Wednesday, 3 August 2016

How To...Make a Hedgehog Mousse Cake

I find nostalgia is amplified by living on the other side of the world. For some this makes them feel like the grass maybe wasn’t greener and draws them home, for my friends and I this nostalgia effect is evidenced by our desire for food from home. I think I have consumed more Tim Tams and Cherry Ripe's since moving to London then I ever did at home. My obsession with chicken salt has also increased tenfold.

Nostalgia was certainly in play when the Compatriot chose her theme for her recent birthday cake: hedgehog slice.

For the uninitiated this is an iconic Australian childhood treat made with chocolate (or cocoa), broken biscuits and coconut. Nuts sometimes make a guest appearance but are entirely optional. Hedgehog slice is sold in bakeries and found in lunch boxes across the country and is as common to an Australian as a chocolate digestive or custard cream to a Brit.  

While hedgehog slice is delicious, it didn’t quite meet my lofty aspirations in terms of appearance for a birthday cake. I like to lean toward dramatic, if not perfect.  I cobbled together some ideas, rejecting others (no to cheesecake, no to various shapes) and eventually settled on what would become this:



Hedgehog slice, topped with coffee mousse with a Nutella mousse core, chocolate mirror glaze and truffles. 
The Compatriots 28th birthday cake. With its shiny top and domed surface this was a hedgehog slice worthy of a birthday celebration.

The whole concept of this cake rested on a sliceable mousse dome, a sort of mousse I had never made before- previous mousses had always been the type to hide in a solid bowl or cup, no structural integrity needed!  Yet here I was aiming to make the majority of a cake with this mystical mousse. I do love to set myself a challenge. 
My internet research turned up few options that inspired confidence in the end result- I was after clean slices, not a puddle of mess on a plate. My holy grail was found with one of my go-to bloggers: Sprinkle Bakes. She is amazing and endlessly creative, everything I have made from her website has been perfect so it was with confidence I adapted the mousse portion of this recipe, making some substitutions and scaling down the recipe for the Nutella core. I also had to make substitutions in the hedgehog slice as Marie biscuits, the biscuit of choice for this slice in Australia, could not be found. Instead I used a combination of Nice and rich tea biscuits but any plain biscuit will do. Now, how to make this domed beauty!


RECIPE
*Note- this mousse cake should be started at least 48 hours in advance of serving*

EQUIPMENT
2 freezer safe bowls, one roughly a third smaller than the other. I used the smallest and largest of a 3 piece glass bowl set.
1 cake tin the same diameter of your large bowl, or slightly larger
Small and large saucepan

NUTELLA MOUSSE
Adapted from Sprinkle Bakes

3/4 tsp powdered gelatine
2 tsp cold water
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons hot milk
75g Nutella
½ cup whipping cream

HEDGEHOG SLICE
Recipe from Nine.com.au found here

300g plain biscuits (I used a mix of Nice and Rich tea)
1 cup chopped walnuts (optional)
½ cup desiccated coconut
250g butter, chopped
1 ¼ cups caster sugar
1/3 cup cocoa powder (I use Van Houten)
1 egg

COFFEE MOUSSE
Adapted from Sprinkle Bakes

2 tsp powdered gelatine
2 tablespoons cold water
3 egg yolks
½ cup sugar
½ cup of hot milk
225g white chocolate, chopped
1 ½ tablespoons instant coffee (I used Azeera)
1 ½ cups whipping cream

MIRROR GLAZE 
John Whaite recipe, found here

1 gelatine leaf
120g golden caster sugar
60ml water
1 tablespoon golden syrup
75g cocoa powder (I use Van Houten)
60ml single cream

METHOD

NUTELLA MOUSSE
1. Line the smallest bowl with plastic wrap, leaving an inch or so of overhang.
2. Place water in a small saucepan and sprinkle gelatine over the water, let stand for 1 minute.
3. Whisk in the egg and sugar, mixing well. Stir in the hot milk then place over medium heat, whisking constantly for 5 minutes or until it has thickened (it should coat the back of a spoon)
4. Stir in Nutella and mix until combined. Let cool.
5. Once cooled, whip the cream until stiff peaks form. Gently fold the gelatine mix into the cream until combined.
6. Pour into the small bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and place in the freezer until set (mine took at least 3 hours)

HEDGEHOG SLICE BASE 
Once the Nutella mousse is in the freezer make a start on the hedgehog slice.

1. Line a cake tin the same size as the base of your large bowl with baking paper.
2. Chop/crush biscuits into small pieces, place in a bowl along with the walnuts and coconut
3. In a medium saucepan combine the butter, sugar and cocoa powder. Stir over medium heat until the butter is melted and sugar is dissolved.
4. Remove saucepan from heat and whisk in egg.
5. Pour chocolate mixture over the biscuit mixture and mix well. Press into the prepared pan, the slice should be around 1 ½ to 2 cm deep. If yours looks to be getting taller than that you can put some of the mix in a separate tin to set separately and eat as a snack.
6. Cover and refrigerate until set (mine took around 4 hours. It wasn’t fully set but firm enough to cut and hold its shape).

COFFEE MOUSSE
Start to prepare the mousse once your hedgehog base is suitably set

1. Unwrap your hedgehog slice. If the slice is larger than your large bowl trim the slice to size so it fits snugly in the widest part of the bowl.
2.Line the large bowl with plastic wrap, leaving an inch or so of overhang.
3. Place water in a small saucepan and sprinkle gelatine over the water, let stand for 1 minute.
4. Whisk in the egg and sugar, mixing well. Stir in the hot milk then place over medium heat, whisking constantly for 7-10 minutes or until it has thickened (it should coat the back of a spoon)
5. Stir in white chocolate and instant coffee, mix until combined. Let cool.
6. Once cooled, whip the cream until stiff peaks form. Gently fold the gelatine mix into the cream until combined.
7. Fill the large bowl with around a third of the mix.
8. Remove the Nutella mousse from the freezer and unmould from the bowl, discarding the plastic wrap. Place the Nutella mousse into the coffee mousse with the flat side facing up. Pour the rest of the coffee mousse mix into the bowl or until almost full (leave enough room for the base to fit at the top of the bowl.)
9. Place your hedgehog slice on top of the coffee mousse (if one side of your slice is smoother than keep this facing up.
10. Fold the overhanging plastic wrap back over the base of the slice. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and freeze for at least 24 hours.

MIRROR GLAZE.
1. Soak the gelatine in a bowl of cold water for 5 minutes
2. In a small saucepan heat the sugar, water and golden syrup. Allow to boil for a minute and then remove from heat and whisk in the cocoa powder. Once combined, whisk in the cream then return to medium heat for a minute, stirring constantly. Remove from the heat.
3. Remove the gelatine leaf from the water and squeeze to remove the excess water. Add to the chocolate glaze and stir until dissolved. Pass the glaze through a sieve into a bowl.

To use the glaze it needs to cool but still be pourable. You can either wait until it cools or place in the fridge until needed. On removing from the fridge microwave on short, low power bursts until pourable.

ASSEMBLY
.1. Set a wire rack over a tray.
2. Remove the cake from the freezer. Remove the plastic wrap from the bottom and invert the cake onto the wrack, peeling away the remaining plastic wrap.
3. With your glaze a pourable consistency, pour the glaze over the cake, letting the excess glaze drip down into the tray. If you need more glaze use the excess that has dripped into the tray.

CONFESSION NOTE: This was my first time using mirror glaze and I was terrified it would melt the mousse so didn’t warm it up as much as I should have- it was pourable but still quite thick. In the end it was too thick and stopped spreading before it fully reached the bottom of the cake which left a few bald patches. This meant there was a mad scramble as I scrapped excess from the tray and reheated before trying to apply to the side. Luckily gravity worked its magic and smoothed it all it so you couldn’t tell where the touch ups had been.

  4. Refrigerate until ready to serve. Mine was in the fridge for 24 hours before serving. You could serve it once the glaze has set but it may be frozen/semi-frozen (which is also delicious, though the hedgehog slice may be a bit solid!)


To serve I cobbled together some homemade truffles (dark chocolate, Kahlua and dark chocolate as well as white chocolate and coconut) adding them to the finished cake as decoration along with some Ferrero Rochers. 



Blurry interior shot- too thankful it didn't collapse to focus!

Wednesday, 30 March 2016

London Eats: Dickie Fitz

I am always wary when I hear a restaurant labelled as ‘Australian’.

As an Australian it causes both panic and curiosity. First of all, please let it not be somewhere serving overcooked ‘themed’ food (hello Outback Steakhouse, Walkabout…), second, how have they defined ‘Australian’ cuisine? Our national menu is so hard to quantify you’re never quite sure what to expect. Chicken parmigiana and a lamb chop? Steak and seafood? Stir fries, curries, dim sims, packets of Tim Tams, a meat pie?


Needless to say, curiosity was high when I heard Dickie Fitz was opening in Fitzrovia with an  Australian inspired menu. I scoured the internet in the weeks leading up to the opening, looking to see what would be on offer. What I found suitably satisfied my definition of Australian food, going for a contemporary take on what is a country with a vast mix of cuisines, solidifying the Australian feel with classics including barramundi, Asian fusion and a few very Aussie treats including Tim Tam martinis and lamingtons.


I headed in for lunch with my Aussie compatriot to taste test this new representative from our homeland. On the menu for us:

Looks can be deceiving! Truffle 'macancini'

A shared starter of Truffle ‘macancini’ (which seems to have since departed to only the Dinner menu) which were little nuggets of mac and cheese fried with a coating of black truffles. The truffle taste was spot on, not too overwhelming, but I could have upped the cheese taste (I love a cheesy mac ‘n’ cheese). They were just enough to get us going though, leaving lots of room for the dishes to follow.



Mine: The true Aussie classic- barramundi

Compatriot: Pork Belly & Fennel Kimchi


I opted for the Aussie classic, barramundi, for my main where Aussie No.2 went for the Pork Belly.  The fish dish was perfectly light yet delicious, with steamed fish,  grilled cabbage and perfect daikon served with a dashi broth. The compatriot's pork belly was perfectly cooked and just a little spicy, paired with fennel kimchi and a bacon broth. We both agreed these dishes caught the modern Aussie/Asian feel that’s so popular at home. For a bonus side we grabbed a side of the chicken salt chips, an Aussie classic, which were spot on with their flavour. Chicken salt is a thing everyone needs to get on board with.

We were of course tempted into trying out some of the Australian inspired cocktails on offer, getting a good giggle at the  Goon Bag Caipirinha, the U Beaut and the She’ll Be Apples though perhaps the Honey Badger should be called the Drop Bear? Our choices were swayed by the accompaniments- a Tim Tam Martini for the compatriot, and the Caramello Koala for me. Served with a Tim Tam and a Caramello Koala respectively (Australia’s best biscuit and a caramel filled koala shaped chocolate, for those not in the know) we couldn’t pass up the chance to indulge in a treat from home along with a lunch time drink.



Unsurprisingly they were both delicious although how much our opinion was influenced by our childlike glee I cannot say. Compatriot did as an any Aussie would and went with a Tim Tam Slam to get a start on her martini (vodka, espresso, Kahlua and honey syrup), while I greedily nibbled away at my koala while sipping my cocktail, a mix of Amaretto, Kahlua, Butterscotch Schnapps, Baileys, milk and cream. 

A true Aussie: Performing a Tim Tam Slam with her Tim Tam cocktail.

We bit the bullet and opted to finish off our visit with desserts to share. A chocolate fondant with salted peanut and burnt marshmallow and the banana bread sticky toffee with coconut and ginger. Both did not last long on the plates.


Dessert porn. Above, chocolate fondant. Below, banana bread sticky toffee pudding
At the end of our visit we were both happy to say this was an Australian inspired restaurant. The dining room itself carries pops of bright yellow that help to invoke the sunny motherland and the place on a whole is contemporary yet inviting. The price point is a little high for these two poor expats to make it a regular fixture but the breakfast menu looks delicious yet affordable and will likely be the focus of our next visit. Going forward it is comforting to know that I can get my hands on a Caramello Koala cocktail and some lamingtons when the craving hits, and that there’s a good restaurant to recommend when someone wants that fix of home.

Thursday, 10 March 2016

Quick! Eat This: UK Edition

Quick! Eat This: UK Edition

A few quick picks from around the UK

 

Anything from Mary’s Milk Bar, Edinburgh

Mary is a sweetheart and everything she produces for her shop tastes like heaven. For a pick me up on a cold day opt for her hot chocolate float- hot chocolate with added ice cream- I recommend adding in a scoop of salted caramel

19 Grassmarket, Edinburgh EH1 2HS

Pork Roll from Oink!, Edinburgh

This place serves up a whole roast pig a day, opening from 11am to 5:30pm (5pm on Sundays) or until they sell out. Choices are easy- pick your size, your bread, add your pork, pick your accompaniment/sauce. I opt for the ‘Oink’ size with brown roll and haggis though to be honest you can’t go wrong with any option. Get in early if you want some crackling too. 

2 locations: 34 Victoria St, Old Town, Edinburgh EH1 2JW and  Royal Mile 82 Canongate Edinburgh EH8 8BZ

XXL Pressed Sandwich from Nic’s NYC Deli, Glasgow

Pulled pork, ham, roast chicken, pastrami, turkey, bacon, Monterey jack and Swiss cheese, jalapenos, pickles, sweet fried onion and choice of sauce. Need I say more?

4dh, 50 St Enoch Square, Glasgow G1 4DH

BBQ Pork Belly Buns at Kurobuta, London

Close runner up is the miso glazed aubergine. Excuse me, I’m drooling. 

3 locations: 312 King's Rd, London SW3 5UH, 17-20 Kendal Street Marble Arch, London, W2 2AW, and at Harvey Nichol's 109-125 Knightsbridge, London SW1X 7RJ

Fudge from The Fudge House Edinburgh, Edinburgh

I’ll let you pick your own flavour, you can’t really go wrong. 

197 Canongate, Edinburgh, Midlothian EH8 8BN

Ice Cream from Scoop and Crumb, Brighton

Feel very lucky if they have the Swedish Ginger biscuit flavour on rotation while you’re there, it’s delicious. If you’re hungry or celebrating an occasion go for one of their sundaes- definitely a worthy treat! 

5-6 East St, Hove, Brighton, Sussex BN1 1HP