Saturday, April 30, 2011

My Plating

Chocolate and Lemon Cream, Chocolate Streusel,
 a little Lemon Jelly and Earl Grey Ice Cream

     Chef plated this dessert using a glass and layered the creams with the streusel.  Usually we have to mimic her design but she allowed us to do whatever we wanted.  This is the way I plated it.
     Chad's 80's themed murder mystery party is tonight.  He assigned everyone characters to come as.  I'll be Cyndi Lauper and  I'm sure there will be lots of pictures!

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Monday, April 25, 2011

Plated Dessert: Week One

Here are some snap shots from plated desserts 
courtesy of Chad (most of them are the Chef's plates). 

Citrus Soup

Mini Citrus Soup

Chiboust and Berries (cold, creamy, yummy)  

Baked Berries 

Chocolate Molten Cake 


Vanilla Souffle

Stewed Plum 
... and if you're wondering what that crispy decorative thing 
sticking out of most of these desserts is called, it's tuile and it's 
yummy.  We use it for almost everything we plate in a variety 
of flavors, it gives a plate more volume.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Brett Art

The boyfriend's art:

He's went through an Oscar Peterson (jazz guy) phase recently.

 
He is not a fan of conceptual art

... and he is not a fan of the trend followers.

He made me a tiny octopus.


 He did the art for a web comic for awhile.


Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Plated Desserts

This is the final ice cream cake from last week.  Hazelnut 
dacquoise and chocolate ice cream sandwich buried in 
earl grey ice cream, and a dark/white chocolate 
wood grain around the side.

Glazed Pineapple with a Pineapple Chip and Mango Sorbet

     We started plated desserts this week.  We have a new Chef and new partners and I think I'm just getting into the groove.  World Pastry Champion Chef En-Ming Hsu is our instructor.  She has given us a ton of helpful knowledge and I am in awe of her precision and expertise.  The above photo is of the Chef's platting.  The technique for scooping the ice cream is called quenelling and it is not easy.  I tried a couple during my stage at ge and haven't done it again since.  I really need to practice.
And I get to see Bretty tomorrow!!!  Eeeee!!!

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Parfait Bombe

Parfait creamy delicious ice cream with a little 
raspberry coulis on top, covered in chocolate ice cream
 and a bit of piped meringue.  It all sits on a 
sable dough cookie disk.

Just incase you were wondering 
bombe refers to the shape.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Raspberry/Passion Ice Cream Cake

 The plastic wrap smooched my piping. 


A disk of baked meringue is both a base 
and a top for the passion fruit and raspberry sorbet.   
There are alternating fingers of meringue and piped whipped cream 
on the sides and a little extra whip on top. 

Yes, it is the best sorbet I've ever had... let alone made.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Next Restaurant

     Wednesday night I was sitting at my computer, checking facebook, and I saw that Greg (a classmate) needed someone to go to dinner with him.  He had already made reservations and had to make them for two, so he needed a companion for Friday night.  The restaurant is called Next and it cost X amount of dollars etc.  Immediately, not even knowing about the restaurant, I wanted to go.  It was the X amount of dollars that was causing some scruples.  I decided that if he hadn't found anyone by the next day I would "volunteer."  Man I was glad nobody could go.  This allowed me to go scruple free, I mean I was doing the guy a favor right?


     I had to google the restaurant to find out exactly what it was.  All that I knew was that it was new (opening week), same chef as Alinea (ranked #7 restaurant in the world) and that you had to buy tickets to get in.  The whole ticket thing is pretty different but kinda neat.  You go to their website and purchase a ticket for whatever it is that you'd like to order, then when you get there you just sit down and they start serving you.  Ticket prices very by day and time, peak hours and weekends you pay more.  At the end of the meal you just get up and leave, no check.  This being the case, as soon as people had tickets they started popping up on craigslist... anywhere from $500-$3,000 (for chef's table)!  Needless to say X amount was a drop in the bucket in comparison.  Greg had put his name on the waiting list the first day possible and that list is now almost 20,000 people long!
     The place looked very sophisticated in shades of grey, with beams on the ceiling that were more artistic than industrial.  And the staff was super friendly in a not stuffy way.  It was very chill, especially considering the couple at the next table may have paid a thousand dollars to eat the same food we were.  The menu is Paris 1906 as it will be for the next three months, then it will switch; the menu will change four times a year.
  

     It all started with the hors d'oeuvers and these are a few of my favorite things.  Four little bites and a truffled egg custard served in an egg shell.


     One of those little bites, a quail egg with an anchovy was one  of my very favorite things all night.  Recently I have grown to love eggs and everything about them.  I think the yoke is my favorite color and this quail eggs yolk was liquidy deliciousness inside.


     It's a close call between the quail egg and the brioche with a foie gras center.  I read a review that said it reminded them of egg in a basket and that's just what it looked like.  As Greg pointed out how did they do that?  It looks as if they baked the brioche with the foie gras inside.  Foie gras is my new best friend by the way.  It was aces.  The egg custard in the shell was definitely something of a novelty.  I've always loved the little egg on a pedestal that I've only seen in movies.  I think it really made the plate, so it looked as good as it all tasted.  Greg had ordered a drink pairing that was all house made juices and this course had been paired with a drink that featured ginger; it was like zing! in a glass.

  
     Anybody who ever has doubts or feelings against eating turtles needs to try this soup, it's delicious.  Sometimes it feels like there's nothing better than a really nice consomme.  The drink pairing for this and the next course featured green tea, apple and passion fruit.  Greg was such a great dinner date and his smooth... oh wait he is the most awkward person ever; it was hilarious!




     Filet of sole was definitely tasty but for me the sauce normande made me want to lick the plate.  The little mushroom stuffed with crawfish was a nice highlight.


     Supremes de poussin must mean tasty chicken in french because that's what it was.  The drink pairing was a horchata that was very smooth and featured sesame and coriander.


     The duck was fantastic and the sauce was bath worthy.  They take the meat off of the duck and put everything that's left in a press and get all of the juices out.  Then they reduce it with red wine and brandy= amazing.  They served it and Greg was trying to spoon as much of the sauce off of the plate as he could and then they step in with a boat of extra sauce.  It's like a little show, they make you want more before they give it to you.  Greg was very happy.  Scalloped potatoes with gruyere rounded out this course.  They were super cheesy and I love my cheese.  Drink pairing: cherry, lapsang souchong (tea) and sanbitter.  Yum.
     Salade Irma was a nice little palate cleanser and yes I did eat the flower.  It tasted just like you would expect a flower to and I mean that as a good thing.


     Dessert was the bombe, bombe ceylan.  Cocoa on the outside and coffee ice cream on the inside.  The rum soaked cherries were strong and delightful.  The anglaise (sauce on the plate) also made me happy; I love that creamy deliciousness.

We ate these from right to left: 
nougat, caramel and beet pate de fruit

     To top the evening off was the mignardises, or teeny tiny tasties at the end of the meal.  Hmm... what do you think it could of been?  Some very familiar desserts I think.  Pistachio nougat, salted caramel and beet pate de fruit.  All things we've been making this week in class.  The beet pate de fruit truely had the earthy flavor of a beet and may have been Greg's favorite bite of the night.  Beets happen to be one of my mothers favorite things and I thought of her as I took my last bite of the evening.  
     Truly a once in a lifetime chance and I loved it.  And in June it'll change to Thai Street Food, wow.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Lollipops and Pulled Sugar


Raspberry Lollipops


Chocolate Caramels

Almond Caramels

 Raspberry Gummies

Piña Colada Pulled Sugar Candies
(Yum)

     All of the candy is pretty easy to make and it's fun!  Pulling sugar was really cool.  The outlet I was using at my table stopped working so I had to go work by myself behind a wall.  Some people twisted their sugar with their partners to make fun swirls and mixing flavors.  But I was by myself behind the wall so mine are all piña colada.  They taste good and they last almost too long in your mouth.  Fun day!

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Candy

 Mint Candies

Cassis-Pear Pate de Fruit
We made these without a thermometer
and they're a little firm.

Chocolate Nougat
Chewy Chocolate with Toasted Almonds
and Pistachios 

 Marshmallow Lollipop 

More Marshmallows  

And there will be even more tomorrow!

     Tomorrow I'm going to a new restaurant called Next Restaurant.  A classmate was lucky enough to get tickets and needed to find someone to go with him.  Yes, I said he has tickets, it's a whole new kind of restaurant.  Some people are reselling their tickets on craigslist and they're going for $1000!  And the waiting list is close to 20,000 long!  Craziness!  Needless to say I'm excited! 
Exclamation Point!!!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Nougat and Pate de Fruit

Raspberry Pate de Fruit
We weren't allowed to use a thermometer on the 
pate de fruit we made today.  It's setting overnight so in the morning we'll see how eyeballing it worked out for us.

Nougat
A chewy honey meringue candy with toasted 
almonds and pistachios.