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Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Hungarian Eszterházy Torta (cake)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY To AVANATOR!!
(The other, more culinarily talented Californian sister who is posting on this yummy blog)

For today's birthday I have decided to make an Eszterházy Torta, another Victorian Era Hungarian delicacy of the layered variety. Although it looks at first glance similar to the Dobos, it is not - in fact it may be a little easier to make. It also happens to be my favourite of the two.

Ingredients (three part):

For the sponge layers:

* 5 egg whites
* 1 whole egg
* 210 grams of sugar
* 120 grams ground walnut
* 120 grams ground almond
* 50 grams flour
* 50 grams butter

For the cream filling:


* 4/5 cup milk
* 40 grams sugar
* 20 grams vanilla pudding powder (for cooking)
* 2 egg yolks
* 250 grams
* 1 cup of heavy cream
* 1 tbsp cognac
* 10 grams of gelatin
* 2/5 cup water

For the decoration:

* 80 grams sugar
* 1-2 tbsp lemon juice
* 10 grams melted cooking chocolate (black)
* 40 grams chopped almonds
* 3-4 tbsp apricot jam

Directions:

1) Beat the egg whites with the sugar until firm. All the ground walnut and almond, then slowly add the flour and finally the butter. The point is, you don't want to wreck your puffy egg whites, so add everything slowly.
2) Bake 1/6 of the batter in a round lightly buttered and floured baking tin (21 cm) at 180-200 degrees celcius for 3 minutes each. Watch them to make sure they do not burn. When they are done remove each layer and cool on pastry sheets.
3) While they cool, let's bake the filling. First, mix the pudding powder with the sugar, half of the milk, and the egg yolks.
4) Heat up the rest of the milk in a saucepan, then add the rest of the mixture to the saucepan. Once it has been heated, turn off the heat and let it cool.
5) While it cools, whip the heavy cream and set aside, and mix the gelatin with cold water and set aside.
6) Add the cognac to the (cooled down) filling from the saucepan, then gradually add the whipped cream and the gelatin.
7) Smear the filling on five of the six layers of cake, allowing the filling to run down the sides of the cake evenly.
8) Finally, we make the top frosting. First, add the sugar to about 3 tablespoons of water and boil for about two minutes in a small pan.  Take it off the stove and add lemon juice, then put the small pan in a larger pan full of cold water. Stir the mixture until the frosting turns white.
9) Spread a very thin layer of apricot jam on one side of the very top layer of cake... and then FLIP IT OVER onto the top of your cake. (You want a dry layer on top.)
10) Spread the fondant frosting over the top of the cake. Use the melted black chocolate to make designs on the top of the cake, and coat the outside of the cake with almonds.

Tips:

* This cake is creamy though a bit lighter than the Dobos Torta from last week. Both cakes go very well with after-dinner coffee.
* The layers are much easier to handle when cooled to room temperature. Especially the top layer flip.
* Do not use too much apricot jam - think of it like perfume, not like toast. If you add too much jam, the cake will be slippery and difficult to cut.

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