Archive for July, 2010

Lesson 6, 7, 8, & 9

I’m behind on my lesson updates!  There’s been a bit of internet drama during the past two weeks, but the important thing is that I have a connection now and will (hopefully) continue to have one.  Luckily, classes have been pretty slow averaging one to two demos/practicals per week.  After this mini-massive update, everyone will be almost up to speed.

These past four lessons are actually quite intertwined and related to each other.  We’ve been combining different techniques to create a range of desserts and pastries. In Lesson 6 we learned how to make pâte à choux or choux pastry, an important base for many French pastries such as chouquettes, éclairs, choux chantilly, as well as the St. Honoré and Paris-Brest in Lesson 8. The dacquoise, a meringue based almond sponge cake, from Lesson 7 is also featured in the tarte meringuée aux poires caramelisées in Lesson 9, while the praline buttercream used to frost the daquoise is similar to the filling of the Paris-Brest.  Furthermore, the pear tart from Lesson 9 is essentially the same as the tarte aux pommes but with pears, a partially almond pâte sucrée (also used as the base of the St. Honoré but without almond meal), and a meringue top.  Confused yet? To summarize: pâte sucrée, pâte à choux, and meringue have been the main areas of focus and are important to master.  During the various practicals, we made chouquettes, chocolate eclairs, a dacquoise, St. Honoré, and a meringue topped pear tart.

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July 25 2010 | france and le cordon bleu and paris and thoughts | 10 Comments »

Lesson 5: Feuilletage

Feuilletage or puff pastry is quite possibly one of the least tackled techniques of the home baker.  It is tedious, laborious, time sensitive, and a bit messy.  I have only made it once at home and am pretty sure that tally will remain steady for a long time.  Not because the recipe is difficult to make, but because I just don’t have the space and equipment.  I have a small toaster oven, which could fit probably two palmiers max, in an apartment without air conditioning.  The dough needs to be worked fast and kept as cool as possible so as not to melt the butter- impossible during the summer.  There’s also a question of who will eat a dozen apple turnovers containing a total of you-don’t-even-want-to-know amount of butter.  Two non-culinary friends plus me divided by x amount of butter equals way too much butter per person.

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July 06 2010 | france and le cordon bleu and paris and thoughts | 8 Comments »