Recipe: Crepe Cake

My instragrammed crepe cake

Makes: 8 inch cake (24 layers)

Time required: 3 hours

Difficulty: ★★★☆☆

Inspiration:

Having never made crepes or pancakes before (well … not cooking much in a pan at all), I was keen to try making a crepe cake. I’ve always loved the crepe cakes from the famous Lady M – stopping by the Lady M boutique on 40th street each time I’ve visited New York and I still remember how excited I was to stumble across a Lady M on a trip to Singapore where I got to introduce my sister (who is a huge fan of matcha) to the matcha crepe cake.

Initially, given it was my first time making crepes I wanted to keep the cake simple – like the Lady M ones – by just making it layers of crepe and cream. However, after exploring the nearby wet market in Hong Kong for fresh fruits I came home with a bunch of passionfruit and decided to incorporate those into the cake. I ended up with a crepe cake layered with passionfruit custard and chocolate ganache – as you could probably guess from my previous posts (passionfruit & chocolate eclairs, passionfruit & chocolate tart …) it is one of my favourite flavour combinations!

Elements of this cake:

  • 24 crepes (~8 inch in diameter)
  •  passionfruit custard
  • chocolate ganache
The Famous Lady M crepe cakes in New York
The Famous Lady M crepe cakes in New York

Ingredients:

Crepes (makes ~24 depending on the size of your pan)

  • 600ml whole milk
  • 1tsbp vanilla paste
  • 2tsbp brandy
  • 5 egg yolks
  • 50g caster sugar
  • 90g butter
  • 300g all purpose flour

Passionfruit Custard:

  • 700ml whole milk
  • 3 eggs
  • 3 egg yolks
  • 200g caster sugar
  • 65g cornstarch
  • 1tsbp vanilla
  • 85g butter
  • 4 passionfruits, seeds removed

Chocolate Ganache:

  • 100g dark chocolate
  • 100ml cream

 

Instructions:

I’d recommend making the custard first, so it has time to cool in the fridge while you’re frying the crepes

Crepes:

  1. place all the ingredients except flour into a blender and blend on med speed
  2. add in the flour and blend again until well combined
  3. refrigerate for 2 hours (or overnight)
  4. lightly spray or grease a small pan (~8inch in diameter) and fry the crepe batter on medium heat. I used around 1/4 cup of batter for each crepe
  5. allow the crepes to cool by spreading on parchment paper while making the rest of the crepes
My first time frying crepes
My first time frying crepes

Passionfruit custard:

  1. place the whole eggs, egg yolks and cornstarch with 20g of the sugar in a bowl and whisk until smooth
  2. in a large saucepan, combine milk, remaining sugar and vanilla and bring to a boil
  3. remove from the heat and slowly pour in half the hot milk into the egg mixture while whisking to avoid cooking the eggs
  4. pour the milk and egg mixture back into the pot and heat until the mixture lightly bubbles
  5. remove from heat and stir in the passionfruit and butter
  6. pour the custard through a fine mesh and plastic wrap with the plastic touching the surface of the custard and store in the fridge to cool

Chocolate Ganache:

  1. bring cream to boil
  2. poor over chocolate and set aside for 2 mins. Stir together the melted chocolate and cream

Assembling the crepe cake:

  1. take one crepe and place it on a 8 inch cake board
  2. spread a thin layer of chocolate ganache over the crepe
  3. follow with a thin layer of passionfruit custard
  4. place the next crepe over the top and repeat until all the crepes are used up

You could also trim the edges of the crepes to a 8inch cake tin if you want cleaner edges, however I preferred the natural rough edges on my cake. I also coated the top of the cake in sugar and torched it for a bruleed finish

Thin layer of chocolate ganache
Thin layer of chocolate ganache
thin layer of passionfruit custard
thin layer of passionfruit custard
repeat until all layers of crepes have been assembled
repeat until all layers of crepes have been assembled
IMG_8184
torching the crepe cake
IMG_8202
experimenting with decorating the crepe cake
IMG_8278
My instragrammed crepe cake

 

Instagram: Whatever_It_Bakes

Christmas Baking: Croquembouche

Christmas Croquembouche

Having completed my practice croquembouche in Hong Kong several weeks ago, it was time to bake another croquembouche for family Christmas dinner. See earlier post for the full recipe and croquembouche made in Hong Kong.

For this croquembouche for Christmas day, I made several adjustments to the decorations – instead of randomly scattered profiteroles coated in coconut and crushed peanuts, this one contains layers of coconut and plain profiteroles.

My practice croquembouche also didn’t have any spun caramel as I wanted to keep the tower relatively neat. However, after several complaints about it not being a ‘real’ croquembouche without the spun caramel, I did manage to drape some caramel neatly around the profiterole tower. This caramel later melted due to the 35degree heat in Melbourne on Christmas day 😦

Overall, the family was very happy with Christmas dessert – from admiring the tower during dinner to eating the 80 leftover profiteroles several days after Christmas. The only bad feedback was from my sister-in-law who wasn’t too happy that I took the tower apart.

Now, to decide what to bake for Christmas next year …

Instagram: Whatever_It_Bakes

Recipe: Passionfruit & Meringue Eclairs

passionfruit chocolate meringue eclair recipe

Makes: 15 eclairs

Time required: 2 hours

Difficulty: ★★☆☆☆

Inspiration:

Since moving to Hong Kong in February this year, I have been baking using a portable oven (besides my trips back to Melbourne). For those of you who haven’t lived in Hong Kong before … the apartments are small and most apartments have tiny kitchens without ovens. Although this portable oven (around the size of an Australian microwave) is great for cooking and basic cakes, the temperature isn’t very even or reliable so I haven’t been brave enough to try baking macarons in Hong Kong. But I am dying to bake some sort of pastry … so I decided to try a choux pastry!

My favourite eclairs are the salted caramel ones from Chez Dre in Melbourne and the world-famous eclairs from Sadaharu Aoki in Tokyo. Having no prior concept of what makes choux pastry puff, I’ve always marvelled at how patisseries manage to fill the eclair with custard without cutting the eclair open. Turns out it’s quite simple! 🙂

img_0848
My portable oven in Hong Kong – great for basic baking but I haven’t been brave enough to test macarons in this

Ingredients:

Passionfruit custard:

  • 200g passionfruit, seeds removed
  • 350ml milk
  • 2tsp vanilla been paste
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 100g caster sugar
  • 50g cornstarch
  • 20g unsalted butter

Choux pastry:

  • 125g bread flour, sifted
  • 100ml milk
  • 100ml water
  • 10g sugar
  • 1tsp salt
  • 100g unsalted butter
  • 4 eggs

Chocolate ganache:

  • 200g chocolate
  • 150ml cream

Meringue:

  • 2 egg whites
  • 180g caster sugar
  • 65ml water

Instructions:

Passionfruit custard:

  1. whisk sugar and egg yolks until pale.
  2. whisk in the cornstarch
  3. heat milk and passionfruit over low-med heat until simmering
  4. pour 1/3 of the milk/passionfruit into the egg yolk mixture whilst whisking, then pour the entire mixture back into the rest of the milk/passionfruit
  5. place back on low heat, stirring constantly until the custard thickens
  6. remove from heat and stir in the vanilla paste and butter
  7. cover in glad wrap with the glad wrap touching the surface and set aside to chill in the fridge while making the eclair shells

Choux pastry

  1. Preheat oven to 200°C
  2. Place the water, milk, butter, sugar and salt into a saucepan over low heat
  3. Once the mixture just comes to a boil, take off the heat, pour in all the flour and mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon (it should now look like mashed potato)
  4. Place the mixture back on low heat and continue to mix for another 2-3mins until the dough forms a ball and comes away from the sides of the pan
  5. Pour the dough into a bowl and mix with wooden spoon to cool slightly before adding the eggs
  6. Add the eggs one at a time and ensure each egg is well incorporated before adding the next egg. This allows greater control over the amount of egg to ensure the mixture doesn’t become too runny from too much egg
  7. The mixture is ready when you lift the wooden spoon and the dough slowly falls off the spoon
  8. Place dough into a piping bag fitted with a 1cm star nozzle lines around 10-12cm long. Be sure to leave enough space between for the eclairs to expand in the oven
  9. Bake for 10mins at 200°C and then reduce the temperature to 180°C and bake for another 20mins
  10. once removed from the oven, use a toothpick to poke a whole through each meringue to let the steam out. This prevents the eclair shell from becoming soggy or sinking
  11. set aside to completely cool before adding in the custard
img_2834
Piped choux pastry ready to go into the oven
img_2835
Choux pastry puffing up in the oven

Chocolate ganache:

  1. Bring cream to boil and pour over dark chocolate. Set aside for 2 minutes
  2. Mix in the melted chocolate with the cream
  3. stir in the butter, and set aside to cool slightly

Assembling the eclairs:

  1. once the shells have completely cooled, poked three holes evenly spaced along the top of the eclair
  2. place the custard into a piping bag fitted with a long narrow tip and fill each eclair with custard through the three holes
  3. coat the top of the eclair in chocolate ganache using a spatula

Many blogs tell you to poke the holes and fill the eclairs from the botton of the eclair shell however I prefer to pipe it through the top so I can cover up the holes with ganache.

img_2844
Eclairs coated in chocolate ganache

Meringue:

  1. whisk egg whites until foamy
  2. heat sugar and water over low-med heat until the syrup reaches 120ºC
  3. while whisking the eggs, pour the sugar syrup in a thin stream down the side of the whisking bowl
  4. continue to whisk the eggs until it form stiff peaks
  5. place the meringue into a piping bag fitted with a petal tip and pipe the meringue onto the eclairs. you could also use other piping tips to create other patterns
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Carefully piping the meringue onto the eclairs
img_2843
nom nom … all that delicious meringue
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
torching the meringue

To finish … torch the meringue and decorate the eclairs with raspberries and mint leaves 🙂

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Finished eclairs!! Photo: IG __Salpal__
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
ready to be eaten … so delicious :p … Photo: IG __Salpal__

 

Instagram: Whatever_It_Bakes

Recipe: Christmas Croquembouche

Christmas croquembouche baking recipe

Makes: 80-100 profiteroles, serves 15 – 30 people

Time required: 3 hours for the choux pastry, another 2 hours for filling and assembly

Difficulty: ★★★★☆ … Moderate to Difficult. Each step is relatively simple, however it takes time and patience to bring the whole thing together

Challenge:

After baking four cakes for Christmas dinner last year, I needed to bake something bigger and better for Christmas this year. However, an added challenge this year is that I am now living in Hong Kong and will only have one day to bake Christmas dessert once I arrive back home in Melbourne on Christmas Eve. This means I need something that can be baked in less than one day, can feed a family of 9 and also satisfies the requests I usually get from family: coffee, coconut, sweet, not too sweet … and of course it needs to have a touch of Christmas.

Enter croquembouche: makes ~80-100 profiteroles and can feed 15-30 people, it can be decorated to resemble a Christmas tree and you can make a range of fillings to meet every request … AND they look SPECTACULAR.

Inspiration:

I first saw croquembouche as an Adriano Zumbo challenge on Masterchef Australia several years ago. Touted as a very difficult challenge on Masterchef, I never even thought about making a croquembouche until several weeks ago when I was desperately thinking up Christmas ideas.

Having never baked profiteroles before, I read several blogs, watched a range of youtube videos and viewed countless Instagram photos in search of inspiration for decorating to make it fit the Christmas theme.

I decided to use my eclair recipe for the choux pastry. As for decorating, I went for a ‘cleaner’ croquembouche without the caramel strings and added pops of texture by coating some profiteroles in coconut or crushed peanuts. I also found some lovely ribbon at the Eslite Bookstore in Hong Kong to top off the croquembouche.

This post details my ‘practice’ croquembouche … I will be making the real one on Christmas Eve and will upload an update post-Christmas 🙂

Ingredients:

Choux Pastry (makes ~100 profiteroles):

  • 310g bread flour, sifted
  • 250ml water
  • 250ml milk
  • 250g butter
  • 30g caster sugar
  • 8-10 eggs
  • 2tsp salt

Custard filling:

  • 950ml milk
  • 8 egg yolks
  • 120g caster sugar
  • 80g corn starch
  • 30g unsalted butter
  • 2tsp vanilla bean paste

For decorating:

  • 500g sugar to assemble the croquembouche
  • 200g crushed peanuts
  • 100g shredded coconut

Note: you could also use sugar crystals, pearls or anything else you would like to decorate the individual profiteroles

Instructions:

Choux pastry:

  1. Preheat oven to 200°C
  2. Place the water, milk, butter, sugar and salt into a saucepan over low heat
  3. Once the mixture just comes to a boil, take off the heat, pour in all the flour and mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon (it should now look like mashed potato)
  4. Place the mixture back on low heat and continue to mix for another 2-3mins until the dough forms a ball and comes away from the sides of the pan
  5. Pour the dough into a bowl and mix with wooden spoon to cool slightly before adding the eggs
  6. Add the eggs one at a time and ensure each egg is well incorporated before adding the next egg. This allows greater control over the amount of egg to ensure the mixture doesn’t become too runny from too much egg
  7. The mixture is ready when you lift the wooden spoon and the dough slowly falls off the spoon
  8. Place dough into a piping bag fitted with a 1cm plain round nozzle and pipe balls around 2-2.5cm in diameter
  9. Dip a fork into water and slightly flatten the piped circles. The fork indents also reduce cracking in the oven
  10. Bake for 10mins at 200°C and then reduce the temperature to 180°C and bake for another 20mins

Custard filling:

  1. Whisk together egg yolks and sugar until pale
  2. Add in the cornstarch and whisk
  3. Place milk over low-med heat until it comes to a light boil
  4. Remove milk from heat and pour 1/3 of the milk into the egg mixture while continually whisking
  5. Pour the egg mixture into the remaining 2/3 of the milk and place back on low heat. Continue to whisk until the custard thickens
  6. Stir in butter and vanilla
  7. Transfer this to a bowl to cool – at this stage you could also break the custard into smaller batches and create several flavours by whisking in melted dark chocolate, fruit puree or coffee syrup
  8. Cover in glad wrap (with the glad wrap touching the surface of the custard) and refrigerate until it’s time to assemble the croquembouche.

Assembling the croquembouche:

  1. Transfer the custard into a piping bag fitted with a long piping tip and fill each profiterole with custard. Be sure to poke the piping tip through the side of the profiterole which will be facing the inside of the croquembouche
  2. Melt sugar over low heat until all the sugar is melted and is a light amber colour (you could also make a sugar syrup by adding water). Carefully dip the bottom of each profiterole and place the toffee side up on the tray to dry – at this stage I also coated around half of the profiteroles with either shredded coconut or crushed peanuts
  3.  Trace a circle template on a sheet of baking paper
  4. Construct the croquembouche by carefully lining the profiteroles around the circle; sticking each profiterole together using the toffee ‘glue’
img_3402
The finished product!!

Tips for serving:

  • The profiteroles can be cut away from the tower using a pair of scissors
  • I also pulled together a bowl of dark chocolate ganache (150g dark chocolate, 100ml cream) for guests to dip the profiteroles into while serving
img_3408
Cut the croquembouche with scissors

 

Instagram: Whatever_It_Bakes