Holy guacamole! This was the most
challenging one to date. It is a true miracle that a tart emerged from all that
chaos. I think I was cursing the whole time, and at one point, even considered
giving up baking entirely… But somehow, I pulled through. And the result was
surprisingly good (a miracle, I tell you!).
The trouble was with the Chiboust cream,
the vanilla speckled sensation. I’d baked the tart crust (the sweet cream crust
was just per-fect) and the sponge cake layers (not bad either) the day before. I
even reconstituted frozen raspberries as they were defrosting (don’t ask how!).
And on the designated day, I got up literally at the crack of dawn to make the
Chiboust cream and assemble the tart. I think I may have just been sleepwalking
(perhaps my “meditation” time really is necessary) because I made the biggest
baking blunder – I forgot to reduce all the ingredients uniformly. The tart
only called for a portion of the Chiboust recipe, and I reduced all the
ingredients – except the sugar. And so my cream came out all lumpy. I knew this
wasn’t right, so I dumped the whole concoction down the drain and tried again. And then again. And then yet again. I briefly considered giving up and
going back to bed. But I was having a “potluck brunch” in a couple of hours and
the tart was really the centerpiece. Sometimes having no choice is the only
thing that propels you forward…
In the end, I wasted about two hours of
time that could have been spent sleeping, two very precious vanilla bean pods
that were flown in from the U.S., rare and expensive (in Korea) gelatin, and just
lots and lots of sugar and eggs. No pictures document this disaster.
On the bright side, assembling the tart
went relatively smoothly. Standard stacking and spreading. The sponge cake didn’t
fit quite as snugly as hoped (strange, it was baked in the same pan, but seems
to have shrunk a whole centimeter). But the almond slices around the edge were
an ingenious solution to soggy crust (all hail Grandmaster Beranbaum!).
The layers: sweet cream crust sealed with
raspberry jam, light sponge cake doused with Grand Marnier, thick layer of Chiboust
cream dotted with raspberries, another layer of sponge cake, thin layer of freshly
whipped cream topped with reconstituted raspberries
And it tasted awesome. The liqueur lent a
slight but noticeable kick, and the tartness of the raspberries complemented the
cream quite well. It was almost like the slices of cake sold in coffee shops,
though not with the same finish, but more flavorful and much much fresher.
All’s
well that ends well.
Who had the honor of eating this cake? You should reveal the names, so we can be jealous of them!
ReplyDeleteErm, I don't have too many friends here, so it shouldn't be too hard to guess!
ReplyDelete