Recipe video above. Pavlova Bombs are mini pavlovas balls that are filled with lemon curd, raspberry coulis and whipped cream. They look so innocent when placed before you - then they explode with colourful fillings when you smash into them! Show aside, the flavour and texture combination here is just incredible.Shockingly easy to make - just poke a hole in the base of small pavs (so much easier to make than a single large one!), and fill with whatever you want. Think, passionfruit pulp, mango puree, chopped fruit, chocolate sauce, caramel sauce! See in post for more suggestions.
Prep Time25 minutesmins
Cook Time1 hourhr30 minutesmins
Cooling4 hourshrs
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Australian, New Zealand
Keyword: Mini pavlova
Servings: 5pav bombs!
Author: Nagi
Ingredients
Pavlova Balls:
80 ml / 1/3 cupegg whites , from 3 large eggs (Note 1)
2/3cupscaster sugar(superfine sugar), do not cut down, it will affect result!
Pipe then shape meringues into 5 domes. Bake 1 1/2 hours at 110°C/225°F (100°C fan), cool 3 hours / overnight in oven. Cut small hole in Pav bomb base, squidge around with chopstick to make room for fillings. Fill with coulis then curd, plug hole with cream. Decorate, SMASH!
FULL RECIPE:
Pavlova bombs:
Preheat oven to 150°C / 325°F (all oven types).
Egg whites - Separate the egg yolks from egg whites while fridge cold (it's easier). Measure out 1/3 cup (80 ml) egg whites then set aside to come to room temperature for 15 minutes (fluffs better at room temp).
Add sugar - In a stand mixer or using an electric beater, beat the egg whites on high for 1 minute. While still beating, slowly pour the sugar in over 1 minute.
Beat 5 minutes - Continue to beat for 5 minutes on high until it's fluffy, glossy, and there are no sugar grains remaining when you rub a bit between your fingers. Add vinegar and cornflour then beat for a further 30 seconds.
Line tray - Dab a bit on the corner of 2 trays then cover with baking paper (parchment).
Pipe mounds Transfer meringue mixture into a large piping bag. Snip the end to make a large 2cm / 0.8" hold. Pipe 5 mounds on the tray, then smooth into domes that are taller than they are wide (they flatten slightly when baked). Mine are about 4 cm / 1.6" wide and 6.5cm /2.6" tall. Use a small offset spatula or butter knife to smooth into a dome shape (no need to be perfect, it gets decorated later).
Bake 1 hour 30 minutes - Place both trays in the oven, immediately turn oven DOWN to 110°C/225°F (100°C fan) and bake for 1 hour 30 minutes or until they are dry to touch (check base). Keep baking if still sticky - exact times may vary. (Note 4)
Cool in oven - Turn oven OFF and leave to fully cool for 3 hours or overnight around 10 hours (I often do this while I sleep so handy!).
Fillings:
Make the Lemon Curd and Raspberry Coulis while the pavlovas are in the oven. Very easy - simmer to thicken, strain, then chill before using.
Whipped cream - Beat cream ingredients in a large bowl on high until soft peaks form (45 seconds using a stand mixer, 1 - 1 1/2 minutes with hand held beater). Do this just prior to serving, unless you stabilise the cream (which can be done the day before). Note: if making stabilised whipped cream, follow the steps for your chosen method (there's multiple ways to do it).
Assemble Pavlova Bombs:
Piping bags - Transfer the raspberry coulis, lemon curd and cream into separate piping bags. Snip a small 5 mm / 1/5" off the end of the raspberry coulis, and a larger 1cm / 0.4" off the cream piping bag. (No piping bag? See Note 5)
Access hole! Place a pavlova bomb upside down in a muffin tin, to hold in place as you work. Carefully cut a 1cm / 0.4" hole in the middle using a small sharp knife. Stick a chopstick into the hole and squidge around GENTLY to move some pavlova marshmallow centre out of the way to make room for the fillings.
Pipe some raspberry coulis in (~ 1 1/2 tsp), then lemon curd (~ 2 - 3 tsp). Plug the hole with cream.
Plate up - Pipe ~2 tbsp cream on a plate, top with pavlova bomb (stops it from sliding). Pipe then spread more cream on the top of the pavlova bomb. Top with a raspberry, mint sprig, sprinkle of pistachio, dust with icing sugar.
Smash! Serve immediately - pavs don't wait around once assembled! Encourage everyone to smash into their Pavlova Bombs so you get a bit of everything in your first bite - delicate crispy meringue, marshmallow centre, tangy lemon curd, bright raspberry coulis. SWOON!
Notes
1. Egg Whites:
Measure out the egg whites until you have 1/3 cup (80 ml), usually 3 eggs. Why measures? Because it turns out not all eggs are the same size.... So annoying right? Someone needs to have a talk to chickens! 😂
Separate the egg whites from the yolks while fridge cold (it’s easier to do than with warm eggs)
Leave whites for 15 minutes to take out the fridge chill, cold eggs don't fluff as well.
DO NOT use carton egg whites – it doesn’t fluff up nearly as well
2. Vinegar & cornflour/cornstarch – Helps stabilise pav and avoid cracks. For vinegar just use plain white vinegar. Not anything fancy!3. Stabilised whipped cream - This is just whipped cream that's been stabilised so you can whip it the day before and it stays fluffy. Store in a piping bag for ease of storage and use the next day, else in an airtight container but do NOT stir before spooning onto pavs (this will deflate it ia bit).See the Stabilised Whipped Cream recipe for different methods (store bought powder, gelatine and mascarpone), I use all 3 methods.4. How to check the Pav is ready - Bake time can vary depending on how well heat distributes in your oven. Goal: dry, lightly crispy shell. The shell will dry out further as it cools in the oven, whilst the centre stays marshmallowy.5. No piping bag? That's ok! Use ziplock bags (snip the corner) or just carefully pour the fillings into the hole, and use a spoon for the cream.6. Storage - Pavlova shells can be stored in an airtight container as soon as you take them out of the oven and they are fully cooled. If pavs are exposed to heat and humidity, the surface may get sticky and chewy.Best served on the day you take them out of the oven after cooling. The shell will stay dry and crisp for 2 to 3 days (as long as they are kept in a cool dry place), but the marshmallow inside will start to deflate. It reduces by about 1/3 on Day 3. Do not refrigerate! The meringue shell will disintegrate.EXCELLENT PREP AHEAD dinner party dessert. Have the fillings in piping bags in the fridge. Make Stabilised whipped cream and put that in a piping bag in the fridge (it will be 100% fluffy for 24 hours). Make the holes in the pav balls. Then assemble when ready to serve! Piping makes assembly so fast. :)Assemble just prior to serving because the cream will soften the meringue shell.