Extra Brute: A Very Simple Chocolate Ganache Recipe
Recipes are worthless without great ingredients. Ganache, for example, would be a nasty thing made with Hershey bars. BLECH.
My favorite scarfing chocolate will always be Lindt Bittersweet. My grandmother kept a not so secret stash when I was a kid. Back in the day, it was a German thing. Now I can buy it at my local grocery store. I haven't decided yet whether having easy access to my nostalgic childhood treats at the local Super Saver is a good thing. I'm thinking no.
At the shop, I buy cases of bittersweet chocolate. One bar weighs eleven pounds. ELEVEN POUNDS! Can you imagine being a kid a coming across an eleven pound chocolate bar? How about a stack of eleven pound chocolate bars? I'm inordinately proud of myself for not leaving teeth marks in every one. But when I'm weighing out chocolate for a recipe, it's always an ounce or two off. "Oopsy daisy. Accidentally dropped a fist sized chunk of chocolate into my pie hole."
It took me a while to land on the right chocolate for baking. I needed something that would work with all of my chocolate recipes and make for decent snacking. Bless my poor little heart, I had to go through a lot of tasting before I landed on the right one.
It was a toss up Valrhona and Callebaut. Valrhona is a luscious thing. It's smooth and elegant, with a fruity finish. Callebaut, on the other hand, is slick and macho. It's a full court press of cocoa butter. No fruit finish, just deep
Ganache is chocolate cut with cream. It's liquid truffle, quite literally. If you let ganache set, take a melon scoop and make a perfect round of chocolate. Roll it in cocoa powder. Voila. The best truffle ever and you made it yourself.
Left soft and warm, ganache is a deadly filling and coating for cakes. If you find it too thick, add a bit more cream to get the consistency you prefer. Add a tablespoon or more of corn syrup to give it more of a sheen. It will set with time and is very transportable.
But start with the best chocolate you can get our hands on. It's the same concept as cooking with wine: don't use anything you wouldn't drink straight.
GANACHE
This is as simple as ganache recipes get. Some get a little more involved but are equally easy. So if this appeals to you, don't be afraid to try out a few more versions. And tell me what you like best.
1 cup heavy cream
10 ounces bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped and set aside in a metal bowl.
In a small saucepan, bring the cream to a boil. Pour the cream over the chocolate and whisk constantly in a circular motion. In one direction only. Make sure to keep the whisk in contact with the bottom to incorporate all the chocolate and to keep from making a bloody mess. Keep whisking until the cream and chocolate have perfectly combined into a holy union of shiny black liquid goodness. Resist the urge to plunge your face into it. . . . .at least wait until its a bit cooler.