Saturday, February 23, 2008
Glace au Four
Here it is finally - the recipe I promised to make during last year, but never got around to. Well, now I have! Glace au four is basically ice cream in the oven. Which sounds strange, doesn't it? I think it's called Baked Alaska in parts of the world, too. What it is is a cake bottom, ice cream, and then meringue. It's just in the oven long enough to brown the meringue, and not to melt the ice cream.
This particular recipe is probably a bit different from most. It has a crunchy caramelly cake layer, rather than the more common sponge cake, and it has a layer of strawberry preserves between the ice cream and meringue. I got it from Cissi, a close friend during my university years, who actually had a food blog for a while, but it's not active anymore. (Truly a shame, she was miraculous in the kitchen!)
This is not difficult at all. You do need to pipe the meringue carefully though, or it won't work as insulation. No holes! And choose the dish carefully. Here, I can buy ice cream in 500 ml blocks rather than in containers, and those work especially well here. My chosen dish is just large enough to accomodate two of those blocks. You want a fairly snug fit. Or, as long as you pipe the meringue tight enough, you can probably go free-form with this... but I don't dare try! :)
If you don't happen to have brick-shaped ice cream, I'd let regular ice cream soften a little, scoop and pack it on the cake, and the re-freeze for a while so it's still very cold before the oven. Again, haven't tried, can't guarantee it, but it *should* work.
Glace au Four
Serves 5-6
For the cake:
75 g melted butter
250 ml (1 cup) rolled oats
125 ml (1/2 cup) sugar
1 egg
1 tsp baking powder
1 tbsp flour
Preheat the oven to 175°C. Mix all the ingredients, and bake in a small oven-proof dish for 20 minutes.
Let the cake layer cool completely and raise the oven to 275°C.
Make a meringue from 3 egg whites and 75 ml sugar (6 tbsp). Beat the egg whites until foaming, and add the sugar gradually. Keep beating until the meringue is stiff and glossy.
Cover your cake with ice cream - I use 2 500-ml packets. Cover the ice cream with good strawberry or raspberry preserves - homemade is of course ideal. Carefully pipe the meringue on top, making sure there are no holes. The ice cream and preserves must be completely sealed in.
Pop in the oven to brown for 3-4 minutes.
Recipe in Swedish:
Cissis Glace au Four
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