Sunday, February 8, 2009

Recipe: Chocolate Ravioli with White Truffle Ganache & Blood Orange Sauce


Each year before Valentine's Day our Mimbres Region Arts Council holds a Chocolate Fantasia fundraiser event. For $20 you get 20 handmade chocolates ranging from brownies and fudge to truflles and bon bons to confections that are a bit more exotic. My goal each year is to provide a show stopper. For my regular readers you can anticipate that I never do just chocolate. This year was no exception!

Inspired by Flagrantedelicia's chocolate tagliatelle, I morphed the pasta in ravioli, then filled it with a white truffle infused ganache, and dressed it up with blood orange sauce and cracked black pepper. First the pasta:

150g Wheat Flour
50g Semolina
2g Salt
3 Eggs
40g Powdered Sugar
50g Cocoa Powder, Natural
1C. Sugar

Whisk the flour, semolina and salt together. In separate bowl combine eggs, powdered sugar and cocoa. Pour egg mixture into dry ingredients and combine with a wood spoon and then fingers and work until thoroughly combined. Form into a ball, wrap in saran wrap and let it sit for a couple of hours or overnight.

Make your ganache:

150g Heavy cream
300g Chopped 70%+ Chocolate
15g White truffle oil (add more if you want it more intense)

Pour cream in a measuring cup and microwave until just starting to bubble. Immediately pour the chocolate in the cream and let rest for one minute. Using a small silicone spatula combine until shiny. As soon as you have a good sheen, add the oil and continue whisking/folding until thoroughly incorporated. Let rest until firm (one hour in the fridge or 3 hours on the counter).

If you want to make ravioli, roll out the dough as thin as you can either with a pasta maker or on a lightly floured counter. If you use a pasta maker, work toward the 6 setting. If you're rolling out go for 1/16". Also, feel free to make linguine strips and top them with the ganache meat balls although it won't be as much fun.

Once you have two strips rolled, brush the bottom (thinner of the two) with an egg wash. Using a melon baller, scoop a ball of ganache and set it in the center of the pasta strip.

Place the second strip of pasta on top and gently press to seal the ravioli. Using a ravioli press, seal the balls in. If you don't have a ravioli press (they're only about $5 each), then cut with a pizza cutter and seal with a fork. Let these sit in the open air for a few hours to dry or overnight.

Fill a stock pot with water and the granulated sugar. Bring to a full rolling boil. Add the ravioli one at a time and cook for about 8 minutes. I'm at higher altitude so you'll need to adjust your cooking time and temp.

Drizzle with blood orange sauce:

1 C. Blood orange juice, pulp removed
1 T. Corn starch
1 T. Butter

Bring juice to a simmer. Slurry the starch with a couple of tablespoons of warm water and whisk into the juice. Add the butter and whisk until combined. The sauce will thicken as it cools. Crack some pepper over the top and enjoy!

If you have leftover ganache, make balls and roll in crushed cacao nibs for a little treat while you watch your water boil.


11 comments:

Manggy said...

A showstopper indeed Rob! I didn't expect the event to be a sit-down for some reason, but this should wow everyone :) I suppose you could also use truffle butter to finish off the ganache :)

Gfron1 said...

It wasn't a sit down, I did that just for you :) I mean really, how ugly would it be to take a pic of a ravioli in a paper cup?!

Maggie said...

Wow, what a great idea.

Amy said...

Wow, very impressive! (Plus...yum!)

bethanyjoy said...

No Haz-Mat costumes? No secret corridors? I'm disappointed.

Gfron1 said...

yeah, I was missing the Langes yesterday.

Sara @ Our Best Bites said...

Wow, these look fantastic!

Anonymous said...

Holy geez those look amazing. If only I had a pasta machine...

Kristen616 said...

Wow these look amazing!

Gfron1 said...

wow - such a response! Thanks. Cocoazilla - If I didn't need to make so many of them I would have just rolled them out. Take a large golfball sized chunk of dough, work it with your hands into a rectangle, then place it between two silpats and roll. Every now and then lift the top silpat to check for uniformity of thickness and roll some more. Once you have it as thin as you think you can get, lay a dish towel underneath the silpat and roll some more - this will get you super thin. Then because the dough is so thin that it will be a bit fragile, peel the silpat off of the dough v. the dough off of the silpat.

pigpigscorner said...

oh this is amazing! The flavours sound awesome!