Chocolate Eclair Cake. We had the Missionary Elders for tea last night and I wanted to make them a special dessert to enjoy. This chilled dessert always goes down a real treat with everyone I serve it to.
Another name for it would be Profiterole Cake. It's basically a choux pastry base filled with a vanilla and cream cheese filling, topped with whipped cream and then drizzled with a chocolate sauce! It is fabulously delicious!
Chocolate Eclair Cake from scratch is one of those desserts that will have people thinking about it for a very long time. Its a lot simpler to make than one would suppose as well!
One of the things I love most about this cake is that it is a chocolate eclair cake without coolwhip. I would much rather use the real thing rather than a petroleum by-product, wouldn't you?
I have never had anyone turn their noses up at this . . . in fact most people want seconds and the Elders were no different.
When I offered seconds they jumped at the chance! It just so happened that Eclairs was our Alaskan Missionaries favorite dessert, so he really enjoyed this!
It is a North American Recipe that I had to adapt to English ingredients when I moved over here fourteen and a half years ago.
Many of the original ingredients were not readily available here and still aren't. I have listed the original North American Ingredients in the recipe.
It's such a simple dessert to make and yet it is a show stopper! You might be a bit afraid of making choux pastry, but if you make sure your boiled mixture is cooled to lukewarm and you persevere when beating in the eggs, you have every chance for success.
Adding eggs to a boiling hot flour mixture is always a sure recipe for disaster. Been there, done that when I was thirteen. A mistake I never made twice. Experience is a great teacher.
That rich custardy filling is deliciously creamy and just sweet enough without going over the top . . . a nice layer of lightly sweetened whipped cream is layered over the whole cake and then a delicious chocolate sauce is drizzled over all.
Again, let the sauce cool before you drizzle it on. You don't want it to melt the whipped cream. Altogether this simple dessert is a real delight both to make and to indulge in!
Filling:
(I used Banana Flavoured Angel Delight)
To make the sauce whisk the sugar and cocoa powder together in a saucepan. Whisk in the milk. Drop in the butter. Cook over medium heat, stirring to melt the butter. Bring to the boil, whisking constantly. Boil for two minutes then remove from the heat.
Whisk continuously during this time. Whisk in the salt and vanilla. Cool to room temperature. Drizzle the chocolate sauce decoratively over top of the chilled cake. Chill the cake until ready to serve. You will have plenty of sauce, so put the remainder into a pouring jug. Pass any additional sauce at the table.
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I just died and went to heaven looking at it ! Oh.my.God !! I think that's the reason why we French invented profiterolles !
ReplyDeleteHaha Frugal. I have been grateful many times for French Patisserie! Especially your almond croissants and the deligtful macaron!! xx
ReplyDeleteI bet they loved it!!
ReplyDeleteThey were in heaven Monique! xoxo
ReplyDeleteI have made this many times and it is delicious! Surprisingly easy to make. We call it "moon" cake also because the crust looks like the craters on the moon. :) You can also use Hershey's syrup for the chocolate sauce.
ReplyDeleteLorraine
IT does look a bit like that before you cover it Lorraine!! we cannot get Hershey's syrup over here unfortunately. I have to make my own. I did use Hershey's cocoa powder though. xx
ReplyDeleteCan this be made a day ahead? Carol in Texas
ReplyDeleteYou can definitely make it a day ahead so that it sets up really well. I would not add the chocolate sauce until you go to serve it! Hope this helps! ~Marie
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