So, I figure that I must post misadventures along the way as well. This is the first time in a long while that I felt defeated by a baking project. :-( So sad - just kidding. Humbling experiences are good for the soul, right! :-)
Carmel topping I eventually scraped off the cakeGo blue dad grew up eating dobosh torte cake as a kid when he visited his grandpa in St. Louis. So, given my love of baking, I decided to attempt to make him a dobosh torte, originating from the Hungarian Dobos torte we believe, for his birthday. We combined things we liked from the Hungarian recipes and the St. Louis version to come up with our own dobosh torte.
The cake is a simple mixture of flour, eggs and sugar placed in six separate 9" buttered cake pan and baked for about eight minutes at 350 degrees. This came from the "Hungarian" dobos torte recipe. The cake has a nice, lightly sweet flavor with a crispy texture instead of a moisture, silky texture like a fluffy cake. If anyone has made authentic dobosh - just let me know if the cake should have been fluffy...
Four layers minus the top layer, which is awaiting the caramel. Yes, it's messy, but it was my first attempt at making a cake in this manner.
So, after making the cake, I made a dark
chocolate/chocolate pudding
ganache and covered the layers with it (my own creation) instead of chocolate
buttercream filling (Hungarian version) because go blue dad likes the St. Louis
dobosh filling.
Now I was ready to make the
caramel top for the cake. I have never made
caramel before or worked with 'hot' sugar, so this is where it REALLY went down hill. Keep in mind, I placed the cake with the
ganache in the fridge to keep cool for a few minutes and forgot to bring it back out when it was time to place the hot, cracking, solidifying
caramel on it.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiSnTTfoMrPgF0jj2Q85-hKhDNEQU7NH0mQS8IPKRLNjGhVbtYUpXvwCSszhHtbHBLY73cD4Wv3Gin8UUudBLlQR5Hw9Yv-OJEOLn_OCjFA_EdheXh_Gh5r7nPBgZQZvhKkAgvOFD2qBLve/s320/Random+133.JPG)
Hence, the mess on the floor as photographed above. I splatter hot
caramel on the floor, the counters, plates, cutting boards, the stove top - EVERYTHING!!! Plus, the
caramel start to set while I frantically tried to pull the cake out of the fridge to get the last layer on it and cut slice marks through the
caramel before it got to hard. Oh, I think I let the sugar get to hot and burned it as well, because the
caramel tasted like coffee and left a burnt taste in your mouth
afterwards. Delicious - not really!!
Kaitlyn was sleeping during this drama.
Yes, I know this looks terrible, but it'd been a long day. So, above is how the cake turned out. I tried to hide the
caramel disaster with white
buttercream icing like the St. Louis version, which just made it look worse. Later in the evening, I realized I should have done some piping and it would have looked much better, but I was exhausted and defeated by this point. I had really hoped to surprise go blue dad with an awesome cake!! (No, I'm not looking for any pity or sympathy here :-) ).
This is where the story gets better...
The layering turned out pretty good. I now know how to replicate a
dobosh torte layer cake from St. Louis or a real Hungarian
Dobos torte. Small win there!!!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgDJjxctSIGpod-NbpVBzm9Svv0ttCoFB2QcljC2b8D7-L21vIP7vucrgnNJrWHdY1inWdtBeHft5GFNxnsfeN69UlQoHbyIThDCjIuqNYQ2xY25ad2imjQhSFzD8SC8Cld7pQsMlZ85okv/s320/Random+145.JPG)
After we celebrated go blue dad's birthday, we decided the white
buttercream icing (made with granulated sugar, flour, butter, milk and vanilla - much silkier, less sweet and more 'buttery' than the regular
buttercream icing I make) tasted pretty darn good.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEibq_TfHACvwnfrDNjCxbLIk8totQ0KInhyphenhyphenCqwvNoKrn2duI2RemmbXt-k4EcR861yc2RDEfyD8Fcd87x4e-jQhyKVSmTaojT66_-BoaSiyAu_RntiuLLirU41Xsp3uA1tRpW67aBNd5oHN/s320/Random+152.JPG)
So, I tore off the awful
caramel topping and replaced it with the leftover
buttercream icing. While this may not have bee the original plan, it tasted much better and we actually enjoyed the leftovers.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUnZaZ67kYR-t6PLMMSTdLZJFsqp2dzhITMN45HGZz8UgvbJEitBXM5LnTj-PEeDNWihw5HUkZoubY8yBfryBGbgNODk3hOHMynTkvgT5hkJxKnGd1wtZM7hyphenhyphenBsa_bQMsoqK7ttta1Cqul/s320/Random+150.JPG)
So, all in all a learning experience. I would love to taste an authentic Hungarian
Dobos torte or at least read a different recipe. I may have a connection there... Also, I will still try to remake the St. Louis
dobosh torte with a fluffier yellow cake,
ganache or
buttercream filling and white
buttercream icing. Go blue dad said he
preferred my icing and filling to the St. Louis cake, so that's a victory for me!!!