French Genoise for Petits Fours
- 6 lg. eggs
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 cup sifted flour (1 1/2 cups for petite fours)
- 1/2 cup sweet butter, melted and clarified
- 1 tsp. vanilla
- 1 cup apricot jam, raspberry jam
- butter cream
- 1 cup apricot glaze
- 3 cups fondant
- mock fondant
- 2 tsp. vanilla
- any liqueur
- 1 tbsp. strong coffee
- 2 oz. unsweetened chocolate, melted
- 1 cup sieved apricot jam
- 1 to 4 tbsp. cognac, kirsch, applejack,
- any liqueur (optional).
- Set oven at 350 degrees F. Grease and lightly flour ANY 1 of the following for your needs: two 9-inch layer-cake tins three 7-inch layer-cake tins one 11 x 16 jelly-roll pan for petite fours two shallow 10-inch layer-cake tins NOTE: For petits fours you must use ONE 11 x 16 jelly-roll pan.
- You must use 1 1/2 cups all purpose flour if you are making petite fours.
- FOR THE CAKE: In a large bowl combine eggs and sugar.
- Stir for a minute, or until they are just combined.
- Set bowl over a saucepan containing 1 or 2 inches of hot water.
- Water in pan should not touch bowl; nor should it ever be allowed to boil.
- Place saucepan containing bowl over low heat for 5 to 10 minutes, or until eggs are lukewarm.
- Heating the eggs help them whip to greater volume.
- It is not necessary to beat them continuously as they are warming.
- They should, however, be lightly stirred 3 or 4 times to prevent them from cooking at bottom of bowl.
- When eggs feel lukewarm to your finger and look like a bright yellow syrup, remove bowl from heat.
- Begin to beat, preferably with an electric mixer.
- Beat at high speed for 10 to 15 minutes, scraping sides of bowl with a rubber spatula when necessary, until syrup becomes light, fluffy, and cool.
- It will almost triple in bulk and look much like whipped cream.
- It is the air beaten into the eggs that gives genoise its lightness.
- Sprinkle flour, a little at a time, on top of the whipped eggs.
- Fold in gently, adding slightly cooled, clarified butter and vanilla.
- Folding can be done with electric mixer turned to lowest speed, or by hand.
- Best done by hand.
- Be especially careful not to overmix.
- Pour batter into prepared pans, of your choice above.
- Bake in preheated oven 25 to 30 minutes, or until cakes pull away from sides of pans and are golden brown and springy when touched lightly on top.
- Remove from pans immediately and cool on cake rack.
- Almost all petits fours freeze well before they are iced.
- Not all petits fours require an icing glazed with fondant.
- This is tricky to make and use.
- Traditionally, petits fours are served in small, individual paper cases.
- FOR THE PETITS FOURS: To make the little iced geometric cakes most people think of as petits fours, bake a sheet of genoise for petits fours in an 11 x 16 jelly-roll pan.
- The baked sheets of cake should not be more than 3/4 inch high.
- If possible, bake the cake a day ahead so it can be cut more easily.
- Cut the cake in half, making 2 layers, each 8 x 11.
- Spread 1 layer with a thin layer of apricot or raspberry jam.If desired, any butter cream may be substituted for jam.
- Place second layer on top of first.
- If butter cream is used, chill cake slightly.
- Brush top with hot apricot glaze.
- Trim off all crisp edges.
- Allow glaze to dry for a few minutes.
- Then, using a long knife with a serrated edge, cut cake into even 1-inch shapes; cubes, rectangles, triangles, etc.
- A ruler may be used for making cakes of equal size.
- Rounds can be cut with a cooky cutter, although there is much waste.
- Wipe knife edge off with a damp sponge after each slice.
- Place 1/3 of the little cakes on a cake rack, leaving some space between them.
- Set rack in a shallow pan.
- Warm the fondant or mock fondant.
- Flavor it with vanilla or a liqueur.
- When lukewarm, spoon or pour plenty of icing in the center of each cake so that it will run down and coat sides.
- Excess will drip into pan under rack.
- Scrape up drippings and return them to pan of vanilla fondant.
- Add coffee to flavor fondant.
- Reheat what is now coffee fondant to lukewarm.
- If necessary, thin it with a little syrup or water.
- Arrange another third of the cakes on a second cake rack.
- Place rack in shallow pan.
- Cover tops and sides of the little cakes with coffee fondant.
- Scrape icing up and return in to pan.
- Flavor remaining coffee fondant with chocolate.
- The chocolate flavor and color will now dominate.
- Place remaining cakes on a third rack and cover with chocolate fondant.
- Allow all the cakes to dry about 10 minutes.
- Loosen from racks with a spatula.
- Place each in a tiny paper case and, if desired, decorate.
- Simple decorations can be very beautiful: crushed bits of crystalized violets or green pistachio nuts; or prepare ad additional 1/2 cup of fondant, coloring it as you like.
- It should be a little thicker than the fondant used for pouring.
- Fill a paper cornucopia with the colored fondant and cut a tiny hole in the pointed end.
- Make dots, lines.
- scrolls; a variety of patterns can be improvised.
- Each little cake needs no more than the tiniest bit of decorations.
- Yield: approximately 90.
- FOR THE APRICOT GLAZE: Heat apricot jam in a saucepan until it is boiling.
- Stir in preferred flavoring.
- Use glaze while it is hot.
- Mock Fondant: Much easier to make than real fondant, and more quickly prepared, this recipe provides an excellent substitute if you have on hand a jar of the basic simple syrup, which keeps almost indefinitely.
- For best results, pour mock fondant over cake which has first been lightly brushed with hot apricot glaze.
- BASIC SIMPLE SYRUP: 2 1/2 cups sugar 3/4 cup white corn syrup 1 1/4 cups water Combine sugar, corn syrup, and water in a large saucepan.
- Stir over low heat until sugar is completely dissolved.
- When it looks clear, wash down sides of saucepan with a brush dipped in cold water.
- Place lid on saucepan for 5 minutes so that steam will further dissolve any sugar crystals.
- Remove lid.
- Raise heat.
- Boil for 5 minutes without stirring.
- Cool syrup, pour into jars, and cover tightly.
- Store for future use.
- Note: if sugar has not been thoroughly dissolved, the syrup, after a week or even less, may form large crystals in the bottom of the jar.
- The presence of crystals will not hurt the syrup, but it is wasteful, because the more crystals the less syrup you will have.
- MOCK FONDANT: 1/2 cup cooled basic simple syrup 1 1/2 cups sifted confectioners' sugar (approximately) 1 teaspoon egg white 1 teaspoon melted butter Place syrup in a saucepan.
- Add enough sifted confectioners' sugar to make a fairly stiff paste.
- It should be a bit too thick to pour or spread by itself.
- Place saucepan over low heat and warm, stirring constantly till fondant is lukewarm.
- Be careful not to overheat, or the icing will not be shiny.
- Beat in a teaspoon each of egg white and melted butter.
- If icing is still too thick, add additional syrup or flavoring liquid to thin it.
- If it becomes too thin, add more confectioners' sugar.
- This is enough mock fondant for the top of a 9-inch layer cake.
- Flavor with any one of the following, or any flavor of your choice: 1 ounce melted unsweetened chocolate 1 tablespoon extra-strong coffee 2 tablespoons rum 2 tablespoons any liqueur 1 teaspoon vanilla.
eggs, sugar, flour, sweet butter, vanilla, apricot, butter cream, apricot glaze, fondant, mock fondant, vanilla, liqueur, coffee, unsweetened chocolate, cognac, liqueur
Taken from www.foodgeeks.com/recipes/20303 (may not work)