Friday, July 18, 2008

Raspberry Ice Cream Bombe: Easy Ice Cream for Everyone


I just came home last week, not that I got a vacation but I have to stay at the hospital from the fever. It’s boring when I couldn’t do anything, just sleeping and eating (and I believe you know the food is not tasty at all). Anyway, I got a magazine from the hospital and I really want to try it (it’s not too old, and it’s great for me to have a food magazine when lying around). This recipe is Raspberry Ice Cream Bombe, and it’s easy to make even when you just recover (like me), I strain the pit out but if you don’t mind and just blend everything together, this recipe will be super easy. But in my opinion, the pit is annoying and the ice cream is smoother. I reduce the condensed milk from the original recipe, but if you like super sweet ice cream you can use up to 400 ml.


Raspberry Ice Cream Bombe
Served 6



350 g
Raspberry*
300 ml
Condensed milk
150 ml
Whipping Cream


* If you want to remove the pit, use 500g of raspberry and strain to remove the pit before weight.


Whizz raspberry in a blender, add the condensed milk and cream and blend to combine.


Pour the mixture in to the cup and freeze overnight.


Adaptation from: Olive Magazine (Issue June 2008)

Friday, July 4, 2008

Green Tea Soufflé Roll Cake with Buttercream


Some friends asked for this kind of recipe and this is my first attempt. This is soufflé roll cake, the soft cake which I got the recipe from the Japanese bookThe method is different from other kinds of roll cake, the egg white must be cool and the first step is the same as making soufflé base. The cake is very puffy and tender (this is my first time so you can see that the cake has a little hole all around). Anyway I think this is quite easy for anyone who wants a roll cake which is soft and it’s not chiffon.
Note: The cold egg white method is very good; the meringue is thick, glossy and the bubble is smaller than making with room temperature egg white.


My green tea powder (no color added)
Green Tea Soufflé Roll Cake with Buttercream
Make one 30 cm long roll






38 g
Unsalted Butter



A
44 g
Cake flour

3 g ( ¾ tsp)
Baking powder

6 g
Green tea powder




70 g
Whole milk (cold)



B
47 g
Whole egg

70 g
Egg yolks



Meringue
150g
Egg whites (cold about 1-4°C)

75 g
Sugar





Preheat the oven to 180°C
Line 30x30 cm rimmed pan with baking paper.
Put the egg white into the refrigerator.
Sift A ingredients together, set aside.
Mix B ingredients together, set aside.

Put the butter into the pan and melt over low-heat, when the butter melt immediately add the A all at once and stir continuously with a wooden spoon (or heat resistance spatula). Mix until the mixture pulls away from the pan, forming a ball and remove from the heat.


Pour all the milk into butter and flour mixture, whisk to combine.

Put the pan over low heat, stir continuously with a wooden spoon (or heat resistance spatula), until the mixture start to pulls away from the pan, remove from the heat.


Add the B gradually, mixing the dough until it is smooth.
Pour the mixture into large bowl, set aside.


Take the egg white out of the fridge, and beat with hand mixer. Beat until soft peaks form add the sugar gradually and beat until stiff peaks form.


With a large rubber spatula, gently fold the egg whites into the batter just until blended (being careful not to deflate the batter).
Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for about 18-20minutes
Turn onto a lightly damped clean kitchen towel. Trim edges, if necessary; roll cake up, towel and all, while still warm. Let cool completely.
For the Buttercream
you will get more than you want for the roll)

½ cup sugar
2 large egg whites
1 ½ sticks (6 ounces) unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

To Make the Buttercream
Put the sugar and egg whites in a mixer bowl or another large heatproof bowl, fit the bowl over a plan of simmering water and whisk constantly, keeping the mixture over the heat, until it feels hot to the touch, about 2 minutes.
The sugar should be dissolved, and the mixture will look like shiny marshmallow cream.
Remove the bowl from the heat.
Working with the whisk attachment or with a hand mixer, beat the meringue on medium speed until it is cool, about 4 minutes, add the butter a stick at a time, beating until smooth.
Once all the butter is in, beat in the buttercream on medium-high speed until it is thick and very smooth, 5-7 minutes.
During this time the buttercream may curdle or separate – just keep beating and it will come together again.
You should have a shiny smooth, velvety, pristine white buttercream. Press a piece of plastic against the surface of the buttercream and set aside briefly.



Unroll and fill with buttercream then re-roll cake.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Orange Chocolate Mousse

Chocolate mousse again, but this time the flavor is so intense, with lovely orange fragrance. This recipe doesn’t require whipping cream or any cream so it’s egg, orange and chocolate business. Anyway, even I say you don’t need cream; I have to give you a little advice, due to the little fat contain in high percentage cocoa mass chocolate bars, you may have to add 2-3tbsp warmed cream when melting chocolate or add ½ tbsp of the butter in the recipe, but if you use the chocolate with only 43% of the cocoa mass, just follow the instruction.
Because this recipe doesn’t use cream as a main ingredient, the mousse will become dense if keeping too long, but I believe you won’t wait that long to enjoy it.

Orange Chocolate Mousse
Makes about 1540 ml


250 g
Semisweet Chocolate (chopped)
60 g
Unsalted butter
4
Egg yolks
Zest from 1 orange
Meringue
4
Egg whites
A dash of
Salt
55 g
Confectioner’ sugar



Melt chocolate and butter in a double boiler or a metal bowl set over a pan of simmering water, stirring frequently until smooth. Whisk yolks into chocolate until smooth, then add the orange zest.


Beat the egg whites in a bowl with an electric mixer beat the egg white until soft peak and add the sugar and beat until it just holds stiff peaks. Whisk one third of meringue into chocolate mixture to lighten, then fold in remaining meringue gently but thoroughly.
Spoon mousse into glasses or ramekins and chill, covered, at least 6 hours.

Printfriendly

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...