Unlock the secret to making Cumulus Inc.’s iconic, boozy rum baba at home
This rum-drenched, brioche-like cake has been the Melbourne restaurant’s signature dessert. Discover how to master it in your own kitchen.
Drenched in rum and sugar syrup and served with a generous dollop of creme diplomat, this boozy brioche-like cake has been one of the most popular dishes at Melbourne’s Cumulus Inc. for more than 15 years.
“It will take some time to master, and every step is important, so if you are making this at home, expect a few misses before success,” says Cumulus Inc. head chef Allan Eccles. “Once perfected, you will reap the rewards.”
He recommends serving this with a bottle of aged rum for dousing the babas and to encourage feisty conversation.
Ingredients
BABAS
2 tsp dried yeast
4 eggs, at room temperature
250g plain flour, sifted, plus extra for dusting
25g caster sugar
generous pinch of salt
100g unsalted butter, softened, plus extra for brushing (see note)
CREME DIPLOMAT
275ml milk
1 vanilla bean
75g caster sugar
3 egg yolks
3 tsp cornflour
1 tsp plain flour
SUGAR SYRUP
300g caster sugar
300ml water
½ vanilla bean
2 small strips of orange zest
1 small strip of lemon zest
TO SERVE
100ml pouring cream
1 bottle of aged rum
Method
TO MAKE THE Babas
Step 1
First, make the babas. Dissolve the yeast in 3 teaspoons of warm water in the bowl of an electric mixer and let stand for 5 minutes, until it becomes frothy. Add the eggs, whisking them by hand into the dissolved yeast. Fix the bowl in place and fit the dough hook. Add the flour, sugar and salt and mix on low speed until it comes together, about 5 minutes. With the machine still running, add the butter 1 teaspoon at a time, incorporating each one before adding the next.
Step 2
Cover the bowl with cling film and set the dough aside in a warm spot to prove for about 45 minutes or until doubled in size (while the babas are rising, prepare the creme diplomat, see method below).
Step 3
Brush 10 baba moulds with soft butter (it must be soft, not melted) and flour them, tipping out any excess. Distribute the dough evenly between the moulds, then leave to prove again for about 25 minutes or until doubled in size. Preheat the oven to 210C fan-forced (230C conventional).
Step 4
When the babas have risen, bake them for 5 minutes, then turn the oven temperature down to 200C fan-forced (220C conventional) and bake for another 8-10 minutes. Remove the babas from the oven but leave them in their moulds for a few minutes before turning out. While they cool in the tin, make the sugar syrup (see method below).
Step 5
Turn the warm babas out of the tin and place them in the warm sugar syrup in batches. Soak for 5 minutes, turning them from time to time. Remove and drain on a wire rack. Repeat with the remaining babas.
Step 6
To serve, whisk the pouring cream into the creme diplomat, then place a generous spoonful on a plate. Put a baba on top and serve with a bottle of aged rum for dousing the babas.
TO MAKE THE SUGAR SYRUP
For the sugar syrup, place all the ingredients in a large stainless-steel saucepan and simmer for about 5 minutes, until all the sugar has dissolved.
To make the creme diplomat
Prepare the creme diplomat ahead while the babas are rising by placing the milk, vanilla bean, and half of the sugar in a small saucepan and bringing it to a simmer. Remove from the heat. In a bowl, whisk the egg yolks with the remaining sugar and both flours. Gradually whisk in the warm milk, then pour into a clean saucepan. Cook over low heat, whisking constantly, until it thickens. Pour into a bowl and cover with cling film, pressing it down onto the surface to prevent a skin from forming, and place in the fridge to chill.
Note
- This mixture makes 10 babas. If you don’t plan to serve them all at once, skip the syrup step and place the remaining babas in freezer bags or airtight containers and freeze them. To serve, thaw the babas and resume at step 3, soaking them in syrup.
- If you don’t have baba moulds, you could use large muffin moulds. Each cup needs to hold about 50g (⅓ cup) of batter.
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Sign upCorrection: An earlier version of this recipe incorrectly listed the butter as 10g. The correct measurement is 100g.
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