Sunday, June 27, 2010

Chocolate Pavlovas with Chocolate Mascarpone Mousse

I should have known that it all wouldn't go smoothly with my first Daring Bakers' Challenge.  From remaking my recipe to a big ol' camera snafu, the first one left me a lot to learn from.  Without further ado, here's my shorter than spectacular post!


The June 2010 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Dawn of Doable and Delicious. Dawn challenged the Daring Bakers’ to make Chocolate Pavlovas and Chocolate Mascarpone Mousse. The challenge recipe is based on a recipe from the book Chocolate Epiphany by Francois Payard.

A little about my level of expertise on this subject.  Before this challenge I had NEVER:
made a pavlova
made a mousse from scratch
made my own creme anglaise

I had really only dabbled in cookies, cakes, pies, and a few breads, so I was excited and definitely taking out of my culinary comfort zone for this, my first challenge.

The first item I made was my creme anglaise...TWICE.  My first go round turned into a big pot of curdled vanilla goop.  Not good.  After realizing that I needed to lower my temperature and use a different burner altogether for the second step of the creme anglaise, it turned out smooth, custardy, and very, VERY tasty.  I seriously ate a ton of it with a spoon.
The next step while that was cooling was to get my chocolate pavlovas going since the recipe said they'd bake for 2-3 hours!
This I actually didn't have any trouble with.  Whip the dickens outta the egg whites and fold in the cocoa powder and confectioner's sugar.  I placed in a piping bag, but I just cut the tip.  For my first go, I was going to success instead of fancy pants.

Here's the one recovered photo:

A few rounds, and two hearts.  Cute.  Except the centers were so marshmallowy, that removing them from the sil-pat ruined their shape.  My finished product ended up looking more, erm, rustic. :-)  Delicious, but rustic.
I made some with just vanilla, too.

I think they look like peeps.  These are amazing on their own.  The Mascarpone Mousse was another element that was made twice due to my temperature giddiness.  Adding my chopped chocolate to the heavy cream was an expensive step since the first chocolate was added when the heavy cream was WAY too hot, and I ruined it.  After another trip to Meijer in Richmond, the second go went much better.
I plated four of the chocolate pavlovas with some chilled mousse, and I went heavy on the creme anglaise since it was my favorite part.  My guinea pigs (John's mom, dad, brother, and sister-in-law) licked the plates clean.  Since one of our favorite shows is Top Chef.  They made me present it as if they were "Judges Table."  I peed a little, but I did get 5 stars from all but one (the portion wasn't big enough for one!)  :-)
I will make these again, especially since my beloved Canon ate my plated dessert pictures, and I do want to try this with some peanut butter or caramel. Stay tuned!


Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Cake-Cake here, A cake-cake there...

Here a cake, there a cake...
  Here's a few pictures of the cakes I've done in the past year. 

Friday, June 4, 2010

A cake with a Dark Side.


So, I got these little guys from Williams-Sonoma last week, and I almost peed my pants from sheer joy.  How stinking cute are they?  Except I didn't want them for cookies (though I tried unsuccessfully-puffy sugar cookie dough was uncooperative), I wanted them for fondant and gumpaste decor on John's birthday cake!  Cutting them out was easy.  Painting them, not so much.  I dropped the first Boba Fett on my pants...And I am praying to the gods that my Tide pen can remove all of that coloring from my khakis.  The little guys were a huge hit!  May the force be with you this weekend!

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Perfect Day for Fishing

 
This little guy was made for John's Dad and Pap.  Their birthdays are two weeks apart, so they wanted one cake to celebrate.  They are avid fishermen, and I decided I wanted to try to work on figure making.  I used all fondant, gumpaste, and the little fishing rods are uncooked spaghetti painted brown.  It was fun to make them, and I learned a ton about figures from awesome tutorials provided on YouTube that Cake Central.  The cake was a milk chocolate cake with a triple chocolate filling...my fave part was the chunks of white chocolaty goodness mixed in with the dark and milk chocolate ganache.
I need to remember to take better pictures of my cakes instead of taking them quickly right before they are cut and destroyed!
Again, thank you to my family and friends for letting me bake up a storm for them.

There's always room for cake!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Happy June

June is the month of weddings, and since it's June 1st, I thought I'd start off with a post featuring my favorite wedding cake I've done yet.  This was also my 2nd ever cake!  The cake was red velvet and strawberry flavors with vanilla buttercreme.  The calla lilies have a secret hidden support in there that holds the bride and groom's tier up.  Heart attack putting that thing together, I tell ya.  Alas, I think it turned out well, and I'm quite proud of this one...as were the recipients, Andy and Michelle Sherrow last June.  Thanks for taking a chance on this novice baker, guys.