Hi, I'm Chef Mercedes. I'm a graduate of the French Culinary Institute/International Culinary Center's classic pastry arts program. Currently I do not work in the food industry so I use this blog to share my love of eating and passion for baking with the world. I hope you’ll enjoy what I have to share about baking and that I’ll inspire you to bake as well.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Petit Four Tray 3
Our final petits fours tray. This one includes: (from left to right) swirl sablée cookies, coconut palmiers, domed glazed petits fours, Russian tea cakes, pyramid glazed petits fours, checkerboard sablée cookies, square glazed petits fours, lemon cookies, caramel mou, and florentines.
We got our assignments for the petits fours exam in class yesterday. I have to make pyramid petits fours glacée, pâte de fruits, and lemon cookies. I'm not thrilled about having to make the pyramid petits fours glacée, but I'm quite happy with the other two. Plus I have to design and make a fourth petit four. I've chosen a chocolate sablée cookie sandwich filled with white chocolate and peppermint ganache. Yum!
Petit Four Glacée
Unglazed round and pyramid petits fours. The pink buttercream is raspberry, the green is pistachio, and the brown is coffee. |
Glazed round petits fours. |
Glazed pyramid petits fours. |
Square petits fours |
Decorated square petits fours. I think the box is my favorite. |
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Lemon Cookies
These weren't quite lemon-y enough, but they were quite nice. They taste more like a light butter cookie with a hint of lemon. I think I'd add more lemon zest if I make these myself. They are sandwiched together with a very thin layer of raspberry jam (yum) and half dipped in glazing chocolate. Overall, tiny and yummy and very cute.
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Christmas Tree Cookies
Inspired by my success decorating my tree with cookies last year, I decided to do it again this year. Because we have a new puppy we decided a small, tabletop tree would be sensible. That made my job easier since I needed fewer cookies. Fewer cookies meant I could spend more time decorating each one, so I opted for trying my hand at decorating with royal icing. I'm still not the steadiest hand with a piping bag, but I think they came out really lovely.
Friday, December 23, 2011
Goodie Bags
The reason I baked chocolate chip scones, spiced chocolate cookies, lemon curd (for the meringue shells), and peppermint bark was that we were having people over for the holiday. I didn't want any of them to leave empty handed--albeit it with full stomaches--so I made them goodie bags with scones and chocolate cookies. I think that they look really nice, especially because two cookies happened to be almost the same hight as one scone. I like these so much, I'm thinking of doing something like this as gifts for people who won't be getting an entire cookie plate.
Peppermint Bark
Have you ever had the Williams-Sanoma peppermint bark? It's incredible, right? Well this was pretty darn close to that! I made it with good quality bittersweet and white chocolate. In a nutshell, I spread a thin layer of dark chocolate on a silpat and let it set. Then I flavored melted white chocolate with peppermint extract, spread it on top of the dark chocolate, and, while it was still tacky, sprinkled crushed up peppermint candy on top. Quite easy actually.
Ideally I should have tempered the chocolate to give it more snap and shine (and to help it set up faster) but I haven't learned that in school yet and chocolate is too expensive for me to experiment with. Ah well, it was excellent and will be more excellent next year when I do know how to temper chocolate.
Spiced Chocolate Cookies
This photo does not do these cookies justice, but I was too busy eating them to take a decent picture. Sorry! |
Chocolate Chip Scones
These scones are based off the recipe we used in school for currant scones. I replaced the currants with chocolate chips and used half whole wheat flour and half normal white flour instead of all white flour (for two reasons: it seemed healthier and I was running very low on white flour.) They came out very well indeed. The change of flour didn't make them too dense or tough as I had worried about and chocolate chips are always an improvement over currants.
Lemon Curd in Meringue Shells
Remember those meringue shells I made in class? Well, I made some thick lemon curd (with Meyer lemons, yum) and piped it into the shells. How cute are they?! And so delicious too!
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Coconut Palmiers
Meringue Nests
An adorable leafy nest that, once filled with lemon curd, will look somewhat like a sunflower. |
Seasonal shapes: snowpeople, trees, and a lollypop |
Caramel Mou
My chef calls these caramel mou ooh ooh, because they are just so good. She's completely right; they're incredible! They aren't quite caramel tasting, but they are very chocolaty. They have an incredible soft (but not too soft) and slightly chewy texture. The sea salt on top brought out the subtle sweet caramelized sugar flavor, which worked perfectly with the dark chocolate that was a major component of the recipe. I think the closest thing I can compare this to as far as texture (and taste to some extent) is good quality chocolate fudge. Yum!
My partner and I didn't quite cook the sugar mixture enough so, unfortunately ours came out slightly soft and cracked a bit on top. I tasted some that came out perfectly and I think ours tasted just as good, the texture just wasn't quite as great. And trust me when I say that the not quite perfect texture didn't stop me from eating it!
Monday, December 19, 2011
Russian Tea "Cakes"
These "cakes" are really cookies and they are really nice. They are nut based and sort of melt in your mouth, yum!
Checkerboard, Swirl, and Marbled Sablee Cookies
Uncooked checkboard cookies. |
Swirl Cookies |
Marbled Cookies: the cookies in the two columns on the left were not rolled in sugar, the two columns on the right were. |
Florentines
Are these a cookie or a candy? I'm not sure. I've heard them called cookies, I usually think of them as candy. However, the way we made them makes me think more cookies than candy. Instead of a layer of caramel and nut mixture coated in chocolate, it was a layer of sweet tart dough covered with the caramel and nut mixture. While I miss the chocolate, I have to say, these are really good!
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Cookie Plates
I made a few cookie plates as gifts this year. They were really quite nice, if I do say so myself. They had brownies (the same cocoa brownies I made for the cookie plates last year), my own recipe chocolate chip cookies, cream cheese mints (see recipe here), gingerbread cookies with Meyer lemon glaze, and rum raisin cookies (the same ones we made in class). I wasn't a fan of the gingerbread cookies, they were too ginger-y not cinnamon-y enough, but I loved the glaze with them. I got the idea for that flavor combo from Nigella Lawson's, who does proper gingerbread (cake, not cookies) with a lemon glaze. I cut these into isosceles triangles and drizzled them with the glaze to look like garland on a tree.
Wouldn't you love to get a gift like this? |
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Petit Four Tray 2
Madeleines
You may notice the absence of the distinctive shell pattern on these madeleines, that's because they are supposed to be served plain side up. I find that odd. |
Langue de Chat
Langue de chat literally means cat's tongue, probably because their shape and slightly rough texture that resemble that of a cat's tongue. They aren't my favorite cookie. They're kind of bland and dry. Plus they are a pain to pipe properly. Now some of this (not the piping, but the taste and texture) could have been because they got somewhat over baked.
Passion Fruit Tartlets
How cute are these?! They are tiny tart shells are made with pâte sucrée--sweet tart dough--rather than pâte brisée--it puffs up too much to make such a small, shallow shell--in the same barquette molds we used to make the financiers. We just filled them with passion fruit curd and topped them with fresh berries, yum.
Pate de Fruit
These are surprisingly good! I say "surprisingly" good because I'm not usually a fruit jelly fan, but these aren't like typical fruit jellies. They are less jello-y and more melt-in-your-mouth-y. These are raspberry flavored and there is something really delicious about the tartness of the raspberries paired with the sweetness of the sugar in the recipe. Once they are cut into shapes (my partner and I chose triangles, but squares or circles or really any small shape works) you toss them in sugar. Yum, yum.
They are not too hard to make, but they do have ingredients that are seldom found in a home kitchen, so I doubt I'll make them outside of school. At least it makes such a large batch that I'll have pate de fruit for quite a while.
Nougat
Not my favorite to make or eat. It's a nightmare to make. My partner and I had to redo ours because we overcooked the honey mixture the first time. And you know what happened the second time? We overcooked it again. That's because you can take it off the heat a few degrees low, bring it over to your mixer, and, by the time you pour it out, it's far too hot. Oops. Overcooking the honey makes the nougat hard. That's a shame really, because had I managed to achieve a softer texture I may have liked it a bit more. Still though, it's a little too sweet for my taste and the nuts don't have quite enough flavor to cut through the sweetness (that's that not entirely this nougat, so much as all nougat). Ah well, it's good for me to have something that I don't want to eat a ton of. (I should point out that my mom and pops both really enjoyed it, too sweet or not.)
Friday, December 16, 2011
Opera Cake
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Petit Four Tray
Every other class during the petit four unit, we tray up our creations like we would if we were making a petit four tray at a restaurant. My partner and I made this tray with our tuiles, financiers (with chocolate chips), chocolate and raspberry macarons, rum raisin cookies, and Sarah Bernhardts. If I had it to do over again, I'd switch the financiers and rum raisin cookies so that the colors and shapes would be a bit more varied. Ah well, it still looks good and every tasted delicious.
We all bring our trays to the front at the end of class. Aren't they pretty? |
Macarons
These macarons could rival those at Ladurée. Well maybe not this batch exactly, but if I hadn't slightly overcooked the sugar they would have. They were delicious and beautiful. The outside shell was crisp and the inside was still tender. The jam was very nice (not that I made it, but still) and complemented the cookies wonderfully. They only problem was there were a couple spots with pieces of overcooked sugar that couldn't incorporate into the batter. Still these pieces of sugar did not make a noticeable impact on either taste or texture, they just made the few affected cookies look a bit less perfect.
In case you were wondering, this type of macaron is called a macaron gerbet.
Tuiles
Tuiles, still in their mold. |
Monday, December 12, 2011
Sarah Bernhardts
These were very, very good. Basically, a Sarah Bernhardt is a plain almond macaron cookie (made with almond paste) topped with crème d'or and coated with chocolate glaze. Yum, yum!
On a side note, they are named after the actress, Sarah Bernhardt. There are two theories as to why they are named after her, both having to do with their shape. Either they are meant to emulate her tears, after all she was a dramatic actress, or her breasts, which apparently were quite voluptuous. I prefer to believe that it's the former, but I have to say they do look a bit more like the latter.
Macarons au Chocolat
These macarons are made with a traditional almond paste method rather than the still-traditional-but-slightly-more-recently-developed meringue base method, so they don't have quite the same elegant look as the macaroons that Ladurée and other patisseries have made so popular in recent years. Honestly, I like them a little more. They have a more distinct flavor and a very slightly chewy texture that I really enjoy. We sandwiched them together with chocolate ganache which made them pretty much perfect!
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Financiers
Financiers were traditionally made in rectangular molds; that coupled with their golden color made them reminiscent of gold bullion, hence the name. They are really delicious and not too difficult to make. The hardest part is making the brown butter (beurre noisette), and that really isn't hard, you just have to take a little care not to go past brown to burnt. After piping the chilled dough into the molds, you can put toppings on them. We used pistachios, fresh mango, and mini chocolate chips. I'd never seen that before (but then again, I don't eat or bake financiers terribly often.) They were nutty and spongy but not too light--sort of a cross between a cake and a cookie. In other words, wow they were good!
Friday, December 9, 2011
Rum Raisin Cookies
Today was the first day of the petit four unit. I can tell already that this unit is going to be a little tedious, but I think it's also going to be kind of cool. These cookies were a good indication of that: they were a pain to make but really nice to look at and eat. The thing is, you have to pipe each cookie, which is made difficult by the chunks of raisins in the cookies. Plus, once they come out of the oven you have to glaze them. It's totally worth glazing them, it makes them delicious (and is where the rum comes in), but it's another step and there are an awful lot of cookies! It was worth all the tedium, though. The cookies were tender--almost cake-y--and deliciously sweet and rum-y.
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Bread Unit Exam
So the brioche à tête came out pretty well. Definitely tasty and even though the heads came out a little wonky, the chef said that they looked quite nice. This is especially good because about half the brioche dough (mine included) wasn't defrosted before class, so I had to wait over an hour before I could use it. The croissants were under proofed and slightly underbaked because there wasn't enough space in the proof boxes and then I ran out of time. Ah well. At least the pain au chocolat were closer--they were pretty much proofed and properly baked--and the chef said they looked nice. The cornbread came out almost perfect and oh so yummy! And the vienois was pretty close to perfect (although I didn't do the cuts on top quite deep enough.)
Overall, not a great success, but not too bad either.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Focaccia
Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins
I was really excited about these, but unfortunately they were a bit of a let down. They weren't as tart as I like and mine got taken out slightly too early--they weren't undercooked, but they weren't quite browned and crisped enough on top. Ah well, I'll have to try these again...or maybe just another recipe.
Pizza
We made homemade pizza dough and then made pizzas for dinner! Sorry there isn't a picture, by the way, I was far too hungry and excited about fresh pizza on homemade dough to remember to take a photo.
Anyway this was really good. I admit, the dough wasn't anything special, but it was good. It's always nice having good quality, fresh pizza dough, but I don't think the effect was much better than I get when I use the fresh pizza dough I buy at Whole Foods from time to time. The toppings were great. The chef made a lovely, slightly spicy tomato sauce, which I then topped with fresh mozzarella, fresh basil, and sopressata. Yum!
Anyway this was really good. I admit, the dough wasn't anything special, but it was good. It's always nice having good quality, fresh pizza dough, but I don't think the effect was much better than I get when I use the fresh pizza dough I buy at Whole Foods from time to time. The toppings were great. The chef made a lovely, slightly spicy tomato sauce, which I then topped with fresh mozzarella, fresh basil, and sopressata. Yum!
Oatmeal Bread
This wasn't my favorite bread we made, but it was quite nice. It was a whole wheat bread with oats, nuts, and dried fruits. Nice, not amazing. But then again, I don't tend to like chunks of stuff in bread, it makes the texture a little too not bread-like. You know what was nice, eating this fresh (or toasted) with cream cheese.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Danish, revisited
The pinwheel, with cream cheese filling (technically I was supposed to put an apricot half on top, but I'm not a fan):
The bear claw, with almond cream and raspberry jam (as is traditional):
The package, with almond cream:
The two headed baby (no, that's not the real name, but I don't remember what it is), with pastry cream and apricot halves:
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