Bake_from_Scratch_November-December_2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

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his is a tale of two logs, one a pagan ritual and the other
the Christian baker’s edible reimagining. The original
Yule log was a special stump of wood pagan families

would burn during the Yule season to bring fortune and


good luck. Over time, this pagan rite was absorbed by the


Christian celebration of Christmas, and the need for the


log became more of a symbolic tradition. Nineteenth-


century French pastry chefs shrewdly adapted this symbol


into a delectable piece of pastry illusion, a decadent cake


masquerading as freshly cut tree log. One of the earliest


recipes recorded for the bûche de Noël is from Pierre


Lacam’s cookbook Le mémorial historique et géographique de la


pâtisserie. Genoise sponge cake was cut into rounds and


sandwiched together with chocolate cream, forming a


cylindrical log, and fi nally adorned with green almond


paste leaves and fi nely chopped pistachios. Eventually, it


transformed into the roulade we know today, but it has


kept its iconic shape in homage to its ancient, uh, roots.


The elements required for crafting a proper bûche de Noël


are a genoise sponge that is light and elastic but still a joy to


eat; a simple syrup to moisten said genoise sponge, ensuring


it stays tender during its time as the holiday centerpiece,


and to enhance the sponge’s fl avor profi le; and a rich


buttercream fi lling and outer coat that must be sweeter


than the sponge cake but not cloying, and fi rm enough to


withstand slicing and styling. Finally, there is the whimsical


decoration: handcrafted chocolate bark, cocoa-dotted


mushroom-shaped meringues, nutty pistachio moss, and


a delicate frost of confectioners’ sugar. Our two bûche


de Noëls—one delightfully traditional and one radically


vertical—bring all this and more to the table. Follow


along so you can create your own version of the ultimate


Christmas centerpiece.

Free download pdf