
This month's challenge was introduced with great fanfare, which is only logical considering the musical name of the item to be baked. I had never heard of it but the description sounded scrumptious. Ladies and gentlemen, the Daring Bakers made a culinary trip to France and it's Opera...cake that is.

Traditional Opera Cakes are made with three thin layers of almond cake, each soaked in coffee syrup; layers of espresso flavored buttercream; a layer of chocolate ganache; and a topping of chocolate glaze. For the challenge, the cake was kept light, as in with light colors and flavors. The chocolate was replaced with white chocolate and the syrup with a simple syrup. The ganache turned into a mousse.
Layers of nutty sponge cake, buttercream and mousse....what could sound better? Hardly anything if you ask me! Unfortunately, this was one instance where the anticipation and description far outdid the product. It may have just been my fault but I guess I'll never know.

The original cake recipe called for an almond sponge called a joconde but I dislike almond taste so I used macadamias instead. That may have been my first mistake. The sponge was not at all spongy, it was rather dense and oily but tasted good. I flavored the white chocolate mousse and buttercream with limoncello and on their own, they both tasted great. So far so good. Then time for the white chocolate glaze and I truly believe that is what did my cake in. It was far too sweet and made the whole thing sickly sweet. Other Daring Bakers agree with this and some decided to change the glaze after hearing so many complaints about the sweetness of the original recipe. I don't blame them.

Despite all that, I'm glad I participated in this challenge. The cake was hard work to put together and it's not something I would have done on my own. It was a complicated French dessert and I'm glad I gave it a shot. This will definitely be the basis for other, hopefully better, Opera style cakes in my baking future.

For the full recipe, see the hostess' blog Cream Puffs in Venice.
Your cake looks beautiful!! But, I must tell you - I adore your cake plate!!! Wonderful challenge!!
ReplyDeleteYum, so gorgeous! What perfect slices! Looks really delicious!
ReplyDeleteIt looks so perfect and beautiful.A showpiece.
ReplyDeleteWow, it looks perfect. And your cake plate... I want one! Where did you get it?
ReplyDeleteYour Opera Cake looks beautiful. I bet the limoncello was delicious also.
ReplyDeleteWell it looks beautiful! :)
ReplyDeleteThat cake plate is THE cake plate! And the cake looks perfect!
ReplyDeleteOh yes, that is pretty!
ReplyDeleteyour photos look great and the cake looks even better! I love your cake plate too!
ReplyDeleteTerrific job, and perfect slices! Nice work!
ReplyDeleteSuch perfection, it looks bakery-ready! Nicely done!
ReplyDeleteHa, I like your cake plate :-) And the cake on it is a good job! Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful cake, your cake plate is kind of hilariously kitschy! Love the straight perfect-ness of the angles.
ReplyDeleteLovely cake and plate.
ReplyDeletePerfect and very very neat layers....
ReplyDeleteOh June what a pretty looking cake June - this is so perfect!
ReplyDeleteYour cake looks very exquisite!! The clean lines, the beautiful layers .... simply wonderful!!!
ReplyDeleteGreat googly moogly that's a fine lookin' cake. And that cake plate is perfect for it!
ReplyDeleteYou did a wonderful job on your cake. I love your cake plate...it's very pretty.
ReplyDeleteNatalie @ Gluten a Go Go
you cake slices look so regular !!!! I'm very impressed by that agnificent cake :) congratulations !
ReplyDeleteOH My Gah... Is that a fancy shoe cake plate???? Adorable!
ReplyDeleteThe Opera looks perfect too!
I thought it was too sweet as well. But it does look picture perfect!
ReplyDeletewow your layers look so perfect! cute cake stand too :)
ReplyDeleteYour Opera cake looks beautiful...and you did the mousse! The only reason that my macadamia nut jaconde wasn't oily and heavy was that I made the flour by grinding the nuts by hand with a rotary chees grinder which made for a light flour...a food processor just makes nut butter. I suspect that there is a reason that this is usually chocolate, almond, and coffee flavored. A good bittersweet chocolate would cut some of the sweetness, right? LOVR your cake stand...so cute.
ReplyDeleteThat's a beautiful cake, absolutely perfect layers. Looks very professional.
ReplyDeleteI'm with Renee, Natashya, Cookie, Virginia and the gang... I covet your cake plate. I'm sorry the flavors in this one didn't work out better for you, but the cake *and* the plate you served it on are gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteLovely! Your layers came out so perfectly, and I'm loving that yellow. Good job!
ReplyDeleteAdd me to the one loving your cake stands! You did a wonderful job with this challenge! Bravo!
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