Simon Hopkinson and Lindsey Bareham
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Along with the rather sad oranges in caramel, wilting profiteroles, gaudy
sherry trifle and fruit salad with too much apple, Black Forest Gâteau
remains a sweet trolley favourite.
It's always there, isn’t it, in the most prominent position? “And will madam
be having cream with that?” Yes, of course she will — we all do, saturating
the already creamy black wedge into submission.
It is wolfed down day after day from Hastings to Hartlepool: dry sponge, cheap
tinned cherries, ersatz cream and worryingly glossy icing. Neither waiter
nor customer really cares whether it tastes good, how carefully it’s been
prepared or where it came from. That is, until now.
Of all the retro dishes, this one seems to have plumbed the deepest depths.
Who knows, perhaps once upon a time, somewhere in the very blackest bit of
the Black Forest, an old woodcutter's wife knocked up a bit of chocolate
cake, chopped it in half, threw in a few cherries, upended the kirsch bottle
and filled the cake with cream. It was so good that word spread. So, of
course, she bought a trolley, opened a restaurant, and the rest is history.
However loopy its mythical origin might be, the essence of a good Black Forest
gâteau lies in carefully chosen ingredients, lavishly assembled.
Ingredients
Prep: 20min
Cook: 1hr
Serves 8-10
275g best-quality bitter-sweet chocolate, broken into pieces
100g semi-salted butter
75g dark brown sugar
1tbsp golden syrup
175g self-raising flour
25g cocoa
2 large eggs, beaten
150ml milk
700g good-quality bottled or tinned pitted cherries in syrup
2tbsp kirsch
600ml double cream
METHOD
Pre-heat the oven to 325F/170C/gas mark 3. Butter a 20cm x 5cm loose-bottomed
cake tin and fit a circle of greaseproof paper into the base. Put 75g of the
chocolate, plus the butter, sugar and syrup into a heavy-bottomed pan over a
low heat and stir until everything is melted and amalgamated. Allow the
mixture to cool until it is tepid but still molten.
Sift the flour and cocoa into the bowl of an electric mixer or use an electric
hand-whisk. Add the chocolate mixture using a spatula and start to beat
slowly together. Combine the eggs and milk and slowly pour this in. Whisk
together gently, increasing the speed until the mixture is light and thick
yet fluffy.
Spoon the mixture into the cake tin, smooth the surface and bake in a
pre-heated oven for 35-40 minutes until firm and springy. A skewer inserted
into the middle of the cake should come out clean. Remove from the oven and
leave to cool in the tin for about 30 minutes before turning out on a wire
rack.
Drain the cherries in a sieve suspended over a bowl. Tip them into another
bowl and measure off 200ml of the cherry syrup. Add to this the two
tablespoons of kirsch. With a serrated knife, slice the cake horizontally
into three discs. Place each disc on an individual plate and spoon the
cherry syrup and kirsch mixture evenly over the three and leave to soak in.
Meanwhile, heat 200ml of double cream until it is about to simmer and add
the remainder of the chocolate. Remove from the heat and stir gently until
melted and very smooth. Pour into a bowl and allow to cool in the fridge
while you assemble the cake.
Whip the other 400ml of double cream until thick. Spread one of the discs with
half of it, cover with half of the cherries, pressing them in lightly, cover
with the second disc and repeat the process. Finally, put on the third disc
and gently, with the palms of both hands, press all together.
Have a look at the chocolate cream mixture in the fridge, which should be
stiffening. Give it a stir: it needs to be thick enough to spread like
icing. With a palette knife, cover the top and sides of the cake, spreading
thickly until all the cream is used up. Leave to set in a cool place,
preferably not the fridge as this can cause the “icing” to slide.
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My cake came out a bit flat and dry. Advice?
Claudine Earley, Wellington, New Zealand