One of the nicest things, so far, about cooking my way through Dorie’s Around My French Table with the wonderful French Fridays with Dorie gang is that I usually have all or most of the ingredients already on hand. It’s so nice! Take this double chocolate mousse cake. I didn’t need to get anything for it. The ingredient list is very short – chocolate, eggs, sugar, coffee, butter, salt. That’s IT.
And it’s a good thing, because I made this, along with last week’s gnocchi, last Wednesday, which was A Day Of Much Snow in these parts, and no one was going anywhere.
By the way, to make the strong coffee or espresso called for in this recipe, I even used our French press.
Aren’t I cool? Not really – it was Bill’s idea.
Okay, so once I had the coffee brewed, I was ready to start. I’d already buttered my springform pan (minus the base) and set that on a parchment-lined pan.
I put the springform upside-down, because I didn’t want the batter getting stuck in that little ridge where the base fits in. In hindsight, I’m not sure if that was the best plan. You’ll see.
Okay, next, time to melt the chocolate…
Then I poured in the coffee, but there’s no picture, so you’ll just have to take my word for it…
And then, piece by piece, I stirred in the butter.
And the sugar.
And the yolks.
Oh, lush, chocolatey goodness!
And then I whipped the whites…
Whisked a quarter of the whites into the chocolate mixture…
And, finally, I folded in the rest of the meringue.
YUMMMMMMMMMMMM.
Light, lovely, chocolatey goodness.
And then my brain shut off.
I poured ALL of it into the springform. Yes, I really did. Dolt. I even put it all in the oven…and then I looked at the mousse-less counter and thought – in speeded up slo-mo “wait…aren’t I supposed to put something in the refrig-!!!!” And then I pulled the pan out and scooped a bunch of the mousse out of the pan and into a bowl.
MORON. Me, not you.
Anyway, I slid the pan back into the oven and wondered how it would all turn out NOW THAT I’D RUINED IT.
Yes, my thoughts are usually overly dramatic like that.
Anyway, here’s what the base looked like:
Like the surface of the moon, if the moon was made of chocolate rather than cheese.
It smelled good.
Oh, and see the leaking?
Not sure if I caused that when I was yanking the pan around, or if it leaked because the top of the ring flares out, and I was using the top as the bottom.
But not too much of it leaked. And I cleaned it all up by breaking the leaked bits off and eating them.
Yum.
Now, after reading ALLLLLLLLLL of the variations on the next step – adding the rest of the chilled mousse…to bake again or not to bake…to chill for a long time or just dig in with a spoon…all of that, I decided to go with what Dorie says is her favorite method.
So once the pan had cooled, I put that in the fridge for an hour.
Then I poured the rest of the chilled mousse into the pan and baked that for half an hour.
I worried that a lot of the meringue had possibly deflated during all my scooping-back-out-of-the-pan drama. But…I figured if I’d ruined it, I could always make it again.
Here’s how it looked after half an hour in the oven:
The surface was dry and crisp looking, and some doubting part of my mind worried that ALL of it was dried out and crispy. It would probably taste good…but…weren’t there supposed to be two distinct layers?
Hmmm.
Well, we’d find out. I let the cake cool to room temperature and then put it in the fridge to chill for 4 hours.
Tick tock tick tock tick tock tick tock.
Ding!!
Four hours later…
I ran a knife around the edge of the cake and removed the springform.
Hm. Well, some of it looked like this:
But…some of it looked like this:
I was optimistic.
I served slices to everyone.
And.
Oooooooh. Aaaaaaah.
And best of all,
Two! Distinct! Layers!
Most of the cake was a lush, creamy mousse, and the very bottom was light and crisp.
The top that LOOKED so crispy and made me worry the whole thing was going to crunch was, in reality, papery thin.
Everyone agreed – this was very, very good.
Once again, thank you, Dorie, for giving us such a yummy recipe!
And to see what all the other French Fridays members thought of this week’s choice, click here and look at all the links.
Try not to drool on your keyboard.
LOVE your plate!! And your photos are gorgeous...such a keeper!!!
Posted by: Lizzy | January 21, 2011 at 08:23 AM
Still not sure where my layers went... Paris, maybe. :)
Don't you love it when you can rescue a mistake and it still comes out incredible. (Not that it happens to me all that often, but still. Love your photos, too!
Audrey
Posted by: Audrey | January 21, 2011 at 09:03 AM
Looks yummy! Started drooling already... Mmmmmh. I might just give it a try this weekend. Maxbe take it with me to rehearsals on Sunday in order to protect myself from eating it all by myself.
Posted by: Annette | January 21, 2011 at 09:38 AM
YOU are a temptress with all those beautiful pictures. I think I didn't get any leaking because I used a silpat.. Looks very yummy B:)
Posted by: beth @thescrrenporch | January 21, 2011 at 09:55 AM
Hmmm. Do you know whether the receipe can be found on the internet somewhere?
Posted by: Annette | January 21, 2011 at 10:24 AM
I have no idea. You might try Dorie Greenspans site, but everyone participating in French Fridays has agreed not to post the recipe. The book is wonderful and well worth the price, which can be found on Amazon or Barnes Noble or wherever at a discount.
Posted by: Jayne | January 21, 2011 at 10:31 AM
You may have discovered a recipe on accident.Looks good to me.
Posted by: Alana D | January 21, 2011 at 11:05 AM
Too bad. So no choclate mousse cake for me this weekend. Living in Germany, I'll probably have to order the book in the store tomorrow and everything's closed on Sundays.
Next week, then.
Posted by: Annette | January 21, 2011 at 12:02 PM
Yummy! Love all your process photos, too! :)
Posted by: Jessica of My Baking Heart | January 21, 2011 at 12:25 PM
Great documentation of the process. I appreciate the closeup. My cake had just one texture, not two :( Nice job!
Posted by: Laura | January 21, 2011 at 01:34 PM
I do like the distinct layers of your cake. That's how I confirmed that I hadn't messed up! That's a good idea to use your French press. I hadn't even thought about that, but that's because I just used instant coffee.
Posted by: yummychunklet | January 21, 2011 at 01:36 PM
I love the fact that I haven't had to buy anything for the last 2 week's recipes either. Your cake looks fab - you retrieved it in the nick of time. And I bet it would have turned out Ok the other way too- still chocolate mouser cake, just a different texture. It's cool when it all works out, isn't it!
Posted by: Cakelaw | January 21, 2011 at 05:41 PM
that's super cool that you got two distinct layers. i know i did something wrong because i couldn't tell the layers apart. oh well! nice job!
Posted by: josefa | January 21, 2011 at 08:01 PM
Great cake. I left the top layer uncooked. It was delicious but I don't think it is as pretty that way. I will make this again.
Posted by: kitchenarian | January 21, 2011 at 09:50 PM
Your cake looks great! I got the nice layers, too, although mine were really flat. It tasted great, though.
Posted by: Gaaarp.wordpress.com | January 21, 2011 at 09:51 PM
Fabulous.
Posted by: chocolatechic | January 22, 2011 at 06:38 AM
I think it would have been a "grande experiment" to cook it all at the same time? (Actually, I was very tempted to do that when I made it) Glad it worked out in the end for you.
Posted by: Cher | January 23, 2011 at 11:38 AM
I was noticing how I seem to have everything on hand for these recipes too. I haven't had to buy anything out of the ordinary so far. I love your layers!
Posted by: Ronda Kisner | January 23, 2011 at 07:14 PM
Your process sounds like something I would do. :) Glad everyone liked this so much!
Posted by: Karen | January 24, 2011 at 10:45 PM