs Dark chocolate (go for a 50-70% cocoa solids) - melted
4 medium free-range eggs, separated
generous tablespoon / slug of Frangelico hazelnut liqueur (available at many good supermarkets or off-licenses and worth buying as goes nicely in coffee too ;-)

For the milk chocolate hazelnut mousse layer:
4ozs hazelnut milk chocolate (I used Lindt but you could just use normal milk chocolate as you are going to add caramelised chopped hazelnuts in any case)
2 free range eggs, separated
2ozs caster sugar
1 oz chopped and roasted hazelnuts

For the Salted Caramelised Hazelnut Shards:
4 ozs caster sugar
1/4 pint water
2ozs whole roasted hazelnuts (skinned if you prefer)
pinch of sea salt flakes - I used Maldon

First make the praline as it needs to cool and set before you can grind it into a powder for folding into the milk chocolate mousse layer.

To make the dark chocolate mousse:
Put the 2ozs caster sugar into a pan and gently melt, add the chopped roasted hazelnuts and coat well.  When the sugar has melted and caramelised, spoon the nut mixture onto some non-stick baking paper and leave to set.

Melt the dark chocolate however you like and works best for you (I do mine in the microwave), leave to cool a little (so the raw egg doesn't start to cook/scramble in the residual heat) then beat in one egg yolk at a time mixing well between additional yolks.

Then stir in the Frangelico liqueur.

Beat egg whites till bordering on stiff peaks (don't overdo it, better to be on the soft peak side) then stir in a large tablespoonful of the whisked whites into the dark chocolate mix to lighten it before gently folding in the remainder.

Pour into your dessert dishes (individual or one big one) and leave in fridge to set.

Make the milk chocolate and hazelnut mousse layer next:
Melt the milk chocolate next, cool a little (so the raw egg doesn't start to cook/scramble in the residual heat) then add one egg yolk at a time mixing well. 

Using either a rolling pin or other heavy object and lots of aggression or a grinder / mini food processor (which is what I used) grind the cold hazelnut praline you made first into a powder.  It doesn't need to be completely finely ground, a few small bits here and there will add some crunch to the texture of the mousse.

Fold the majority of this crushed praline into the melted milk chocolate mixture reserving some for decoration.

Whisk egg whites as above and fold into milk chocolate mixture as described above.

Carefully spoon on top of the dark chocolate mousse which should have set by this time and then chill again till just before serving.  Can do up to this stage well in advance or even the day before but there is a fair chance it will get sampled before you intended if you leave it this amount of time!

For the Salted Hazelnut Caramel shards:
Up to a couple of hours before serving you can make the caramel hazelnut shards but don't make much before this as the caramel will start to melt down again and it doesn't like to be refrigerated either.

Put the caster sugar and water into a pan and heat gently, swirling and stirring if need be to make sure that all the sugar crystals have dissolved and there are no sugar grains sticking to the walls of the pan.

Once all the sugar has dissolved, turn up the heat and boil rapidly without stirring till the syrup reaches a deep golden caramel.  You can very gently and occasionally swirl the pan as it starts to caramelise to evenly distribute the heat and colour.  As soon as the caramel reaches the required colour (I like my caramel on the dark side of golden so that it is verging on bitter rather than sickly sweet) add the whole roasted hazelnuts and then pour mix onto a sheet of non-stick baking paper. Add a very light sprinkling of the sea salt flakes to the hot caramel at this stage if you like this combination, but you can omit if salted caramel is not your thing. When set and cold, break up
into shards.

To serve:
Sprinkle the top of the mousse with the reserved crushed hazelnut praline and either stick shards of the whole hazelnut salted caramel directly into the top of the mousse at jaunty angles or simply place these on the side plate as I did. Serve with a cream if desired or a Frangelico liqueur coffee .....got to use up that Frangelico somehow!!  ;-)

P.S. - having eaten these after a roast dinner tonight I can safely say that this recipe would definitely serve 8 people as it is very rich and small portions might look stingy at first glance but your heart and hips would thank you for it ;-) 

Saturday, 11 September 2010

Chocolate Orange Loaf Cake with Orange Liqueur Buttercream Frosting

Chocolate Orange Loaf Cake with Orange buttercream
I was requested by he who "ought to be obeyed" to make a chocolate orange cake with an orange buttercream icing.  Having recently bought Nigella Lawson's new cookery book "Kitchen, recipes from the heart of the home" I decided to give her recipe for Chocolate orange loaf cake a whirl and adapt slightly adding my own buttercream frosting as her recipe serves this cake plain and with "...just a hint of inner gunge..."

I cooked the cake a few minutes longer than instructed as I didn't want the pudding type "gunge" as she described if I was going to be frosting the cake and serving as a tea time treat rather than as a dessert cake. Otherwise I pretty well followed her recipe and used a standard buttercream frosting augmented with some orange zest and Grand Marnier liqueur - recipe added to the cake recipe below.  The cake itself is light and not overly sweet with just a hint of orange.  Adding the buttercream made the overall effect sweeter and more orangey.

For the cake:
150g soft, unsalted butter (plus a little extra for greasing)
2 x 15ml tbs golden syrup
175g dark muscovado sugar
150g plain flour
1/2tsp bicarb of soda
25g best quality cocoa powder, sifted (I used Green & Black's)
2 eggs
zest of 2 regular oranges and juice of 1

For the Orange Liqueur Buttercream Frosting:
125g unsalted butter, soft
250g icing sugar, sifted
zest of 1 orange
1 tbs Grand Marnier or other orange flavoured liqueur or orange juice

Preheat oven to 170C/ gas mark 3 and line a 900g (2lb) loaf tin (I just greased a silicon mould).

Beat the already soft butter with the syrup and then add the sugar and beat really well to get rid of the lumps of sugar until you get a coffee coloured fairly smooth airy mix (the sugar will still make the mix feel very slightly gritty)

Mix the sifted flour, bicarb and cocoa powder together lightly and beat 1 tbs of this into the butter and sugar mix then beat in 1 of the eggs and repeat with another big spoonful of the flour mix followed with the other egg.

Carry on beating the dry ingredients into the butter mixture and finally add the orange zest and slowly beat in the orange juice.

Pour and scrape mixture into the loaf tin/mould and bake for about 45mins (check after 40 mins) - if you want the cake to be slightly more of a dessert cake texture with a soft middle as Nigella's recipe calls for then 45 mins will be enough (note that a skewer inserted will not come out completely clean for this level of doneness and the middle of the loaf will sink a little on cooling).  I continued to cook the cake for another 5 mins.

Remove from oven and allow to cool for a while in the tin/mould before carefully turn ing out onto a rack to cool completely.

Dark chocolate cake with a hint of orange,
sandwiched and topped with a boozy orange buttercream sweet frosting
If using the icing - beat the soft butter and mix in the icing sugar beating well to incorporate. Add the zest and the liqueur or orange juice till well mixed in and the buttercream is light and fluffy.

When the cake is cold, slice through the middle horizontally and spread half the buttercream carefully over the bottom half and then replace the top half of the loaf and spread the remaining buttercream over the top.

Kitchen: Recipes from the Heart of the Home