Posts mit dem Label tiramisu werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label tiramisu werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
2014/03/18
Bailey's Tiramisu Cake
So the other day at work, two colleagues and I invited our department to a little birthday celebration (I know, the celebrations won't end. And I wasn't even that fond of becoming a year older.), so I had to bake my...third birthday cake. (It's the last one, though, I swear.) I was a little undecided on what I wanted to do, but in the end I got "nudged" to do the tiramisu cake (the original recipe is from "Sugar & Everything Nice", but I've adapted it quite a lot to my taste over time). I've made that cake a few times before and it's usually gone within a few hours, no matter how many or few people are around to eat it. I count that as a win. If you don't like Bailey's, of course you can substitute that with whatever liqueur you like (or leave it out at all and use only hazelnut syrup instead), but I'm not a big fan of Amaretto or Kahlua, so I usually exchange these for Bailey's in every recipe I come across one of them. In this case I used hazelnut Bailey's, because I wanted the cake to have a bit of a nutty flavor and added some praline spread to one of my layers for the same reason (see tip at the end of the recipe).
Bailey's Tiramisu Cake
For the cake:
360g all-purpose flour
120g cornstarch
4 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
300g softened butter
300g sugar
6 large eggs
2 large egg yolk
3 tsp vanilla extract
360ml buttermilk
For the Espresso Syrup:
2 tbs instant espresso powder
2 tbs boiling water
120ml water
75g sugar
2 tbs Bailey’s
For the filling:
250g mascarpone
200g sour cream
200ml whipped cream
150g powdered sugar
2 tsp vanilla extract
3 tbs Bailey’s
2 tbs hazelnut syrup (optional)
50-100g grated milk chocolate
Cake:
1. Sift together the flour, corn starch, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Set aside.
2. Beat the butter until it’s creamy. Add the sugar and beat for about 3 minutes.
3. Add first one egg at a time, then an egg yolk at a time, beating the batter about a minute after each addition.
4. Add the vanilla extract.
5. At medium speed, add the dry ingredients and the buttermilk in 5 parts, starting and ending with the flour mix.
6. Divide the batter between two spring pans (26 to 28cm) and bake at 175°C for about 30 minutes.
7. Let the cakes cool completely, then cut each of them into two layers of the same height, giving you a total of four layers.
Espresso Syrup:
1. Dissolve the espresso powder with 2 tbs of boiling water.
2. Bring the water and sugar to a boil in a small saucepan.
3. Transfer to a bowl and stir in the Bailey’s and 2 tbs of the espresso. (Keep the rest of the espresso, we’re going to need it later on!)
Filling:
1. Put the mascarpone, sour cream, vanilla extract, Bailey’s and hazelnut syrup in a bowl and whisk until well combined.
2. Sift the powdered sugar over the mix and whisk again until combined.
3. Whip the cream to stiff peaks and fold into the mascarpone-mix.
4. Transfer about 300g of the mix to separate bowl and add some of the leftover espresso syrup to taste (and some hazelnut syrup if you want). This will be our frosting.
Assembling the Cake:
1. Soak the bottom layer of the cake with espresso syrup (just sprinkle it on with a tablespoon or brush). The cake should be fairly dense, so don’t be timid (like I always am because I’m afraid the cake is going to turn into mush), it can take quite a bit of syrup before it actually soaks through.
2. Spread some of the mascarpone mix on top (about 1 to 2cm thick) and sprinkle some grated chocolate on top.
3. Repeat with cake layer two and three. Then put the last layer on top without soaking it in syrup.
4. If you have any filling left after you’re done filling the cake, just mix it in with the frosting.
5. Frost the outside of the cake with a large spatula.
6. Decorate however you like (I used chocolate coffee beans around the sides and grated chocolate on the top).
7. Refrigerate for at least 3 hours or overnight if you want the flavor to really set in.
Tip: If you want your cake to have that little bit of extra chocolate or hazelnut flavor, you can also spread a thin layer of nutella or praline spread onto the inner two layers of cake before adding the mascarpone mix.
Enjoy!
♥ Nicole
2013/12/23
The 12 days of Christmas...y food: Day 12 - Gingerbread Tiramisu
Hallelujah. I made it to day 12 before Christmas Eve. Never thought that would happen. Heh. Looks like I should set myself goals more often.
A couple of years ago I did some advanced job training and at the facility where they held our seminars, they served us gingerbread tiramisu for dessert one day. And the first thing I thought was "Why haven't I thought of that before?" And really, why hadn't I? Anyway. The tiramisu they served there tasted okay, but I thought I could improve on it a little. Namely, by adding copious amounts of alcohol. And other stuff. Plus, I like my tiramisu a little lighter, so I don't use eggs and I don't like to just use mascarpone, so I usually mix it with quark. If you can't get quark where you live - don't worry, it tastes fine with just mascarpone and cream as well. Just substitute the quark for mascarpone and cream (1:1).
This is going to be my Christmas dessert, by the way (On all three days. Because as usual, I made way, way too much for one person to eat.) So looking back at what I used for the recipe I'd say you're looking at either three very, very big desserts (that I'm gonna have problems finishing after a roast) or six desserts that'll be slightly easier to finish.
Gingerbread Tiramisu
Ingredients:
about 10 pieces of gingerbread (and by gingerbread, I actually mean German "Lebkuchen", the normal chocolate covered kind without wafers)
1 cup of freshly brewed, but slightly cooled down coffee
200g mascarpone
200g quark
100g whipped cream
50g sugar
2 p. vanilla sugar (or 1/2 tsp vanilla extract)
Optional:
about 100-150ml Bailey's (I used the hazelnut flavored Bailey's)
about 50ml hazelnut syrup
cocoa powder or chocolate shavings for decoration
1. Whip the cream with one package of vanilla sugar. (If you use vanilla extract, don't add it to the cream.)
2. Put the mascarpone, quark, sugar, 1 package of vanilla sugar (or alternatively, the vanilla extract), about 100ml of Bailey's and a couple of tablespoons of the hazelnut syrup in a bowl and whip with an electric mixer until well combined (the Bailey's and hazelnut syrup is really to taste - you like it stronger, put in more, you like your flavor very subtle - put in a little less).
3. Fold in the whipped cream.
4. Cut the Lebkuchen into smallish pieces (mine were about 3 to 4cm).
5. Mix the coffee with Bailey's and hazelnut syrup to taste.
6. Start layering the different components into glasses or dessert bowls, starting with a layer of Lebkuchen. Sprinkle a few tablespoons of coffee over the Lebkuchen - just enough to soak it. Add a layer of mascarpone cream. Start over. Depending on the size of your glasses and how thick you make each layer, you should get about two to three layers of each into a glass.
7. Top with cocoa powder or chocolate shavings.
Enjoy and happy holidays!
♥ Nicole
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