White Chocolate Grand Marnier Mousse Recipe

Chocolate and Orange At Its Best

White Chocolate Grand Marnier Mousse in Chocolate Cups Recipe

Years ago, I worked in a restaurant that served Grand Marnier mousse in fancy crystal dishes, topped with a tiny butter cookie. Light, orangey, and delicious, it was one of my favourite desserts next to the strawberry pie.

A few weeks ago when I found dark chocolate cups in the grocery store, all I could think of was filling them with that mousse. For the longest time I was never that fond of chocolate and orange flavours together, but in recent years I've grown to love them. I scoured the internet for a good mousse recipe, did a little testing, and I think I've found it just in time for our New Year's Eve dinner.

A tip here: use the very BEST whipping cream and chocolate you can find. I used Avalon Dairy's  Organic whipping cream and Green and Black's white chocolate.

Ingredients:

4 large egg yolks
1/4 cup Grand Marnier
2 tbsp sugar
1 tbsp grated orange zest
2 cups whipped cream (unsweetened) about 1 1/2 cup unwhipped
2 bars of Green and Blacks White Chocolate (or, 1/2 cup)

  In a stainless steel bowl over simmering water, whisk together the egg yolks, Grand Marnier, sugar, and orange zest. Stand and whisk constantly while it heats and cooks, occasionally taking the bowl off and away from the boiling water if it's getting too hot.

  What you should have happen is the egg yolks and other ingredients come together and become thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. What you don't want is scrambled eggs, so hence the constant watch and stirring. The original recipe said it should take 4-5 minutes and the water should be boiling, but I found the water too hot and mine was finished in about 3 minutes. Use your judgment. The consistency was about that of melted chocolate.

  Take the bowl off the heat and set aside to cool.

  Whip the cream. You need about 2 cups of it whipped, so I'm guessing 1 1/2 cup before you start whipping it would be good. Don't add anything to it-you need the whipped cream to be plain.

  Meanwhile, also start melting your chocolate. I do this directly on the stove over low heat in a saucepan, but you can use your microwave, a double boiler, etc. Let it cool. (Important! You don't want a warm chocolate wrecking the whipped cream)

  Once your egg yolk mixture (also known as sabayon) is cool, fold in the whipped cream, and then the cooled chocolate.

  At this point I spooned the mousse into chocolate cups and let them chill in the fridge for 5 hours, before serving topped with shaved white chocolate, and fresh berries. When I halved the recipe it filled 7 cups, generously.

Adapted from Emeril Live, Food Network Canada

She may go by the name Scatteredmom online, but Karen really is anything but scattered when it comes to the kitchen.  Churning out tasty treats within view of the Georgia Strait on Canada's west coast, Karen will hand you an organized weekly meal plan or teach you how to make meals from scratch.  As Mom to a teenage boy, she knows exactly what it takes to keep kids full and happy-which has really come in handy with her job as the Food Editor at Yummy Mummy Club.

A strong supporter of Food Revolution who has been endorsed by Jamie Oliver himself, by day Karen can be found working as a special education teaching assistant, running a kitchen and showing teenagers how to cook nutritious meals for themselves.  By night, when she's not chatting on Twitter and answering cooking questions,  she writes her popular blog Notes From the Cookie Jar, or posting mouthwatering recipes over at Chasing Tomatoes.  Not afraid to give her opinion and passionate about community, Karen spoke at Blissdom Canada 2010 and her writing has been published in Canadian Living magazine, as well as in various online publications. 

Follow Karen on Twitter @scatteredmom