Chocolate Decoration Cake
- 1 cake Chocolate spongecake
- 400 ml Heavy cream
- 1 approx. 10 grams Sugar
- 80 grams Chocolate (half dark and half milk)
- 1 tbsp Milk
- 1 few drops Vanilla oil (or any liquor)
- 1 to 1 1/2 tablespoons Water
- 1 to 1 1/2 tablespoons Sugar
- 1 to 1 1/2 tablespoons A liquor, like brandy or rum
- 8 Oreos
- 1 Banana
- 4 or 5 Candied chestnuts
- Cut the spongecake into 3 flat slices.
- I use a thin knife to draw lines around the perimeter of the cake to use as guidelines.
- If there's a better way, I want to know.
- Make the syrup by putting the ingredients into a heatproof bowl and microwaving it.
- Use a brush to thoroughly paint the surfaces of the spongecakes with the syrup.
- Use as much of the syrup as you like.
- Let's make the chocolate cream with the ingredients marked .
- Put the cut up chocolate, 2 tablespoons of heavy cream, and milk in a heatproof bowl and heat for 30 seconds at 600W.
- After you've taken the bowl out of the microwave, the chocolate may still look a bit solid, but it will melt nicely if you stir it.
- If it still doesn't melt, put it back in the microwave for a few more seconds.
- Combine the remaining cream, sugar and vanilla oil together and whip together until soft peaks form.
- Then add the ganache made in Step 4.
- As soon as you've added the ganache, beat together with a whisk.
- When slightly stiffer peaks form, the chocolate cream is finished.
- Place the first layer of sponge cake on a rotating table.
- Smooth the cake with the chocolate cream.
- I topped the cream with Oreos and finely minced candied chestnuts.
- If you crumble the Oreos a bit before adding to the cake, it will be easier to cut.
- Add more cream on top of your first filling and smooth out.
- After checking that the height is even, add the second layer of sponge cake.
- Cover with more cream.
- This time, once the cream was flat, I added sliced bananas and more candied chestnuts.
- Cover the topping with more cream just as before, and once its height is even and flat, add the third layer of spongecake.
- Scrape off any cream that may have been squeezed out of the sides.
- Including the cream you scraped off, cover the entire cake thinly with cream.
- This is just the crumb coat, so make it smooth so that it can be topped easily later.
- If the cream has too many air bubbles in it, fix it before you top the cake!
- Stir 1 to 1.5 tablespoons of milk into the cream to return the cream to a smooth texture.
- I read about this way to fix the cream in a cake decorating book.
- It said that you can fix dried out cream with milk.
- But don't make the cream more than 20% milk!
- Drop a generous amount of cream on the top of the cake and, while rotating the cake, hold a palette knife parallel to the top of it to smooth the cream flatly over the top of the cake.
- This time, hold the palette knife perpendicular to the cake and keep rotating the cake without stopping.
- While holding the palette knife still, rotate the cake slowly.
- After transferring the cake to a tray or plate, it's time to decorate.
- I finished the cake with a piping nozzle.
- I decorated it with grapes!
- It made for an autumnish cake.
- Though it's still not Obon (a summer festival for honoring ancestors in Japan), it's alright since the first day of fall (approximately August 8th) has passed.
- Though I couldn't eat the cake myself, my parents praised it for being very delicious.
- I'm very happy.
cake chocolate, sugar, chocolate, milk, vanilla oil, water, sugar, a liquor, oreos, banana, chestnuts
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/144826-chocolate-decoration-cake (may not work)