Archive | June, 2010

End of semester catch-up

30 Jun

I’ve just completed my second semester of school. I wish I could have gotten a few more pictures along the way… but, I think my classmates started to think I was a bit weird for obsessively whipping out my camera long after our required portfolios were done. I guess even in the culinary world, we food bloggers are a rare sort.

Here is a small sampling of my last weeks in Baking I and Cake Decorating…

Pies!
Apple, sweet potato, and chocolate cream pies.

Sweet Potato Pie
Sweet Potato pie with whipped cream. (Can you believe I’d never eaten sweet potato pie until I tried this? It was delicious, though.)

Bread
Kneading bread dough.

Italian Bread
Italian bread.

Biscuits
Biscuits.

Daisies
Gum paste daisies.

Carnations
Gum paste carnations. I really wanted to love these, but they just weren’t working for me. It’s not really clear in this picture, but the bottoms are all… wonky. Not carnation-like at all.

Filler Flowers
“Filler flowers.” Had I considered how hard these would be to photograph against the white Styrofoam, I would have made them a different color.

Gum Paste Roses

13 Jun

Gum paste flower

The only thing I wanted for my 7th birthday was a Fantastic Flowers kit. (I did get it, and I loved it.) Eighteen years later, I’ve discovered that making flowers, while essentially useless, is still pretty entertaining.

I’m going to be honest; I don’t really “get” using gum paste on cakes. Yes, it’s technically edible… but, you wouldn’t want to eat it. Most real and artificial flowers are equally non-toxic and don’t take nearly as much time and effort. Still, crafting something like this by hand is just fascinating. I’m really looking forward to learning other types of flowers.

Gum paste flower

Gum paste flower

The topmost rose was made solely by hand, with no tools at all. The instructing chef told us to imagine that we were stranded on a desert island without our kits, but inexplicably found a batch of gum paste and floral wire. (The conversation quickly diverged to reveal that most of us own all seven seasons of Gilmore Girls, and still watched them regularly. I don’t recall how.)

The bottom two roses were made with this kit by Wilton and was actually very similar to the aforementioned Fantastic Flowers kit.

I hope to make this one of my first step-by-step guides, as soon as I learn a bit more and can coordinate with my husband/photographer.

Fondant

9 Jun

Fondant
Happy Birthday, Mom!

We’ve started fondant in my cake decorating class. I’d never had it before, but we did a taste comparison with pre-made commercial fondant and a few variations we made from scratch… I was pretty unenthused about all of them. (Though, my group made it with “homemade” bourbon vanilla, and was my favorite…)

The whole process was much easier than I expected it to be, and I do understand why it is more popular from an aesthetic point of view, as I was pretty pleased with my finished product. However, I think my interest in the baking and pastry field is leaning more towards creating tasty sweets than cake design.

Either way, I am still super-excited to be learning all the various aspects of decorating that I’ve never tried before, and will be very glad to have them in my skill set.

This cake was taken to my mom for her birthday, which happened to land on the same day as this lesson… Worked out nicely, I think.

School Update

3 Jun

Whew. Four weeks into the new semester of school, and I’m finally getting into the habit of bringing a camera regularly… My goal was to post weekly updates from my classes, so I’ll have to start with a bit of catch-up.

I’ve got two lab classes this semester; Baking I and Cake Decorating. I think I’ve always known that cake decorating, despite being my job, is not my calling. I lack the patience, steady hand, and artistic skill it requires… and honestly, I’m not terribly interested in it. However, I’m pretty excited that we’ll be moving into things I’ve not yet tried soon. Perhaps I’ll find something I like.

Butter cake
Butter cake recipe by Rose Levy Beranbaum, homework for Cake Decorating.

Swiss buttercream and string work.
The first take-home cake project fell on the first anniversary of our wedding. The second falls on my mom’s birthday. Handy little class I’ve stumbled into.

Double Chocolate and Coconut Brownies
Double-Chocolate and Coconut Brownies.

Raisin-Chip Oatmeal Cookies
Raisin-Chip Oatmeal Cookies.

Platter
Both of the above, plated.

Fort Brownie
Fort Brownie. (Hey, we get bored.)

That Chocolate Cake

That Chocolate Cake
“That Chocolate Cake” and Swiss Butter Cream.

Pie Crust

Orange Chiffon Pie Filling

Orange Chiffon Pie
So, this pie… essentially, it’s an orange curd folded into meringue. The resulting color was a pale yellow, not terribly different than a key lime pie. It didn’t look too bad, in my opinion, but the instructing chef wanted it dyed orange. These pictures don’t really convey the sheer atrociousness. I think a classmate was pretty spot-on in describing it as Cheez-Whiz… which effectively killed any desire I had to try it. (It contained gelatin, so I had no real intention of eating it to begin with.)

A few things made by other classmates that I may or may not get to try my hand at in the future; soft rolls, hard rolls with freshly made butter, challah, buttermilk biscuits, rosemary focaccia, blueberry muffins, dill poppyseed bread, pecan pie, and raisin scones. All of the breads have been amazing, and I’m really looking forward to starting that section myself.