Showing posts with label Valentine dessert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Valentine dessert. Show all posts

Friday, February 12, 2010

'BLOW YOUR VALENTINE SWEETIE AWAY' ~ CHOCOLATE-CHERRY ICE CREAM BOMBE

"All I really need is love,
but a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt!"

~ Lucy Van Pelt (in Peanuts, by Charles M. Schulz)



~Valentine Tulip
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CHOCOLATE-CHERRY ICE CREAM BOMBE

~Begin making this a day ahead. Chill the mold well before filling it. Allow several hours for the bombe to freeze and mellow before serving time. This easy recipe is from Bon Appetit (February 2000).
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1 16-oz. jar hot fudge sauce
1 12-oz. package semisweet chocolate chips
3 Tbsp. water
1/4 cup brandy
3 pints (slightly softened) cherry-vanilla ice cream with chocolate chunks or fudge flakes
1 1/2 (slightly softened) pints chocolate sorbet (or frozen yogurt)
or chocolate-cherry sorbet (or frozen yogurt)
1 9-oz. package chocolate wafer cookies
  • Stir first 3 ingredients in heavy medium saucepan over medium-low heat until melted and smooth. Remove from heat. Whisk in brandy. Cool.
  • Line 10-inch diameter, 10-cup metal bowl with plastic wrap, extending over sides. Spread cherry-vanilla ice cream over inside of bowl to within 3/4-inch of top edge, leaving center 6-inch diameter hollow. Freeze 30 minutes.
  • Fill hollow completely with sorbet (yogurt); smooth top. Overlap half of cookies (about 22) atop ice cream and sorbet, covering completely and pressing gently. Spread 1 cup fudge sauce over cookies. Overlap remaining cookies atop sauce. Cover; freeze bombe overnight. Cover and chill remaining sauce. (Can be make 3 days ahead. Keep bombe frozen).
  • Rewarm remaining sauce over low heat, stirring often. Turn bombe out onto platter. Peel off plastic. Cut bombe into wedges. Serve with remaining sauce. (12-16 servings)

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

TEMPTATION FROM THE DARKER SIDE ~ COUNTESS TOULOUSE-LAUTREC'S FRENCH CHOCOLATE CAKE

"All of the evil that people have thrust upon chocolate is really more deserved by milk chocolate, which is essentially contaminated. The closer you get to a pure chocolate liquor (the chocolate essence ground from roasted cacao beans) the purer it is, the more satisfying it is, the safer it is, and the healthier it is."

(The Darker Side of Chocolate)




COUNTESS TOULOUSE-LAUTREC'S FRENCH CHOCOLATE CAKE
~ a perennial favorite, perfect for Valentine's Day, adapted from MAIDA HEATTER'S BOOK OF GREAT CHOCOLATE DESSERTS
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1 lb. good semisweet chocolate
5 oz. (1 1/4 sticks) room temperature sweet butter
4 extra-large eggs, separated
1 Tbsp. unsifted all-purpose flour
Pinch of salt
1 Tbsp. granulated sugar
  • Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
  • In an 8-inch springform pan, cut a round waxed or parchment paper to fit the bottom. Butter one side of paper and the sides of the pan (not the bottom). Place buttered paper in pan, buttered side up, and clamp shut.
  • In top of double boiler, place coarsely chopped chocolate. Melt over simmering water, stirring occasionally with rubber spatula. Add 1/3 of butter at a time, each addition completely melted before adding next. Set aside to cool slightly.
  • In small bowl beat egg yolks at high speed for 5-7 minutes, until pale and thick. Add Tbsp. of flour and beat on low only to incorporate. Gently fold beaten egg yolks to into chocolate.
  • In another clean bowl, beat egg whites and salt until whites hold a soft shape. Add sugar and beat until whites hold definite shape but not too stiff or dry. Fold one-half beaten whites into chocolate -- don't be too thorough. Fold chocolate into remaining whites, handling gently until blended. Turn into prepared pan and rotate to level batter.
    Bake for 15 minutes. Cake will be soft (only 1 inch high in middle, rim higher and cracked ~ you'll think it's not done but don't worry). With a small sharp knife, carefully cut around side of hot cake, but don't remove sides. Let cake stand in pan until room temperature. Refrigerate several hours or overnight.
  • To remove, cut around sides again with small sharp knife. Remove sides. Carefully insert a narrow spatula and invert on serving plate. Glaze with ganache (or top with toasted sliced almonds or a fine dusting of cocoa).

GANACHE

In double boiler (or glass bowl over water), melt 6 ounces coarsely chopped good semi-sweet chocolate with 2 ounces heavy cold cream until fully melted. Whisk in 2-4 ounces more cold heavy cream until smooth and shiny. Add 1 Tbsp. unsalted butter. If mixture becomes too thick, heat gently. Cover sides first then spread generous amount on top.
Bon appetit!
Note: Holds up well when frozen