Chattanooga Times Free Press

CHRISTMAS CAKE

ELEVATE THE DESSERT TABLE WITH A YULE LOG

- BY SUSAN PIERCE / CORRESPOND­ENT Email Susan Pierce at beagle luvr126@yahoo.com.

Fans of Food Network’s many youth and adult holiday baking championsh­ips know that not a season passes during which contestant­s aren’t challenged with creating a yule log. A holiday temptation that tests contestant­s’ knowledge of flavor combinatio­ns and technique, these made- fromscratc­h cakes are basically chocolate sponge cake filled with flavored whipped cream and covered in a chocolate ganache.

The cakes are named yule logs because they are rolled in a cylindrica­l shape with the end sliced off to reveal they resemble the inner circles of an actual log (think oversized Little Debbie Swiss Cake Rolls). Their variety of flavors has grown as fast as their comeback in popularity as TV bakers have demonstrat­ed creative variations over multiple holiday season contests.

The traditiona­l burning of a yule log dates back to medieval times when a large log or small tree was cut, dragged into a villager’s home and the largest end of the log was placed in the fireplace to provide warmth through the 12 days of Christmas. By the 19th century, the yule log cake (a much safer in-home decoration) emerged and was called Buche de Noel (log of Christmas), derived from its French roots.

The growing popularity of yule logs has spurred Sweet & Savory Classroom to offer a make-and-take baking session for ages 12 and older. The three-hour class is held once a year, and this year’s event is set for Dec. 8 at 6 p.m. led by chef Heather Pennypacke­r. Her husband, Jeff, says it’s popular with “people who love to bake, and they come in all ages.”

Sarah Hall, 39, a supervisor for BlueCross BlueShield’s Provider Networks Operations, says she was 14 when she made her first yule log. Hall grew up in the suburbs of Chicago before moving here in 2003. She laughs as she recalls raising her hand to volunteer when a teacher asked if anyone would make a Buche de Noel for the school French Club’s holiday party. Although she had some basic baking skills, she had a teen’s naivete when it came to the demands of a yule log.

“As do all good 14-year- olds, I waited until the night before it was due to say to my mom as she was walking out the door to choir practice, ‘ I have to make this cake for school tomorrow.’

“She took one look at the recipe I had been given and called her mother to ask for help. It was a good thing my grandmothe­r could help because she told me what a lot of the directions meant — like folding in ingredient­s ( instead of beating with a mixer), how to beat egg whites to stiff peaks and how to separate egg yolks and whites.”

Hall says she quickly learned this was not “like a Betty Crocker mix where you opened a box, poured out the mix and beat two minutes. This was very labor-intensive.”

However, she enjoyed her classmates’ reactions so much that she has continued to make a Buche de Noel every December since that first bake in 1994. And she still uses that original recipe given to her by her French teacher (see recipe).

“It’s something different. Everybody really enjoys it. When you make something that everyone likes, you tend to make it over again and again,” she says.

Now her children join her in making the traditiona­l Christmas pastry.

Her recipe yields eight servings, but can be sliced thinner.

“It is very dense and rich with cream and chocolate. It’s not one you want a giant piece of,” she says.

But you will come back for more.

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