Cherry
Tiramisu
8
tablespoons of cherry juice (100ml)
20fl
oz whipping cream/1 pint/570ml (heavy)
4tbls
cherry liqueur - Kirsch (optional)
one
red velvet cup cake per serving
4tbls
caster sugar
225g/8oz
Mascarpone or curd cheese (Philadelphia)
4
Amaretti biscuits, crushed to a crumb
50g/2oz
plain chocolate (grated) or
a
cherry liqueur chocolate to decorate
Cherry
compote
Red
velvet sponge – see notes below
Cherry
and Raspberry Compote
350g cherries, stoned – can use frozen
150g caster sugar
juice of 1 lemon (2 tbsps)
150g raspberries – can use frozen
4 tbsp water or juice from defrosted fruit
Pour the water into a pan and add the cherries, sugar and lemon
juice. Place on a medium heat and stir until the sugar dissolves.
Cook the cherries over a low heat for 5-10 minutes until they have
released some juice but are not overcooked. If you are using frozen
cherries you will have the fruit juices when defrosted – use this
juice instead of the water and reduce the cooking time to 5 minutes.
Add the raspberries to the pan and cook for a further 1-2
minutes until they start to soften. Remove the pan from the heat and
leave the mixture to cool, then chill it well before serving. Blitz
the compote and pass through a sieve. You'll get 400ml.
Mix
the cherry juice with the Kirsch. If you're serving kiddies then
omit the Kirsch and add an additional 4 tbsp of cherry juice.
Mix
the cream carefully with the sugar and mascarpone. A small tip –
place the mascarpone cheese in a mixing bowl and add the sugar. Once
combined add the cream gradually. Fold 2 tablespoons of cherry
compote into the mixture, gently, to give a ripple effect.
Cut up
the cake in shapes that suit the bowl you are using and dip into the
cherry mixture.
Layer
the mascarpone mixture with the sponge.
Add
your decorations when you are about to serve – sprinkle the
Amaretti crumb and then add the grated plain chocolate or a cherry
liqueur chocolate.
For
extra pizzazz add a puddle of cherry compote. Freeze the compote you
don't use along with any red velvet sponge you have left for another
day!
You have options
with the red velvet sponge. I made red velvet cupcakes and a batch
gave me 24, far more than I needed, which was deliberate since I was
able to either freeze what I didn't use or add frosting for a
traditional cupcake.
There are “fast
fixes” out there – most large supermarkets sell
red velvet cake mixes which will usually give you 12 cupcakes or a 7”
cake. Betty Crocker likewise.
Hints
and tips and the tiddy version of the tiramisu up next.
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