1/3 c  Hazelnuts
   1/2 c  Sugar
     8 oz Unsweetened chocolate
     6    Eggs
     3    Egg yolks
   1/2 tb Honey
   1/4 lb Butter
     1 ts Vanilla
   3/4 c  Flour plus 3/4 cup cake
          Flour
          Or use 1 1/2 cups minus 1
   1/2 tb Flour
     6 tb Heavy cream
     1 tb Apricot jam
     7 oz Sweetened chocolate
     3 tb Marachino liqueur
     2 tb Brandy
 Toast the hazelnuts in the oven and remove the outer skins. Melt 1
 Tbsp of the sugar in a small saucepan and add the toasted hazelnuts
 to it. Process or pound this combination to a smooth hazelnut paste.
 Melt 3oz/85g of the unsweetened chocolate and set aside. Whisk
 together the 6 eggs, 3 egg yolks, and all but 1 Tbsp of the remaining
 sugar until foamy and thick. Do this with the bowl standing over a
 saucepan full of warm water; don’t allow the water to get any more
 than body temperature, or the cake will be spoiled. Add the honey,
 remove from the heat, and continue to beat until completely cool and
 thickened. Place the butter, melted chocolate, vanilla, and hazelnut
 paste in another bowl over a pan full of hot water or in the top of a
 double boiler and stir until smoothly mixed together. Sift the flour
 and cake flour into the egg, sugar and honey mixture and fold in very
 carefully and gently. Then fold in the chocolate-hazelnut mixture.
 Pour this into two buttered and floured 9-inch/23cm cake pans and
 place in a preheated 190C/375F oven. Bake for about 40 minutes. When
 the cakes are done, lift out of the oven and turn out onto a clean
 cloth, where they can be left to cool. Put the remaining 5oz/140g
 unsweetened chocolate in a bowl over a pan of hot water or in the top
 of a double boiler, add the cream, and stir until smooth. As soon as
 it begins to boil, remove from the heat and pour into a bowl to cool,
 stirring occasionally to prevent a skin from forming on the top. Put
 the apricot jam in a small saucepan and add the remaining 1 Tbsp
 sugar. Stir over low heat until melted, then set aside in a warm
 place. Melt the sweetened chocolate and also set aside in a warm
 place. Whip the cream and chocolate mixture until stiff. Place the
 cooled cakes on a serving platter with a sheet of wax paper
 underneath. Slice off the hard crust. Mix the liqueur with the brandy
 and paint half of it all over one of the cakes. Spread three-quarters
 of the chocolate cream over the same cake, then put the other cake on
 top, so that the two form a single cake.  Paint the top of the cake
 with the remaining liqueur, then coat the cake completely with
 apricot jam. Spread with the sweetened chocolate and decorate with
 the remaining chocolate cream. Remove the wax paper before serving.
 Do not put the cake in the refrigerator, but keep it in a cool place
 until ready to serve. This cake is traditionally baked in a round pan
 and has “Gianduja” or “Gianduia” written across it with melted
 chocolate.
 Viviane’s Note: If you cannot get unsweetened chocolate, substitute
 bittersweet chocolate and reduce the amount of sugar. I would maybe
 use about 3/4 cup of sugar (half the suggested amount) but it depends
 on how sweet you like it to be.
 File ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/mmkah001.zip
                
                 Yields       
                1 Servings