Christmas feature with recipes from master pastry chef Adriano Zumbo including candy cane macarons, passionfruit, lychee and coconut buche de Noel, gianduja Christmas crackers and more.
Adriano Zumbo(born on November 6, 1981) is an Australian pâtissier as well as a chef. Adriano Zumbo is famous for his Croquembouche tower, V8
Australian patissier and chef Adriano Zumbo on his lifelong love affair with pastry
So the story goes, I was in Adriano Zumbo's bedroom but more on that later. And what was I doing at his house? Getting a preview of his new collection: 40 Days and 40 Nights in Paris (due out May 23rd) for my birthday. For a food blogger, this is as close to the best birthday gift you could ever get. After returning recently from two months in Paris including attending the Coup de Monde de la Patisserie (World Pastry Cup) and working at Pierre Herme, he came home eager to get back into his own kitchen and get started on his new collection.
301 moved permanently
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, get set for the most spectacular, most extravagant treat for your tastebuds from the fabulous Adriano Zumbo!
Yes, that’s right. I decided to make Adriano Zumbo’s V8 cake. Not a car cake as might be thought by the name, but a gorgeous cake composed of eight different layers of vanilla. Vanilla crème chanti…
After years in the baking wilderness, Matt Preston learns the tricks of the trade from a top pastry chef.
Um bolo com 8 textura de baunilha, uma criação do chef confeiteiro Adriano Zumbo.
I guess every cook has a dish that is on top of his “wish-to-prepare” list. For me it has been V8 – a multi-layered cake created by an Australian pastry chef Adriano Zumbo. It stroke a chord in my heart once I saw it – more than a year ago – in Masterchef TV show. The following day I found the recipe in the Internet but had to admit that for me it was next to impossible to reproduce this pattisserie masterpiece. However, I kept opening the webpage with the recipe and kept studying it avidly – with the hope that one day I will eventually be able to make this cake at my kitchen. Pretty soon I found myself hooked to the idea: indeed, even when I saw a 20cm square tin in a shop half a year ago, I bought it only because I knew that V8 is assembled in such a tin and a few months ago I couldn’t but buy small silver balls as I realized that they would serve as a perfect decoration for my future cake! Why is it called V8? Zumbo was asked to create a birthday cake for an Australian celebrity cookery writer Margaret Fulton. He found out that she is quite conservative in her taste and when it comes to desserts she prefers simple vanilla flavour, so he made a multi-layered gateau with eight textures of vanilla – that’s how it got its name. Now it is one of the most famous cakes in the world and it leaves almost no one indifferent to it: only those people who are not great fans of white chocolate or vanilla aroma, can’t understand the overall obsession with the cake. The main obstacle on my way to the “dream-cake” was finding the ingredients. Needless to say, since this gateau is all about vanilla, one should use only real vanilla beans – and you need 11 of them to prepare the cake! It took me a while to collect such a number (some of them were even brought by a friend of mine from Delhi!). There are some other not so readily available ingredients as well and I had to make almond meal, almond paste and almond praline at home, together with the mirroir glaze. I couldn’t find titanium dioxide which is a colorant that would have made the cake look pure white but since it doesn’t affect the flavour, the use of it, I figured out, is optional. So, as I finally got the last bean in my possession, I made sure that I have a sufficient amount of white chocolate at home (for all the tiles and decorations) and double-checked that I have liquid glucose, canola oil and rice flour at the kitchen pantry (the recipe calls for only a small amount of them, but you can’t do without those ingredients anyway) – and finally choose a date for making my culinary dream come true. I booked the whole day for preparations and I woke up long before my alarm clock, feeling an urge to start the process as soon as possible. The only thing that I made right before I’d gone to bed a day before was vanilla water gel (as it needs time to set in the fridge) and I literally couldn’t stop sniffing my fingers after splitting the first bean and removing the seeds - no wonder, I’d been dreaming about the cake the whole night! Once I looked in the mirror in the morning, I saw black seeds all over my face! That was a great start of the massive vanilla-scented day! To say true, after having made a few elaborate gateaux during the last few months (like Golden key, Ispahan, Tanzanie and Chocolate Mousse Cake) I couldn’t label V8 as extremely difficult but subconsciously I still treated it as an “Everest of my culinary journey”. Of course, I was more than overwhelmed with delight when I put the last chocolate decorations on my cake – it was a victory, a huge kitchen victory! It’s difficult to find words to explain all the feelings that I had when I was looking at a serving plate with V8 – the most beautiful cake I’ve ever cooked in my life. And yes, it was delicious – the taste lived up to all the expectations! I intentionally prepared the cake (and the post about it) by this date – not only because it’s the 8th day of the month: today is also a birthday of a person who is very dear to me. (Happy birthday, bro! It’s a pity that you are far away and don’t have an opportunity to try a piece of this divine cake. I’ll cook you another one once I’m back home to Russia!) Recipe adapted from the original one by Adriano Zumbo Ingredients Vanilla crème chantilly 4 gm gold gelatine leaves 590 gm thickened cream 1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped 175 gm caster sugar 24 gm cold water Vanilla water gel 250 gm water 38 gm caster sugar 6 gm gelatine 1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped Toasted vanilla brulee 66 gm egg yolks 50 gm dark brown sugar 250 gm thickened cream 1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped 1 tsp vanilla extract Vanilla glaze 10 gm gold gelatine leaves 60 gm cold water 40 gm glucose liquid 35 gm water, extra 250 gm caster sugar 400 gm thickened cream 1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped 150 gm miroir glaze (specialty cold-application patisserie glaze) Vanilla ganache 300 gm white couverture chocolate, chopped 185 gm thickened cream 14 gm vanilla extract 1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped 95 gm unsalted butter, chopped and softened Vanilla syrup 62 gm caster sugar 125 gm water ½ vanilla bean, seeds craped 3,5 gm vanilla extract Vanilla macaron 52 gm egg whites 50 gm pure icing sugar 75 gm pure icing sugar, extra, sifted 75 gm almond meal, sifted ½ vanilla bean, seeds scraped Vanilla dacquoise 60 gm egg whites 42 gm caster sugar 65 gm almond meal 40 gm pure icing sugar, sifted 1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped 1,5 gm vanilla extract 10 gm pure icing sugar, extra, for dusting Vanilla chiffon cake 17.5 gm plain flour 2 vanilla beans, seeds scraped 22 gm egg yolks 5 gm dark brown sugar 17.5 gm water 15 gm canola oil 45 gm egg whites 22.5 gm caster sugar 2.5 gm rice flour Vanilla almond crunch Crushed vanilla beans 2 large vanilla beans Brown sugar crumble 50 gm unsalted butter 50 gm plain flour 50 gm dark brown sugar 50 gm almond meal ¼ vanilla bean, seeds scraped 45 gm milk couverture chocolate 90 gm almond praline paste 90 gm pure almond paste 18 gm unsalted butter 45 gm brown sugar crumble 45 gm pailette feuillitine (crunchy wheat flakes) 17 gm toasted diced almonds 2 crushed vanilla beans 2 gm sea salt ¼ vanilla bean, seeds scraped Decoration White chocolate flower and tiles 500g white chocolate, finely chopped 1 chocolate flower 20 tiles a few sugar spheres or silver drops Method: 1. For vanilla crème chantilly, cut gelatine into small squares, soak in the cold water. Place cream, vanilla seeds and sugar in a saucepan and bring to the boil. Remove from the heat and allow to cool to 70-80°C, and then stir through the gelatine and water mixture until dissolved. Place in a container, cover the surface with cling wrap and place in the fridge. 2. For vanilla water gel, line 18cm square cake tin with plastic wrap. Soak gelatine in 20 gm cold water. Put the remaining ingredients in a saucepan over medium heat and whisk continuously until the mixture comes to boil. Allow to cool to 70C, then stir in the gelatine and any soaking liquid. Pour into the lined tin and place in the refrigerator to set. Once set, place in the freezer to set hard. 3. For toasted vanilla brulee, preheat oven to 160C. Mix yolks and sugar in a bowl by hand with a whisk until just combined. Add cream vanilla bean and seeds to a small saucepan and bring to the boil, pour a little over the eggs while stirring, then add the remaining liquid including vanilla bean. Puree with a hand blender until smooth and pour into a shallow baking tray about 25 x 38cm. Place into the oven and cook until just set, about 10 minutes, then increase oven to 200°C and bake until it forms a golden brown crust, about 5 minutes. It should look slightly split when removed from the oven. Scrape mixture into a blender, or small food processor and blend to a smooth paste. Cover the surface of the brulee with cling wrap so it doesn’t form a skin and place in the fridge until you need it.. 4. For vanilla glaze, soak the gelatine leaves in cold water. Boil glucose, water and sugar until 165°C, brushing around the sides of the saucepan with a pastry brush dipped in cold water as you go. Do not allow caramel to take on any colour. In another saucepan, bring cream and vanilla seeds to boil and then add to the sugar syrup. Mix through, then allow to cool to 70°C and add softened gelatine and any soaking liquid, stirring well. Add miroir glaze and blend well. Strain, then refrigerate until set. 5. For vanilla ganache, place chocolate in a bowl. Bring cream, together with vanilla seeds and vanilla extract, to a boil, pour over the chocolate. Set aside for 2 minutes, then stir until the mixture is smooth. Blitz in butter using a stick mixer. . 6. For vanilla syrup, bring all ingredients to the boil, then allow to cool. 7. For vanilla macaron, draw an 18cm square on a piece of baking paper placed on a baking tray. Using an electric mixer or hand beaters, whisk egg whites on high speed until soft peaks form then slowly add pure icing sugar, checking it has dissolved in between additions until you have stiff glossy peaks. Stir through almond meal, the remaining icing sugar and vanilla seeds. Spoon mixture into a piping bag fitted with a 5mm nozzle. Pipe into the pencilled frame using a continuous snaking motion to fill the entire square. Set aside ay room temperature for 30 minutes or until a skin form and then bake for 10 minutes at 160°C until golden. Remove from oven, slide baking paper off tray and place on kitchen bench. 8. For vanilla dacquoise, preheat the oven 180C. Draw an 18cm square on a piece of baking paper placed on a baking tray. In an electric mixer fitted with whisk attachment, whisk egg whites on high speed until soft peaks form then slowly add caster sugar, beating until you have stiff glossy peaks. Mix almond meal with icing sugar, vanilla seeds and extract, gently fold through egg whites. Spoon into a piping bag fitted with a 5mm nozzle. Pipe into the pencilled frame using a continuous snaking motion to fill the entire square. Dust with icing sugar, let sit 2 minutes then dust again. Bake at for 10-12 minutes or until golden. Remove from oven, slide baking paper off tray and place on kitchen bench. 9. For vanilla chiffon cake, preheat the oven to 160C. Draw a 18cm square on a piece of baking paper placed on a baking tray. Put flour, roasted vanilla seeds, egg yolks, brown sugar, water and oil in a bowl and mix well. Whisk egg whites in an electric mixer on medium speed until soft peaks form then slowly add the sugar and rice flour, beating until you have stiff, glossy peaks. Fold the meringue through the batter gently. Spoon into a piping bag fitted with a 5mm nozzle. Pipe into the pencilled frame using a continuous snaking motion to fill the entire square. Bake in the oven until golden, about 15 – 20 minutes. 10. For roasted vanilla beans, preheat the oven to 200C. Put the beans on a baking tray and bake for 30 minutes or until they look burnt and are dry and crisp. Cool, then grind to a fine powder in a mortar and pestle or spice grinder. 11. For brown sugar crumble, preheat the oven to 180C. Place all ingredients in an electric mixer and beat mix until dough forms. ‘Grate’ through a cooling rack with a lined baking tray sitting underneath to catch the crumble then bake in the oven for about 10 minutes until golden 12. For vanilla almond crunch, melt milk chocolate, add almond praline and the pure almond paste and mix well. Melt butter in a small saucepan, then cook it until it is browm and nutty. . Add crumble and fueilletine flakes and mix through praline mixture, then fold through burnt butter, followed by toasted almonds, crushed vanilla beans, sea salt and scraped vanilla seeds. Smooth a 5mm layer over vanilla dacquoise. 13. To assemble the cake, line a 18cm square tin with a non-sticking baking paper. Place the vanilla dacquoise covered with vanilla and almond crunch inside the frame. Spread with a 1 cm thick layer of vanilla ganache, smoothing it with palette knife. Place in the freezer until firm. Lay the vanilla chiffon cake over the ganache and press down gently. Use a pastry brush to brush some vanilla syrup over the cake. Spread the toasted vanilla brulee over the cake. Place the vanilla macaron over the brulee, gently pressing down. Place the vanilla water gel over the macaron. place in the freezer for 3 hours, until firm. 14. Line a square 20 cm tin with acetate. Using a mixer, whisk vanilla crème chantilly on medium speed until soft peaks form. Spread a 5 – 10 mm layer of chantilly on the bottom of the tin. Place in the freezer until it sets slightly. Remove the assembled cake from the 18cm tin and place it on top of the chantilly layer, with water gel at the bottom and dacquoise on the top. Use a piping bag to fill the gap between the cake and the sides of the tin. Freeze for 3 – 4 hours. 15. For white chocolate tiles and flower, melt a chocolate in a double boiler and temper it. Spread a thin layer, about 2-3mm thick on 2 pieces of acetate (30 x 40cm) using a large palette knife. Once the chocolate has almost set, on one sheet of acetate carefully mark 3 strips lengthways on the strips, about 7-9cm-wide. Mark thin triangles in each strip. These form the flower petals. Place a piece of baking paper over the top, and wrap around a rolling pin or similar cylinder and allow to completely harden. On the other sheet use a ruler to mark out 5 cm squares. Place a piece of baking paper over the top and invert onto a board or clean work surface to completely harden. To assemble the flower spread a small amount of melted tempered chocolate onto a small piece of baking paper and use this as a base to stick the petals, starting in the centre, working outwards to create a flower. 16. Place a wire rack over a large sheet of plastic wrap. Remove the cake from the freezer and invert it onto wire rack. Remove the tin and acetate. Heat the vanilla glaze gently till it reaches 30-35C and pour it over the cake, allowing to run down the sides. Smooth the surface with a palette knife. Set aside for a few minutes, then slide a large knife under the cake and transfer it to a serving plate. 17. For decoration, press four prepared tiles on each side of the cake, pressing them gently till they stick. Place the chocolate flower, together with edible sugar drops, on top of the cake. Allow the cake to defrost for 3 hours in the refrigerator before serving. Notes: 1. The recipe of the cake can be found on Masterchef Australia official website. However, I made some changes using the recipe from Adrano Zumbo’s book. The major ones are the following: a) in the book both roasted vanilla beans go to the almond crunch while in the Masterchef version one of it is added to chiffon cake; b) the contestants of the show assembled the cake upside-down, using one tin. Setting the central part of the cake in a smaller tin first (as the book suggests) is quite helpful: it gives an opportunity to trim the edges before putting it in a bigger tin, thus, making the layers eventually look perfect. 2. You will end up having some vanilla syrup and brown sugar crumble left (as Zumbo says, it’s just not practical to reduce the quantities as it may compromise the result). I would, however, recommend increasing the amount of chantilly cream, especially if you decide to trim the edges of all the seven layers that go inside the cake – you will have wider gaps to fill in this case.
Yes I know, I know, I'm so late to be posting about Adriano Zumbo's Summer collection but in my defence, your Honour, I don't really live closeby and I do find it hard to get here. However this time, I am ordering cakes for my birthday and of course where else would I get them but Zumbo.
Sydney eats. Tasty travels. A feast of photos. Food blogging since 2004 and still hungry!
New limited-edition classic Aussie gelato flavours with a unique twist for Summer, created in delicious collaboration with The Sweet Assassin, Adriano Zumbo
Yes I know, I know, I'm so late to be posting about Adriano Zumbo's Summer collection but in my defence, your Honour, I don't really live closeby and I do find it hard to get here. However this time, I am ordering cakes for my birthday and of course where else would I get them but Zumbo.
Discover the best things to do in New South Wales with our travel guide. Beautiful beaches, charming country towns and some of the best wine regions.
Yes, that’s right. I decided to make Adriano Zumbo’s V8 cake. Not a car cake as might be thought by the name, but a gorgeous cake composed of eight different layers of vanilla. Vanilla crème chanti…
Lovingly tested in the Queen Kitchen, discover our delicious selection of recipes worthy of every occasion. Get your bake on!
"I've incorporated two Aussie classics for this Australia Day inspired creation. Introducing the Pavlington!" - Adriano Zumbo
I was so inspired while watching MasterChef when Adriano Zumbo brought out a massive Croquembouche (a custard filled profiterole stack covered in toffee/caramel). Hearing the crispy crunch as the c…
The croissant-doughnut hybrid that has New York in a spin has finally come to Sydney, crafted by none other than celebrity pastry chef, Adriano Zumbo.
For those who don’t know, the V8 Cake is an 8-layered cake that the contestants on series 2 of Masterchef Australia had to re-create under high-pressure conditions. This masterpiece was desig…
Um bolo com 8 textura de baunilha, uma criação do chef confeiteiro Adriano Zumbo.
For his first taste.com.au magazine challenge, Adriano Zumbo presents the Zonut! Get the recipe in the September 2013 issue and watch our videos to go behind the scenes on our shoot and get Zumbo’s expert tips. Plus, get the recipe for caramel and chocolate Zonuts below.Jeremy Simons To watch the behind-the-scenes video from Zumbo’s photo shoot, click here.To check out Zumbo’s tips for making the perfect Zonut, click here. Caramel & Chocolate Zonuts Start by making the Zonuts from the September issue, then twist the filling and icing recipes to make chocolate and caramel versions. creme chantilly filling 4g gelatine leaves590ml pouring cream 1 vanilla bean, split, seeds scraped 50g dark chocolate, melted50g salted dulce de leche**If unavailable, substitute with Nestlé Top ‘n’ Fill mixed with ½ tsp sea salt flakes 1 Place the gelatine in a bowl and cover with cold water. Set aside for 5 minutes to soften. Squeeze excess liquid from gelatine. 2 Bring the cream and vanilla bean and seeds to the boil in a saucepan over medium heat. Remove from heat and stir in the gelatine until dissolved. Divide cream mixture among 3 separate bowls. 3 Stir chocolate into 1 bowl of cream mixture until smooth and combined. Cover with plastic wrap. Chill overnight or until set. 4 Cover remaining two bowls of cream mixture with plastic wrap and chill overnight or until set. 5 Use an electric beater to whip 1 portion of cream mixture until smooth and soft peaks form. Repeat with chocolate mixture. 6 Stir dulce de leche into remaining cream mixture. Use an electric beater to whip until smooth and soft peaks form. icing 80ml (1/3 cup) condensed milk150g (1 cup) icing sugar mixture, siftedPink food colouring, for tintingCaramel food colouring, for tintingChocolate food colouring, for tinting Place condensed milk in a bowl and stir in icing sugar until smooth and thick. Divide mixture among 3 bowls. Tint one mixture pink, one mixture caramel and 1 mixture chocolate brown. how to assemble the Zonuts 1 To fill the Zonuts, use a small paring knife to make 3 small incisions in the base of each Zonut. Place vanilla crème chantilly filling in a piping bag fitted with a small nozzle. Insert nozzle into cuts and pipe in filling. Repeat to fill a total of 6 Zonuts. Repeat with chocolate filling to fill another 6 Zonuts. Repeat with dulce de leche filling to fill remaining 6 Zonuts. 2 Roll vanilla and caramel Zonuts in caster sugar to coat. Roll chocolate Zonut in cinnamon sugar to coat. 3 Use a teaspoon to spoon the pink icing over the top of the vanilla Zonuts. Repeat with the chocolate icing over the chocolate Zonuts and the caramel icing over the caramel Zonuts. Set aside to set.
?Today we are having a macaron class with Zumbo to celebrate the start of the series. We are not making the hamburger macaron or the pig's blood and chocolate macaron (yes real pig's blood that apparently tasted incredibly smooth and buttery) but a more stately sounding but still slightly unusual passionfruit, basil and white chocolate macaron using a recipe that Zumbo claims as "foolproof" and guaranteed to produce perfect macarons every time.
Before I launch into this blog, I need to tell you that I don’t like Macarons…. never have. I find them way too sweet and if I have ever had to be polite and eat them, they must be accompanied by a large cup of black tea. This does not mean that the cook in […]
Test your skills on a fun treat where flaky croissant meets indulgent deep-fried doughnut.
La 7ª Muestra Internacional de Pastelería tuvo lugar el sábado 20 de enero en Sant Vicenç dels Horts, la capital catalana de la pastelería.
Dessert king Adriano Zumbo and his wife Nelly have announced they're expecting to welcome their first child.