Sunday, July 21, 2019

Black forest swiss roll

I adapted from the coffee swiss roll by Yochana and my adaptation was spot on!

Ingredients
5 eggs, at room temperature
90g sugar (do not reduce this amount)
30g cocoa powder
70g plain flour
pinch of salt
65g corn oil or melted butter (I use oil)

Filling
150ml double cream
¼ cup icing sugar (do not reduce this amount)
1 cup drained canned and pitted cherries

Topping
100ml double cream
4 tbsp icing sugar
Drained cherries for deco

The toppings cover the cracks in the cake
Method
1. Take out the eggs and bring them to room temperature.
2. Prepare the pan by lining it with parchment.
3. Beat the eggs with sugar until pale and foamy, until the ribbon stage. It should triple in volume.
4. Add the oil in batches and also mix until incorporated.
5. Fold in sifted cocoa powder, flour, and salt.
6. Pour into the pan and flatten with spatula. Ensure that fills the corners of the pan. Drop from a height to dispel the bubbles.
7. Bake at 180 deg C for 18 to 20 minutes until the top springs back when touched.
8. Once out of the oven, immediately take the cake out of the tin and let it cool on a wire rack for 5 minutes.
The top. The skin got stuck to the paper and peeled off. Oh no!
9. Place a clean baking paper on another larger baking tray. Invert the cake onto the baking tray and remove the backing of the cake. Let it cool further on a wire rack.
10. Once cool enough to handle (about 5 minutes), roll the cake up as tight as you can (but be careful not to crack the cake!) using the baking paper to assist. Cover with a cloth and leave to cool completely.
11. While waiting for the cake to cool, beat the double cream with the icing sugar until stiff peaks.
Cracks on the side from being very heavy handed with the cake
13. When the cake is completely cool, unroll it. Cut off 1.5 cm at a diagonal on one of the short ends. This will help the cake to form a nice seam. Spread on the cream thinly with an offset spatula. Place the drained cherries to only the first quarter of the cake (the side you begin rolling). If you put too much fruit, it becomes very hard to roll. Re-roll the cake. Make sure that it is resting on the seam.
Decorated
14. Wrap the cake in the baking paper and then wrap over with cling film. Let it cool and rest in the fridge on its seam, for a minimum of 1 hour or best overnight.
Everything looks nice after a clean up!
15. While chilling, make the topping. Just before serving, pour on the whipping cream for the topping and decorate with cherries. Serve immediately!

Recipe feedback
- Considering I adapted this recipe from the coffee swiss roll, it was great! It was very moist but a bit crumbly and this showed when I tried to roll it. The top skin of the cake stuck to the parchment when I had inverted it onto the baking try to remove the backing. I had to turn it back so that the bottom of the cake was showing on the outside.
- I had forgotten to add sugar to the filling cream and it would have gone really well against the sourness of the cherries. But overall, satisfied!

Updated: This cherry swiss roll has an interesting way of placing the cherries to roll up.
https://www.anncoojournal.com/cherry-swiss-roll-cake/?fbclid=IwAR1c2Bn5ROhI8EZbTWM4Dq4Thj1QgWWgCnMi0BncgteVN3QQwvQ_z30LseY

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