Bistro Vue’s Warm Chocolate Orange Mousse


MY ATTEMPT AT SHANNON BENNETT’S MASTER CHEF CHALLENGE

I know you have all been waiting for this one! Shannon Bennett would have to be one of my most favourite Australian chefs. I have dined at Vue de Monde and wow it was an amazing experience. My last Master chef dish I made with my good friend Mathew is still my most viewed post on my blog. So it was only fitting to attempt his 2015 Master Chef Aus Bistro Vue’s Warm Chocolate Orange Mousse.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfniS0P3hhw

INGREDIENTS

Madeleines:

– 3 Eggs

– 150g Caster Sugar

– 1/2 Lemon, Zested and Juiced

– 1/2 Orange, Zested and Juiced

– 50g Cold Milk

– 1/2 Vanilla Bean, Split and Scraped

– 150g Flour, Plus More for Pan Prep

– 10g Baking Powder

– 100g Butter, Melted and Cooled Plus More for Pan Prep

– Icing Sugar, for Dusting

Tempered Chocolate Discs:

– 300g 62% Chocolate, Roughly Chopped

Anglaise:

– 150ml Milk

– 150ml Cream

– 1 Vanilla Pod, Split and Scraped

– 3 Egg Yolks

– 20g Caster Sugar

Chocolate Mousse:

– 300g Anglaise

– 300g 62% Chocolate

 

 

Sable Crumble:

– 40g Egg Yolks

– 80g Caster Sugar

– 120g Flour

– 10g Baking Powder

– 80g Butter, Softened

Orange Jelly:

– 4-6 Oranges, Juiced and Strained to Make 400g Orange Juice

– 50g Caster Sugar

– 1-2 Lemons, Juiced to Make 20g Juice

– 3.5g Agar

– 2 Oranges, Peeled, Cut Into Segments and Roughly Chopped

Orange Pearls:

– Orange Jelly

– 1L Grapeseed Oil

Chocolate Caramel 
Sauce:

– 100g Butter

– 100g Caster Sugar

– 100ml Cream

– 100g 62% Chocolate

– 1 Tonka Bean, Finely Grated

To assemble:

– 1 Tonka Bean

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METHOD

1: Preheat ovens to 160C and 180C and water bath to 52C.

2: Place the grapeseed oil for the orange pearls in a tall container and keep in the freezer until the jelly is ready.

3: To make the madeleines, place the eggs and sugar in the bowl of an electric mixer with the whisk attachment and whisk until pale. Add the lemon and orange zest and juice, half the milk, split and scraped vanilla bean half and continue whisking.

4: Mix together the flour and the baking powder and add it to the egg mixture in the electric mixer and allow to mix until fully incorporated.

5: Add cooled, melted butter to the remaining milk and add to the mixture. Whisk for a further 5 minutes.

6: Transfer the mixture into a piping bag and place into the fridge to thicken, about 30-40 minutes.

7: Prepare the madeleine moulds by brushing with melted butter and sprinkling with flour.

8: Once the madeleine mixture has thickened, remove from fridge and pipe the mixture into the madeleine moulds. Bake at 180˚C until the top of the madeleines are firm, about 8 minutes. Remove from oven, allow to cool slightly then set aside on a wire rack.

9: To make the chocolate discs, first temper the chocolate. Place 200gm chocolate in a bowl and place over a saucepan of gently simmering water. Allow to melt, stirring, until chocolate reaches 50C. Remove bowl from saucepan and add remaining 100gm chocolate. Stir continuously until well combined and temperature drops to 28C. Return bowl to the simmering water and allow to heat, stirring, until chocolate reaches 32C.

10: Spread tempered chocolate over an acetate sheet (I didn’t have any so I just used grease proof paper) to 1mm thick and let cool slightly. When the chocolate is semi set, use an 8.5 cm diameter ring cutter to cut out chocolate
 discs. Set aside.

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11: To make the sable crumble, place the yolks and sugar in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, and beat until pale and frothy.

12: Meanwhile, in a separate bowl, sift together the flour and baking powder.

13: When the yolks are foamy and pale, add the softened butter and then the flour and 
baking powder and beat until well combined.

14: Transfer sable dough onto baking paper and roll to 5mm thick. Place in the freezer to rest.

15: When the sable dough is very cold, remove from freezer and place in the 160C oven to bake until 
golden, about 14 minutes. Remove from oven and when cool enough to handle, crumble and set aside.

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16: To make the anglaise, place the milk, cream and scraped vanilla bean in a saucepan and set over medium heat to bring to a boil.

17: Meanwhile, place the egg yolks and the sugar in a bowl and whisk with a hand whisk until pale. Once the cream mixture has come to the boil pour over the eggs, whisking thoroughly then return the mixture to the saucepan.

18: Return saucepan to medium heat and cook, stirring, until the anglaise reaches 80C, remove from the heat and pass through a fine strainer. Measure out 300g anglaise and place over an ice bath to cool.

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19: To make the chocolate mousse, place cooled anglaise and chocolate in a sous vide bag, vacuum 
all the air out and seal.

20: Place filled sous vide bag in the water bath and infuse for 20 minutes. Remove from water bath and knead bag to ensure mixture is well combined.

21: Transfer mixture to syphon gun. Charge gun twice 
and set aside at room temperature.

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22: To make the orange jelly, place all ingredients, except the orange segments, in a saucepan and bring to the boil over high heat. Remove from heat, skim bubbles off the top and strain.

23: Place 3-4 roughly chopped orange segments in the bottom of each serving glass. While jelly is still warm, pour enough into the glass to just cover the fresh orange. Place glass immediately in the fridge to set.

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24: To make the orange pearls, fill a syringe with the warm jelly. Remove the cold grapeseed oil from the freezer. Gently push single drops of orange jelly from the syringe into the cold oil. Keep the syringe moving to ensure no pearls touch each other while setting. Once set, carefully strain the pearls and set aside in the fridge. Repeat with remaining jelly.

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25: To make the chocolate caramel sauce, place butter and sugar in a saucepan and set over medium heat to caramelize. When light golden, take off the heat and slowly whisk in cream.

26: Add the chocolate, tonka bean and set aside.

27: To assemble, remove a glass from the fridge, ensuring the orange jelly is set. Fill the glass to about 1/3 with 
mousse from the syphon gun.

28: Sprinkle sable crumble on top of the mousse then add a layer of the orange pearls on top.

29: Rest a chocolate disc on top of the glass. Place the glass on a serving plate. Grate some tonka bean on top of the chocolate.

30: Dust 4 cooled madeleines with icing sugar and place them on the serving plate.

31: Return the chocolate caramel sauce to a low heat and heat to just before boiling point. If the sauce splits, add 1 tablespoon water to bring it back together. Transfer warm chocolate caramel sauce to a serving jug.

32: Pour the warm chocolate caramel sauce on top of the chocolate disc and allow to melt into the dessert.

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Full credit to Shannon Bennett and the Master Chef Australia Crew

Link below

http://tenplay.com.au/channel-ten/masterchef/recipes/bistro-vue-s-warm-chocolate-orange-mousse

Click for Special Ingredients

Edible Cigars


EDIBLE CIGARS

When I ventured over to Melbourne in February I took my lovely girlfriend to a little restaurant called Cutler and Co. This is where I came across Fromage Blanc Cigars, a delicate little cigar-shaped pastry filled with cheese and at either end an olive tapenade and white balsamic gel. However I thought I would try my own twist on this little number. I replaced the cheese with a chocolate ganache and managed to find some edible labels courtesy of Edible Image Printing. I looked at many recipes (most I translated to English from French) but in the end I just made up my own recipe.


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INGREDIENTS

– 200g Dark Chocolate

– 50Ml Coconut Cream

– 1 Packet of Filo Pastry

– 1 Egg

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METHOD

First defrost the filo pastry and whisk the egg in a small bowl, this will be an egg wash. Next you will need a small sauce pan with enough water in it so that when a glass bowl is placed on top the water isn’t going to touch the bottom of it. Put the chocolate in and stir constantly while you wait until it melts. Once it has done so, remove from the heat and stir in the coconut cream. Leave to cool down and for an extra effect at this point I smoked the chocolate with cigar smoke using my smoking gun.

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Meanwhile clear a surface, dust with flour and lay a sheet of filo down. Grab a brush and wash the filo with the egg before placing another sheet on top. Repeat until you have a five layer thick sheet. To make the tobacco looking ends roll and squish a few sheets of the filo together until you will have the thickness of the cigar you want (it should look like the picture above). Mine were about one to one and a half centimeters in width. Next you want to cut from that roll three 1 cm pieces two for the ends and once for the middle I found this stopped the cigars from collapsing where the ganache is spooned in.

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Place these 1 cm pieces evenly, roughly three to four centimeters apart and spoon some ganache into these 2 spaces. Brush the filo with egg and roll the cigars as tight as you can. Be careful doing this not to tear the pasty. Place on some grease proof paper and put into the freezer to chill. Once frozen cut the ends off so that they are nice and neat. Next you want to heat some canola oil (or you can cook them in the oven) in a pot and fry the cigars until they are golden brown. Let them sit on some paper towel to get rid of any excess oil then leave them to cool and enjoy.

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Below is a link to some of the recipes I sorted through and combined to create my own: https://www.google.com.au/#q=cigares+au+fromage+blanc