Chocolate terrine (Chocolate mousse in chocolate sponge cake)
- 12 ounces semisweet chocolate
- 1/2 pound butter
- 5 egg yolks
- 2 tablespoons cognac
- 5 egg whites
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 1 cup unbleached white flour
- 1 cup cocoa
- 12 eggs
- 1 1/2 cups sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1 pound semisweet chocolate
- 1 cup cream, approximately
- 1/2 pound semisweet chocolate
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
- Butter and flour two 10 inch-by-15-inch jelly-roll pans.
- To make the mousse, melt chocolate and butter over hot water, beat egg yolks into chocolate and butter, and add cognac.
- Beat egg whites to soft peaks and add sugar slowly.
- Continue to beat till stiff but not dry.
- Add stiffly beaten whites to chocolate mixture and beat together with a whisk.
- Whip cream almost to stiff peaks and fold into chocolate mixture.
- Chill for at least one hour.
- To make the sponge cake, sift flour and cocoa twice.
- Whisk together eggs and sugar over simmering water until sugar begins to dissolve and mixture is warm.
- Add vanilla.
- Whip at high speed until thick and light, and mixture forms a ribbon when poured from a spoon.
- Sift one-third of the dry ingredients over the eggs and sugar, and fold in with a rubber spatula until combined.
- Repeat with remaining flour and cocoa, one third at a time.
- Divide the batter equally between the two pans and bake until cake tester is clean in the center, or about 20 minutes.
- Remove from oven and cool.
- When cake has cooled, cut the sponge cake to line completely a pate mold or a straight-sided bread pan, about three inches by four inches by 10 inches.
- Cut each piece slightly larger than the pan.
- Simply press the fresh cake against the bottom and sides of the pan, making sure the corners and seams are sealed with cake.
- Chill until ready for filling.
- Save the scraps for later use; you should have two pieces large enough to use as layers inside the terrine.
- To make the ganache, chop chocolate into coinsize pieces.
- Bring one cup of the cream to a boil and pour over chocolate.
- Stir until chocolate is completely dissolved and ganache is smooth and shiny.
- To assemble, fill chocolate terrine with alternating layers of chocolate mousse, ganache and a sheet of chocolate sponge cake, ending with chocolate sponge cake to form a cover and seal the terrine, reserving enough chocolate ganache to cover the outside.
- This will come later.
- Rap the pan sharply several times while assembling and again afterwards.
- Allow the terrine to chill overnight.
- To make chocolate curls, melt the semisweet chocolate slowly over hot water, making sure the bottom of the bowl does not touch the water.
- When completely melted, spread the chocolate about one-eighthinch thick on a baking sheet with a metal spatula.
- Chill completely.
- When chilled, remove from refrigerator and let chocolate begin to warm.
- Holding the metal spatula at a 45-degree angle to the baking sheet, begin to move the spatula across the sheet, loosening the chocolate.
- If the chocolate has reached the proper temperature, it will slide up the spatula as you move along the sheet, curling as you go.
- If it cracks, it is too cold.
- Let it warm up and try again.
- If it sticks to the spatula, it is too warm.
- Regrigerate for a moment or two.
- Refrigerate the curls.
- When the terrine has chilled thoroughly, turn it out by placing an appropriate-size platter (a rectangular bread board will do) upside down on top of the terrine.
- Then turn it over.
- The terrine should drop right out.
- If it does not, let it sit on the platter, and tap the top and sides with the heel of your hand.
- Remelt the remaining ganache over hot water, stirring occasionally until smooth and shiny again.
- If it seems too thick to pour, add several tablespoons of cream.
- Starting at one end and moving toward the other, pour the ganache over the terrine, letting it run down the sides.
- Smooth the sides and top with a narrow frosting spatula and let the terrine set in the refrigerator for several minutes.
- Garnish the entire terrine with curls in any way you like.
- The curls will stick to the ganache.
- Refrigerate until one-half hour to one hour before serving.
chocolate, butter, egg yolks, cognac, egg whites, sugar, heavy cream, unbleached white flour, cocoa, eggs, sugar, vanilla, chocolate, cream, chocolate
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/6135 (may not work)