250

Milk chocolate (reverse) ganache
Flip the classic hot cream ganache rule on its butt! By melting
your chocolate and adding cool cream, you are at peak gloss
and spreadability without a tedious wait for it to thicken.


You can also apply this technique for mid cocoa-level dark
chocolate or white. Same ratios of chocolate to sour cream,
same  deliciousness and same instant success!

Big baking love to Rose Levy Beranbaum for this technique –

my baking hero and author of The Cake Bible and other


must‑own-and-make-every-recipe bakebooks.


Temperatures are paramount to avoid the chocolate cooling and forming
lumps in the ganache. Aim for milk chocolate at 50–60°C (120–140°F) and
sour cream at 20°C (70°F). On cold days, take the sour cream out of the
fridge an hour before starting.

Weigh the sour cream into a small bowl and leave at room temperature.


Bring a small saucepan of water to a bare simmer. Weigh the milk
chocolate into a bowl that nestles on top without touching the water.


Push the chocolate around the bowl until it has melted – don’t agitate
it too much.


When the chocolate has melted, do a temperature check. If the sour
cream is still cold, hold the bowl over the double boiler for a minute,
stirring slowly and constantly only to take the refrigerator chill out of it.


Scrape the sour cream into the chocolate and mix to form a smooth,
glossy and firm–gloopy mix. If you need it a bit thicker, leave it to cool
for 10 minutes, but don’t chill it without keeping a close eye to ensure
it doesn’t over-chill and become unspreadably hard.*


* If you did chill it and it hardened, put the bowl over the still-warm double boiler
and gently soften. The ganache may look less smooth after a reheat, but it’s
still  usable.

Makes 300 g (10½ oz). Takes 20 minutes. Keeps Up to 2 weeks chilled.

150 g (5½ oz) full-fat
(35% milkfat) sour cream
(not crème fraîche – it’s too
high in fat)
150 g (5½ oz) good milk
chocolate (30%-plus cocoa),
roughly chopped
Adaptrix
Dark chocolate
Use the same process, but I like
to keep my dark chocolate around
55–60% cocoa. If you use a 70%
cocoa, increase the sour cream by
50 g (1¾ oz) so it’s still luscious.


White chocolate
This reverse ganache Adaptrix will
be softer because it’s only cocoa
butter (not solids). It will firm enough
to use for a cake coat, but isn’t up to
long-term structural layering duties.


Regular cream ganache
Sub in a regular 35% milkfat cream
for the sour cream. If your cream is
runny, the ganache will take extra
time to reach spreadability. It’s still
hands-down faster than the hot
cream on chocolate method, though.


Shine shine shine
If your ganached cake dulls in cold
weather, sweep a brûlée torch
over the surface to rekindle the
cocoa  lustre.