[net.cooks] Chocolatier Magazine and Killer Chocolates

dave@cylixd.UUCP (Dave Kirby) (10/14/85)

In article <5400027@hpfcly.UUCP> holly@hpfcla.UUCP writes:
>Do any of you other chocoholics subscribe to or buy the CHOCOLATIER MAGAZINE?
>If you don't, you should.  It's an outstanding magazine full of WONDERFUL
>chocolate recipes.  The pictures alone will make you go crazy...


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I'm posting this because I can't figure out how to mail to you.

I have been looking for a recipe for killer chocolate drops - the kind
of large Hershey-kiss-shaped candy that is so rich that one piece puts
you under the table. I first tasted such chocolate at a fancy restaurant's
dessert bar here in Memphis, and since then they have closed down the
dessert bar (perhaps for selling lethal chocolate without a license).
Anyway, I would like to know of the richest chocolate recipe you have.
Something very sweet and potentially dangerous when ingested in large
quantities.


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Dave Kirby    ( ...!ihnp4!akgub!cylixd!dave)

(The views expressed herein are the exclusive property of Dave Kirby.
Any person, living or dead, found with the same or similar opinions
will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of law.)

dlp@akgua.UUCP (D.L. Philen [Dan]) (10/15/85)

  Here is the Chocolate Torta as originally posted to the net.

		Torta Di Cioccolata Alla Sanna

	        from Chocolatier, Vol. 1, No.	1

	    The	Mocha Divine Cake, originally created by Sanna
       Cohen of	Sanna's	Restaurant in philadelphia, is delicious
       proof of	how chocolate is translated on a transcontinental
       scale.  The original recipe called for a	sweeter, milkier
       chocolate for the cake, but the customers at Washington
       Square Bar and Grill in San Francisco wanted a denser, more
       bittersweet taste in their desert, so the recipe	was altered
       to fit the needs	of the restaurant's clientele and renamed
       in honor	of its creator,	Torta Di Cioccolata alla Sanna.


	1 pound	sweet butter
	1 cup plus 2 tablespons	sugar
	1 cup plus 2 tablespoons espresso or french roast coffee
	12 ounces bittersweet chocolate
	4 ounces unsweetened chocolate
	8 large	eggs

	1.  Preheat oven to 350	degrees. Line a	9X3 inch flase
       bottom or spring- form pan with aluminum	foil and grease	and
       flour generously.  Set aside.

	2.  In saucepan, over LOW heat,	melt together sweet butter,
       sugar, and coffee.

	3.  Whisk the above ingredients	together.

	4.  Add	chocolate and continue to stir until melted.

	5.  Remove from	heat and add the eggs, slightly	beaten.

	6.  Whisk together and turn into prepared pan.	Bake for
       50-55 minutes.  Cake is done when top has a crust and is	dry
       to touch.  You can eat this as soon as it is cool enough, or
       refrigerate up to 12-14 hours and eat it	then.

	Yields 12-14 servings

	Note:  This is a chocoholic's delight. No flour, one pound
       of chocolate.  It is very simple	to make, and of	course,
       contains	no calories.


  **********************************************************
   This article was posted as an addition to  the above.

NOTE: Evidently some would be cooks in netland were confused as to
      the meaning of "add 1cup of coffee", thus I recently posted
      the following addition.

      Bon Apetito

 As the original poster of the Chocolate Torta recipe, let
me clear up the confusion.  First of all, the coffee should
be LIQUID FRESHLY BREWED.  You can also use a freeze dried
coffee provided you make it in the ordinary way as if you
were going to drink it.  Think about it!  Coffee grounds
are fit only for feeding to worms, and a cup of instant
coffee makes an awful lot of coffee.  Can you imagine
the taste if you were to do those things? BLEAH! YUCH!

 As an additional note, I have made some changes and I think
improvements in the original recipe.  First, I used a regular
dark roast coffee instead of French roast.  My first torta was
a little heavy on the French coffee flavor for my taste. This
seems to work much better.  Second, I add 2tsp of vanilla extract.
This adds flavor and cuts the taste of so many eggs.  Finally,
I added 2 tablespoons of flour.  This helps the cake set up 
faster.  This is a real trick as you can not add flour to
the hot butter chocolate mix.  The alternatives are to try to mix
the flour with the eggs, or better save a little coffee aside,
mix the flour with it, and add at the last moment before
placing in the oven.  Be sure to mix well with a wisk.

 This is a VERY RICH Torta.  I have served it to many friends
with much praise and requests for the recipe.  My gourmet
group went wild over it.  Needless to say, this torta goes
a long way, since only a small slice will suffice.  Therefore,
I managed to cut the recipe exactly in half, bake in a 6 X 3
inch spring form pan for 35-40 min at 350, with great
results.  This still makes plenty of torta for all.
As with most chocolate dishes, this one gets better with age.
It seems to reach its peak after about two days in the 
refrigerator.  Be sure to cover it to keep it from drying out.

                        d. l. philen akgua!dlp