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Extract from Le Cordon Bleu's Pastry School • By Le Cordon Bleu • Published by Grub Street Publishing
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COST DIFFICULTY TIME
Equipment required: 17 x 17 cm baking frame – 6-cm diameter biscuit cutter – 4-cm diameter biscuit cutter
2 piping bags – mould with 7-cm diameter half-sphere cavities – 8-cm diameter biscuit cutter
Posted by Grub Street Publishing • Published 30th September 2018 • See Grub Street Publishing's 37 projects » © 2019 Le Cordon Bleu / Grub Street Publishing · Reproduced with
permission.
PRINT • EMBED
30 Sep 09:00
Grub Street Publishing published her project Chocolate And Blackcurrant Domes
Step 1
Preheat the oven to 200°C (gas mark 6). Whisk the eggs with the sugar. Melt the chocolate, add the butter and mix. Incorporate the egg and sugar
mixture. Add the creme de cassis and potato starch and mix.
Step 2
Set the frame on a baking tray lined with baking parchment and fill with the mixture. Spread out well and bake for 5 minutes. Leave to cool.
Step 3
Keep the oven temperature at 200°C. Mix together the dry ingredients. Whisk the eggs with the sugar in a bowl. Incorporate the dry ingredients,
followed by the melted butter.
Step 4
Spread the mixture over a baking tray lined with baking parchment to form a square about 22 x 22 cm. Bake for 8 minutes and leave to cool.
Step 5
Lay a sheet of baking parchment over the cold “biscuit” sponge, turn over and and remove the parchment from what was initially the bottom. Use
the 6-cm biscuit cutter to cut out 12 discs.
Step 6
Remove the baking parchment from the “mi-cuit” cream chocolate filling inside the frame and place over another sheet of baking parchment. Run a
knife around the inside of the frame to cleanly remove the “mi-cuit” cream chocolate filling from the mould.
Step 7
Step 8
Soften the gelatine in a bowl of cold water. Combine the blackcurrant puree with the sugar in a pan and bring to the boil. Remove from the heat, and
whisk in the softened gelatine. Refrigerate.
Step 9
Combine the blackcurrant puree, water and sugar in a pan and bring to the boil while stirring with a whisk. Remove from the heat and add the crème
de cassis. Transfer to a bowl and refrigerate.
Step 10
Melt the chocolate over a bain-marie. Whisk the egg yolks in a bowl. Make a pate a bombe by combining the water and sugar in a pan and heating
until the temperature reads 118°C on the cooking thermometer. Pour the hot syrup into the egg yolks while whisking briskly until the mixture turns
pale, thickens, and cools down.
Step 11
Whip the cream until it is a little firm and add to the pate a bombe. Very gently mix.
Step 12
Pour a third of the mixture into the chocolate and mix with a whisk. Incorporate the remainder and mix until smooth. Transfer to a piping bag.
Step 13
Assembly
Pipe chocolate mousse into the mould cavities until one-third full.
Step 14
Use a tablespoon to spread the mousse over the sides of the cavities, then pipe a ball of mousse into the middle.
Step 15
Step 16
Step 17
Whisk the blackcurrant coulis to smooth, then fill a piping bag and cut off the end. Pipe a layer of coulis over the “mi-cuit” cream chocolate filling.
Step 18
Imbibe the Savoy “biscuit” sponge discs with the blackcurrant syrup and insert one into each cavity to close the domes.
Step 19
Press gently on the Savoy “biscuit” sponge, then smooth with surface with a palette knife to remove the excess mousse. Freeze for 3 hours.
Step 20
Preheat the oven to 170°C (gas mark 3–4). Lightly dust the work surface with flour. Roll out the sweet pastry dough (see pages 488 and 489) to
about a 2 mm thickness. Use the 8-cm biscuit cutter to cut out 12 discs. Bake for 15 minutes.
Step 21
Soften the gelatine leaves in a bowl of cold water. Combine the water, cream and honey in a pan and bring to the boil. Mix the sugar and cocoa
powder in a bowl, add to the pan and mix. Squeeze the gelatine to drain, whisk into the hot liquid, then pass through a sieve into a bowl.
Step 22
Cover the surface of the glaze with a sheet of cling film, then remove immediately to eliminate any bubbles. Leave to cool.
Step 23
Dip the bottom of the mould into a bowl of hot water to remove the domes from the mould, then transfer to a rack. Freeze for 10 minutes, then place
the rack over a Swiss roll tin.
Step 24
Pour the warm glaze over the domes. Pass a palette knife under each dome to remove the excess glaze, leaving a clean base.
Step 25
Use a small sieve to dust the pastry discs with icing sugar.
Step 26
Step 27
Chef’s tip
If you do not have a mould with half-sphere cavities, you can use what you have at home: a muffin tray, cups or small bowls lined with cling film.