Published on August 12, 2024
By applying heat to white chocolate in this dessert, you'll be introduced to a confection you've never experienced before.
White chocolate has a relatively mild, sweet, milky vanilla flavor that often complements and blends in with the flavors it's paired with. But by applying heat to white chocolate, its plentiful sugars and milk solids caramelize, and it becomes a different confection entirely—bold, less sweet, rich with butterscotch notes, and appropriate for a starring role. To caramelize the chocolate, we roast it in a relatively low oven (300 degrees) until it slowly turns from a creamy white hue, to beige, to, finally, light brown—stirring all along the way for even cooking. The color of the roasted chocolate should resemble peanut butter once fully caramelized, and the texture will become more dry and crumbly (almost startlingly so) as it cooks. We whisk the water for the mousse into the skillet of caramelized chocolate and cook it on the stovetop just until the chocolate is mostly smooth again; any remaining small lumps are easily strained out. Folding whipped egg whites and whipped cream into the chocolate and egg yolks gives the creamy mousse a light, buoyant texture.
We’d love to hear from you! Drop us a message anytime and we’ll get back to you. We’re here to help!
Published on August 12, 2024
1 hr 20 min
Serves 6
0 Comments