Hi All - I'm thinking about making a Buche de Noel for Christmas - any T&T recs?

sandi-in-hawaii

Well-known member
It's been a busy month, but I'll have some free time, and I'm feeling fairly ambitious smileys/smile.gif

I see Buche de Noel recipes all over the place. Seems like a very traditional Christmas dessert, although I've never actually seen one.

I'd love to see a tried and true recipe, if you have one.

TIA!

 
p.s. Mimi, I haven't thanked you yet for setting this forum yet - THANKS!!!

It's wonderful that you set this up to replace Gail's. Just like the old one, but better.

Thank you!

 
I made this one last year and it was great...

...ok it would have been great had I not put too much brandy in it by mistake, but that was my fault not the recipe. It taste tested wonderful up to the brandy spillage disaster of 2004! LOL!

Buche de Noel Recipe courtesy Nick Malgieri, Perfect Cakes, HarperCollins, 2002
Difficulty: Expert Prep Time: 1 hour 45 minutes Inactive Prep Time: 2 minutes
Cook Time: 12 minutes; Yield: 12 servings; User Rating: *****


Coffee Buttercream:
4 large egg whites
1 cup sugar
24 tablespoons (3 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
2 tablespoons instant espresso powder
2 tablespoons rum or brandy
1 Chocolate Genoise Sheet, recipe follows

Marzipan (see note below):
8 ounces almond paste
2 cups confectioners' sugar
3 to 5 tablespoons light corn syrup

For Finishing:
Cocoa powder
Red and green liquid food coloring
Confectioners' sugar


To make the buttercream: Whisk the egg whites and sugar together in the bowl of an electric mixer. Set the bowl over simmering water and whisk gently until the sugar is dissolved and the egg whites are hot. Attach the bowl to the mixer and whip with the whisk on medium speed until cooled. Switch to the paddle and beat in the softened butter and continue beating until the buttercream is smooth. Dissolve the instant coffee in the liquor and beat into the buttercream.

Turn the genoise layer over and peel away the paper. Invert onto a fresh piece of paper. Spread the layer with half the buttercream. Use the paper to help you roll the cake into a tight cylinder Transfer to baking sheet and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes or until set. Reserve the remaining buttercream for the outside of the buche.

To make the marzipan: Combine the almond paste and 1 cup of the sugar in the bowl of the electric mixer and beat with the paddle attachment on low speed until the sugar is almost absorbed. Add the remaining 1 cup sugar and mix until the mixture resembles fine crumbs. Add half the corn syrup, then continue mixing until a bit of the marzipan holds together when squeezed, adding additional corn syrup a little at a time, as necessary; the marzipan in the bowl will still appear crumbly. Transfer the marzipan to a work surface and knead until smooth.

To make marzipan mushrooms: Roll 1/3 of the marzipan into a 6-inch long cylinder and cut into 1-inch lengths. Roll half the lengths into balls. Press the remaining cylindrical lengths (stems) into the balls (caps) to make mushrooms. Smudge with cocoa powder.
To make holly leaves: Knead green color into 1/2 the remaining marzipan and roll it into a long cylinder. Flatten with the back of a spoon, and then loosen it from the surface with a spatula. Cut into diamonds to make leaves, or use a cutter.
To make holly berries: Knead red color into a tiny piece of marzipan. Roll into tiny balls.
To make pine cones: knead cocoa powder into the remaining marzipan. Divide in half and form into 2 cone shappes. Slash the sides of cones with the points of a pair of scissors.

Unwrap the cake. Trim the ends on the diagonal, starting the cuts about 2 inches away from each end. Position the larger cut piece on the buche about 2/3 across the top. Cover the buche with the reserved buttercream, making sure to curve around the protruding stump. Streak the buttercream with a fork or decorating comb to resemble bark. Transfer the buche to a platter and decorate with the marzipan. Sprinkle the platter and buche sparingly with confectioners' sugar "snow."

Storage: Keep at cool room temperature. Cover leftovers loosely and keep at room temperature.


Chocolate Genoise Sheet:
3 large eggs
3 large egg yolks
Pinch salt
3/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup cake flour (spoon flour into dry-measure cup and level off)
1/3 cup cornstarch
1/4 cup alkalized (Dutch process) cocoa


Special equipment: 10 by 15-inch jelly-roll pan buttered and lined with buttered parchment. Set rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 400 degrees. Half-fill a medium saucepan with water and bring it to a boil over high heat. Lower the heat so the water is simmering. Whisk the eggs, yolks, salt, and sugar together in the bowl of a heavy-duty mixer. Place over the pan of simmering water and whisk gently until the mixture is just lukewarm, about 100 degrees (test with your finger). Attach the bowl to the mixer and with the whisk attachment, whip on medium-high speed until the egg mixture is cooled (touch the outside of the bowl to tell) and tripled in volume.

While the eggs are whipping, stir together the flour, cornstarch, and cocoa.
Sift 1/3 of the flour mixture over the beaten eggs. Use a rubber spatula to fold in the flour mixture, making sure to scrape all the way to the bottom of the bowl on every pass through the batter to prevent the flour mixture from accumulating there and making lumps. Repeat with another 1/3 of the flour mixture and finally with the remainder.

Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Bake the genoise for about 10 to 12 minutes, or until well risen, deep and firm to the touch. (Make sure the cake doesn't overbake and become too dry, or it will be hard to roll.) Use a small paring knife to loosen the cake from the sides of the pan. Invert the cake onto a rack and let the cake cool right side up on the paper. Remove the paper when the cake is cool.

Storage: Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for several days, or double-wrap and freeze for up to a month.
Yield: 1 (10 by 15-inch) sheet cake

* Marzipan -- I tried to make this without a stand mixer and don't advise it. It just wouldn't come together for me. Thank goodness I had some of the premade in the pantry.

http://groups.msn.com/APlaceattheTable/mariadnocasalbum.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=48

 
Maria, I've been looking at that recipe on the web, but wanted a T&T recommendation>>>

So glad to know it comes with a glowing recommendation, as well as a fabulous picture!

What a beautiful cake! Your guests must have loved it, extra brandy and all smileys/smile.gif

Thanks for the response - I love this place!

 
So glad you like it...A Holiday Story...some FRC thoughts/warnings!.. smileys/wink.gif

First, give yourself some time. Last year in a second wind faux burst of holiday energy (that I shudda known better than to trust. Geez, I was like perky and humming whatz up with that?) I started making this at like 7 pm on Xmas Eve. That was my first bad idea. The 2nd, which I noted in the recipe, was to try making the marzipan without a stand mixer....

Cut to me *much* later that night, the full force of tired now set in, gone is the humming, gone is the stepford wife outfit and hair, too tired to even think of finding a chair, sitting on the floor mixing bowl in my lap, mixer in hand, hair all shot to h*ll and pulled up into a scrunchie, wearing sweats, cursing at the darn stuff as to why aren't you coming together? Am I not giving you enough love? Are you not happy with me? Does Santa hate marzipan so he wants me to leave it out? What!? Then it hits me don't I have some of this premade in the pantry? Oh but it's Christmas I don't want no premade! Homemade from stratch we must have! It's the holidays after all and we don't need no stinking premade!

Tick-tock-tick-tock.......scr*w homemade! Out to the pantry I go giving in to the full force of 'isn't this over yet?' My bed in the other room calling 'if you just give up it'll all be over and they can still eat cake!' Digging through shelves finally grabbing...almond paste. Fear shoots through my heart for a split second screaming NOOOOOOOOOooooooo! ...till right behind it...sigh...marzipan. Thank GAWD. I'm feeling the love now. All is right with the world.

Yes, Virgina...the end is in sight and there is a Santa Claus!

Yes, it was easy and oh so pretty. I think I may make one again today.

smileys/bigsmile.gif>

Happy Holidaze Everyone!!!

 
Maria, you're cracking me up in your Marilyn-esque like post!!!>>

And I haven't even started making my cake yet (sitting here wasting time on the computer smileys/smile.gif

It's been a crazy hectic week, and today's the first day of rest.

I thought I'd use it to make the cake, but it's been such a nice lazy day, that I'm having second thoughts.

But maybe I'll be like you, and get that second wind. But I'll be sure to put the extra brandy into a glass, and not into the cake! hee hee!

Happy Holidays to you and yours!

 
Heheheee, YES sad but true...it was much better this year tho...

I again made this recipe, tho I eneded up tweaking it a bit. Decided to spread some nutella on the cake before roll-up because why not? Then I used just the coffee (no booze at all this year) buttercream in the center, then added melted chocolate before icing the outside. Came out real nice. I took a picture but it mostly looks the same only I didn't bother with making pine cones this year - just the 'shrooms and holly.

Did you end up making a Buche?

 
No, had a little accident and ended up with four stitches in my pinky finger>>>

I was going to feed the dog, and I dropped her ceramic dish, which broke in half, and sliced my pinky.

So I gave up my Christmas eve baking for a short visit to the ER, getting it stitched up.

Oh well, at least I have a reprieve from dishwashing duties for a little while smileys/smile.gif

Your tweaks to this year's Buche sounds FAB! Forget Nick Malgieri's raspberry version - your nutella one sounds waaay better.

Sounds like you're starting a new tradition - making a new buche flavor every year.....

 
Oh mi gosh -- hope you're ok!!!

So sorry to hear aobut your unexpected side trip on Christmas Eve! Hope you and your pinky are feeling better now. Did Santa bring puppy a new dish? (Funny cuz I have one all wrapped up waiting to give someone I haven't hooked up with yet this holiday season. I couldn't resist - it's made to look like a chinese food carton. Perfect for her new pint sized lap dog.)

 
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