Godiva Marjolaine

"Godiva Marjolaine, is a layered dessert, made of hazelnut meringues, chocolate mousse and hazelnut praline flavored cream; piped between layers of toasted hazelnut meringue. Googled it, just to see, and it says: gateux marjolaine = a multilayered chocolate and nut cake. What an understatement! The chilling time will vary. Also, I don't know if this is an old wives' tale or not, but I have been told that meringues take a longer time to bake when it is rainy and humid, and also a longer time to cool. My grilfreind, Judy, and I made this and we took it to her son's house, they were having a dinner party - we should start catering - NOT!!"
 
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Ready In:
2hrs 30mins
Ingredients:
15
Serves:
12
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ingredients

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directions

  • TOASTING THE HAZELNUTS:(Make a day ahead).
  • Preheat oven to 350ºF. Spread hazelnuts in a single layer on a baking sheet and toast for 12-15 minutes, shaking the pan two or three times, until the nuts are golden. Store in air-tight container.(The oven has to be at the correct temperature for the meringues).
  • HAZELNUT MERINGUE LAYERS:

  • Preheat oven to 300ºF.
  • Generously butter 17"x12"x1" jelly roll pan.
  • Line bottom with parchment paper. Then, lightly butter parchment paper. Dust with flour and tap off excess.
  • Place 2 cups toasted hazelnuts in a food processor. Cover & process until very fine, but not oily.
  • Combine ground hazelnuts and flour in medium bowl.
  • Cover and process remaining toasted hazelnuts. Reserve for garnishing the cake.
  • Beat egg whites in clean large mixing bowl until frothy, using electric mixer at medium-low speed.
  • Add salt and increase the speed to medium-high and beat egg whites until soft peaks start to form.
  • Add sugar, 1 tablespoon at a time, beating well.
  • Continue beating until stiff, shiney peaks form.
  • Gently fold in hazelnut-flour mixture. Spread hazelnut meringue in prepared pan.
  • Bake fo 30-35 minutes or until very lightly browned and just set when lightly touched.
  • Cool cake in pan on wire rack for 10 minutes.
  • Invert the cake onto the wire rack and peel off the parchment paper and cool the cake completly.
  • MAKE THE DARK CHOCOLATE GANACHE:

  • Put chocolate in medium bowl.
  • Heat cream in saucepan until it comes to a boil.
  • Pour hot cream over the chocolate and let stand 30 seconds to soften the chocolate.
  • Whisk mixture until smooth.
  • Stir in butter and liqueur.
  • Let cool for 15 minutes or until slightly thickened.
  • Dip 12 hazelnuts in chocolate ganache for garnish and let set.
  • MAKE THE BUTTERCREAM:

  • Place the egg yolks in mixing bowl.
  • Place bowl in a shallow bowl filled with hot water; set the bowl with the egg yolks directly over it, letting the water touch the bottom of the bowl to warm the egg yolks.
  • Stir gently for 1 minute or until the yolks are warm.
  • Remove bowl from water.
  • Beat egg yolks 5-7 minutes, using electric mixer at medium-high speed.
  • Beat until yolks have tripled in volume and form a ribbon when beater is raised.
  • While the eggs are mixing, prepare the syrup.
  • PREPARING SYRUP:

  • Combine granulated sugar and corn syrup in saucepan over medium-low heat. Stir with a wooden spoon to dissolve the sugar. Increase the heat to medium-high and bring the mixture to a boil.
  • With the mixer running at medium speed, carefully(hot sugar really burns)pour the hot syrup into bowl with eggs.
  • Continue to beat the eggs, until they have cooled to room temperature, about 5-10 minutes.
  • Reduce speed to low.
  • Gradually, add the butter, one or two tablespoons at a time, beating well.
  • The buttercream will look lumpy or curdled when half of the butter has been added, but it will smooth out at the end.
  • Add the hazelnut liqueur.
  • ASSEMBLE TH CAKE:

  • Cut cake crosswise into 4 equal pieces, about 11x4".
  • Cut a piece of cardboard into a 11x4" rectangle. Cover the cardboard with foil; place one of the cake pieces on the cardboard rectangle.
  • Spread half the chocolate ganache over the cake.
  • Top with the second cake layer and spread with 1 cup buttercream filling.
  • Repeat layering and spread with the remaining buttercream over the top and sides of the cake.
  • Lift up the cake on the rectangle base, supporting the bottom of the cake in one hand. (It makes it easier to frost when there is more than one person).
  • Using the other hand press the finely chopped hazelnuts on sides of cake.
  • Garnish with chocolate-dipped hazelnuts.

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>Hello all, thank you for visiting My Page but forgive me for&nbsp;it is a work in progress! :) As I am sure you have noticed I changed my Chef Name to Manami which means love &amp; beauty. ;) Just thought I should get with the program - my geisha &amp; my icon! :) Don't fret, I won't change it again! <br /><br />I am 70 years young and I live in a nursing home, which is out of this world, I am treated like a princess and the world is my oyster! I have a private room and during the season I do taxes for most of the staff, as well as my personal clients that have been following me since I left the business world about 25 years ago. I was rear-ended by a van and it turned my whole world upside down. Why dwell on that? <br /><br />I am an American Jew (from NYC) who moved to Havana, Cuba when I was 2 1/2 years old, lived there until a few days after Castro took over and vamoosed it out of that country as fast as my legs would carry me! I&nbsp;was on a forced hiatus from the UofM, due to illness. <br /><br />From there my sister, mother and I went to NYC to work and my father went to Haiti in Port-Au-Prince, where he and my uncle had purchased some tiny cocoa plantations &amp; a chocolate factory - for the choccolate liquer - to make baking chocolate (the real bitter stuff). We joined my father about 2 months later where I spent 2 of the most carefree &amp; wonderful years of my life! It is the stuff that movies are made of! (A la Grace Kelly - even my clothes were like hers)&gt;&nbsp;</p> <p>I then continued my studies in upstate NY and hated it because it was too, too cold!:( Went back to NYC to work and see what I wanted to do with my life - I was all of 20 years old and had to drop out of school because of illness and then because of the weather! Yuck - so I got a job in a Textile Buying Office as a receptionist and soon I found myself buying trimmings! Loved it and was very happy with the work I was doing. <br /><br />However, I got an offer from two young guys who had a factory in Cleveland, Ohio, where they made Maternity Clothes and they wanted me to be in charge of the shipping dept, keep inventory and in my spare time - help with the designing!! I couldn't pass it up - the offer sounded so great and the salary was twice what I was making in the NYC. So I went to Cleveland, got married, had both my children and got a divorce 15 years later. <br /><br />Then my children and I moved to South Florida and have been here since 1978, I can't count that far back :) <br /><br />Learned how to do taxes with H&amp;R Block and worked simultaneously&nbsp;as a Supervisor in 2 offices&nbsp;for them for 15 years. Then after the accident everything went spiralling downwards until I could no longer walk alone even with a walker - so the next step was a wheelchair. Stayed at home with a lot of help (nurses, PT therapists) fixed the bathroom so I could bathe myself and fixed the kitchen so I could help warm-up meals (was taught how to cook in rehab) and so forth and so on. <br /><br />However, the fire department had other plans for me, I called them too often to pick me up off the floor - how embarassing! So they gave me a choice - either a home or they would have to call HRS! :( (very sad) <br /><br />It was there, in my home where I was robbed! <img title=Cry src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-cry.gif border=0 alt=Cry />&nbsp;All my cookbooks (all my Julia Childs Cookbooks, my Settlement Cookbook which had been my mothers - published in 1939 - with all her notes) my mother's cookbooks from Cuba &amp; Haiti, all my handwritten recipes. They also took all my Delft collection, some antiques that I had in the kitchen like my rolling pin, a beautiful old &amp; used wooden bowl, a charcoal-iron that was brought north when my parents left Haiti, it was hand-painted &amp; was gorgeous, as well as all the other things that are too numerous to mention! <br /><br />That proved to be the last straw &amp; from there it was an ALF,<img title=Yell src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-yell.gif border=0 alt=Yell /> which was horrible, and then on to another home where the administrator of that home became the administrator here and voila, here I am. <img title=Smile src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-smile.gif border=0 alt=Smile /></p> <p>I have a beautiful large private room with a private&nbsp;bath, furnished to my liking: eclectic!&nbsp;<img title=Wink src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-wink.gif border=0 alt=Wink /> My room is large enough to house my office and all the other odds and ends with which I like to surround myself.<br /><br />During tax season, mostly, my room is always full (of course I love it that way)! I have a blanket&nbsp;my daughter bought for me in New Mexico and that is on my bed. You guessed it - that is where everbody sits or on my great grandfather's arm chair which is in great shape. <img title=Smile src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-smile.gif border=0 alt=Smile />&nbsp;Update 01/11/2008 that time is here again :) Have started doing taxes already and not just regular taxes but corporations, partnerships and 1040X - ammended returns! Whoopee! I love the feeling I get when this time comes around and I get into gear!!! I love it! :) <br /><br />The head chef, the kitchen supervisor &amp; the dietician enjoy the recipes from Zaar; the ones that I post, as well as, the others. We are in the process of changing the menu right now - so we have been doing a lot of figuring. The administrator is so cute because every once in a while she asks for a recipe and then she gives me a pack of paper so I can print them. <img title=Wink src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-wink.gif border=0 alt=Wink /><br /><br />I am president of the resident council and most of the family members come to me to take care of their grievances - this way I do my part - and the staff can take care of the larger problems! It has been working for 10 years - why change if it ain't broke?<img title=Wink src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-wink.gif border=0 alt=Wink /></p> <p>Well, it's time to say hasta luego folks. <img title=Laughing src=/tiny_mce/plugins/emotions/img/smiley-laughing.gif border=0 alt=Laughing /><br /><br /></p>
 
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