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How To make Queen Of Sheba Cake
Cocoa-almond cake: 1 c Almonds; blanched, toasted
16 ts Sugar
1/2 c All-purpose flour
1/4 c Cocoa powder
1 ts Baking powder
6 Eggs, separated, room temper
-ture 1/4 ts Cream of tartar
1/3 c Butter, melted and cooled
Chocolate parfait: 12 oz Bittersweet chocolate, coars
-ly chopped 1 c Milk
8 Egg yolks, room temperature
1 1/3 c Sugar
2 c Whipping cream, well-chilled
1/2 c Amaretto liqueur
1/4 c Water
Chocolate whipped cream: 2 oz Bittersweet chocolate, coars
-ly chopped 1 c Whipping cream, well-chilled
4 ts Sugar
1 ts Vanilla
Almonds; whole, blanched Chocolate garnishes, optiona - Position rack in center of oven and preheat to 350 degrees. Cover bases of two 9" springform pans with foil, then attach sides. Finely grind almonds with 4 tbsp sugar. Sift flour, cocoa, baking powder into a small bowl. Stir in almond mixture. Beat yolks and 8 tbsp sugar using electric mixer until slowly dissolving ribbons form when beaters are lifted, about 6 minutes. Beat whites in another bowl, with cream of tartar until stiff but not dry. Gradually, add remaining 4 tbsp of sugar and beat until whites are stiff and shiny. Fold 1/3 of almond/cocoa mixture into yolks, then 1/3 of egg whites. Repeat twice, folding in melted butter just before final 1/3 of whites is incorporated. Spoon 1/2 of batter into each pan, smoothing surface with spatula. Bake until tester inserted in center of cake comes out dry, about 20 minutes. Cool in pans on rack 5 minutes. Invert onto rack and cool cakes completely. Melt chocolate in top of double boiler over hot, but not boiling water. Bring milk to simmer in heavy medium saucepan over low heat. Whisk yolks and sugar in bowl until smooth. Gradually, whisk in hot milk, return to saucepan. Stir over low heat until mixture leaves path on back of spoon when finger is drawn across it, about 5 to 7 minutes. Do Not Boil. Gradually, whisk custard into chocolate until smooth. Cool completely, stirring occasionally. Whip cream to soft peaks. Fold into cooled chocolate mixture in 3 batches. To assemble, cut each cake into 2 layers, using a serrated knife. Set one layer, cut side up in the 9" springform pan. Combine liqueur and water. Brush 4 tbsp onto cake in pan. Spoon 1/4 of chocolate parfait over cake, spreading to edge. Top with
second layer, cut side up. Repeat with liqueur and parfait. Add third layer and repeat. Add forth layer and repeat, smoothing top of parfait with a spatula. Cover and freeze until firm, at least 4 hours. Remove pan sides. Refrigerate cake while preparing cream. Melt chocolate in double boiler over hot, but not boiling water. Stir until smooth. Remove from over water. Whip cream with sugar and vanilla to stiff peaks. Whisk in chocolate. Spoon mixture into a pastry bag fitted with medium star tip. Set cake on serving platter. Pipe decorative whipped cream rosettes around edge of cake. Set almonds in rosettes. Mayalso use chocolate leaves or curls as garnish.
How To make Queen Of Sheba Cake's Videos
Testing JULIA CHILD's CHOCOLATE CAKE - Queen of Sheba
Can we mess up Julia Child's prized Queen of Sheba Chocolate Cake? French cooking is intimidating but the steps are easy enough, although time consuming. This isn't a fluffy chocolate cake with thick icing, it's more of a chocolate torte that's a little dense but light at the same time. You could say with the almond flour, the top had a macaron texture. This Valentine's Day or any upcoming romantic occasion, give this a try. It spells love for sure but don't forget the ganache icing or glaze. Julia Child is a legend and we wanted a fun easy recipe to try, although we're not the best baker we did good enough in our book. A French chocolate cake sounds decadent, let us know how yours turns out! Signing out as Julie and Julia and Kat and Jina :)
#juliachild #chocolatecake #celebrityrecipe
For the recipe referenced in today's video:
Mastering the Art of French Cooking pages 677-679
You can also find it online, here's one that was easy to follow:
QUICK TIPS WE LEARNED AFTER TEST:
1. The cookbook references different pages in the book for making pulverized almonds and her chocolate icing. Make sure to pay attention. We think you can just buy the almond flour and skip the boiling, squeezing, baking and pulverizing!
2. The recipe said 1/4 cup of butter or 1 stick of butter. Confusing. Kat did 1/4 cup and it was little dry but could be because it overcooked. Jina used 1 stick and it was moist but she didn't cook fully. We are no help, lol.
3. Recipe doesn't call out cooking temp. We did 350 for 25 minutes, it's supposed to be jiggly in center but both at 20 and 25 minutes the center was not jiggly.
4. Icing is optional but Kat loved it and it was so simple, only 2 ingredients.
One recipe, tested by two cooks!
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Queen Of Sheba Chocolate Cake By Chef Gianfranco Minuz
The Queen of Sheba cake: a rich, decadent chocolate cake made with almonds ground in sugar, rum-infused unsweetened chocolate, and finished with decorative powdered sugar stenciling. Presented to you by Chef Gianfranco Minuz!
SUBSCRIBE to keep up to date with Chef Gianfranco Minuz's latest, delicious posts!
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Music and editing by Alan Ishii
Queen Of Sheba Cake | The French Chef Season 5 | Julia Child
Enrobed in chocolate icing, this chocolate, butter, rum and almond Reine de Saba is just the best chocolate cake you will ever eat.
About the French Chef:
Cooking legend and cultural icon Julia Child, along with her pioneering public television series from the 1960s, The French Chef, introduced French cuisine to American kitchens. In her signature passionate way, Julia forever changed the way we cook, eat and think about food.
About Julia Child on PBS:
Spark some culinary inspiration by revisiting Julia Child’s groundbreaking cooking series, including The French Chef, Baking with Julia, Julia Child: Cooking with Master Chefs and much more. These episodes are filled with classic French dishes, curious retro recipes, talented guest chefs, bloopers, and Julia’s signature wit and kitchen wisdom. Discover for yourself how this beloved cultural icon introduced Americans to French cuisine, and how her light-hearted approach to cooking forever changed how we prepare, eat and think about food. Bon appétit!
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Queen of Sheba
Chocolate! And Almonds!! And RUM! And BUTTER!!
Making Julia Child's Queen of Sheba!!...TBWB #9
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Queen of Sheba Cake Tutorial
Watch Danielle as she makes a Queen of Sheba cake from Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Shows and explains how women and cookery used media outlets such as print and television to promote new ideas and equality of women.
Filmed for Truman State University JINS (Junior Interdisciplinary Seminar) Course, Fall 2012