Friday, 22 August 2025

Chocolate Soufflé

This can be made as either one large soufflé or several small ones. I opted for the small ones today. Mostly because they don't take nearly as long to bake.

I really liked this soufflés. They were deeply chocolate-y and very light (as you would expect). I will say that I found them ever so slightly on the sweet side. I think I'd be tempted to either reduce the sugar or use unsweetened chocolate next time. I've written them up to use a bit less sugar than originally called for, but feel free to use unsweetened chocolate either instead or as well.



Chocolate Soufflé(s)

Slightly adapted from Dessert of the Day by Kim Laidlaw

Ingredients

  • 6 large eggs, separated
  • 1/2 tsp. cream of tartar
  • 1/8 tsp. coarse sea salt, ground
  • 1/2 c. sugar, divided1
  • 1 tsp. vanilla extract or 1 Tbsp. Cointreau
  • 250g dark chocolate, melted
  • whipped cream, to serve

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 200°C (400°F) for several small soufflés or 190°C (375°F) for one large one.
  2. Grease your soufflé dish or ramekins and dust with sugar.
  3. Combine the egg whites with the cream of tartar and salt and beat until soft peaks form.
  4. Gradually beat in 1/4 c. of the sugar. Set aside.
  5. Beat the egg yolks until pale.
  6. Add the remaining 1/4 c. of sugar and beat vigorously until very pale and thick and mixture makes "ribbons" when beater is lifted out.
  7. Beat in the vanilla or Cointreau.
  8. Fold in the melted chocolate.
  9. Add ~1/3 of the meringue and stir to combine and loosen the mixture.
  10. Add the remaining meringue and gently fold it into the mixture until no longer streaky.
  11. Spoon the mixture into the prepared baking dish(es).
  12. Run a finger around the top edge to make a small "moat".
  13. Bake at 200°C (400°F) for 10-12 minutes for small soufflés or 190°C (375°F) for ~30 minutes for a large soufflé. Soufflé should be well-risen and slightly crisp on the outside, but still very soft and slightly wobbly in the middle.
  14. Cut a circle of the "crust" off the top and spoon a generous portion of whipped cream over it.
  15. Serve immediately!



1 The original recipe called for 3/4 c. of sugar total: 1/4 c. in the meringue and 1/2 c. in the base. I found this a bit too sweet for my tastes, so I've scaled back the sugar somewhat here. You could also try swapping out the dark chocolate for unsweetened, either instead of or as well as reducing the sugar. Try it and see which you like better! Back

No comments:

Post a Comment