Thursday 27 January 2011

Daring Bakers Jan. 2011 - Biscuit Joconde Imprime/Entremet



The January 2011 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Astheroshe of the blog accro. She chose to challenge everyone to make a Biscuit Joconde Imprime to wrap around an Entremets dessert.


Not so easy, mine came out a bit faded actually. But the taste was wonderful! The print was suposed to be just simple diagonal stripes.
Inside I used a mango mousse and a coconut mousse. In the top and for decoration I just used some simple fresh mango stripes.


The recipe and indications to do the Biscuit Jaconde, you can find here.








For the Mango mousse:

200 gr of mango puree
1 tablespoon of sugar (my mangos where quite sweet so I just added a bit of sugar to beat the cream. Adjust accordingly)
100 mL of cream
3 gr of white gelatin powder

Hydrate the gelatin powder with enough cold water (2 or 3 tablespoons), and let it stand until swollen.
Heat the mango puree until it starts softly simmering. Dissolve the gelatin in the puree and let it cool down to room temperature.
eat the cream with 1 tablespoon of sugar until it starts forming peaks. Add the cream to the mango mixture until it is well mixed.
Pour it into the Entremet forms and place in the fridge to stiffen.




For the coconut mousse:


200 mL of coconut milk
1 egg yolk
2 + 1 tablespoons of brown sugar
100 mL of cream
3 gr of white gelatin powder.


Hydrate the gelatin powder with enough cold water (2 or 3 tablespoons), and let it stand until swollen.
Mix the coconut milk with the egg yolk and 2 tablespoons of sugar, place in a small pan and bring to heat whisking frequently until it thickens. Take from heat and mix in the hydrated gelatin, dissolving well. Let it stand to cool down to room temperature.
Beat the cream with 1 tablespoon of sugar until it starts forming peaks. When the coconut mixture cools down, mix in the cream until everything is well incorporated. Pour the coconut mousse on the top of the mango mousse (once the later has stiffen) and place in the fridge.


The ideal is to leave the Entremet in the fridge overnight. When serving decorate with some fresh mango.




PS: Got a new 50 mm lens that I tried out in this pictures. :)

Saturday 8 January 2011

Lemon and green tea swirl cookies and some news

Hope everyone had a wonderful start of 2011! My first week was somewhat stressy revolving around preparations for a trip to Palermo, Sicily, next week. Not vacations though... but hopefully I will have some spare time to visit the wonders of the city.

On another note, to explore my recent love for photography, I created an account on Flickr. If any of you out there also use it feel free to add me as a contact.

On the side bar of the blog I also updated with a link to the Flickr photostream, and to my Twitter account, which honestly I do not "tweet" so much I mostly read my timeline.

And finally, a recipe of some cookies I did still during Christmas time. These are another take on the well known "black and white" cookies, which are usually with chocolate and vanilla. In this case I used lemon and matcha, the green tea powder which nowadays you can easily find in the "international" section in bigger supermarkets.

I adapted the recipe from a "black and white" swirls recipe, in a cookies book from IKEA (Plätzchen backen). I bought it in 2009, not sure if you can still find it there.










Lemon and Green Tea Swirls

ingredients (around 45 cookies)

250 gr Flour
1 teaspoon of backing powder
125 gr powder sugar
Zest of 1 lemon
a pinch of salt
1 egg
125 gr butter
2 teaspoons of green tea powder (matcha)
1 spoon of milk
2 egg whites
extra flour for handling the dough

In a bowl mix the flour, backing powder, powder sugar and salt. Add the butter in pieces and mix in the dough until it appears like sand. Add the egg and mix the dough to incorporate all the ingredients.
Divide the dough in two similar sized pieces. In one add the lemon zest, and in the other add the matcha powder and the milk. Mix in well until the matcha powder is well spread throughout the dough. Mold both pieces of dough in to squares and placed them in the fridge for at least one hour.
Spread both pieces of dough in similar size squares with around half a centimeter high. Place one of the pieces in the bottom, spread some egg white on the top and place above the second piece of dough, spreading also some egg white on the top. Roll the assembled doughs in a cylinder, tightening it up as you roll. Take again to the fridge for 1 hour, to make it easier to cut. Cut it in slices of around half cm, and bake at 180°C until the edges start to look golden (around 15 minutes).

Enjoy!