Three tiers of crisp shell, pillowy center and gooey raspberry curd — this chocolate pavlova stack is theatrical, messy and absolutely worth the 4-hour indulgence.
It’s been way too long since we had a showstopper of a dessert. When I look over the last four years of archives, it seems that practical, slightly boring and grownup things like salad and dinner have nudged out cooking purely for the purpose of generating and distributing decadent joy. The Celebration Cake category looks like the land that time forgot. And so on this very snowy/slushy day, and the day before Valentine’s, no less, I’d like to recommend: Not a weeknight dinner.
Here is a three-tiered chocolate pavlova, a crackly-edged, pillowy-centered meringue, with a few messy, wonderful things between and on top of it: raspberry curd, barely sweetened whipped cream, a drizzle of chocolate ganache, fresh raspberries, and a dusting of snow, almost as pretty as what’s out my window right now. There are corners you can cut if you wish: you could use a drizzle of storebought chocolate sauce, you could make a quicker raspberry dessert sauce instead of making the curd, but as the curd uses 6 egg yolks and the pavlova uses 6 whites, you might find the balance of ingredients when you make both as satisfying as I do. You could also revert to the single-layer chocolate pavlova in the archives, should you need less of everything.
But the spirit here is maximalism. It’s not a one-bowl cake for rushed times or because you forgot someone’s birthday until the last minute. [For that there’s this, or this.] The stack is wobbly and a little chaotic with a mix of sweet, tart, creamy, bittersweet, crisp, and gooey textures and flavors that a regular layer cake could only dream of. It’s fun, it’s happy, it’s quietly gluten-free, and it promises to make anyone you share it with happy.
Podcast! Friends, in case you missed it, I’m starting a podcast with none other than J. Kenji Lopez-Alt where we get to obsess over our favorite subjects: home cooking and recipes, with a heavy lean towards comfort foods and nostalgia. The Recipe With Kenji and Deb launches Monday 2/26 from PRX and Radiotopia and you’ll be able to listen to it anywhere you get your podcasts. The podcast website is up, as is the Instagram, and you can hear the trailer there too.
Servings | Total time | Source |
---|---|---|
8–12 | About 4 hours + 1–2 hrs resting | SaedNews |
Component | Ingredient | Amount |
---|---|---|
Pavlovas | Large egg whites | 6 |
Granulated sugar | 1 1/2 cups (300 g) | |
Kosher salt | 1/4 teaspoon | |
Balsamic or red wine vinegar | 1 1/2 teaspoons | |
Unsweetened cocoa powder | 1/4 cup (20 g), sift if lumpy | |
Semi- or bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped | 2 ounces (55 g) | |
Raspberry Curd | Fresh or defrosted raspberries | 12 ounces (≈2 1/2 cups) |
Fresh lemon juice | 2 tablespoons (30 ml) | |
Granulated sugar | 1/2 cup + 2 tablespoons (125 g) | |
Large egg yolks | 6 | |
Unsalted butter | 3 tablespoons (45 g) | |
Assemble & Finish | Semi- or bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped | 4 ounces (115 g) |
Heavy cream (divided) | 2 cups (475 ml) | |
Granulated sugar | 2 teaspoons (10 g) | |
Vanilla extract | 1 teaspoon (5 ml) | |
Fresh raspberries | 1 cup (115 g) | |
Powdered sugar | For dusting |
Make the meringue: Heat oven to 300°F. Use a pencil to trace 3 8″-diameter circles on each of 3 separate pieces of parchment paper. Place pencil-side down on baking sheets.
Beat the egg whites with the whisk attachment of an electric mixer on medium to medium-high until thickened, satiny peaks form (this is very important to achieve before adding any sugar or the structure will collapse) then beat in the 1 1/2 cups of sugar a spoonful at a time until the mixture is stiff and shiny. Sprinkle the surface of the mixture with the salt, vinegar, cocoa powder, and 2 ounces chopped chocolate and gently fold it in with a spatula, being careful not to deflate the meringue at all.
Dollop in big spoonfuls into the prepared parchment circles and use the back of a spoon to push them into thick, ripply discs. Place in oven and reduce temperature to 250°F, and bake until the pavlovas are crisp and dry to the touch, about 75 minutes. If they feel a little sticky or look shiny in places at 75 minutes, add another 15 minutes. Turn the oven heat off. I stick a spoon or balled up dishtowel in the oven door to keep it slightly ajar while slowly cooling the pavlovas. You can cool them completely this way, but I get impatient after about 30 minutes and cool them the rest of the way with the door open. You might get a couple small cracks, but it won’t matter for this rustic dessert.
Meanwhile, make the raspberry curd: Purée your raspberries in a food processor or high-speed blender and push through a fine-mesh strainer to remove the seeds. Place 1/2 cup of this raspberry purée (you’ll have a little extra; save for a smoothie or yogurt bowl), lemon juice, 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons granulated sugar, and egg yolks in a medium-large heatproof bowl and whisk to thoroughly combine.
Bring a medium saucepan with an inch or two of water in it to a simmer on the stove. Place the bowl with the raspberry mixture over the pot (the bowl should not touch the water) and cook, stirring, until the mixture begins to thicken and it coats the spatula or whisk (between 170–180°F). Do not let it come to a simmer; the mixture will thicken right before it will. Remove from the heat, add butter and stir until it melts.
Transfer the curd to a bowl to cool completely; it will finish thickening as it cools. To hurry this along, as I always do, set the bowl in a larger bowl of ice water (ensuring the ice water is far below the surface of your bowl so it doesn’t splash in, of course) and let it cool, stirring it occasionally so it does so evenly.
Make final components: Once pavlovas and raspberry curd are completely cool, you can get ready to assemble the dessert. To make the chocolate sauce for drizzling, place 4 ounces chopped chocolate in a heatproof bowl. Bring 3/4 cup of the heavy cream to a simmer in the microwave or in a small saucepan on the stove and pour it over the chocolate. Let it sit for one minute, then whisk the mixture together until the chocolate is smooth and glossy. Set aside to cool slightly.
To make whipped cream, beat remaining 1 1/4 cups heavy cream with 2 teaspoons granulated sugar and vanilla extract until it reaches soft peaks.
Assemble and rest: Place a dab of raspberry curd in the middle of a serving plate and place first layer of pavlova on top. The curd can help it stay in place. Spoon about 1/3 of the raspberry curd (just eyeball the amount) over the pavlova and use a small spoon or offset spatula to gently nudge it across the surface. If it wants to spill over the edges in places, let it. Spoon 1/3 of the whipped cream over the curd and again, use a spoon or spatula to nudge it out to the edges. Drizzle some of the chocolate sauce over the whipped cream, letting some drip. Place second pavlova disc on top and repeat this process twice, with remaining curd, cream, some of the chocolate, and remaining pavlova layer. Finish with fresh raspberries, a final drizzle of chocolate, and a dusting of powdered sugar.
Transfer completed pavlova stack to the fridge for 1 to 2 hours before serving, and up to 6. The longer it hangs out in the fridge, the softer the center gets, but I promise, even at 8 hours, nothing will be bad about it.
To serve: Serve pavlova in messy wedges. If it’s in the first couple hours of resting time, you’ll probably want a sharp serrated knife to cut through the pavlova layers. Leftovers keep in the fridge for up to 4 days, but the edges of the pavlovas get more dry and the center more soft and chewy each day.
Baked meringues will keep lightly wrapped at room temperature for a day. Raspberry curd will keep in the fridge for 4 days. The chocolate sauce and whipped cream are best made right before assembly, although there are ways to make fridge-stable whipped creams. (The chocolate sauce would likely need to be gently rewarmed to be thin enough to drizzle if made in advance, which doesn’t seem like it would save any time.)
Practical Tips
Tip | Source text (short) |
---|---|
Trace 8″ circles on parchment for uniform layers | “Use a pencil to trace 3 8″-diameter circles on each of 3 separate pieces of parchment paper.” |
Beat whites to satiny peaks before adding sugar | “This is very important to achieve before adding any sugar or the structure will collapse.” |
Cool pavlovas slowly in an ajar oven | “I stick a spoon or balled up dishtowel in the oven door to keep it slightly ajar while slowly cooling the pavlovas.” |
Strain raspberry purée to remove seeds | “Purée your raspberries … and push through a fine-mesh strainer to remove the seeds.” |
Make chocolate sauce by pouring hot cream over chocolate | “Bring 3/4 cup of the heavy cream to a simmer … pour it over the chocolate … whisk until smooth.” |
Storage windows | “Baked meringues will keep lightly wrapped at room temperature for a day. Raspberry curd will keep in the fridge for 4 days. Leftovers keep in the fridge for up to 4 days.” |