Friday, May 27, 2011



The Tres Leches

So, I did the unthinkable and I decided to tackle the Tres Leches recipe for Zoe's birthday weekend. This recipe is part of the Holy Trinity that truly made my dad successful, and ultimately put us all through college. The Holy Trinity (the Churrascos, the Tres Leches, and Plantain Chips) are the main reason people go to Cordua restaurants, and they make up over 50% of the sales.

This recipe is from Tia Patricia. She is now a principal at a school in Nicaragua. But when the first Churrascos opened in 1988, she was in the kitchen helping out as a pastry chef. So she is a pro and has bestowed her knowledge onto her daughter-in-law, Venessa, who graciously agreed to be my guide through out the entire journey! Thanks Vene!

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Not only are there three milks, and not only is the Tres Leches part of the trinity, BUT it also has three distinct parts to the process.
First! If you can get a DJ for the event, it's best. "If you're lucky... you'll have a DJ"













Okay now, gather your ingredients:

THE CAKE:
2 cups Flour (sifted)
2 cups Sugar
6 teaspoons of Baking Powder
1/2 cup of Whole Milk
6 eggs (room temp)

THE TRES LECHES:
2 cans Condensed Milk
2 cans Evaporated Milk
1 pint Whipping Cream
1 tsp Vanilla Extract
1 shot of Baileys (optional, but encouraged)

THE MERINGUE FROSTING:
6 Egg Whites
1/2 cup Sugar
1/2 cup Water (approximately; see notes)
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Recipe for the Cake:
1. Turn the oven to 375 degrees
2. In a medium bowl, mix all your dry ingredients together (the sifted flour, sugar, and baking powder)











3. Next, in your standing mixer add the 6 eggs











4. Turn the mixer on and continue until the eggs are foamy and pale yellow. Like so...











5. Little by little add your dry mix to the egg mixture. As it starts to dry up, and a little bit of milk. Repeat this process until youʼve used all the milk and dry mix.












6. Pour mixture into a lightly greased 9X12 pan.











7. Bake for about 40 minutes or until fork is clean. (Do not open oven until after 30 minutes have passed or cake will sink.) (If you are using a glass pan, it will cook much faster than when it's in a foil or aluminum)
8. After 30 minutes, you can begin testing the cake with a knife. Once it comes out clean, the cake is ready!










Recipe for the Tres Leches:
8. While the cake is in the oven, gather your ingredients for the Tres Leches











9. You may need to blend these ingredients in two batches because they may not all fit. Have a large bowl ready where you can combine both blender batches.
10. We filled the first blender with 1 can of condensed milk, 1 can of evaporated milk, half a pint of heavy cream, and the vanilla extract. Blend until mixed thoroughly. Then poured the mix into a large bowl. In the second blender, we combined the remaining ingredients (the rest of the heavy cream, 1 can of evaporated milk, 1 can of condensed milk, and a shot of Bailey's).











11. Set the milk mixture aside until the cake is ready and out of the oven.
12. While the cake is still hot, poke a bunch of holes with a fork, and begin pouring the milk mixture onto the hot cake. Keep piercing the cake as you pour. (It helps to pour the milk mixture in a pitcher-like-container or something with a spout).












13. The finished product will look a little messy. But remember the icing is beautiful, and will cover the puncture holes.











14. Set the cake aside. It needs to cool and soak up the milk.












Recipe for the Meringue:

15. The safest thing to do is to leave the cake in the fridge covered over night. And then make the icing right before you serve the cake.
16. First, get all your ingredients ready for the icing. I would recommend using fresh egg whites (not like I did).











17. Mix the 6 egg whites in your Kitchen Aid or a hand held blender. (I have neither at my house, so I got a real work out mixing those egg whites!) Mix egg whites a "punto de nieve-" It has to look thick yet fluffy like fresh ice cream. In the picture below, it's almost ready, but not quite.

* Add 1/4 teaspoon of Cream of Tartar to hold the meringue if you're not serving cake right away 











18. Meanwhile, add 1/2 cup of sugar into a small sauce pan.











19. Then, pour just enough water to cover sugar. You may not need the entire amount but do not go over 1/2 cup if it is not covered.
20. Heat in medium-low heat and stir frequently.











21. Keep testing it by dipping a fork and lifting it up in the air. Once it is, an "hilo” or string will form as you lift the fork. Then you are ready for next step. It might take a while but it is important to get the right consistency. And you need to move quickly with this next step before sugar cools.

22. Now, while the sugar is hot go back to your egg whites. Add sugar mixture a little at a time while mixing. Once it is all blended in, add a little more. Donʼt do it too fast or it wonʼt mix right but donʼt do it too slow or sugar will cool down. Keep mixing until bowl is cool.












23. Frost your cake and enjoy!!!!













*Tonight, I'll post a picture of the finished product with candles and everything*

20 comments:

  1. This is amaaaazing Eli!! I especially love the part about the DJ... "if you're lucky...you have a dj". Zoe is in for a treat! Can't wait to see the finished product.

    XOXO

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  2. melissa made this recently and it was AMAZING!!

    but it's funny that it's called a meringue frosting cause the cordua tres leches frosting is sooo much thicker than traditional merigue.

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  3. I know! And most tres leches recipes call for about half the condensed milk. But that's why this recipe is the best one! Such an indulgence.

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    2. Okay, David gave us a few more tips today.

      Beat the whole eggs for about 15 mins before adding the dry ingredients (it will make the cake more like soufflé).

      Then, if you use an aluminum pan to bake the cake it will heat up faster, so you need to shorten the cooking time and it will add to the soufflé consistency. David says its best to use a very thin aluminum pan if possible.

      Once its baked you want the cake to have almost a belly and then cut off the belly so that the liquid will soak up better. This would replace the fork puncturing step.

      Happy Baking! ...And HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO MICHELLE MIRSHAK. WE LOVE YOU!!!

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  4. Is it really 6 Tablespoons of baking powder? That seems like a lot.

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    1. Hi Lisa, I was shocked too when I was told to use 6 tablespoons. And honestly, I have made the cake using 3 tablespoons and it came out fine. The purpose is to make the cake as spongey as possible so that it can absorb the milk liquid, so 6 tablespoons are recommended. Great question!

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  5. Hi Elisa, can I check on the size of the cans you used for the condensed and evaporated milks? My local store only does 12oz cans of evaporated milks and 14oz cans of condensed milks. Should I aim to use equal quantities of each or will it not matter to use more condensed than evaporated? Thanks!

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  6. 3 cups condensed milk, 3 cups evaporated milk, 3 cups heavy cream.

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  7. I have tried baking this cake twice today! The first time it completely bubbled out of the pan so I tried again. The second time I went and bought a bigger pan hoping to avoid the overflow. Well, no luck it boiled over the edges and when it was done the cake completely fell into practically a pancake. Is it too much baking powder? I have never had this happen to me before, I know how to bake!

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    1. Any reply on this? The same happens to me.

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    2. Try the recipe from the Pioneer Woman or Alton Brown. I made the Pioneer Woman Tres Leches cake for Super Bowl and it was delicious. The only change I'd make is to refrigerate the cake with the sauce overnight. Then frost the cake the next day. This recipe seems like the amounts aren't right. Especially the 9(!) cups of sauce.

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    3. We're consulting with our chef experts (dad and brother who developed the recipe) because we haven't run into this issue before. The cake will deflate some, but using a bigger pan will make it spread out even more. Will post what we find!

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    4. Yes, I can't imagine you poured nine cups of sauce on top of this cake. Every other recipe has three to four cups and it's VERY wet after it has soaked overnight.

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    5. Maybe this is a recipe for two cakes, that would make more sense with the amounts of flour and sugar.

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    6. Ive used this recipe many times and have not had this issue. Nonetheless, I checked with my aunt in Latin America who was one of the original dessert chefs at the restaurants and her response is below (she essentially says it could be that the egg was over beaten, the oven over heated, or to try a larger pan):

      "Veo la receta bien. No se que fallara. Puede ser que se batió mucho el huevo o la temperatura del horno. Pero creo que quizas el pyrex es muy pequeño. Que traten uno mas grande."

      happy baking everybody!

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  9. Is it 6 tablespoons or 6 teaspoons of baking powder? In your recipe you have teaspoons, but in the comments you put tablespoons. Thanks

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  10. Hello my merengue frosting is not coming out my sugar is not setting at hilo stage.

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