
How good was the long weekend. Five consecutive days off should happen more often. As promised over the break I got into a little cooking. It was rather convenient as the weather was pretty poor.
Ever since it aired on TV last year I have been wanting to cook the Caramel Parfait Glace. This was a dessert challenge against a chef. I had time off and ran out of excuses so it was time to get into the kitchen. The first challenge was the shop. Battling the supermarket before public holidays is never fun. People seem to have panic in their eyes and they feel the need stock their pantries like a Cold War bomb shelter. I easily found everything I needed except funnily enough the cream. This recipe requires 1 litre of cream and all that was left was two small cartons extra light! I jumped in the car and visited two more supermarkets before I got what I needed.
As this recipe had many processes I decided to break it up over many days and just cook one little bit at a time. This was both time efficient and gave me some space to do the washing up. I used so many bowls, measuring scoops, beaters and spatulas that I needed to have a washup break between each processes.
Overall this was a very challenging and satisfying recipe. I really enjoyed making each process and they were all something new. The salted caramel was sooo good, I couldn’t help eating it all by itself. As a result I was buzzing around the house for hours on a sugar high before I crashed into a caramel induced coma.
Less than 48 hours till Masterchef 2011, lets see what they will serve up this year.

Caramel Parfait Glace with Salted Peanut Caramel and Milk Chocolate Mousse
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Recipe By Philippa Sibley@ Masterchef
Ingredients
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| Caramel Mousse |
|
| 500ml |
Thickened Cream |
| 1 |
Vanilla bean, split, seeds scraped |
| 135g |
Liquid Glucose |
| 190g |
Caster Sugar |
| 50g |
Unsalted Butter, cold |
| 6 |
leaves gold leaf gelatine, soaked in cold water, drained |
| 160g |
Egg Yolks |
|
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| Milk Chocolate Chantilly Cream |
| 250ml |
Thickened Cream |
| 250g |
Milk Chocolate |
|
|
| Peanut Salted Caramel |
| 200ml |
Thickened Cream |
| 80g |
Liquid Glucose |
| 150g |
Caster Sugar |
| 50g |
Unsalted Butter, cold |
| 100g |
Salted peanuts, chopped coarsely |
| ¼ tsp |
Salt |
|
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| Peanut Dacquoise |
| 140g |
Salted peanuts |
| 250g |
Pure icing sugar |
| 80g |
Almond meal |
| 160g |
Egg Whites |
| 100g |
Caster Sugar |
|
|
| Milk Chocolate Plaques |
| 200g |
Milk Chocolate |
Method
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- For the caramel mousse, whip 200ml of the thickened cream to soft peaks, cover and refrigerate until needed. Combine vanilla, remaining cream and 115g of the glucose in a saucepan and bring to the boil. Set aside. Meanwhile, weigh out 140g of the caster sugar. Heat a heavy-based saucepan over medium heat and add 1 teaspoon of caster sugar. Once it has dissolved, gradually add the remaining, stirring constantly, until it has dissolved and turned lightly golden. Slowly pour the hot cream into the caramel, whisking until combined; whisk in the butter followed by the gelatine leaves. Strain into a bowl, set over another bowl half filled with ice and water and leave to cool, whisking occasionally.
- Combine the remaining 50g of caster sugar, 30ml water and remaining 20g of liquid glucose in a small saucepan over medium heat and bring to the boil. Meanwhile, using an electric mixer, beat the yolks on a moderate speed. Using a sugar thermometer bring the sugar syrup to 118°C. Remove from the heat and let the bubbles die down slightly. Pour the syrup down the side of the bowl onto the still whisking yolks. Turn up the speed and whisk until pale, doubled in size and cool.
- To finish the mousse, fold the two cooled mixtures together, fold through the whipped cream then pour into a 20cm x 25cm x 3cm Swiss roll tin lined with baking paper and place in the freezer until very firm.
- For milk chocolate Chantilly cream, melt the chocolate and keep warm to the touch. Whip the cream to soft peaks. Quickly whisk half of warm chocolate into the cream, to lighten the mixture. Immediately whisk through remaining chocolate and refrigerate.
- For the peanut caramel, combine cream and glucose in a saucepan and bring to the boil. Set aside and keep warm. Heat a heavy-based saucepan over medium heat until 1 teaspoon of caster sugar dissolves when added. Gradually add the rest of the sugar and stir constantly until it has dissolved and has turned light golden brown. Slowly pour the hot cream into the caramel, whisking until combined; whisk in the butter. Set over another bowl half filled with ice and water and leave to cool until slightly thickened. Fold through the peanuts and the salt and refrigerate until needed.
- Preheat oven to 180°C fan forced.
- For the peanut dacquoise, process peanuts until finely ground. Combine icing sugar, nuts, and almond meal in a large bowl. Using an electric mixer, beat the egg whites until soft peaks form. Sprinkle sugar onto the whites and continue whisking until firm and glossy. Gently fold the mixture through meringue until combined, but not over-mixed. Spread onto a lined baking tray at a thickness of about 1cm. Bake for 8-10 minutes or until the dacquoise is crisp on top but slightly soft in the centre. Remove from the oven and slide onto a cool surface. Place a piece of baking paper on top of the surface of the dacquoise and carefully flip it over onto a small flat baking tray. Remove the paper. Allow to cool for 2-3 minutes. Remove the mousse from the freezer and invert onto the slightly warm dacquoise. Press down lightly to ensure the two surfaces are lightly stuck together. Remove the tin from the mousse. Slide onto a tray and return to the freezer.
- For the chocolate plaques, gently melt the chocolate, no hotter than 45°C, in a metal bowl over hot but not boiling water. Pour 2/3 of the melted chocolate onto a cool, clean work surface and spread it around until it begins to thicken and feels cool to the touch. Return the cooler chocolate to the warm chocolate that remains in the bowl. Stir until completely combined. The chocolate needs to be about 26°C. The chocolate will feel cool on the side of your little finger. Spread the tempered chocolate with a palette knife over 3 x 4cm x 30cm strips of acetate plastic (stuck to the marble with sticky tape). When the chocolate is set to the touch but still slightly malleable, peel the strips off the bench and turn upside down so the chocolate surface is down. To portion the plaques, measure 10cm lengths, mark through the chocolate with a knife heated under warm water then cut the acetate with scissors. You will get 2 plaques per strip of plastic. Store plaques in the fridge until ready to use.
- Remove the tray from the freezer and peel off the paper and discard. Using a long knife heated under very hot water, cut the mousse into 10cm logs, taking care to keep the edges clean and straight.
- To serve, smear a small amount of the peanut caramel in the middle of the plate. This will stop the dessert from sliding around. Then place the bar on the plate dacquoise side down. Now peel the plastic off a plaque and carefully place, shiny side up, on top. Using a teaspoon dipped in hot water to form small quenelles and evenly place three on the plaque. Fill the two spaces with peanut caramel then place another plaque on top. Be careful not to get fingerprints on the chocolate. Serve immediately on a cool plate.
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10 comments
OohLookBel says:
May 1, 2011
Wow, that looks stunning. Love the drippy caramel, the mousse, the plaque, everything!
mademoiselle délicieuse says:
May 1, 2011
Wow…it is unfair of you to taunt us like this! So, ahem, where was my invite over to your place over the long weekend to sample this?!
Mark says:
May 1, 2011
Well it was pretty good. Unfortunately for me I shared it with others so I only got one piece. My advice would be just to make a large batch of the peanut salted caramel and wolf it down with a big spoon. You achieve the same sugar coma.
Iron Chef Shellie says:
May 1, 2011
O. M. G!!! I should have done that on the long weekend toooooo but I was already swamped! looks soooooo good!
Phuoc'n Delicious says:
May 1, 2011
WOW WOW WOW! This looks great Mark! Kudos to you for attempting it! I’m with you, more 5 day long weekends please! Well done on the chocolate tempering too!
Sara (Belly Rumbles) says:
May 2, 2011
Oh look at that oozing caramel down the parfait! That looks so delicious.
angie says:
May 3, 2011
You are a champ! Awesome job! Mmm I could probably sit there with a bowl of salted caramel all by myself too
Mark says:
May 3, 2011
I can’t bring myself to eating anymore sugar after this
Relishment (Rory Hart) says:
May 4, 2011
Wow quite a construction! Yours looks better than the Masterchef one!
Forager @ The Gourmet Forager says:
May 24, 2011
That looks amazingly good! Icecream or not, that could not have lasted long!