Archive for August, 2008

Hot Magma

This week we worked with HOT magma sugar…pulling and blowing and casting. It is pretty amazing to look at our final project after only three days in the kitchen. So after a hand full of blisters and three days below is our final product. We titled it “The Tree of Life”.

This isn’t the best photo, but I should get one from my teammate Gaby, so I will post that once I receive it from her. Ultimately, sugar work is very time consumer, it burns your finger tips and sometimes leaves you with blisters, but in the end, when you see the final product, it all seems worth it. I don’t think I will use this daily or even monthly, but for special occasions like the Christmas holiday, you might find it in my bakery window.

We did a few smaller projects the first two days which are shown below. The kitchen was around 90 degrees, so everything began sagging but you get the idea.

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5 Years…wow

Seth and I celebrated our 5 year wedding anniversary last week. It was wonderful..and we had a great weekend together. For lunch on Saturday we sliced up the heirloom tomatoes I got at the farmers market on Friday and mozzarella drizzled with balsamic vinegar and olive oil and some ripe, local peaches. It was delicious.

Below are a few pictures of the products I made during the week before Seth arrived. Petit fours(small almond flavored cakes), rochers(almond clusters), mediants(the chocolate circles with fruit and nuts) and truffles(rum banana, cointreau coconut, and cointreau milk chocolate). We worked with tempering chocolate for the first time. It was a lot of fun to learn about the cocoa butter crystals and how temperature and agitation affects the whole process. Something I am sure I will use often in the coming years. Friday we had the day off, so we took a field trip to Guittard Chocolate factory near San Francisco. It was a lot of fun…almost like the movie..with conveyors belts with chunks of chocolate rolling along and huge vats of churning chocolate during the conching process. Pretty amazing and generous of the company. I was very impressed with their product offerings and company overall. They are still a family owned business and have a strong relationship with the growers. They also left us with a parting gift of a sampling of their chocolates.

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Mignardies-Day 1

Yesterday I finished the individual production rotation of this class. Finishing the class involved another practical….we had to make 12 portions of vanilla napoleons, 12 chocolate mousse barquette or french tartlette, and four containers of Bavarian cream. Since we have a practical almost every other week, I try not to stress too much over them. I focus on learning from them, rather than the grade. With a three hour time limit and so many components, you definitely have to push yourself to get everything done. I wasn’t exceptionally happy with my final products, but I think I did okay and I learned something new, which is what this is all about.

The quick puff pastry for the napoleon set me back a bit as it was very crumbly and almost shattered when I tried to move it. I knew something was wrong, but worked with what I had to finish my product(The quick puff was made the day before the test as it requires numerous folds and rests which take up time). After talking to the chef during evaluation, we determined that I probably rolled the dough out too thin when I was folding it, which smeared the butter throughout the flour instead of making layers of lamination. So..lesson learned about quick puff. Today during class the chef mentioned this to the whole class, as it seems I wasn’t the only one that had this problem…so lesson learned for the whole class.

Today we started the mignardies rotation. These are bite size treats, often sent out at the end of the meal in restaurants. We made raspberry and chocolate french macaroons, coconut macaroons and financiers. The macaroons were quite delicious…crunchy on the outside and chewy on the inside. The colors are also appealing and fun. The other team made pistachio macaroons which are shown in green.

We garnished our financiers with candied orange zest and a slivered almond. This little cake is made with browned butter and baked in molds. These are also tasty, but not my favorite dish. The browned butter gives it a good flavor, but other than that, it is kind of boring in my opinion.

Below are a few pictures from last week. Enjoy!

Opera Cake-Layers of sponge cake soaked with espresso syrup between layers of coffee buttercream covered with a chocolate glaze. This is a beautiful and delicious cake. I will definitely be reproducing this in the future.

Lemon Roulade

Coconut Chocolate Torte-I should have taken a picture of the inside of this beautiful little cake. There is a surprise behind the sponge cake…chocolate mousse! The white cream on top is coconut Bavarian cream. One might thing coconut doesn’t really sound like it would flow with everything else, but it was very subtle and had just the right amount of flavor to compliment the chocolate.

These pictures are actually from the last class, basic and classical cakes.

Chocolate Soufle Cake

Flourless Chocolate Cake

From left to right…flour-less chocolate cake, ricotta cheesecake, caramelized pear cheesecake, chocolate souffle cake, and hazelnut cake.

And finally…I leave you with some piping homework. Good night.

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Pastry cream, pastry cream, pastry cream

It seems that more and more items we make in the bakery have pastry cream or some form of it as a component. It is a great product that can be used and changed in many ways, but I think I have had my share of it.

It is hard to believe that the week is almost over. The days seem to fly by here. Today we made Othellos and Religieuse, both are molded, filled pastries. The Othellos is a sponge cake batter that is piped, baked, then filled with pastry cream and glazed with fondant. We used vanilla pastry cream and chocolate fondant. The Religieuse are two stacked cream puffs filled with diplomat cream(pastry cream lightened with whipped cream) and covered in fondant.

Yesterday we made 2 flavors of Napoleons, one vanilla and one Carmel apple. Honestly, I didn’t expect much from this pastry as it is basically layers of puff pastry and cream. I have seen them in bakeries and always figured they were one of those things that looked amazing, but tasted bland. I was delightfully mistaken. The Carmel apple was amazing! We flavored the diplomat cream with calvados and cinnamon. It was very rich, but in small quantities, sure to please. This would be especially good during the fall season, with the apples and cinnamon….mmmm.

After class I went to Brix, a restaurant up the road towards Napa with a few of the women that live in my building. The restaurant had great service….even though we got there just after 9pm when the kitchen closed, they still served us and didn’t rush us through our dinner. I had the swordfish with cranberry beans and a fried zucchini flower. It was pretty good, but it seemed like there was too much going on with the beans that I believe took away from the fish. Of course we had dessert too…even after being stuffed from dinner….I had a fig and plum buckle with pistachio ice cream. We also ordered the lemon cake with blueberry coulis and chocolate mousse with raspberries. Pictures below. All were delicious.

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