You can see why I was getting bleary eyed by mid-afternoon. This post will focus on the numerous ganaches that we made. First, Chef introduced us to a cool way to prep ganache frames. He has a bunch of 1/2" thick plexiglass that is cut to the size of his sheet pans. We then wiped those with a moist towel and lined them with acetate. Tempered milk chocolate was then thinly wiped over the acetate just wider than the frame. The frame is then set into the chocolate firmly and since its tempered seals the frame to the base making it water-tight.
With that set-up you'll see all the different ganaches we made. All of them follow the same basic process. Here's Mexican Vanilla Ganache:
630 g Cream 35%
120 g Butter 85%
8 Mexican vanilla beans
50 g Sorbitol
40 g Dextrose
400 g 65% Chocolate
215 g 38% Chocolate
20 g Vanilla extract
10 g Mycryo cocoa butter (1% of total weight)
1 g Soy lecithin liquid
Split beans. Put cream and butter in a sauce pan. Many say butter should go in at the end, but Chef disagrees. There is no structural reason for leaving it til the end and Chef believes that adding it now increases the emulsification process. Warm and add the dextrose, sorbitol and vanilla beans and extract. Ideally, steep covered for 24 hours then re-warm. Melt the chocolate and then add the warm cream mix and process in a food processor or with a stick blender. Mixing by hand can lead to separation. Finally, add the mycryo and pour into the frame, leveling and removing air bubbles.
Pistachio Marzipan
500 g Marzipan
135 g Simple syrup
25 g Kirsch
165 g Pistachio paste
115 g Mycryo cocoa butter
In processor, add each ingredient in order until smooth and homogeneous.
Chef then covered the pistachio marzipan with Lemon Ganache.
360 g Cream 35%
256 g Butter 85%
300 g Lemon juice
40 g Lemon peel
150 g Sorbitol powder
288 g Pasteurized egg yolk
65 g Inverted sugar
396 g 38% Chocolate
840 g 65% Chocolate
60 g Mycryo cocoa butter
Mojito Ganache
350 g Cream
180 g Lime purée
20 g Sorbitol
200 g Inverted sugar
175 g Butter
810 g 65% Chocolate
85 g White rum
8 g Mint
10 g Cocoa butter
Kona Hawaiian Coffee Ganache
550 g Cream
100 g Sorbitol powder
215 g Dextrose
160 g Butter
220 g Glucose
5 g Lechithin liquid
640 g 65% Chocolate
235 g Kona Coffee
20 g Mycryo cocoa butter
Earl Grey Tea Ganache
650 g Milk
80 g Tea
600 g 38% Chocolate
300 g 65% Chocolate
110 g Butter
95 g Sorbitol powder
50 g Dextrose
25 g Mycryo cocoa butter
I'm crashing so I'll finish up tomorrow with caramels and nougats.
Craft Republic – Albuquerque, New Mexico
1 week ago
4 comments:
this looks awesome! i am so jealous. i want to go to a pastry forum... the ganaches look incredible, i will be trying these recipes soon!
Let me know how they turn out. I'm off to day 2!
Hello again Gfron,
I'm going to try and have some ganache frames made like the ones you showed for the World Pastry Forum 2010 and I was hoping you could answer a few questions. When you did multiple layers of ganache, were several frames able to be stacked one on top of the other, or did you just fill one half way, let it crystallize then fill it up with the second ganache? If you did stack them, how did you keep them stable while filling the second ganache. I noticed that you had a smaller frame as well, was it also 1/2" thick like the others? Thanks again for posting your experiences at the World Pasty Day, they have been tremendously helpful!
When you have them made - be sure of how thick/tall you want them to be...maybe a combination of thicknesses. The glass shop needs to be very precise in the internal cuts so that they align perfectly. If they do that, they will not slip or move. Don't try to half fill because it won't be consistent thickness. I think mine cost about $15 each.
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