Dec.
31

An Overdue Thank You

 It’s been far too long that I’ve gone without publicly thanking the dear sweet Mari over at Once Upon A Plate. You see, right before Thanksgiving she gave my blog the Inspiration Award.  Things were so crazy busy getting ready for Thanksgiving that I didn’t take the time to acknowledge her flattering gesture.  

The next thing you know, Thanksgiving is over and the very next week was our wedding anniversary!  Then we were smack dab in the middle of preparing for Christmas!  I kept thinking about Mari and her blog award. Everytime I visited her blog (which you simply MUST do) as much as I enjoyed it I felt a pang of guilt knowing I had not publicly thanked her.  While that didn’t stop me from snagging a recipe or two… or ten… I knew I had done her wrong and she didn’t deserve it.

Mari is one of the most enthusiastic supporters of my blogging efforts. She’s an inspiration to me… a very big inspiration.  From the first time I visited her blog (which you simply MUST do) I was blown away by her creativity, her recipes and most of all her photos.  I admit that I wanna be like her when I grow up (only problem is that I already AM grown up and I’m nothing like her… but I can still try hehe). Most blogs that have music… well… they bother me.  Not so much the blogs bother me but the music bothers me.  Kinda like trying to shop at Abercrombie & Fitch.  Truth be told I dunno how folks *can* shop there with that incessant, loud, thump-thump-thump craziness going on that some call “music”.   Mari’s was the first blog I came across that had music I found to be soothing… enjoyable… pleasant… and of course I had to copy it :)  See, I’m trying to be like her :)

So now it’s the end of the year and I simply don’t want this guilty feeling to be on my conscience come 2009. Nope!  No way!  No how!  Nuh-uhn!!!   I want to continue visiting Mari’s blog (which you simply MUST do) with a clean heart next year :)

Thank you Mari… for everything you are to me.  I know it’s taken me far, far too long to acknowledge the award you so graciously passed along to me.  I’m truly humbled by it.  I know we’ve never met in person nor ever had a phone conversation but I count you among my blogging buddies! The internet is an amazing place… it can take you places you’ve never been… teach you things you’ve never known… expose you to concepts/ideas you never knew existed and make you feel close to people you’ve never met.  Mari and her blog are all that to me… and more.

Have a delicious day – and click here to visit Mari’s fabulous blog!

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Dec.
31

It’s the end of another month which means it’s time to reveal the Daring Bakers recipe for December. And the Challenge this month is…

                                           A French Yule Log!!!

This month’s challenge is brought to us by the adventurous Hilda from Saffron and Blueberry and Marion from Il en Faut Peu Pour Etre Heureux. They have chosen a French Yule Log by Flore from Florilege Gourmand

 

For me, I think this was the most complex of challenges since I joined the Daring Bakers last spring. It’s my understanding the recipes for the 6 different elements were originally written in French and then translated to English.  The ingredients for each were given in metric and US measurements and this proved quite daunting since two different ingredients may have had the same metric value but completely different US values.

The 6 individual element requirements for this challenge were the following:

  1. Dacquoise biscuit (my choice… almond)
  2. Mousse (my choice… dark chocolate)
  3. Ganache insert (my choice… dark chocolate)
  4. Feuillete insert (crisp) (my choice… white chocolate coconut)
  5. Creme Bruleé insert (my choice… vanilla)
  6. Icing (my choice… dark chocolate)

Since I do not have a yule log pan or even a half-round pan, I made this in a standard loaf pan and because I had quite a bit of the dacquoise biscuit I used it to “book-end” the remaining elements. 

In the photo above, from the top down we have buttercream icing as decoration, the required icing layer, the almond dacquoise layer, the dark chocolate mousse layer, the vanilla creme brulee layer, another layer of dark chocolate mousse, the white chocolate coconut crisp layer, another very thin layer of dark chocolate mousse, the dark chocolate ganache layer and finally another almond dacquoise layer.  Apologetically I will say my layers look awful.  I truly struggled with getting them into the pan properly and this shows quite sadly in the finished product.

The first layer I made was the white chocolate coconut crisp. Instead of making a praline gavotte (lace-thin crepe) to use for the crunch, I decided to use the optional puffed rice.  I found the directions to be less than optimal for this and ended up making a mistake.  After completing this layer I realized i should have ground up my puffed rice (rice krispies w/o sugar) and added it to the melted white chocolate and toasted coconut instead of using the puffed rice whole.  After the layer had spent a few hours in the freezer, I ran it thru the food processor so it ended up that I sprinkled it into the final assembly.  This might have been a wise move considering I read quite a few comments from early finishers who stated their crisp layer was difficult to cut.  I just wish my crisp layer was more aesthetically pleasing (though it tasted amazing and I will make that again!).

When I first read the recipe I was completely overwhelmed by the sheer number of pages.  I counted a total of 19 pages in the full .doc version and almost gave up right there!  Then I realized most of the pages were dedicated to variations and options – whew!  Breaking it down into the separate elements, they really weren’t all that difficult but they did require thought, planning and most of all serious preparation.  I made my flavor choices so that the end result would be no sweeter than necessary since all that chocolate could be completely over-the-top and cloyingly sweet.

In the final analysis, the individual components were very tasty and my family enjoyed this dessert.  My two favorite layers were the creme brulee and the white chocolate coconut crisp.  I think the majority of the component recipes were more complex than necessary and as a result this is not a recipe I would make again. I think the concept is fantastic however and in the off-chance I were to make this again I would do so using my own go-to recipes for most of the components.  

This month’s Daring Bakers challenge was not for the faint of heart.  If you, yourself, are feeling rather daring, the full recipe can be found here on hostess Hilda’s website.

Have a delicious day!

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