Monday, March 15, 2010

Ginger White Chocolate Strawberry Trifles, and (not) paying attention in class

I space out in class.  There! I said it.  It's actually quite a problem, because when I get spacey, I start thinking about things that I happen to have lying about the refrigerator and the kitchen, like leftover white chocolate creme anglaise or beautiful chunks of crystallized ginger or egg yolks.


And then, I start thinking, "Oh, what a shame it would be if all these things went to waste!"  And then--here's where it gets dangerous, I start thinking about what I could do with all of these ingredients.  At this point, I'm sure my professors are utterly and completely fed up with me because I really should be paying attention to the diachronic origins of morphological ergativity in Indo-Aryan languages and dialects (which actually is interesting, I promise).  Anyways, here's what I came up with:


Ginger, white chocolate, and strawberry trifles.  Oh boy!  I sure to wish all of my daydreams turned out so well, with layers of ginger genoise cake, white chocolate creme anglaise whipped cream, and fresh strawberries.


The genoise cake recipe that I used here is an all egg-yolk genoise, from Rose Levy Beranbaum's The Cake Bible.  It's one of my favorite genoise recipes because, with all of the egg yolks, it's much more moist than your average whole egg variety--and, it's a great, yummy way to use up leftover egg yolks.  To adapt Beranbaum's recipe to a ginger genoise, I added ground ginger to the batter and also huge, rough chunks of crystallized ginger.  When it came out, the cake was magnificently studded with all of this sweet and spicy crystallized ginger and then I brushed it with some homemade ginger syrup that I had sitting in the fridge (that stuff also makes great homemade ginger ale).


To use up my white chocolate creme anglaise, I folded it into whipped cream.  It was actually quite a discovery when I found out that the white chocolate creme anglaise sets up nicely in the fridge, to almost the consistency of a light pudding!  With the creme anglaise folded in, the resulting cream is thick and luscious, packing just the right amount of sweetness and an incredible vanilla taste.


Combining the cake and whipped cream with fresh strawberries and more crystallized ginger made for the perfect antedote to mid-winter blues.  These were so good that I (accidentally!) inhaled two of them myself, despite the fact that I kept trying to save them for others to try.  Oops...


So, let's see... what is the moral of this story?  Daydreaming in class won't get you anywhere in terms of grades, but it will result in something utterly delicious to eat.  (Wait, is this really going to help me graduate?)


Read on for the recipe....



Ginger, White Chocolate, and Strawberry Trifle
makes enough for 3-4 individually sized trifles

for homemade crystallized ginger and ginger syrup, see David Lebovitz's recipe here, except make bigger chunks rather than small slices.

for white chocolate creme anglaise:
You will need ~1 cup of this recipe, so save the rest for another use.

6 oz. white chocolate, finely chopped
3 egg yolks
4 oz. whole milk
4 oz. heavy cream
2 Tbspn sugar
1 pinch salt
1/2 vanilla bean

1. Place chopped white chocolate in a bowl with a fine sieve on top. Set aside.
2. In a separate bowl, whisk together egg yolks until light. Set aside.
3. In a saucepan over medium-high heat, combine milk, cream, sugar, and salt. Scrape the seeds of the vanilla bean into the milk mixture and put the pod in as well.  Bring to a near simmer.
4. Whisking constantly, pour a small but steady stream of the heated milk and cream into the egg yolks to temper. Do this slowly, while whisking quickly. Once the milk and egg yolks are combined, return to the saucepan and to the stove.
5. Heat the egg yolks and milk mixture while stirring constantly, making sure to scrape the bottom so that nothing burns or sticks.  Slowly bring the mixture to a boil and cook until it thickens enough to coat the back of a spoon, about one minute.  Remove from heat immediately.
6. Pour the hot creme anglaise through the strainer onto the white chocolate.  Let sit for a minute and then whisk until the white chocolate completely melts.
7. Let cool completely in the refrigerator.

for ginger genoise:
(adapted from the Golden Genoise in Rose Levy Beranbaum's The Cake Bible)

50 grams flour
12 grams cornstarch
1 tspn ground ginger
4.5 Tbspn butter
1/2 tspn vanilla extract
6 egg yolks, at room temperature
88 grams sugar
2 Tbspn water
1/4 cup roughly chopped crystallized ginger

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.  Prepare a quarter sheet pan, lined with parchment paper and then lightly greased and floured.
2. Combine flour, cornstarch, and ground ginger and set aside.
3. On the stove, heat the butter until the solids drop to the bottom and begin to brown.  Remove from heat immediately and strain through a fine mesh strainer to remove the solids.  Add the vanilla extract to the liquid butter and keep warm.
4. In a mixer bowl over simmering water, combine the egg yolks and the sugar.  Whisk constantly until the mixture is almost hot to the touch.
5. Transfer the warmed egg yolks and sugar to the mixer and whisk on high for five minutes.
6. Add the water to the eggs and sugar, and whisk briefly on medium to combine.
7. Using a large balloon whisk, fold in the flour mixture to the eggs in two parts.
8. Fold in the melted butter and vanilla to the batter in two parts.  Do not overmix!
9. Fold in the chopped crystallized ginger, being careful not to overmix.
10. Immediately pour the batter onto the prepared pan.  Smooth out the batter, though it may not fill the whole pan--that's okay.
11. Bake for 20-30 minutes until the cake is golden and the top springs back when lightly pressed.  Remove from oven and cool.

for white chocolate creme anglaise cream:

2/3 - 1 cup of white chocolate creme anglaise, cold
1 cup of heavy whipping cream, cold
1/4 cup powdered sugar, sifted

1. Whisk the white chocolate creme anglaise for a few seconds.  Set aside.
2. Using a large balloon whisk, whip the cream until soft peaks, gradually adding the powdered sugar.
3. Gently but quickly, fold in the creme anglaise to the whipped cream.  Use immediately.

for assembly:

ginger syrup
fresh strawberries, hulled and sliced in half
chopped crystallized ginger, optional

1. Using a large round cookie cutter about the size of your trifle glass, cut out cake rounds from the genoise.
2. Brush the cake cut-outs liberally on both sides and all edges with ginger syrup.
3. In each trifle glass, layer cream, cake, and strawberries.  Top with extra chopped crystallized ginger and strawberries.

Tip: a large star piping tip is a great tool for hulling strawberries.


Enjoy!

10 comments:

  1. At least you didn't title the post the trouble with trifles.
    (I hope you get the Star Trek reference. If not, shame!)

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  2. @lutin: OMG, now I wish I had! That's brilliant. :-P

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  3. Beautiful! I love the perky little strawberries.

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  4. It is a beauty. Great flavors.

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  5. Oh wow that looks fantastic and your photography is amazing, now I won't be able to pay attention in class either because I'll be thinking about this all day ;) Great post!

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  6. This is absolutely sinful looking. I daydream about what to cook and blog about too, but I wish I were half as good at actually using up my leftover ingredients before they go bad. Loving the darker photography, too.

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  7. @Patty: thanks! I hope I didn't distract you too much from class. ;-P

    @Xiaolu: I'm usually really bad at using up leftover ingredients, too, but for some reason, these really came together. Still trying to perfect the dark photography. :-)

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  8. Oh wow that looks fantastic and your photography is amazing, now I won't be able to pay attention in class either because I'll be thinking about this all day ;) Great post!

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  9. @lutin: OMG, now I wish I had! That's brilliant. :-P

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I love hearing from you and reading your comments! Thanks so much for stopping by the blog. Happy feasting!