Pistachio Petit-Four Cake

"Adapted from "Sky High: Irresisitible Triple-Layer Cake via Leite's Culinaria. I don't need to tell you that this cake is a little insane to make. But I can tell you it's worth it, and not nearly as complicated as it might seem from the outset. It's a one bowl (plus food processor) cake, the jam comes from a jar, ganache takes two minutes to make, and the next time - - the marzipan will come from a tube, already made, rather than making almond paste from scratch."
 
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Ready In:
2hrs
Ingredients:
16
Serves:
8-12
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ingredients

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directions

  • MAKE THE CAKE:.
  • Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C).
  • Butter three 8-inch round cake pans; line the bottom of each pan with a round of parchment or waxed paper and butter the paper.
  • Spread out the pistachios in a baking pan and toast in the oven for 7 to 10 minutes, or until lightly colored.
  • Transfer to a dish and let cool completely; finely chop the pistachios and set 1/4 cup aside for decoration.
  • Put the remaining 1/2 cup pistachios in a food processor.
  • Add the sugar and pulse just enough to grind them finely.
  • Pour into a large mixing bowl and add the flour, baking powder, and salt.
  • Blend with the mixer on low for 30 seconds; add the butter, milk, and vanilla and, with the mixer on low, beat until completely incorporated.
  • Raise the speed to medium and beat until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes.
  • Add the beaten eggs in 2 or 3 additions, scraping down the sides of the bowl well and mixing only long enough to blend after each addition.
  • Divide the batter among the 3 prepared pans.
  • Bake for about 25 minutes, or until a cake tester or wooden toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
  • Allow the layers to cool in the pans for 10 minutes.
  • Turn out onto wire racks, carefully peel off the paper liners, and let cool completely.
  • MAKE THE MARZIPAN:.
  • Crumble the almond paste into a large mixing bowl.
  • Use an electric mixer on low speed to soften the almond paste.
  • Add the confectioners’ sugar and corn syrup and beat until smooth.
  • Wrap well in plastic so it doesn’t dry out, and allow to rest at room temperature for 1 to 2 hours before rolling out.
  • MAKE THE DARK CHOCOLATE GANACHE:.
  • Chop the chocolate coarsely and put it in a heatproof bowl.
  • Bring the cream to a bare simmer & pour the hot cream over the chocolate and let stand for 5 minutes.
  • Whisk until smooth and use the glaze soon after making so that it doesn’t set.
  • ASSEMBLE THE CAKE:.
  • Roll out a third of the marzipan on a work surface dusted with a little confectioners’ sugar to about 1/8-inch thickness.
  • Set one of the cake pans upside down on the marzipan and trim around it with a small knife to make an 8-inch round.
  • Repeat two more times with the remaining marzipan.
  • Save all your scraps to make roses for decoration, if you like.
  • Place one cake layer on a cake board, flat side up.
  • Spread 1/4 cup of the preserves evenly over the top, leaving a 1/4-inch margin all around.
  • Place one marzipan round on top of the preserves and spread 1/3 cup of the Dark Ganache Glaze over the marzipan so that it completely covers the surface.
  • Repeat with the second cake layer, adding more preserves, another round of marzipan, and more ganache glaze.
  • Top the cake with the third layer.
  • Spread the last of the apricot preserves over the top of the cake and cover it with the last round of marzipan.
  • Place the cake on a wire cooling rack that is nesting in a baking pan.
  • Pour the remaining ganache glaze over the cake, in several additions, spreading to coat the top and sides.
  • Allow the ganache to set.
  • Garnish the cake with the reserved chopped toasted pistachio nuts and a single marzipan rose or several smaller roses.
  • TO MAKE THE MARZIPAN ROSES:.
  • First, tint the marzipan, if desired, by kneading in a tiny amount of paste food coloring, dabbing just a small bit onto the marzipan with the tip of a toothpick.
  • Flatten the tinted marzipan into a disk and roll out on a work surface dusted with confectioners’ sugar or between 2 sheets of waxed paper to a sheet 1/8 inch thick.
  • With a 1 1/2-inch round cookie cutter, cut out 8 or 9 circles.
  • Cover all the marzipan you are not using immediately with plastic wrap so it doesn’t dry out.
  • Roll one piece of marzipan into a ball the size of a marble and pinch with your fingers to shape into a cone about 1 to 1 1/4 inches high, tapering to a fine point at the top.
  • Take another round of marzipan and wrap it like a petal around the cone, pinching it at the bottom to adhere and at the top to thin and ruffle slightly like a flower.
  • Repeat with the remaining petals overlapping slightly as you work your way around. If necessary, use a little water to help glue the marzipan in place.
  • *Some Prep Tips:.
  • The cake itself was baked a few days in advance, flash-froze them, wrapped each layer in three sheets of plastic wrap, and decorated it, still frozen. This made them very easy to maneuver, and saved us from the chaos that would be baking and decorating in one session. Wrapped well, you can freeze cakes for up to a month and nobody would ever know upon tasting the final product.

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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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