Strawberry Mango Fraisier Recipe | Barbara Bakes (2024)

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Strawberry Mango Fraisier Recipe | Barbara Bakes (1)

Jana ofCherry Tea Cakeswas our July Daring Bakers’ host and she challenges us to make Fresh Fraisiers inspired by recipes written by Elisabeth M. Prueitt and Chad Robertson in the beautiful cookbookTartine.

A Fraisier is a light, moist layered cake, split and filled with sliced strawberries and pastry cream, then topped with a thin sheet of almond paste. I’m not a huge almond paste fan, so I topped mine with white chocolate ganache instead.

The challenge required us to make a cake with exposed fruits around the sides of a center layer of pastry cream andmake all the components (cake, pastry cream mousse, simple syrup) from scratch.I made an orange chiffon cake and filled the cake with strawberries and mango. I madecandied kumquats and candied orange peel to add a bright orange color to the cake. I used the syrup from the candied fruit for the simple syrup to moisten the cake.

I was thrilled with the taste of this luscious dessert. It’s essentially an elegant strawberry shortcake with pastry cream instead of whipped cream and the cake isinfusedwith the sweet, citrus flavor of the syrup. Afabulousdessert! Unfortunately, I had lots of struggles creating what I had hoped would be a masterpiece.

July was a busy month and I wasn’t able to start my Fraisier until two days before the scheduled posting day. I thought two days would give me plenty of time to do the challenge, but I under estimated the time involved. I should have made the white chocolate ganache 24 hours before I needed it so it would be nice and thick and spreadable, but of course I didn’t, so I spent an hour stirring the ganache in a bowl of ice cubes to chill it quickly.

Strawberry Mango Fraisier Recipe | Barbara Bakes (3)

My ganachetopping was too soft and so was my filling. I used the two left over egg yolks instead of a whole egg in the pastry cream filling and the pastry cream thickened up nicely and didn’t require straining out any lumps. I probably should have added more gelatin or whipped the cream a bit more because even after 4 hours chilling my filling wasn’t firm enough to support the fruit from sliding around on the side of the cake.

Although it may be because I had the same struggle as many of the Daring Bakers with building the cake in the same spring form pan it was baked in. It shrunk a bit when it cooled so that it was hard to get it to mold tightly.In addition to shrinking in, the cake top sunk in a little bit, perhaps it needed more time to cook but the toothpick came out clean. I should have done as suggested by one of the Daring Bakers and turn it upside down to cool. Then the cake wouldn’t have sunk and I would have remember to take off the parchment.

It wasn’t until I went to serve the cake that I realized I had forgottento take the parchment off the bottom of the cake. So I had to cut away the parchment to get a slice out of the pan making it even harder to get a pretty slice because the filling was so soft.

Yet, despite all my troubles and the fact that my cake wasn’t as gorgeous as I had envisioned, this was a great, fabulously delicious challenge. All the individual elements were scrumptious and together created a fantastic, fresh summer treat. Visit the Daring Kitchen to see all the amazingly beautiful cakes the Daring Bakers baked this month.

Strawberry Mango Fraisier Recipe | Barbara Bakes (5)

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Strawberry Mango Fraisier

Cook Time55 minutes mins

Total Time55 minutes mins

Course: Cakes

Keyword: cooking, Daring Bakers, Dessert, food, recipe

Servings: 12 servings

Author: Barbara Schieving

Ingredients

Orange Chiffon Cake

  • 1 cup + 2 tablespoons 155 gm all-purpose flour
  • ¾ teaspoon baking powder reduced ¼ teaspoon from the original recipe for my high altitude
  • ½ cup + 3 tablespoons sugar reduced 1 tablespoon for high altitude
  • ½ teaspoon salt preferably kosher
  • ¼ cup vegetable oil
  • 3 large egg yolks
  • ½ cup orange juice increased 2 tablespoons for high altitude
  • ¼ teaspoon orange extract
  • 1 teaspoon orange zest
  • 5 large egg whites
  • ¼ teaspoon cream of tartar

Pastry Cream Filling:

  • 1 cup whole milk
  • ½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • teaspoon salt preferably kosher
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • ¾ teaspoon gelatin
  • ½ tablespoon water
  • 1 cup heavy cream

Candied Orange Peel and Zumquats

White Chocolate Ganache:

Fraisier Assembly Components

  • 1 baked 9 inch chiffon cake
  • 1 recipe pastry cream filling
  • cup simple syrup or flavored syrup
  • 2 lbs strawberries
  • 1 recipe white chocolate ganache

Instructions

  • Orange Chiffon Cake

  • Preheat the oven to moderate 325°F. Line the bottom of an 9-inch spring form pan with parchment paper. Do not grease the sides of the pan.

  • In a large mixing bowl, stir together the flour and baking powder. Add in all but 3 tablespoons of sugar, and all of the salt. Stir to combine.

  • In a small bowl combine the oil, egg yolks, orange juice, extract, and orange zest. Whisk thoroughly. Combine with the dry ingredients and mix thoroughly for about one minute, or until very smooth.

  • Put the egg whites into a stand mixer, and beat on medium speed using a whisk attachment on a medium speed, until frothy. Add cream of tartar and beat on a medium speed until the whites hold soft peaks. Slowly add the remaining 3 tablespoons sugar and beat on a medium-high speed until the whites hold firm and form shiny peaks.

  • Using a grease free rubber spatula, scoop about ⅓ of the whites into the yolk mixture and fold in gently. Gently fold in the remaining whites just until combined.

  • Pour the batter into the prepared pan. Bake for 45 to 55 minutes or until toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Removed the cake from the oven and allow to cool in the pan on a wire rack.

  • To unmold, run a knife around the sides to loosen the cake from the pan and remove the spring form sides. Invert the cake and peel off the parchment paper. Refrigerate for up to four days.

  • Pastry Cream Filling

  • Pour the milk, vanilla, and salt into a heavy sauce pan. Place over medium-high heat and scald, bringing it to a near boiling point. Stir occasionally.

  • Meanwhile, in a stand mixer add the cornstarch and sugar. Whisk to combine Add the eggs to the sugar and cornstarch and whisk until smooth. When the milk is ready, gently and slowly while the stand mixer is whisking, pour the heated milk down the side of the bowl into the egg mixture.

  • Pour the mixture back into the warm pot and continue to cook over a medium heat until the custard is thick, just about to boil and coats the back of a spoon. Remove from heat and pass through a fine mesh sieve into a large mixing bowl. (Mine wasn’t lumping and didn’t need straining.) Allow to cool for ten minutes stirring occasionally.

  • Cut the butter into four pieces and whisk into the pastry cream a piece at a time until smooth. Cover the cream with plastic wrap, pressing the plastic wrap onto the top of the cream to prevent a skin from forming. Chill in the refrigerator for up to five days.

  • In a small dish, sprinkle the gelatin over the water and let stand for a few minutes to soften. Put two inches of water into a small sauce pan and bring to a simmer over a medium heat.

  • Measure ¼ cup of the chilled pastry cream into a small stainless steel bowl that will sit across the sauce pan with the simmering water, without touching the water. Heat the pastry cream until it is 120º. Add the gelatin and whisk until smooth. Remove from the water bath, and whisk the remaining cold pastry cream in to incorporate in two batches.

  • In a stand mixer, fitted with the whisk attachment, whip the heavy cream until it holds medium-stiff peaks. Immediately fold the whipped cream into the pastry cream with a rubber spatula.

  • Candied Orange Peel and Zumquats

  • Using a citrus zester or vegetable peeler, shred long strips of orange peel. Slice kumquats into rounds. Place citrus strips and kumquats in a medium saucepan. Cover with cold water, and bring to a boil over medium heat. Drain; repeat two more times with fresh water.

  • Place sugar in a clean saucepan with 1 ½ cups water; stir to combine. Bring to a boil over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until sugar has dissolved, about 3 minutes.

  • Add the citrus strips and kumquats to the boiling syrup; reduce heat, and simmer until translucent, about 12 minutes. Remove from heat; let cool in syrup, at least 1 hour. Remove from syrup when ready to use.

  • White Chocolate Ganache

  • Put the white chocolate into a medium microwave safe bowl. Heat the pure cream in a small saucepan or microwave safe dish until it boils. Be very careful as you do not want it to burn to the bottom of the pan, or rise up and boil over.

  • Pour the boiling cream evenly over the white chocolate, then begin stirring with a fork. The mixture will be lumpy and sticky–just keep going and watch as the white chocolate melts. There will be a point where the heat is all but gone from the mixture and you feel you need a little bit more to get across the line.

  • Place the bowl in the microwave oven for a few seconds. Then take it out and resume mixing, but this time with a whisk. Continue mixing until all lumps of chocolate are gone and you are left with a smooth, thick, viscose mixture.

  • Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and set aside. Leave the ganache to set for 24 hours. I kid you not–if you want to avoid heartache, leave the ganache for a full day.

  • When you return to use it, it will be thick like butter and can be used to fill a cake and cover it. Heat your palette knife under hot water and run it over the surface of the ganache to achieve a perfectly smooth look.

  • Fraisier Assembly

  • Line the sides of a 9-inch spring form pan with plastic wrap. Do not line the bottom of the pan. Cut the cake in half horizontally to form two layers. Fit the bottom layer into the prepared spring form pan.

  • Moisten the layer evenly with the simple syrup. When the cake has absorbed enough syrup to resemble a squishy sponge, you have enough. Hull and slice in half enough strawberries to arrange around the sides of the cake pan. Place the cut side of the strawberry against the sides of the pan, point side up forming a ring.

  • Pipe cream in-between strawberries and a thin layer across the top of the cake. Hull and quarter your remaining strawberries and place them in the middle of the cake. Cover the strawberries and entirely with the all but 1 tbsp. (15 ml) of the pastry cream.

  • Place the second cake layer on top and moisten with the simple syrup. Lightly dust a work surface with confectioners’ sugar and roll out the almond paste to a 10-inch (25 cm) round 1/16 inch (1.5 mm) thick.

  • Spread the remaining 1 tablespoon (15 ml) of pastry cream on the top of the cake and cover with the round of almond paste. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 4 hours. To serve release the sides of the spring form pan and peel away the plastic wrap. Serve immediately or store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.

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Strawberry Mango Fraisier Recipe | Barbara Bakes (6)

About Melissa & Barbara

As of June 2022 Melissa Griffiths now is the one adding recipes. So think of it as Barbara Bakes, and Melissa too! Melissa and Barbara have been blogging friends for over 10 years and when Barbara was ready to retire and spend more time with her family, Melissa took over the site. Read more...

Reader Interactions

Comments

    Leave a Reply

  1. Marissa Orr

    That cake is gorgeous! Hi Barbara, your Fraisier looks absolutely stunning.

    Reply

  2. Megan

    You did a fabulous job, it is a masterpiece!!! And the flavors sound incredible! Great job my friend. 🙂

    Reply

  3. Jenny at Baking Devils

    This cake is my idea of heaven! Much better than any chocolate cake in my opinion. By the look of the beautiful and informative pictures you wouldn’t know you’d had any trouble with it. I love it! Thanks for sharing. Jenny

    Reply

  4. Cathy at Wives with Knives

    You created a masterpiece, Barbara! Your cake is spectacular. I love the strawberries and little candied kumquats. Well done!

    Reply

  5. Kitchen Belleicious

    WHAT! How did I miss this last week! AMAZING, BEAUTIFUL, DELICIOUS! I want it all for my little self right now! The perfect way to continue using the amazing flavors of the summer. Thanks Barbara!

    Reply

  6. Blond Duck

    That cake is gorgeous!

    Reply

  7. Bex

    That looks unreal

    Reply

  8. Anne

    You are a perfectionist, I can tell – but your cake turned out fabulous! Absolutely gorgeous to look at – I can only imagine how wonderful it tastes (pastry cream and white chocolate ganache? Heaven!)

    Reply

  9. Joy

    Oh my goodness. that looks so good.

    Reply

  10. Christina @ Sweet Pea's Kitchen

    I think it looks gorgeous!! I bet it tastes amazing! It looks like a wonderful summer dessert! Yummy!

    Reply

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Strawberry Mango Fraisier Recipe | Barbara Bakes (2024)

FAQs

What is fraisier cake made of? ›

A fraisier cake is a classic French cake traditionally made from layers of genoise, mousseline cream, strawberries and almond paste (also known as marizipan). The name comes from the French word for strawberries "fraise". The resulting cake is a stunning little cake lined with the halved strawberries.

How to put fresh strawberries on a cake? ›

Arrange whole strawberries around the top edge of the cake.

Just be sure to rinse the strawberries well first, and to cut the green stems off. For something fancier, pipe large stars all around the top edge of the cake first, then set the strawberries on top.

What is a godfather cake? ›

A two-tier Godfather themed cake featuring all hand-modeled and edible elements from the classic movie. The cake is lemon chiffon with a delicious raspberry butter-cream filling, covered in dark chocolate ganache and LMM fondant.

How long will fresh strawberries last in a cake? ›

Storage Tips

You do need to refrigerate a cake with cream cheese frosting. Without the optional sliced fresh strawberries added, this cake will last in the refrigerator for 5 days. Sliced fresh strawberries will last in a cake for 3 days in the refrigerator.

How do you stop strawberries from bleeding on a cake? ›

4 - Dice the strawberries and mix them with sugar to allow the juices to seep out of the berries so that they don't bleed on the cake. Strain the juice from the strawberries and then fill the cake.

Can I put strawberries in the middle of a cake? ›

If you are making something like a classic sponge cake or angel food cake with layers of whipped cream and strawberries, I would simply slice them and leave them raw. If you are filling a stacked and frosted cake, I would cook them down to a more jammy consistancy. You can puree it to make it smooth if desired.

What is Isabella cake? ›

The Isabella cake is a soft and delicate pistachio dessert, ideal at the end of a meal or at any time of the day. The Bronte DOP Green Pistachio is a fine variety and the main ingredient of our pistachio cake, ideal for all occasions.

What is German cake frosting made of? ›

3. Make the German Chocolate Frosting: Combine brown sugar, granulated sugar, butter, egg yolks, and evaporated milk in a saucepan and bring the mixture to a low boil over medium heat. Stir constantly until the mixture thickens. Remove from heat and stir in vanilla, nuts and coconut.

What do the French call sponge cake? ›

Madeleines (French Sponge Cakes)

How many calories are in a fraisier cake? ›

Paul Patisseriec Fraisier (strawberry Cake) (1 serving) contains 94g total carbs, 89.7g net carbs, 22g fat, 8.3g protein, and 615 calories.

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