Jacques Easy Chocolate Cake
- 6 ounces bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped
- 6 1/2 ounces unsweetened chocolate, finely chopped
- 6 ounces sugar
- 5 ounces water
- 6 ounces softened butter
- 6 eggs
- 3 ounces sugar
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Spray a 10-inch cake pan with vegetable cooking spray.
- Line the bottom of the pan with a 10-inch parchment paper circle.
- Spray the top of the parchment paper circle with vegetable cooking spray.
- Place both chopped chocolates in a bowl and melt over a double boiler.
- Combine the sugar and water in a 1-quart saucepan and place over medium-high heat.
- Bring to a boil until all of the sugar is dissolved.
- Pour the hot syrup into the bowl of melted chocolate.
- Whisk until the mixture is homogenous.
- Add the butter and whisk until well mixed.
- Use an electric mixer to beat the eggs and sugar until well blended.
- Use a rubber spatula to fold this mixture into the chocolate mixture.
- Be careful to mix gently.
- Pour the batter into the prepared cake pan.
- Place a baking sheet with one-inch sides in the oven.
- Place the filled cake pan on the baking sheet.
- Fill the baking sheet with water so the water covers the bottom inch of the cake pan.
- Bake until the cake surface appears dull and taut when pressed in the middle, about 40 minutes.
- Remove the cake pan from the oven and allow to cool on a wire rack.
- Turn off the oven and let the baking sheet and water cool before you attempt to remove them.
- TEMPERING CHOCOLATE: Tempering is important because it determines the final gloss, hardness, and contraction of the chocolate.
- Those factors are evidence that the cocoa butter in the chocolate has been correctly crystallized.
- Chocolate is purchased in its tempered form.
- It snaps when you break it, usually has a nice shine to it and it is hard.
- In order to use it, you need to melt it.
- When you melt chocolate, the molecules of fat separate and you lose the temper (crystallization).
- If you want to use the chocolate for molding or coating, it needs to be tempered.
- Tempering chocolate means putting the molecules of fat back together.
- There are a variety of ways to do it.
- One of the easiest ways to temper it is to place the chocolate in a glass bowl and put it in the microwave for 30 seconds at a time on high power until the chocolate is melted.
- Be very careful not to overheat it.
- Keep an eye on it; the chocolate will not look like it has melted because it retains its shape.
- The chocolate should be only slightly warmer than your bottom lip.
- You may still see lumps in it but, don't worry; the residual heat of the chocolate will melt them.
- You can also use an immersion blender to break up the lumps and start the recrystallization process.
- Usually, the chocolate begins to set (recrystallize) along the side of the bowl.
- As it begins to crystallize, mix those crystals into the melted chocolate and they will begin the recrystallization process.
- I like to use a glass bowl because it retains the heat and keeps the chocolate tempered a long time.
- Here is another easy way to temper chocolate.
- In this method, tempering is achieved by adding small pieces of unmelted chocolate to melted chocolate.
- The amount of unmelted chocolate to be added depends on the temperature of the melted chocolate but is usually one fourth of the total amount.
- I use an immersion blender to mix the 2 together.
- The classic way to temper chocolate is call tabliering.
- Chocolate is melted over a hot water bath to a temperature between 88 and 90 F (31 to 34 C).
- White and milk chocolate are melted to a temperature approximately 2 F less, depending on the amount of milk fat they contain.
- 2/3 of the melted chocolate is poured on a cold table or marble surface.
- The chocolate is spread out and worked with a spatula until the temperature of the chocolate is approximately 81 F (27 C).
- At this stage, it is thick and begins to set.
- This tempered chocolate is then added to the remaining one third of non-tempered chocolate and mixed thoroughly until the mass in the bowl has a completely uniform temperature.
- If the temperature is still too high, part of the chocolate is further worked on the cold table until the correct temperature is reached.
- This is a lot of work, requires a lot of room and makes a big mess.
- Here is a tip: Temper more chocolate than you need.
- A larger quantity will hold its temper longer than a smaller quantity (just like a large cup of coffee will stay hot longer than a small cup of espresso).
- You can always reuse the extra chocolate.
- Most people have trouble tempering because they use too small of an amount.
- Don't forget to use a glass bowl.
- A simple method of checking tempering is by applying a small quantity of chocolate to a piece of paper or to the point of a knife.
- If the chocolate has been correctly tempered it will harden evenly and show a good gloss within 5 minutes.
- Remember, just like everything else in life, practice makes perfect.
- If your chocolate does not temper the first time, you can still eat it!
- Now that is an incentive!
bittersweet chocolate, chocolate, sugar, water, butter, eggs, sugar
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/jacques-easy-chocolate-cake-recipe.html (may not work)