A foolproof brownie recipe for a squidgy chocolate bake. Watch our recipe video to help you get a perfect traybake every time.
Ingredients
- 185g unsalted butter
- 185g best dark chocolate
- 85g plain flour
- 40g cocoa powder
- 50g white chocolate
- 50g milk chocolate
- 3 large eggs
- 275g golden caster sugar
Method
- Cut 185g unsalted butter into small cubes and tip into a medium bowl. Break 185g dark chocolate into small pieces and drop into the bowl.
- Fill a small saucepan about a quarter full with hot water,
then sit the bowl on top so it rests on the rim of the pan, not
touching the water. Put over a low heat until the butter and chocolate
have melted, stirring occasionally to mix them. Remove the bowl from the
pan. Alternatively, cover the bowl loosely with cling film and put in
the microwave for 2 minutes on High. Leave the melted mixture to cool to
room temperature.
- While
you wait for the chocolate to cool, position a shelf in the middle of
your oven and turn the oven on to fan 160C/conventional 180C/gas 4.
- Using
a shallow 20cm square tin, cut out a square of non-stick baking
parchment to line the base. Tip 85g plain flour and 40g cocoa powder
into a sieve held over a medium bowl. Tap and shake the sieve so they
run through together and you get rid of any lumps.
- Chop 50g white chocolate and 50g milk chocolate into chunks on a board.
- Break 3 large eggs into a large bowl and tip in 275g golden caster sugar. With an electric mixer
on maximum speed, whisk the eggs and sugar. They will look thick and
creamy, like a milk shake. This can take 3-8 minutes, depending on how
powerful your mixer is. You’ll know it’s ready when the mixture becomes
really pale and about double its original volume. Another check is to
turn off the mixer, lift out the beaters and wiggle them from side to
side. If the mixture that runs off the beaters leaves a trail on the
surface of the mixture in the bowl for a second or two, you’re there.
- Pour the cooled chocolate mixture over the eggy mousse, then gently fold together with a rubber spatula.
Plunge the spatula in at one side, take it underneath and bring it up
the opposite side and in again at the middle. Continue going under and
over in a figure of eight, moving the bowl round after each folding so
you can get at it from all sides, until the two mixtures are one and the
colour is a mottled dark brown. The idea is to marry them without
knocking out the air, so be as gentle and slow as you like.
- Hold
the sieve over the bowl of eggy chocolate mixture and resift the cocoa
and flour mixture, shaking the sieve from side to side, to cover the top
evenly. Gently fold in this powder using the same figure of eight
action as before. The mixture will look dry and dusty at first, and a
bit unpromising, but if you keep going very gently and patiently, it
will end up looking gungy and fudgy. Stop just before you feel you
should, as you don’t want to overdo this mixing. Finally, stir in the
white and milk chocolate chunks until they’re dotted throughout.
- Pour
the mixture into the prepared tin, scraping every bit out of the bowl
with the spatula. Gently ease the mixture into the corners of the tin
and paddle the spatula from side to side across the top to level it. Put
in the oven and set your timer for 25 mins. When the buzzer goes, open
the oven, pull the shelf out a bit and gently shake the tin. If the
brownie wobbles in the middle, it’s not quite done, so slide it back in
and bake for another 5 minutes until the top has a shiny, papery crust
and the sides are just beginning to come away from the tin. Take out of
the oven.
- Leave
the whole thing in the tin until completely cold, then, if you’re using
the brownie tin, lift up the protruding rim slightly and slide the
uncut brownie out on its base. If you’re using a normal tin, lift out
the brownie with the foil. Cut into quarters, then cut each quarter into
four squares and finally into triangles. They’ll keep in an airtight container for a good two weeks and in the freezer for up to a month.
Source:
bbcgoodfood
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