Abby Mandel's Boule de Neige (Snowball) (Source: Maida Heatter's Book of Great Chocolate Desserts (Andrews & McMeel Publishing, 2006 ed.), pg. 201.
For New Year's Day, I wanted to make my favorite type of dessert - something chocolate-y, maybe gooey, rich, decadent. I was about to settle on a cheesecake when I came across this recipe. Jackpot! I don't want to over-do the gushing but oh my word, this thing is divine!
This is in Maida's chocolate book and it is attributed to Abby Mandel, a chef and cookbook writer who I was unfamiliar with. She helped found the Green City Market in Chicago and wrote a book in 1982 with Cuisinart recipes that is apparently still well admired, judging by the reviews I was reading.
Speaking of the food processor, Maida gives an aside to this recipe and describes how Mandel put it all together in less than a minute. So I opted to try it Mandel's way and it is indeed very fast and easy. The description here is the Mandel method. Maida's involves doing it in a mixing bowl, similar to the way she does most recipes.
How to describe this? Well, I would say it falls somewhere between a cheesecake and a mousse. It is very creamy and rich with a distinct coffee flavor (I might reduce the coffee granules next time but not by much). A little piece goes a long way...
Unfortunately it doesn't serve up that pretty. It is very delicate and I finally resorted to using a cake lifter to get it on a plate in one piece. You can see the photo at the bottom of the page.
A note about the bowl to use - at first I thought I wasn't going to be able to make this because I had a hard time locating one. You need a mixing bowl with a 6-8 cup capacity. A deeper, more dome-shaped bowl would be idea but I did not have one. The bowl can be glass or metal but does need to be ovenproof. I ended up using a glass bowl.
One more bit of advice - after making the topping, you might think that there isn't going to be enough to cover the cake. I certainly thought so but turns out there is plenty. So as you are piping, don't be afraid to pipe the rosettes right next to each other to avoid gaps.
8 oz. semisweet chocolate (in small pieces)
2 tsp. dry instant coffee
1 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup boiling water
1/2 lb. (2 sticks) sweet butter (room temperature, cut into small pieces)
4 large eggs
1 TBS. Cognac or dark rum
Line an oven-proof mixing bowl (glass, metal or pottery) with foil. Set aside. (See note above about bowl size.) |
Place the chocolate, instant coffee and sugar in a food processor bowl. Pulse until finely chopped. |
With the processor running, add the boiling water through the feeder tube. Process until the chocolate is melted. |
Add the butter until blended. |
Add the eggs. |
Add the rum or Cognac. Process about 15 seconds. |
Pour into the foil-lined bowl. |
Bake for 55 minutes at 350 degrees. When done, the top will be puffy and cracked. |
The next day, remove from the refrigerator and invert onto a serving plate. |
Carefully peel off the foil. |
Return to the refrigerator until you are ready to apply the topping. |
Whipped Cream Topping
1 cup heavy cream
2 TBS. granulated sugar
2 tsp. Cognac or dark rum
Whip the cream in a chilled bowl with chilled beaters until it holds a shape.
Add the sugar and the Cognac or rum and continue to whip until it holds a shape but not too stiff.
Transfer the cream to a pastry bag with a star tip. Cover the cake with rosettes of the whipped cream. (Hint: Place your rosettes so that they are touching each other - closer than what I did. It will look as though you do not have enough cream but there should be plenty.)
Return to the refrigerator.