Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Guava Matcha Roll Cake
I had been wanting to try a matcha roll cake for a while and finally decided to give it a shot. I used The Little Epicurean's recipe for the sponge component. Adapted it for the guava whipped cream.
Matcha Sponge
For one jelly roll sheet:
112g cake flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
5 large eggs, separated
156 g granulated sugar
60 g whole milk
1. Preheat oven to 400F. Line baking sheet with parchment paper or silpat.
2. Whisk together sifted flour, baking powder, and salt.
3. In a different, large bowl, whisk egg yolks, sugar, and milk until pale.
4. Separately, whisk egg whites until medium stiff peaks (if you whisk too stiff, it's harder to incorporate).
5. Add dry mixture to wet mixture and fold together. Then slowly fold in the medium stiff egg whites. Be careful not to deflate them too much.
6. Pour batter onto the baking sheet and then rap the sheet down a few times to release any big air bubbles.
7. Bake for 8-9 minutes (a toothpick should go in and out cleanly).
8. Invert cake, remove silpat or parchment paper and let cool.Whichever side is nicer, let that side be the outside of the roll (bottom).
9. Let cool.
Guava Whipped Cream
250 g heavy whipping cream
~1/2 - 3/4 guava, pureed and sieved
2 g gelatin
10 ml water
1. Mix gelatin with water until apple sauce consistency.
2. Melt until liquid, about 30 seconds in microwave if gelatin has set.
3. Whisk together whipping cream and powdered sugar.
4. Slowly add in liquid gelatin and whisk until stiff peaks.
5. Fold in the guava puree.
6. Fold in chunks of guava.
Assembly
1. Cut a small corner of the sheet off like: |________| ---> /________\ (helps with rolling)
2. Add the whipped cream onto the sheet layer.
3. Using the parchment paper or silpat that the cake had cooled on to help, slowly roll the cake up and over itself.
4. Maintain the shape until fully rolled then place rolled cake, seam side down, in fridge to chill.
5. Dust with powdered sugar or matcha or your favorite dusting before serving.
Gluck!
-Mario
Sunday, November 6, 2016
Dark Chocolate Guava Lava Cake
Lava cakes are a simple and delicious dessert that don't take much time to make and bake. Changing up the filling is super easy as well!
This recipe is for about 4ish servings. [usually 3 chocolate + inside flavor and 1 just inside flavor].
NOTE 1: This is my first time using a fruit puree in the lava cake base, so it made it a bit runny. However, chilling it in the fridge for a few minutes before piping it into the ramekin helped.
NOTE 2: For a white chocolate base that requires a powder instead (like matcha), use 40 g butter (instead of 20) and about 5 g of that powder).
Dark chocolate base:
69 g dark chocolate
40 g butter
40 g sugar
1 egg
25 g flour
Guava white chocolate base:
69 g white chocolate
20 g butter
40 g sugar
1 egg
35 g guava puree (strained)
25 g flour
1. Set oven to 450F. Melt chocolate and butter over a double boiler (stir constantly so it doesn't get lumpy).
2. Take off double boiler. Stir in sugar and mix until smooth.
3. Add egg. Mix.
4. Incorporate guava puree.
5. Sift in flour (or add presifted flour). Stir until smooth and put into a piping bag.
6. Butter the ramekin fully (all the way to the top and the edges too.
7i. Pipe the chocolate base (I go in swirls from center outward and then along the sides.) to "coat" the ramekin.
ii. Then pipe the guava base over this chocolate one.
iii. Finally cover up the top with more chocolate base.
8. Chill in fridge for a bit (10 min is probably fine).
9. Bake at 450F for 9.5 min (9 - 10 min). Loosen the cake by taking something thin and scraping along the sides of the ramekin and then put a plate on top and flip over.
10. Add some powdered sugar or guava puree to garnish and enjoy the deliciousness :D.
Tip 1: Try a single tester one first to see if the cake is able to come out nicely. If too runny, go for another minute and not runny, then bake for less.
Tip 2: When it's in the oven, the center should not be drooping down and should not look wet. When it finally starts to look firm and dry in the center, it's probably ready.
Gluck!
-Mario
Tuesday, November 1, 2016
Pomegranate Macarons
To be honest, I have better luck with no hollows using the Italian meringue method. However, it's much faster for me to use the French meringue method, so when I'm lazy/ want to crank some macarons out, I use this method. From start to clean up, it takes me about 1.5hrs.
Macaron Shells
I use the same ratios and process that Love and Macarons uses (http://loveandmacarons.blogspot.com/2014/01/vanilla-bean-macarons-with-light-and.html).
For about 10 1.5 inch macarons:
46 g almond flour (sift, no big almond pieces)
41.66 g powdered sugar (give or take, since kitchen scales don't have this precision)
35 g egg whites
35 g granulated sugar
1. Oven to 300F (or 325F, see below). Measure out and sift your powdered sugar and almond flour. Whisk together and set aside.
2. Make your meringue. Beat/ whisk your egg whites until frothy and start to incorporate the granulated sugar a bit a time. Beat until stiff peaks. If you want food coloring, add it at the soft peaks stage.
3. Okay. You should look up macaronage (folding of ingredients) on Youtube if you don’t know how already.
In summary: add in dry ingredients to the meringue, a third at a time until mixed. And folding by basically scraping along the edge of the bowl and then pressing down along the center in sort of a J shape. Do this until you have a lava like consistency, where you can pick up your spatula and the batter will drop down in a ribbon. My test is to bang the bowl on the table and see if the ribbon that just fell incorporates back into the main blob—if it does, it’s ready. Otherwise, I do a few more folds. Put into a piping bag.
4. Pipe out your macarons. I use a silpat (would highly recommend). Rap the baking sheet against the table a few times.
5. I hate waiting for the shells to dry, so I cheat and actually put the oven temp at 325. Then I open the oven and hold the tray in the oven, rotating it every 10 seconds or so for about a minute. Then again for another 30 seconds. This quickly dries out the shells :p.
You want to be able to touch the shell and have it not be sticky.
Then I drop down the oven temp back to 300 (it’s about this low anyways since the door has been open.).
6. Bake for 15-20 minutes.
Pomegrante Curd
For the pomegrante curd, I use Macaronguy’s recipe (https://macaronguy.wordpress.com/2014/01/20/strawberry-curd/)
I LOVE using curds as fillings. They’re so much less finicky than ganaches or buttercreams and are very fruity tasting. I follow his recipe to a T.
1 cup fruit of choice (this doesn't have to be super precise, since you can always just reduce down your mixture for a longer or shorter time)
[for these pomegrante ones, I used the juice from half a pomegrante]
50 g granulated sugar
16 g cornstarch
1 egg yolk
10ish g lemon juice
28.5 g butter
1. Extract juice from your fruit and strain. Heat up until simmering.
2. Lightly beat the egg yolk and add sugar and sifted corn starch. I also just add the lemon juice, so that I can make a nice non-lumpy mixture.
3. While whisking, slowly add the heated up juice onto the egg/sugar/cornstarch/lemon. You're tempering the egg to prevent it from scrambling. Once it's fully incorporated, add the mixture back into the pot and stir constantly on medium. Eventually, it'll start to thicken. I usually thicken until it's a nice paste.
4. Take off the heat and stir in the butter, a little a time.
5. I transfer to a piping bag and chill it in the fridge for a short while to firm up before piping onto my macaron shells.
To add the stripes, add some food coloring to a small amount of vodka to make a paint like consistency. Vodka dries very quickly, so it's optimal. Food coloring with just water will end up being sticky and won't dry fully. Brush on the stripes (just buy a paintbrush and clean it well before using).
Let the macarons rest in an airtight container in the fridge overnight for optimal chewiness! :D
Gluck!
-Mario
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)