
Queen Mother's Cake
This was in my first book. It is one of the
most popular recipes in all of my books and is the one cake I
make more often than any other.
I originally got the recipe in 1962 from a
food column by Clementine Paddleford in The New York Herald
Tribune.
The story is that Jan Smeterlin, the eminent
Polish pianist, loved to cook. And he collected recipes. This
is one that was given to him on a concert tour in Austria.
When the Queen Mother was invited to tea at
the home of the Smeterlins, the hostess baked the cake according
to Smeterlin's recipe. The Queen Mother loved it and asked for
the recipe. Then--as the story goes--she served it often at her
royal parties. Including the time she invited the Smeterlins to
her home.
It is a flourless chocolate cake that is nothing
like all of the flourless chocolate cakes that are so popular
today. It is not as heavy or dense. This has ground almonds and
the texture is almost light, although it is rich and moist. It
is divine.
- 6 ounces (scant 1 1/2 cups) blanched or unblanched
almonds
- 6 ounces semisweet chocolate, cut into small
pieces
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 6 ounces (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter
- 6 eggs, separated
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon lemon juice
- 12 portions
First toast the almonds in a single layer in a shallow pan in a 350 degree oven for 12 to 15 minutes, shaking the pan a few times, until the almonds are lightly colored and have a delicious smell of toasted almonds when you open the oven door. Set aside to cool.
Adjust a rack one-third up in the oven and
preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Butter the bottom and sides of
a 9 x 3-inch springform pan and line the bottom with a round
of baking pan liner paper cut to fit. Butter the paper. Dust the
pan all over with fine dry, bread crumbs, invert over paper, and
tap lightly to shake out excess. Set the prepared pan aside.
Place the chocolate in the top of a small double
boiler over warm water on moderate heat. Cover until partially
melted, then uncover and stir until just melted and smooth. Remove
the top of the double boiler and set it aside until tepid or room
temperature.
Place the almonds and 1/4 cup of the sugar
(reserve remaining 1/2 cup sugar) in a food processor fitted with
a metal chopping blade. Process very well until the nuts are fine
and powdery. Stop the machine once or twice, scrape down the sides,
and continue to process. Process for at least a full minute. I
have recently realized that the finer the nuts are, the better
the cake will be. Set aside the ground nuts.
In the large bowl of an electric mixer beat
the butter until soft. Add 1/4 cup of the sugar (reserve the remaining
1/4 cup sugar) and beat to mix. Add the egg yolks one at a time,
beating and scraping the sides of the bowl as necessary until
smooth. On low speed add the chocolate and beat until mixed. Then
add the processed almonds and beat, scraping the bowl, until incorporated.
Now the whites should be beaten in the large bowl of the mixer. If you don't have an additional large bowl for the mixer, transfer the chocolate mixture to any other large bowl. Wash the bowl and the beaters.
In the large bowl of the mixer, with clean beaters, beat the egg whites with the salt and lemon juice, starting on low speed and increasing it gradually. When the whites barely hold a soft shape, reduce the speed a bit and gradually add the remaining 1/4 cup
sugar. Then, on high speed, continue to beat until the whites
hold a straight point when the beaters are slowly raised. Do not
overbeat.
Stir a large spoonful of the whites into the
chocolate mixture to soften it a bit.
Then, in three additions, fold in the remaining
whites. Do not fold thoroughly until the last addition and do
not handle any more than necessary.
Turn the mixture into the prepared pan. Rotate
the pan a bit briskly from left to right in order to level the
batter.
Bake for 20 minutes at 375 degrees and then
reduce the temperature to 350 degrees and continue to bake for
an additional 50 minutes (total baking time is 1 hour and 10 minutes).
Do not overbake; the cake should remain soft and moist in the
center. (The top might crack a bit -- it's okay.)
The following direction was in the original
recipe, and although I do not understand why, I always do it.
Wet and slightly wring out a folded towel and place it on a smooth
surface. Remove the cake pan from the oven and place it on the
wet towel. Let stand until tepid, 50 to 60 minutes.
Release and remove the sides of the pan (do
not cut around the sides with a knife--it will make the rim of
the cake messy). Now let the cake stand until it is completely
cool, or longer if you wish.
The cake will sink a little in the middle;
the sides will be a little higher. Use a long, thin, sharp knife
and cut the top level. Brush away loose crumbs.
Place a rack or a small board over the cake
and carefully invert. Remove the bottom of the pan and the paper
lining. The cake is now upside down; this is the way
it will be iced. Place four strips of baking pan-liner paper (each
about 3 x 12 inches) around the edges of a cake plate. With a
large, wide spatula carefully transfer the cake to the plate;
check to be sure that the cake is touching the papers all round
(in order to keep the icing off the plate when you ice the cake).
If you have a cake-decorating turntable or
a lazy Susan, place the cake plate on it.
Icing
- 1/2 cup whipping cream
- 2 teaspoons powdered (not granular) instant espresso or coffee (see
Note)
- 8 ounces semisweet chocolate, cut into small
pieces
Scald the cream in a 5- to 6-cup saucepan over
moderate heat until it begins to form small bubbles around the
edges or a thin skin on top. Add the dry espresso or coffee and
whisk to dissolve. Add the chocolate and stir occasionally over
heat for 1 minute. Then remove the pan from the heat and whisk
or stir until the chocolate is all melted and the mixture is smooth.
Let the icing stand at room temperature, stirring
occasionally, for about 15 minutes or a little longer until the
icing barely begins to thicken.
Then, stir it to mix, and pour it slowly over
the top of the cake, pouring it onto the middle. Use a long, narrow
metal spatula to smooth the top and spread
the icing so that a little of it runs down the sides (not too
much--the icing on the sides should be a much thinner layer than
on the top). With a small, narrow metal spatula, smooth the sides.
Remove the strips of paper by pulling each
one out toward a narrow end.
(Note: I use Medaglia D'Oro instant espresso.)
Optional:
- Chocolate curls or chocolate shavings
- Whipped cream
- Fresh raspberries
Decorate the cake or individual portions with
optional chocolate curls or chocolate shavings (try chocolate
shavings formed with a vegetable parer and made with milk chocolate).
Place a mound of optional whipped cream (lightly sweetened with
confectioners sugar and lightly flavored with vanilla extract)
on one side of each portion on individual dessert plates, and
a few optional raspberries on the other side of each portion.
|