Hungarian Torte with Walnut Custard Buttercream (Diostorte)
- 1/3 cup dried unflavored bread crumbs, for the pan
- 1 cup walnuts (4 1/2 ounces) ground with a rotary nut grinder only
- 1 cup all purpose flour
- 7 lg. eggs, at room temperature
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 2 cups chopped walnuts (8 ounces)
- 1-1/4 cup confectioners sugar
- 1 cup milk
- 2 tbsp. cornstarch
- 2 lg. egg yolks
- 2 tbsp. golden rum
- 1 tsp. vanilla extract
- 1-1/2 cup unsalted butter, at cool room temperature
- 1/2 cup finely chopped walnuts, for garnish (2 ounces)
- 12 walnut halves, for garnish
- To Make the Cake: Position rack in the center of the oven and heat to 350F.
- Lightly butter a 9 inch springform pan.
- Dust with bread crumbs and tap out the excess crumbs.
- Line the bottom of the pan with a round of parchment or wax paper.
- Grind the nuts in a rotary nut grinder fitted with the fine grating drum.
- Transfer to a bowl and mix with the flour.
- Beat the eggs in the bowl of a heavy duty electric mixer at high speed until the mixture is very thick and forms a slowly dissolving ribbon when the beaters are lifted a few inches, about 5 minutes.
- In two additions, fold in the walnut flour mixture with a large balloon whisk or rubber spatula.
- Spread evenly in the pan.
- Bake until a toothpick inserted in the center of the cake comes out clean, about 35 minutes.
- Cool in the pan on a wire rack for 5 minutes.
- Remove the sides of the pan, and invert the cake onto the rack.
- Remove the paper.
- Reverse onto another rack and cool completely.
- To Make the Icing: Process the walnuts and confectioners sugar in a food processor fitted with the metal blade until the walnuts are very finely chopped, almost a powder.
- Pour the milk into a medium saucepan.
- Sprinkle in the cornstarch, and whisk to dissolve.
- Whisk in the yolks.
- Cook over medium low heat, whisking constantly, until the sauce is boiling and as THICK as PUDDING.
- The sauce must come to a full boil; the cornstarch will prevent the yolks from curdling.
- Strain the custard into a medium bowl set in a larger bowl of ice water.
- Stir in the rum and vanilla.
- Let stand until cool, stirring occasionally.
- Transfer the custard to the bowl of a heavy duty standing mixer with the whisk attached and beat until smooth, about 1 minute.
- On medium speed, one tablespoon at a time, beat in the butter, occasionally increasing the speed to high for about 10 seconds to ensure smooth blending.
- Beat in the walnutconfectioners sugar mixture -- (sometimes called powdered or icing sugar).
- If the icing is too warm to spread, place the bowl in a larger bowl of ice water and let stand, stirring occasionally, until chilled and spreadable.
- TO ASSEMBLE: Transfer about 3/4 cup of the icing to a pastry bag fitted with a 9/16 inch wide French star tip, such as Ateco Number 865.
- Using a long serrated knife, horizontally slice the cake into 2 equal layers.
- Place the bottom layer on an 8-inch cardboard round or a serving plate.
- Spread with about 1 cup of the remaining icing.
- Top with the other layer, and frost the top and sides of the cake with the remaining icing.
- Press the chopped walnut onto the side of the cake.
- Pipe twelve rosettes on top of the cake and place a walnut half on each.
- Refrigerate under a cake dome until 1 hour before serving.
- 12 servings.
- Make Ahead: The cake can be prepared up to 2 days before serving and stored under a cake dome in the refrigerator.
- Kaffeehaus..Rick Rodgers
bread crumbs, walnuts, flour, eggs, sugar, walnuts, confectioners sugar, milk, cornstarch, egg yolks, golden rum, vanilla extract, unsalted butter, walnuts, walnut halves
Taken from www.foodgeeks.com/recipes/19847 (may not work)