Archive for the 'chocolate' Category


Tim Tam’s Latest!

Friday, February 2nd, 2007

New flavours excite me and this is doubly true when we’re talking Tim Tam’s!

The most recent was a limited-edition, strawberry cream-filled ‘Pink Wish’ Tim Tam, launched to coincide with Breast Cancer month. Most stores have run out of this version although I still spot it from time-to-time. I had two packs stashed away and now only one remains after I gave the other to a work colleague when she lamented the fact that they were no longer available.

Well, the folks at Arnott’s have done it again with these two new ‘Love Potion’ flavours: Sticky Vanilla Toffee and Double Chocolate & Raspberry. Actually there is a third one in range, Chocolate Mud, which my local supermarket didn’t stock. The Double Chocolate & Raspberry one sounds suspiciously like the cherry-filled Black Forest version. I guess these must be for the Valentine’s Day rush, but I say ‘Why wait?’

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Bittersweet Roulade & Bittersweet Decadence Cookies

Sunday, December 17th, 2006

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I promised, in my previous post, that I would write about some chocolate desserts that I recently made so here they are. I’m also hoping that these two recipes will prompt some of you to buy a ticket for the $100 koko Black voucher that I’m offering as part of the Menu for Hope campaign. As Neil has urged in a recent post, we should support the companies that have generously donated their products to help make this event a success. To date, we have already exceeded last year’s efforts by more than US$4,000 and still have almost a week to go. Isn’t that fantastic? Anyway, who wouldn’t want to make a dessert that looks this beautiful? Especially with the berries that we have in season at the moment.

I bought Alice Medrich’s ‘Bittersweet‘ cookbook at least 6 or 9 months ago and it’s been sitting on my shelf instead of my kitchen bench. I was reminded of its existence at the opening of the new DFO at the renamed Southern Cross station. The bookshop had it on sale for measly $25.00! And I had paid $75 for it at Borders – don’t you hate that! Having tried out a couple of recipes now, I can tell you that it’s worth the price because these desserts will knock your socks off.

This roulade consists of a a thin layer of flourless chocolate souffle rolled up like a jam roll and simply filled with whipped cream, shavings of white and dark chocolate, and fresh raspberries. The recipe for the souffle sheet calls for a 70% bittersweet chocolate so I visited Koko Black to get their 74% house dark chocolate. As you will see from the recipe below, the souffle sheet is easy to make and don’t worry about the cracking as you roll it up. This produces the most pleasing effect, especially when dusted with some icing sugar and surrounded by the most luscious-looking selection of summer berries. The Koko Black chocolate was absolutely perfect for creating a dessert that was big on chocolate flavour but not overly sweet due to the high percentage of cocoa solids.

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Bittersweet Roulade

185g Koko Black 74% chocolate, coarsely chopped, 1/3 cup freshly brewed espresso, 1 tsp vanilla extract, 6 large eggs, separated, 1/4 tsp cream of tartar, 3/4 cup sugar, 2 tbs unsweetened cocoa powder

1. Melt chocolate with water in a bowl set over a pot of barely simmering water, stirring frequently until chocolate is melted and mixture is smooth. Stir in vanilla and set aside to cool slightly.
2. Whisk egg whites with cream of tartar until soft peaks form. Gradulally sprinkle in sugar and beat at high speed until whites are stiff but not dry.
3. Whisk egg yolks into melted chocolate then fold 1/4 of egg whites completely into chocolate mixture to lighten it. Add the remaning egg whites and fold in gently but completely.
4. Spread batter evenly into lined jam roll tin and bake at 190C for 8 to 10 minutes until cake springs back when pressed lightly with fingertips and skewer comes out moist but not gooey. Cool completely in the pan on a rack.
5. Unmould cake by inverting pan onto a piece of foil dusted with cocoa powder and peeling off baking paper.
6. The recipe suggests using a cocoa bean cream or whipped chocolate ganache in place of cream but I thought this would be too rich. Instead, I filled it with whipped cream and shavings of 74% Koko Black chocolate (just to add a little more chocolatiness, sprinkled with fresh raspberries then drizzled swirls of melted white chocolate because I like the combination of white chocolate and raspberry. Using the foil to help, start rolling up the cake from one long edge. The cake will crack but, don’t worry, this decreases as the roll gets fatter. Place seam side down on platter, dust with icing sugar and surround with fresh summer berries of your choice.

This is the sort of cake to make for friends you love. It looks great and has just the right level of bittersweet flavour to not be overpowering.

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I had enough of the Koko Blakc chocolate to try my hand at the Bittersweet Decadence Cookies as well and am I glad that I did (and more importantly, so is A.). As described in the book, these are ‘ultrachocolatey…crunchy on the outside with a divinely soft center…irresistable.’ I have tried to capture the gooeiness of the chocolate chunks inside but the photo probably doesn’t do it justice. Of course, this means that you will just have to try it out yourself!

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Bittersweet Decadence Cookies

1/4 cup flour, 1/4 tsp baking powder, 1.4 tsp salt, 250g semisweet chocolate, 30g unsalted butter, 2 large eggs, 1/2 cup sugar, 1 tsp vanilla extract, 2 cups pecans (chopped), 185g 74% Koko Black chocolate (chopped into chunks)

1. Melt semisweet chocolate and butter together over a pot of simmering water, stirring frequently until just melted and smooth. Remove from heat and set aside.
2. Whisk eggs, sugar and vanilla well together and set bowl over pot of simmering water. Stir mixture until lukewarm to the touch. Stir eggs into the warm (not hot) chocolate.
3. Mix flour, baking powder and salt together and stir into the chocolate mixture. Add nuts and Koko Black chocolate chunks.
4. Spoon rounded tablespoons of batter onto baking tray and bake at 175D for 12 to 14 minutes until surface of cookie looks dry and set but center is still gooey. Cool on rack.

Chocolate Fix

Sunday, July 16th, 2006

chilli1 

Take a walk down Lt Collins Street, heading towards Elizabeth St. When you spot the Ay Tea House, turn right into Hub Arcade, mosey right down to the end and you will find the Chocolate Fire Cafe. Most of the produce seemed to centre around dried fruit dipped in chocolate but the very chatty owner is looking to introduce 6, yes count them, SIX new lines each week. Where Koko Black is dark timber, elegance and ganaches nestled neatly under a glass counter, Chocolate Fire Cafe is colourful and bright with the dried fruit forming straggly lines. They also offer pringles thickly coated with milk chocolate and plan to feature chocolate-dipped pretzels soon. I didn’t try the hot chocolate but the ower assures me that “…it’s very popular with the Asian students” and that some have claimed that it’s better than Koko Black’s, which was voted Melbourne’s best hot chocolate by the Herald Sun – big call!

My small selection of chocolate-dipped fruit took a loooonnnng time to purchase and for once this was not due to my indecision. The lady behind the counter resolutely kept her back to me, determined to show a very inexperienced new girl how to get a box ready for delivery before actually serving a customer in front of her. After waiting patiently for 10 minutes then asking her if this was a bad time and should I come back later in the afternoon, she replied huffily “Oh, are you in a real hurry?” then sent the new girl, who was absolutely clueless, to serve me. Hmmm, me thinks this area needs some improvements before they are ready to compete with all the other great chocolate places around Melbourne.

Go to Chocolate Fire Cafe if you have a really sweet tooth because you will need this to enjoy the combination of concentrated sugars in the dried fruit and chocolate. Or, go there if you want to test their claim about having the best hot chocolate. Koko Black is just around the corner so you could even do a head-to-head comparison!

Chocolate Fire Cafe
Shp8/ 318 Little Collins St Melbourne 3000
(03) 9663 5881

mon1 

I had heard about Monsieur Truffe before but I only got the chance to visit his stall at Prahran Market two weeks ago. Charming us with samples of decandently dark truffles, the lovely Monsieur Truffe encouraged us to try the various flavours but we quickly fell for the chocolate caramalized almonds and brought a pack home with us. A. reckons that these are the best chocolate almonds around – big thumbs up!