Moist Chestnut Cake with Browned Butter
- 200 grams Chestnut (marron) cream
- 100 grams Almond flour
- 60 grams almond flour + 40 grams chestnut flour in this case (Try using some chestnut flour mixed with almond flour - delicious!)
- 4 Eggs
- 80 grams Sugar (I used raw cane sugar - use whatever sugar you prefer)
- 100 grams Butter
- 8 to 10 Chestnuts in syrup or chestnuts in syrup in their skins
- 1 Powdered sugar to finish
- 1/2 tbsp Rum (optional)
- Line a cake tin with kitchen parchment paper.
- Dust with almond flour.
- The almond flour can clog up the sieve, so push it through with your fingers.
- This cake is delicious too if you replace some of the almond flour with chestnut flour!
- Divide the eggs into yolks and whites.
- Beat the egg whites and make meringue.
- Add the sugar in 3 to 4 batches, and make a meringue with stiff peaks.
- Lower the speed of your handheld mixer at the end to create small air bubbles in the meringue and smooth out the texture.
- While you're beating the meringue, make the browned butter too.
- Put the butter in a pan and heat until it turns dark brown.
- Strain it through a tea strainer.
- Start preheating the oven to 180 C. Combine the egg yolks with the chestnut cream and mix well.
- If you are using rum, add it at Step 6 or 7.
- Keep mixing while adding the browned butter little by little.
- If you stop mixing, the yolks may curdle from the heat of the butter, so keep mixing continuously.
- Add the almond flour.
- Beat well with a whisk until the batter is smooth.
- Add 1/3 of the meringue to the batter, and scoop up from the bottom of the bowl as you fold it in.
- Add half of the remaining meringue and fold it in too.
- Add the remaining meringue, and fold it in as you scoop up from the bottom, trying not to beat out the air bubbles, to make a light and fluffy batter.
- Pour the batter into the cake tin.
- Shake the tin gently from side to side, then tap it on your countertop to remove any large air bubbles.
- Set the chestnuts in syrup (without the syrup) on top.
- (They sank to the bottom when I baked the cake...)
- You can also chop up the chestnuts before adding them to the cake.
- But if you want to enjoy the smooth texture of the cake, I think it's better to just add the whole chestnuts.
- Bake at 180C for 30 minutes, then at 150 to 160C for 20 minutes, for a total of 50 minutes.
- The baking time will vary depending on your oven and the mold you're using, so please be sure to check how the cake is doing.
- If it looks like the surface is going to burn, cover it with a piece of aluminium foil.
- If a skewer poked into the cake comes out clean it's done.
- As soon as you take the cake out of the oven, drop it onto your countertop from about a 30 cm height to push out the steam.
- When the cake has cooled down slightly, take it out of the tin and peel off the paper.
- Leave to cool on a cooling rack.
- Cover the cake with a tightly wrung out moistened kitchen towel as it cools to prevent it from drying out.
- When the cake has cooled down, wrap it in plastic wrap and chill for several hours in the refrigerator.
- The cake will settle and become more delicious.
- It's done when it's well rested!
- The middle will sink a bit when it's completely chilled.
- Dust the top with powdered sugar and enjoy.
- I served it with whipped cream.
- Soooo delish.
- It's kind of like being at a cafe isn't it?
- It's a bit like baked creamed sweet potato, or kabocha squash or sweet potato custard.
- But it's still like a cake too.
- When you put a fork in it, it's like this.
- Sooo moist.
- I think it may be good baked in a pastry crust too!
- It's very moist so it should work.
- I think I'll try it next time.
- I used storebought chestnut cream.
- I used Sabaton's creme de marron this time.
- But I actually think the one from Clement Faugier has a better flavor.
- I made 11 cm diameter cakes to give as gifts.
- You can make 4 cakes of this size.
- I took this picture before dusting them with powdered sugar.
- After giving them a makeover.
- Wrapped nicely.
cream, flour, flour, eggs, sugar, butter, chestnuts, sugar
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/155150-moist-chestnut-cake-with-browned-butter (may not work)