This article was co-authored by Jessica Banh. Jessica Banh is a Pastry Chef and the Owner of Fancy Flavors in San Jose, California. With over 12 years of technical experience, Jessica has expertise in a wide variety of pastry techniques and has a focus on macarons. Her work has been featured in The SF Chronicle, The Mercury News, and Good Morning America. She received her training from The Professional Culinary Institute.
wikiHow marks an article as reader-approved once it receives enough positive feedback. In this case, 100% of readers who voted found the article helpful, earning it our reader-approved status.
This article has been viewed 154,939 times.
Simply cream and chocolate, ganache is a delicious confection. It can be used to fill or top cakes, cookies, and other desserts. Best of all, it can be used as a glaze, a topping, or even whipped. It sounds complicated, but making ganache is actually quite simple!
Ingredients
- 12 ounces semisweet, bittersweet, or milk chocolate
- 1 cup heavy cream
Steps
Making Basic Ganache
-
Chop your chocolate. The higher-quality chocolate you use, the better your ganache will turn out.[1] With a serrated knife, finely chop the chocolate until there are no chunks of it left. This ensures that it will melt evenly. Place in a heat-proof bowl.
-
Bring your cream to a boil over medium high. Bring the cream to a boil on your stovetop. When it's come to a boil, immediately remove from the burnerAdvertisement
-
Slowly mix cream and chocolate. Pour a little bit of cream at a time into the bowl, then stir.[2] Once all the cream is in, stir until smooth. It should have a glossy texture.
- Now would be the time to add in any liquor to give your ganache a little bit of a kick.
- Your ganache might also profit from some flavorings. A teaspoon of vanilla extract does wonders; a bit of peppermint oil gives the ganache a cool burst of flavor.
-
Let stand 10 minutes to cool, then serve with cakes, cookies, or whatever you else desire!
- Refrigerate your unused ganache. When you're ready to bake the next batch of cookies or coat your next chocolate cake, simply reheat the ganache over a double boiler.
-
Finished.Advertisement
Modifying Your Ganache
-
Tweak the different proportions depending on what you use the ganache for. Making basic ganache is a piece of cake. Getting the ganache so that it's perfectly suited for its partner in crime in another story. Here are some proportions that you can use as a guideline when making ganache.[3]
- For glazes, particularly hard glazes — 3 parts chocolate to 1 part heavy cream, along with a tablespoon or more of corn syrup
- For truffles — 2 parts chocolate to 1 part heavy cream
- For cake filling — equal parts chocolate and heavy cream
- For soft icing — 1 part chocolate to 2 parts heavy cream
-
Create whipped ganache by refrigerating and then whipping. Take your basic chocolate ganache and set it in the refrigerator so that it's just a tad cool before whipping. Pour the ganache into a metal or ceramic bowl and then beat with an electric whipper, just as you would make whipped cream out of heavy cream.[4]
-
Make ganache for piping. Let the ganache cool completely and thicken up some. When you can spoon your ganache into a piping back and it holds its form, its ready for action.Advertisement
Expert Q&A
-
QuestionCan you heat ganache in microwave?Jessica BanhJessica Banh is a Pastry Chef and the Owner of Fancy Flavors in San Jose, California. With over 12 years of technical experience, Jessica has expertise in a wide variety of pastry techniques and has a focus on macarons. Her work has been featured in The SF Chronicle, The Mercury News, and Good Morning America. She received her training from The Professional Culinary Institute.
Pastry ChefDefinitely! Microwave your chocolate and heavy cream together in a microwave-safe bowl in 30-second spurts. Make sure you fully agitate the chocolate so it can fully melt together with the cream. -
QuestionWhat is ganache?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerGanache is a chocolate emulsion, usually made from a mixture of chocolate and cream. More cream to chocolate makes for a creamier, softer and looser ganache, while more chocolate to cream makes a firmer ganache that hardens when refrigerated. Ganache can be made using butter as well (this makes for a richer texture) and flavorings like extracts, oils and finely chopped nuts can also be added. It is also possible to make dairy-free ganache for those unable to consume dairy products. -
QuestionWhy did my ganache curdle?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerGanache can curdle if you used too high a temperature to make it. It might also occur where the ratio of chocolate to liquid is not properly balanced, so make sure to follow the ingredient amounts carefully. It can be saved though! To try to save the ganache, add the curdled ganache to a blender or food processor, add a tiny amount of boiling water to the mixture and process or blend it on high (if you have to do it by hand, stir as fast as you can). The idea is to recombine the ingredients and the hot water as quickly as possible. In most cases, this will save it sufficiently for use.
Video
Things You'll Need
- Cutting board
- Serrated knife
- Heat-proof bowl
References
- ↑ Jessica Banh. Pastry Chef. Expert Interview
- ↑ Jessica Banh. Pastry Chef. Expert Interview
- ↑ https://www.thekitchn.com/how-to-make-ganache-cooking-lessons-from-the-kitchn-41099
- ↑ http://savorysweetlife.com/2009/08/simply-glorious-chocolate-ganache-recipe-3-ways/
About this article
To make ganache, you will need 12 ounces of semisweet, bittersweet, or milk chocolate and 1 cup of heavy cream. Finely chop the chocolate before putting it into a heat-proof bowl. Next boil the cream over a medium heat. After removing it from the burner, slowly add it to the chopped chocolate, stirring until smooth. Let the mixture cool for 10 minutes before serving. Also, you can refrigerate unused ganache and reheat over a double boiler. For more tips, including how to make whipped ganache, read on!
Reader Success Stories
-
"The article was easy to read with pictures. I appreciated not having to wade through paragraphs of superfluous words to find what I was looking for. Thanks!"..." more