Today is National Irish Coffee Day! Irish Coffee was invented at the Buena Vista Cafe, right here in San Francisco.
On my first day in California I was lucky to hitch a ride with a
visiting dignitary. The day's tour of San Francisco included the hills
of San Francisco, Sonoma County, the Renaissance Fair, Sausalito,
Fisherman's Wharf, the Palace of Fine Arts, Cliff House, the Golden Gate
Bridge and a stop at the Buena Vista Cafe for an Irish Coffee. I saw
more of the San Francisco Bay Area on that one day than I did over the
next ten years.
Irish Coffee at the Buena Vista Cafe is a very San Francisco tradition. The drink was invented there in 1952. The recipe was a collaborative effort between Jack Koeppler, the Buena Vista’s owner, and Stanton Delaplane, a well-known international travel writer and San Francisco Chronicle columnist.
The official story of Irish Coffee tells of the perseverance and
repeated attempts of Koeppler & Delaplane and even a trip to
Shannon Airport, where a forerunner of Koeppler’s vision was served. The
whipped cream posed a problem, but the input of a prominent dairy
farmer turned Mayor of San Francisco, solved the problem: Age the cream
for 48 hours and froth it to a precise consistency so it would float
on top of the hot coffee, to Koeppler’s specifications.
So if you're in San Francisco today, it's a big day at the Buena Vista. Stop by and raise a glass!
But this is a Chocolate Blog, so once again I wanted to post a recipe that includes Chocolate and the day's 'food' holiday.
Irish Coffee Chocolate Mousse
Ingredients
4 ounces bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, chopped into small pieces
1 cup heavy cream
1-1/2 teaspoons instant espresso powder
4 teaspoons Irish whiskey
2 eggs
2 tablespoons plus 4 teaspoons sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Directions
Put Chocolate, 1/3 cup of cream, and 1/4 teaspoon of espresso powder in heatproof bowl. Put bowl in skillet of barely simmering water. Stir frequently until chocolate is completely melted and smooth. Remove bowl from skillet, stir in whiskey, and set aside.
In heatproof medium bowl, whisk eggs with 1 tablespoon water and 2 tablespoons of sugar until well blended.
Put bowl in skillet and whisk eggs constantly (to prevent from scrambling) over barely simmering water until they register 160 degrees F. on instant-read thermometer.
Remove bowl from skillet and beat at high speed with electric mixer until eggs have texture like softly whipped cream, 3 to 4 minutes.
Fold one quarter of eggs into chocolate.
Scrape chocolate mixture over remaining whipped eggs and continue to fold just until evenly incorporated.
Divide mousse into ramekins. Chill at least 1 hour, or until set, before serving.
Serve with Bailey's Irish Cream
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 tablespoon Baileys Irish Cream
Whip heavy cream to soft peaks. Add Baileys Irish Cream and whisk until
combined.
Spoon small amount of whipped cream onto the top of
each mousse ramekin.
2 comments:
What is meant by "age the cream 48 hours"? Leave it at room temperature?
I went to Ireland with my mother when I was in high school. Everywhere we stopped on our tour they served us Irish coffee. Too bad I was too young to appreciate it, but my mother was happy to drink mine as well as hers!
Libby, we don't 'age' the cream anymore.. just leave it out, so it's not cold.. :-)
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