I couldn't find Social Teas so I used Leibniz butter cookies. I think they come close to the original ones used in 1950's France.They're also a little more buttery too than Social Teas.
These are soaked in espresso with a tablespoons of sugar which I omitted. I felt the French buttercream was too sweet already.
I used Aldi's brand Beaumont coffee.
The icing was the hardest. I used Lindt's 90 per cent dark chocolate which is almost like Baker's chocolate.
This was broken and melted for one minute and a half in the microwave.
The recipe called for a stick of butter (it is French after all).Instead I used a stick of Country Crock margarine.It's vegan and does taste like butter.
along with Vegg egg substitute
it calls for one egg with the yolk and the white separately whisked. However this is a vegan household so I used 1/8 th of a teaspoon and then fork whisked this with a tablespoon of water.
It was added to the creamed butter and granulated sugar. The melted chocolate was then folded into all of this.
It's a very gritty , grainy butter cream.
These are the soaked biscuits ,in a casserole pan. Some fell apart.
Then it's layered with icing and cookies.
There was only one problem. The recipe calls for four layers of cookies which I had thanks to buying two packets. However I had to quickly made another batch of icing to accommodate the other two layers. Again I overbought the Lindt chocolate and quickly whipped up another batch.
This is it. A lot of work for a cake that's supposed to be easy to make. As for the taste.I like the fact the icing chilled to a buttery tasting fudge and I do like my choice of Leibniz biscuits just for their buttery taste. The espresso taste works well too. The only thing that does take getting used to is the grainy texture of the icing.
This is my take on the famed Moka Dupont icebox cake. Would I make it again, knowing all the work involved? Maybe .It does taste yummy for a labor intensive treat.