What is a genoise sponge, how many layers should the cake have and what is the Great British Bake Off recipe?
The light and fluffy multi-tiered sponge cake has many forms and variations
THE Great British Bake Off is back on our screens and it's got us all inspired in the kitchen.
But what is the infamous genoise sponge all about, and how do you go about making one..?
What is a genoise sponge?
A Genoise sponge is unsurprisingly a type of sponge cake.
But what sets it apart from all the other sponges..? Paul Hollywood has the answer.
The Bake Off judge describes the cake as a particularly light and delicate kind of sponge and it is traditionally served with fresh fruit and cream.
What is the recipe from Great British Bake Off?
, GBBO judge Paul has given out his amazing recipe for his favourite way to prepare and serve a genoise sponge.
His Summerfruit Genoise serves eight to 10 people, takes 40 minutes to prep and requires 25 minutes of baking.
The ingredients you'll need are:
- 30g unsalted butter, melted
- 4 medium eggs
- 125g caster sugar
- 125g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
- Pinch of salt
To finish
- 300g strawberries, hulled and halved
- 2 tbsp icing sugar, plus extra for dusting
- 250ml whipping cream
- 250g blueberries
- 250g raspberries
The steps to baking the cake are as follows:
- Heat your oven to 180°C. Use a little of the melted butter to grease two 20cm sandwich tins. Dust them lightly inside with flour.
- Put the eggs and sugar into a heatproof bowl and place over a pan of simmering water. Whisk, using an electric hand-held whisk, for at least 7 minutes until the mixture is trebled in bulk, very pale and thick enough to hold a trail when the beaters are lifted. Sift the flour and salt together over the mixture and fold in gently, keeping in as much air as you can. Finally, very carefully fold in the remaining melted butter.
- Divide the mixture between the prepared sandwich tins and bake for 25 minutes until golden and slightly shrunk from the sides of the tin. Leave the sponges to cool slightly in the tins for about 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool.
- Meanwhile, put 200g of the strawberries into a blender with 2 tbsp of icing sugar and blitz to a smooth purée. It should be intense and sweet; add a little more icing sugar if necessary.
- Whip the cream until it holds soft peaks. Roughly fold in the strawberry purée, keeping the mixture rippled rather than a uniform pink (or you can simply drizzle the strawberry purée onto the cream as you assemble the cake).
- Slice each sponge in half horizontally. Lay one of the sponges, cut side up, on a serving plate. Spread a third of the strawberry cream on top, then put a quarter of the blueberries and raspberries around the edge. Add a second layer of sponge and filling, then repeat to create the third layer. Place the final layer of sponge on the top and dust generously with icing sugar.
- Arrange the remaining strawberries, blueberries and raspberries on top of the cake. Dust lightly with icing sugar and serve.
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How many layers should the cake have?
The cake will typically have around four layers as a rule however it's possible for them to have more or less.
As long as the cake has more than the traditional two that you have with a victoria sponge it will be sure to impress!