|
|
 |
European Recipes : Austrian Recipes :Prinzregent Torte
Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.02
Title: PRINZREGENT TORTE
Categories: Cakes, Austrian, Usenet
Yield: 1 cake
------------------------------------CAKE------------------------------------
9 oz Butter, salted
9 oz Sugar
1/8 t Vanilla extract
4 lg Eggs, beaten
1 2/3 c Cake flour, about
-(sift before
measuring!!)
1/2 c Cornstarch
1 t Baking powder
----------------------------------FILLING----------------------------------
2 c Chocolate pudding
-(extra
strong)
7 oz Butter, unsalted
----------------------------------FROSTING----------------------------------
1 2/3 c Powdered 10X sugar
1 oz Cocoa powder, bitter
1 oz Butter (sweet), melted
3 T Water, boiling
-(up to 4 T)
In an electric mixer, whip the salted butter. Add sugar,
vanilla and eggs.
Beat smooth. Mix flour with cornstarch and baking powder and
sift a second
time (you sift it once before you measured it, right?). Add
flour mixture
to egg mixture, stirring constantly.
Make 8 layers, each less than about 1/4 inch thick, by baking each
in the
bottom of an 8-inch springform layer pan. Do this by cutting
a round of
baker's parchment that exactly fits the bottom of the layer pan,
then using
a spatula to spread the dough evenly over the parchment. Make sure
that it
doesn't get too thin at the edges. Bake each layer for 7 minutes in
a
preheated 400 degree F. oven. Stack the layers separated by
waxed paper.
MAKE THE PUDDING: Use more chocolate in the pudding than you
would
normally use. If you want to be lazy and use pudding from a mix,
then add
about a tablespoon of top-quality cocoa to the pudding mix. Stir
the
pudding while it cools so that it does not congeal. Beat the
unsalted
butter until it is very smooth. When the butter and pudding are
about the
same temperature, add the pudding to the butter to get an even,
smooth
buttercream.
Use the pudding/butter mixture as mortar, and layer the cake
together,
spreading the pudding/butter evenly between the layers. Make
sure the
layers are even and parallel; if they are not, or if one is not
straight,
you can mend things with a little extra pudding here and there. Do
not put
pudding on top of the topmost layer, and try not to get too much on
the
outside edges.
MAKE A CHOCOLATE FROSTING: Sift the powdered 10X sugar and
cocoa together,
add the melted butter while stirring constantly, then add boiling
water.
Frost the cake, taking pains to make sure the sides are perfectly
smooth
and the top is perfectly smooth. Let the cake sit at cool room
temperature
for at least an hour before serving.
NOTES:
* Austrian 8-layer chocolate cake -- I made this recipe for
my boyfriend
on his birthday and he asked me to marry him (I did). I'm not
saying for
sure that the Prinzregent Torte is why Don wanted to marry me, but
I've
always worried that it might have been. It is a magnificent recipe
that
always evokes incredulous cries of pleasure from people that I
serve it to.
The cake is a lot of work, so I only make it about once a year, but
the
people that I make it for feel very special. Yield: Serves 2-8.
* If you are not an experienced baker, you should be warned
that in
recipes like this it is important to measure exactly and to follow
the
instructions exactly. People who prefer to cook by testing, tasting,
and
adding more ingredients should avoid intricate baking.
* These layers are baked in the bottom of a springform pan.
Such a pan
bottom is about 8 inches in diameter, and has a raised lip that is
about
1/8 inch high. It resembles a miniature pizza pan. I have never
succeeded
in making this torte with layers bigger than about 10 inches; about
8
inches is easier. The baker's parchment is crucial and there is no
good
substitute, though buttered kraft paper (from shopping bags) will
work in a
pinch. Use a new piece of parchment for each layer. If you don't
make the
layers straight, then when you pile them up, the cake will be
mounded up in
the middle or will sag down in the middle or will tilt to one side.
* If you are not an experienced cake froster, then make
double the recipe
of frosting. Unskilled frosters usually use too much frosting, and
you
don't really want to run out. You can charge money to people who
want to
lick the spoon if there is any left over.
Difficulty: rather difficult; Time: 1 hour;
Precision: measure
carefully.
|
|
Austrian
- Basque - British
- Croatian - Czech
- Danish - Dutch -
Finnish - French
- German - Greek -
Hungarian -
Icelandic - Irish -
Italian -
Norwegian - Polish -
Portuguese -
Rumanian - Russian -
Scandinavian -
Scottish - Serbian -
Spanish - Swedish
- Swiss - Ukrainian
- Welsh
|
|
 |
|