I have been looking at this recipe for a long time and how I managed to withstand the post-New Year break. And finally, I can please you and myself with a delicate, silky curd dessert, in which three types of chocolate intertwine and complement each other with their unique taste.
Cook Time | 180 minutes |
Servings |
Ingredients
- 100 gram Milk chocolate
- 150 gram White chocolate
- 150 gram Dark chocolate 55 %
- 80 gram Butter
- 125 gram Cookies
- 1 pack Vanilla sugar
- 6 pieces Gelatin sheet
- 300 milliliters Cream (30%)
- 500 gram Cottage cheese defatted, unsweetened
- 100 gram Sugar
Ingredients
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Instructions
- Cut a piece of baking paper and draw a rectangle 26 * 11 cm, i.e. the size of your mold, where we will collect our terrine. The recommended shape for this recipe is only 26*11 cm. Turn the paper over, lay out the mass for the cookies in the form of a rectangle. Tamp it well and send it to the refrigerator or other cold room for cooling.
- Soak 6 plates of gelatin in cold water for 10 minutes. Anticipating the question about ordinary crumbly gelatin, I will answer - take ordinary gelatin based on how much it is needed for 500 ml of liquid. And since gelatin differs in its grinding, look carefully at the packaging, follow the instructions when soaking. I would venture to remind you that ordinary gelatin is soaked in about 4 tablespoons of cold boiled (!) water
- Beat the curd mass with 100 g of sugar and a bag of vanilla sugar. The curd mass is ideal for this dessert - cottage cheese with a silky structure may not work, although you can try to grind the cottage cheese through a sieve a couple of times and add sour cream to the paste. I made it from cottage cheese, as indicated in the original recipe, and was very pleased.
- Separately melt 100 g of different varieties of chocolate. If the chocolate for some reason does not want to melt, add a couple of tablespoons of cream to the chocolate. When heated, the chocolate becomes very docile. Add the melted chocolate (dark, milk and white) to every third part of the cottage cheese, stirring gently until all the ingredients are completely mixed. Then add one third of the whipped cream to each curd-chocolate mass, mix thoroughly.
- Finish with a layer of white chocolate. We take out our rectangular cookie blank and cover it with the last white layer. With a rectangle, you may not quite guess, but it's not scary - align it with a knife, cutting it to the desired size. Naturally, we are not equal to dessert, but to a suitable plane. Now put the terrine in the refrigerator for 8 hours, preferably overnight.
- Melt the remaining 50 g of dark and 50 g of white chocolate separately. We release our dessert from the film by turning the terrine on a tray (dish, etc. dishes). Make a cornetik out of baking paper, pour dark chocolate and apply patterns in the form of cobwebs around the terrine. We do the same with white chocolate. I'm giving you a basic decorating recipe, but you can decorate by including all your wild imagination plus improvised materials.