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A Daring Bakers' First Anniversary
One year ago I joined the Daring Bakers'; a conglomeration of world wide bakers who gather together every month to embark upon a baking challenge. Twice this year I've had to remake something I failed at multiple times in the past, Puff Pastry and Flourless Cake, both successes! I tried my hand at Macarons, and Moon pies, one failure-one success. And enjoyed Bakewell Pudding Tart, Almond Strudel and Dobos Torte.
The February 2010 Daring Bakers' challenge was hosted by Aparna of My Diverse Kitchen and Deeba of Passionate About Baking. They chose Tiramisu as the challenge for the month. Their challenge recipe is based on recipes from The Washington Post, Cordon Bleu at Home and Baking Obsession. This was a fun, busy, complicated and intricate challenge. Tiramisu is comprised of multiple parts, zabaglione, pastry cream, mascarpone and savoiardi biscuits - all which had to be handmade. Tiramisu Traditionally, Tiramisu is flavored with wine and coffee, but since I don't drink either, I substituted with fresh orange juice which lent a delicate fresh and airy flavor to the pastry dessert. This dessert is well worth the challenge and effort, and is a delicious and sophisticated pastry. Mascarpone 2 cups whipping cream 1 tablespoon fresh lemon, or lime juice Fill a large skillet half full with water and bring to a boil Pour cream into metal bowl, and place bowl directly into the water in the skillet Cook until cream reaches 190°, or becomes very thick Stir in fresh juice and cook until mixture curdles Let rest for 20 minutes Line a sieve with 4 layers of cheesecloth Pour cream into cheesecloth, cover and refrigerate a minimum of 24 hours to harden**Tip: Mixture is cooked enough when cheese does not drip through cheesecloth-if it drips, transfer back to pan and continue cooking. Mascarpone is actually surprisingly easy to make, and since it's proved difficult to locate on store shelves where I live, I'm excited to know now that I can make it from scratch. I did have some trouble with the first batch of cheese, but the second attempt was perfect! Zabaglione 2 large egg yolks 3 tablespoons sugar ¼ cup fresh squeezed orange juice ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract Whisk together until smooth In a bowl fitted over a saucepan of boiling water, or in a double boiler cook mixture for 8 minutes, or until mixture is thick and resembles custard Let cool, transfer to bowl and refrigerate a minimum of 4 hours Orange Pastry Cream ¼ cup sugar 1 tablespoon all purpose flour ½ teaspoon vanilla extract 1 large egg yolk ¼ cup fresh squeezed orange juice Whisk together in a saucepan over low eat, stirring constantly Add ½ cup whole milk a little at a time Cook for 12 minutes, or until mixture Transfer to a bowl and let cool Refrigerate a minimum of 4 hoursBoth the pastry cream and the zabaglione were fairy uncomplicated, just make sure to stir constantly and bake at a low temperature with patience. Savoiardi Biscuits 3 eggs, separated Lightly whisk yolks with a fork to separate Whip whites to soft peaks, add 6 tablespoons powdered sugar, and whip to stiff peaks Gently fold yolks into whites, slowly, to keep all volume in whites Add 3/4 cup sifted cake flour Fold into eggs, slowly, to keep all volume in whites Pipe onto cookie sheet lined with parchment paper Sprinkle with 3 tablespoons powdered sugar, let rest 10 minutes Sprinkle with 3 additional tablespoons powdered sugar Bake at F350°, 10 minutes-rotate and bake for 5 additional minutes Transfer to wire rack to cool completelyI opted for layered biscuits by measuring the pan I would eventually assemble the Tiramisu in and tracing that on the parchment, making 4 large square biscuits. Finalè Whip 2 cups heavy whipping cream with ½ teaspoon vanilla and ¼ cup sugar Mix with Pastry Cream, Zabaglione, and ? of Mascarpone until smooth Brush tops and bottoms of biscuits with a light coating of orange juice Layer biscuits with cream and top with cocoa powder or shavings Chill, or freeze for several hours or up to 3 days allowing the flavors to mature**Tip: Line your pan with saran wrap so you can easy pull it out for serving. I opted for 3 layers beginning with the Savoiardi Biscuits, topping with a layer of cream and then a layer of chocolate shavings, finishing with a top layer of Savoiardi Biscuits. I used the entire batch of Mascarpone, and I didn't brush my biscuits with syrup/juice, although I definitely will the next time. One Year Ago: A Daring Bakers' First Adventure, Flourless Chocolate Valentino Cake with Peanut Butter Ice Cream Filling, topped with glazed and quartered Strawberries Don't forget to enter my giveaway: The Price is Right! Simply leave a comment; Deadline March 5. related searches : Daring
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