Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Daring Bakers December Challenge: Yule Log


This month's challenge is brought to us by the adventurous Hilda from Saffron and Blueberry and Marion from Il en Faut Peu Pour Etre Heureux. They have chosen a French Yule Log by Flore from Florilege Gourmand in France.

Holy Cow, Batman! I join up to participate in this online baking group, and my first challenge is a doozy!

First, the good news: I tried. I really did. Second, the bad news: my yule log ended up looking more like a turd log. (Despite the assistance of my wonderful baking partner, Alyssa.) HA!


Let me share the recipe with you, just so you can see what we tried to get our minds (and fingers!) around. Because this yule log had many parts or "elements," as they're called. Six of them, to be exact.

**ELEMENT #1 - DAQUOISE BISCUIT (ALMOND CAKE)

Preparation time: 10 minutes + 15 minutes for baking

Equipment:
2 mixing bowls, hand or stand mixer with whisk attachment, spatula, baking pan such as a 10”x15” jelly-roll pan, parchment paper

You can use the Dacquoise for the bottom of your Yule Log only, or as bottom and top layers, or if using a Yule log mold (half-pipe) to line your entire mold with the biscuit. Take care to spread the Dacquoise accordingly. Try to bake the Dacquoise the same day you assemble the log to keep it as moist as possible.

Ingredients:
2.8 oz (3/4cup + 1Tbsp / 80g) Almond meal
1.75 oz (1/2 cup / 50g) Confectioner’s sugar
2Tbsp (15g) All-purpose flour
3.5oz (100g / ~100ml) or about
3 Medium egg whites
1.75 oz (4 Tbsp / 50g) Granulated sugar

Method:
1. Finely mix the almond meal and the confectioner's sugar. (If you have a mixer, you can use it by pulsing the ingredients together for no longer than 30 seconds).
2. Sift the flour into the mix.
3. Beat the eggs whites, gradually adding the granulated sugar until stiff.
4. Pour the almond meal mixture into the egg whites and blend delicately with a spatula.
5. Grease a piece of parchment paper and line your baking pan with it.
6. Spread the batter on a piece of parchment paper to an area slightly larger than your desired shape (circle, long strip etc...) and to a height of 1/3 inches (8mm).
7. Bake at 350°F (180°C) for approximately 15 minutes (depends on your oven), until golden. 8. Let cool and cut to the desired shape.

Note: We had no almond meal, so we used a blender to grind slivered almonds.

Here are photos of our Dacquoise:





**ELEMENT #2 - DARK CHOCOLATE MOUSSE

Preparation time: 20 minutes

Equipment:
Stand or hand mixer with whisk attachment, thermometer, double boiler or equivalent, spatula.

You will see that a Pate a Bombe is mentioned in this recipe. A Pate a Bombe is a term used for egg yolks beaten with a sugar syrup, then aerated. It is the base used for many mousse and buttercream recipes. It makes mousses and buttercreams more stable, particularly if they are to be frozen, so that they do not melt as quickly or collapse under the weight of heavier items such as the crème brulée insert.

Ingredients:
2.5 Sheets gelatin or 5g / 1 + 1/4 Tsp powdered gelatin
1.5 oz (3 Tbsp / 40g) Granulated sugar
1 1/2 Tsp (10g) Glucose or thick corn syrup
0.5 oz (15g) Water
50g Egg yolks (about 3 medium)
6.2 oz (175g) Dark chocolate, coarsely chopped
1.5 Cups (350g) Heavy cream (35% fat content)

Method:
1. Soften the gelatin in cold water (If using powdered gelatin, follow the directions on the package).
2. Make a Pate a Bombe: Beat the egg yolks until very light in colour (approximately 5 minutes until almost white).
2a. Cook the sugar, glucose syrup and water on medium heat for approximately 3 minutes (if you have a candy thermometer, the mixture should reach 244°F/118°C. If you do not have a candy thermometer, test the sugar temperature by dipping the tip of a knife into the syrup then into a bowl of ice water, if it forms a soft ball in the water then you have reached the correct temperature).
2b. Add the sugar syrup to the beaten yolks carefully by pouring it into the mixture in a thin stream while continuing to beat the yolks. You can do this by hand but it’s easier to do this with an electric mixer.
2c. Continue beating until cool (approximately 5 minutes). The batter should become thick and foamy.
3. In a double boiler or equivalent, heat 2 tablespoons (30g) of cream to boiling. Add the chopped chocolate and stir until melted and smooth.
4. Whip the remainder of cream until stiff.
5. Pour the melted chocolate over the softened gelatin, mixing well. Let the gelatin and chocolate cool slightly and then stir in ½ cup (100g) of whipped cream to temper. Add the Pate a Bombe.
6. Add in the rest of the Whipped cream (220g) mixing gently with a spatula.

Note: I think one of our first missteps was with this element. Yeah, right around step #2b. Because when we added the sugar "syrup" to the egg yolks, the sugar hardened in clumps. So, no, there was no mixing of the two. In fact, to be honest, I dished the sugar clumps out with a spoon and tossed them! HA!

**ELEMENT #3 - DARK CHOCOLATE GANACHE INSERT

Preparation time: 10 minutes

Equipment:
Pan, whisk. If you have plunging mixer (a vertical hand mixer used to make soups and other liquids), it comes in handy.

Because the ganache hardens as it cools, you should make it right before you intend to use it to facilitate piping it onto the log during assembly. Please be careful when caramelizing the sugar and then adding the cream. It may splatter and boil.

Ingredients:
1.75 oz (4 Tbsp / 50g) Granulated sugar
4.5oz (2/3 cup – 1 Tbsp/ 135g) Heavy cream (35% fat content)
5 oz (135g) Dark chocolate, finely chopped
3Tbsp + 1/2tsp (45g) Unsalted butter softened

Method:
1. Make a caramel: Using the dry method, melt the sugar by spreading it in an even layer in a small saucepan with high sides. Heat over medium-high heat, watching it carefully as the sugar begins to melt. Never stir the mixture. As the sugar starts to melt, swirl the pan occasionally to allow the sugar to melt evenly. Cook to dark amber color (for most of you that means darker than last month’s challenge).
2. While the sugar is melting, heat the cream until boiling. Pour cream into the caramel and stir thoroughly. Be very careful as it may splatter and boil.
3. Pour the hot caramel-milk mixture over the dark chocolate. Wait 30 seconds and stir until smooth.
4. Add the softened butter and whip hard and fast (if you have a plunging mixer use it). The chocolate should be smooth and shiny.

Note: no problems here, fortunately!!

**ELEMENT #4 - PRALINE FEUILLETE (CRISP) INSERT

Preparation time: 10 minutes

Equipment:

Small saucepan, baking sheet (if you make lace crepes). Double boiler (or one small saucepan in another), wax paper, rolling pin (or I use an empty bottle of olive oil).

Feuillete means layered (as in with leaves) so a Praline Feuillete is a Praline version of a delicate crisp.

Ingredients:
3.5 oz (100g) Milk chocolate
1 2/3 Tbsp (25g) Unsalted butter
2 Tbsp (1 oz / 30g) Praline
2.1oz (60g) Rice Krispies or Corn Flakes or Special K

Method:

1. Melt the chocolate and butter in a double boiler.
2. Add the praline and the coarsely crushed lace crepes. Mix quickly to thoroughly coat with the chocolate.
3. Spread between two sheets of wax paper to a size slightly larger than your desired shape. Refrigerate until hard.

Note: more problems here, Batman! We had neither praline nor Rice Krispies...but we did have some leftover candied slivered almonds. So we ground those up finely. Then we grabbed an individual box of sugary cereal from the school cafeteria and added that in. Hmmmm.....could that be why our praline turned out so hard that we couldn't cut through it when we went to slice the cake? Me thinks the recipe hosts could have been more specific as to the thickness they wanted. Oh, wait....I now see the recipe says this should resemble a "delicate" crisp. As in "Don't make it a quarter-inch thick, you dorks!" But just so you know, it looked and tasted great! HA!

**ELEMENT #5 - VANILLA CRÈME BRULÉE INSERT

Preparation time: 15 minutes + 1h infusing (unless you use vanilla extract) + 1h baking

Equipment:

Small saucepan, mixing bowl, baking mold, wax paper

The vanilla crème brulée can be flavored differently by simply replacing the vanilla with something else e.g. cardamom, lavender, etc...

Ingredients:
1/2 Cup (115g) Heavy cream (35% fat content)
1/2 Cup (115g) Whole milk
4 Medium-sized (72g) egg yolks
0.75 oz (2 Tbsp / 25g) Granulated sugar
1 Vanilla bean

Method:
1. Heat the milk, cream, and scraped vanilla bean to just boiling. Remove from the stove and let the vanilla infuse for about 1 hour.
2. Whisk together the sugar and egg yolks (but do not beat until white).
3. Pour the vanilla-infused milk over the sugar/yolk mixture. Mix well.
4. Wipe with a very wet cloth and then cover your baking mold (whatever shape is going to fit on the inside of your Yule log/cake) with parchment paper. Pour the cream into the mold and bake at 210°F (100°C) for about 1 hour or until firm on the edges and slightly wobbly in the center (You can bake it without a water bath since it is going to go inside the log - the aesthetics of it won't matter as much since it will be covered with other things - nonetheless it would be recommendable to use a water bath for the following reasons: you will get a much nicer mouth feel when it is done, you will be able to control its baking point and desired consistency much better - it bakes for such a long time that I fear it will get overdone without a water bath. Since it is baked in a pan and it is sometimes difficult to find another large pan to set it in for a water bath, even a small amount of water in your water bath will help the heat be distributed evenly in the baking process. Even as little as 1 inch will help).
5. Let cool and put in the freezer for at least 1 hour to firm up and facilitate the final assembly.

Note: I'm not gonna lie to you. We decided to skip the crème brulée step. Too much bother for so little return, we reasoned. Yeah...we might have been wrong about that. Because the banana mousse we made instead seemingly disappeared! Only a tiny smidgen was to be found when we sliced the cake. (I'm thinking this was an act by the Daring Baker Fairy, teaching us to never, ever, skip a step in future challenges!)

**ELEMENT #6 - DARK CHOCOLATE ICING

Preparation time: 25 minutes (10 minutes if you don’t count softening the gelatin)

Equipment:
 
Small bowl, small saucepan.

Because the icing gelifies quickly, you should make it at the last minute. For other gelatin equivalencies or gelatin to agar-agar equivalencies, look at the notes for the mousse component.

Ingredients:
4g / 1/2 Tbsp Powdered gelatin or 2 sheets gelatin
1/4 Cup (60g) heavy cream (35 % fat content)
2.1 oz (5 Tbsp / 60g) Granulated sugar
1/4 Cup (50g) Water 1/3 Cup (30g) unsweetened cocoa powder

Method:
1. Soften the gelatin in cold water for 15 minutes.
2. Boil the rest of the ingredients and cook an additional 3 minutes after boiling.
3. Add gelatin to the chocolate mixture. Mix well
4. Let cool while checking the texture regularly. As soon as the mixture is smooth and coats a spoon well (it is starting to gelify), use immediately.

Note: the only problem here is that the recipe didn't make nearly enough to cover our log. We had to stop and make a second batch, just when we were ready to ice our frozen log. Pop! Back into the freezer with you, stat!

**ASSEMBLING THE LOG

1) Dacquoise
2) Mousse
3) Crème Brulée Insert
4) Mousse
5) Praline/Crisp Insert
6) Mousse
7) Ganache Insert

Here are the assembly steps, accompanied by our photos:

A) Cut the Dacquoise into a shape fitting your mold and set it in there. If you are using an actual Yule mold which is in the shape of a half-pipe, you want the Dacquoise to cover the entire half-pipe portion of the mold.


B) Pipe one third of the Mousse component on the Dacquoise.



C) Take the Crème Brulée Insert out of the freezer at the last minute and set on top of the mousse. Press down gently to slightly ensconce it in the mousse.


D) Pipe second third of the Mousse component around and on top of the Crème Brulée Insert.


E) Cut the Praline/Crisp Insert to a size slightly smaller than your mold so that it can be surrounded by mousse. Lay it on top of the mousse you just piped into the mold.




F) Pipe the last third of the Mousse component on top of the Praline Insert.

G) Freeze for a few hours to set. Take out of the freezer.

H) Pipe the Ganache Insert onto the frozen mousse leaving a slight edge so that ganache doesn’t seep out when you set the Dacquoise on top. (Note: oops! we were supposed to pipe the ganache!)



I) Close with the last strip of Dacquoise. (Note: we surrounded ours with extra mousse.)


J) Freeze until the next day.

The next day (or, in our case, two days later!):

1. Unmold the cake/log and set on a wire rack over a shallow pan.


2. Cover the cake with the icing. (Note: yeah, this is where we really made a boo-boo. The icing had cooled just enough that when we tried to pour it over the frozen log, the icing set. Yuck!)


So we hurried back to the stove to make another batch (a double this time!). But then we obviously didn't let it cool enough, because when we poured it onto the log, it began melting the log. "I'm melting! I'm melting!"


3. Next you're supposed to decorate the still-frozen log....but we lost heart after watching it start to pool away. So we decided to cut our losses and cut the log to see how the layers looked. As you can see, they're decidedly unappetizing! Thus, our pronouncement of, "We've created a turd log!"


Oh, well! The experience wasn't a total wash: we DID learn to make Dacquoise, for one thing. HA! And we learned a bit about layering different textures, and especially about being mindful of thicknesses. All good stuff. 

Too, as our challenge hosts reminded our group of courageous bakers, "the spirit of the group is to try new things and to stretch your baking limits, trying it and challenging yourself is what matters, not whether you had a perfect outcome or loved the taste of the outcome (although the taste thing would obviously be preferable)."

Ummm....yeah. But when you're dealing with a recipe this expensive, it would be great to see it turn out. ;-)

Don't worry, I'm still gonna show you some eye candy!!!

If you want to see this dessert in a perfect form, jump onto the Saffron & Blueberry (this month's hosts) blog. Their yule log is gosh-darn beautiful, though I will make one observation: their "dark chocolate" mousse insert looks decidedly like vanilla, and their "creme brulee" insert looks like it's made with chocolate. Perhaps they switched things up???

Here are some links to other Daring Baker bloggers who had more success with this month's challenge. You'll learn a lot if you take the time to read their comments.  ;-)

Life After Gluten

NOW you're drooling, right?!!!

10 comments:

AJ said...

I am sure it was delicious!!

Apu

http://annarasaessenceoffood.blogspot.com/2008/12/piquant-sweet-lemon-chocolate-yule-log.html

Sheri Ann said...

It was very, very rich. But what can I say? I LOVE chocolate! ;-)

Sheri

Gretchen Noelle said...

Sorry it didn't turn out as beautifully as you would have liked, but I am sure the taste was superb! Great effort on your first DB challenge. Welcome to the Daring Bakers!

Christine said...

This was my first challenge as well. It was a doozy! I'm sorry yours didn't come out the way you'd hoped. But we get points for trying, right?

breadchick said...

Well done and that is exactly what the Daring Bakers is about, learning new techniques. Welcome to Daring Bakers!

Sheri Ann said...

Thanks for the nice comments, everyone!

Onward and upward to the next Daring Bakers challenge!!

Belle

Natalie said...

Thanks for stopping by! Wow, what a doozy for your first challenge! :) I had the same problem with the icing... which is why I only put a cross-section photo in. Ha. I'm sure yours tasted wonderful!

Natalie

Deeba PAB said...

Well done on the first challenge fellow DB. You took me back to my frst one on Lemon Meringue Pies,where I wept copiuos tears with a weepy custard! I think you've done a darned good job too; this was an involved first challenge! GOOD FOR YOU!! Cheers Deeba

Dayna said...

WOW - Certainly a dozy of a first challenge. I LOVE the way you wrote this up. I have way more fun reading everyone's "live and learn" comments as opposed to all those who get it just right.

I think yours looked amazing...and made me have a total DUH moment...I couldn't get past trying to figure out what type of mold I would have laying around...have to say the bread pan never crossed my mind. This is the first challenge that I sat out....personal reasons though - not out of fear :) I think your photos will be very handy if I ever give this one a whirl in the future.

Welcome again to the DB'ers and especially the Buffalo DB'ers circle. Looking forward to next month~

Rico said...

Looks amazing the whole process and no doubt delicious, quite a long process though...Happy Valentine's and Thanx for sharing loved it