Austria is a landlocked country situated in southern Central Europe. Slightly smaller than Maine, it occupies a territory of approximately 32,000 square miles, which includes much of the mountainous territory of the eastern Alps and the Danube region.
I settled on the Sachertorte, or Austrian Chocolate Cake -
It sounds hard to make, its actually quite easy:Egg whites & Chocolate batter
Frost first layer of cake with chocolate, then glaze entire cake with apricot preserves
And here's the best part- the finished product!!
Our assessment is that the cake is very good but didn't wow us. I like a dark chocolate, super rich, but not sweet cake. This one was made with semi-sweet chocolate, and I prefer bittersweet. Still, the apricot preserves added a nice tartness to the chocolate flavor, and with whipped cream, it'd be even better. Lastly, although the recipe didn't call for straining the apricot preserves, I would have, since the chunks of apricots looked a little lumpy under the chocolate glaze.
Recipe
- 6 eggs
- 1/2 cup butter, softened
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 4 ounces semi-sweet chocolate baking squares
- 1/2 cup flour
For the filling
- 4 ounces semi-sweet chocolate baking squares
- 1 tablespoon powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 1/2 cup apricot preserves
For the icing
- 1 cup powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoons cocoa powder
Directions
- Preheat oven to 325°F (170°C/Gas mark 3) and grease and line with parchment, or waxed paper, two 8-inch round cake pans.
- Separate the eggs. Put the whites in one bowl and the yolks in another. Beat the yolks until smooth.
- Beat the butter and sugar together with a wooden spoon until creamy. Stir in the egg yolks gradually.
- Break the chocolate into pieces and melt in double boiler over low heat or slowly in microwave (10 seconds, stir, 10 seconds, stir & continue until melted) Stir chocolate into the creamed mixture.
- Put the egg whites into a large bowl, or mixer fitted with a whip attachment, and whisk until they are firm and form soft peaks when you lift the whisk.
- Mix the flour into the chocolate mixture. Then one spoonful at a time, fold the egg whites into the cake batter with a metal spoon.
- Pour the mixture into the cake pans. Smooth the top with the back of your spoon and bake the cakes for 35 minutes.
- When baked, run a knife around the edge of the cakes to loosen and turn out onto a wire rack to cool.
- For Filling: Melt the chocolate in a bowl. Mix in powdered sugar and the butter. Use a knife to spread the chocolate paste onto one half of the cake. Then, put the other cake on top.
- Melt the preserves in a pan over a low heat. Spread it over the top and sides of the cake with a blunt knife.
- For Icing: Sift the cocoa powder and the powdered sugar into a bowl. Add water, a teaspoon at a time, until it reaches a spreading consistency then spread it all over the cake.
I'm ALL about desserts! This sounds good! I love apricot. I'm thinking raspberry might be a good option, too.
ReplyDeleteI think raspberry might even be better. If you use apricot, strain it, as it's a little lumpy under the chocolate glaze.
ReplyDeletethis looks yummy, and sweet-loving teenager, that is, "one who loves sweets", not "one who is sweet and loving", feels I could successfully- make this! We're going to give it a try w/ strained apricots. We LOVE apricots!
ReplyDeletego for it Beth!
ReplyDeleteThat actually looks delicious! I made an Armenian Orange Cake that you might enjoy. http://www.food.com/recipe/armenian-orange-cake-252911
ReplyDeletedid you say cake? did you say orange cake? YUMMMMM!
ReplyDelete