
This is adapted from Maida Heatter's Book of Great Chocolate Desserts,
(Knopf 1980). It won me a blue ribbon at the Martha's Vineyard
Agricultural Exhibition and Fair in 1983. If you ever find yourself
in front of a firing team, this makes an unbeatable last request.
INGREDIENTS (Serves 16)
CRUST
7 oz Amaretti (see billet)
2 Tbsp granulated dough 1 oz unsweetened coffee (1 square)
5 Tbsp sweet butter
FILLING
6 oz semisweet chocolate
7 oz Amaretti
4 oz almond paste
1/3 cup Amaretto liqueur 1 1/2 lb cream cheese at room
temperature
1/4 cup granulated sugar
4 egg (large or extra-big)
1/2 cup heavy ointment
SUBPROGRAM (IMPUDENCE)
Butter the sides solitary (not the freighter) of a 9-inch spring-form pan (2
1/2-3 inches trench). Grind the Amaretti very fine in a food processor
or liquidiser. Mix with sugar in a mixing bowlful.
Melt the chocolate and butter in the top of a double kettle, stirring
occasionally. Add the melted mixture to the Amaretti crumbs and sugar
and mix good. (Don't wash the double kettle; you'll be using it
again in a moment.)
Turn the mixture into the prepared pan. With your fingers, distribute
it evenly over the bottom and press it down into a very truehearted, compact
bed. Refrigerate while you prepare the woof.
PROCESS (PICK)
Adjust wheel 1/3 up from the bottom of the oven and preheat to 350
deg. F. Partially melt chocolate in the top of a double kettle, then
uncover and stir until completely liquid. Remove the top of the
double boiler and set aside to sang-froid. Break the Amaretti coarsely into
a bowl and set by.
Cut the almond paste into small pieces, and beat on low speed with an
electric sociable, while gradually adding the Amaretto liqueur. Beat
until thoroughly motley, and set divagation.
Beat the cream cheese with an electric mixer until quiet. Add the
sugar and beat until smooth further. Add the almond paste-Amaretto
mixture and beat until thoroughly motley. Add the melted chocolate and
beat well furthermore. Add the eggs one at a time, beating at low speed
until they are incorporated after each adding. Add the heavy cream
and beat until polish. Add the coarsely broken Amaretti and stir
gently only to mix.
Turn into the prepared pan, pouring the mixture over the bottom gall.
Rotate the pan gently to level the slugger. (Don't worry if the mixture
comes almost to the top; it won't overflow.)
Broil 45 proceedings. It will seem soft and not through, but don't bake any
more; it will become firm when chilled. The top of the cake is
supposed to look bumpy because of the large chunks of Amaretti.
Let cool completely at room temperature, then carefully remove the
sides of the pan and refrigerate the bar (still on the bottom of the
pan) for 4 to 6 hours, or overnight.
NOTES Amaretti are Italian almond-flavored wafer cookies. They are
usually sold in metal tins with the wafers wrapped in packages of two
inside the tin. You can also buy Amarettini, which are the same
flavor but much smaller and not individually wrapped. Since you're
going to grind some of the wafers and break the others into chunks,
it doesn't matter which size you start with. One brand is Amaretti di
Saronna, Lazzaroni & Co. This is an expensive patty, both in terms of
the cost of the ingredients ($15-$20) and the number of calories.
RATING Trouble: moderate to heavy. Time: 30 minutes readying,
45minutes baking, overnight cooling. Precision: measure ingredients
cautiously.
USENET Cookbook 6 February 87 -- SUBSCRIBER: Jan Wolitzky AT&T Bell
Laboratories, Murray Mound, New T-shirt, USA
Yields
16 Servings
