Showing posts with label Dessert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dessert. Show all posts

Sunday, February 21, 2016

Dinner Party Feb 2016

 I like to cook, and I also quite enjoy eating, but eating a 12 course meal by myself if beyond even my abilities.  So what to do? Invite over 5 friends!

Appetizers


  
Charcuterie course; Mostarda, chicken liver mousse, olives, sage cheese, cheese with mustard seeds and a honey goat cheese. Also had some cured meats, green apple and bread.

 
 Chorizo empanada with chipotle crema. Dough is simple puff pastry

Orange and Beet. Heston Blumenthal runs the Fat Duck restaurant in the UK, he is famous for his excellent inventive food.  This course was straight out of his book. 

You tell the diner that the course is Orange and Beet jellies, they assume the red are the beet and the yellow-orange are the jellies made of orange juice. However once they take a bite they are surprised to find out it is the other way around.

Raw golden beets were juiced and then the juice Agar filtered.  Blood oranges get the same treatment. The juices are then set with 1.7% gelatin by weight.

Agar filtration is a technique that allows nearly any juice/stock/extract to be made incredibly clear without any special equipment. Agar is a gelling agent similar to gelatin, but the gel is much less elastic (more brittle) than gelatin. So if the gel matrix is disturbed the liquid can quite readily weep out (Syneresis).  The juice you wish to clarify is set with 0.7% agar, then froze. The ice crystals punch holes in the gel matrix. The frozen juice is set in a strainer over a bowl in the fridge and left to thaw.  Any solids (particulate, starches, proteins, etc) remain trapped in the agar matrix and crystal clear juice drips into the waiting bowl. 

 Asparagus and greyer tart.  Puff pastry crust, shredded cheese, raw asparagus, hot oven for 15 mins.

My new toy is a vacuum siphon. The bottom chamber is filled with water.  The upper chamber holds what you wish to infuse, in this case Kaffir Lime leaves and lime zest. (Apparently you could make coffee with this device as well....)   A fabric filter holds the solids in the top chamber while a burner heats the water below. As the water boils, the steam pressure forces the water up a dip tube into the top chamber where it steeps with the kaffir.  Once the heat is removed below, the steam will condense and suck the water back through the filter into the lower chamber.

This broth was then poured over frozen blueberries. The broth picks up a mild but very aromatic Kaffir lime scent. Delicious with blueberries.

Main's

 Tacos.

Ground pork was seasoned with lemon grass, fish sauce, salt and pepper.  0.1% sodium phosphate is added, this phosphate salt allows the meat proteins to better bind to their moisture, keeping the meat noticeably juicier as it is cooked. The ground meat was torchon-ed, and sous vide at 145F for about 4 hours. At service the torchon is dried off, and seared in a very hot pan.

To make the food pyramid fans happy we have various veggies to go with the meat. Kimchi, pickled carrots and cucumbers, various Vietnamese mints, scallion and lime.


Pumpernickel gnocchi with braised pork shanks and roasted Brussels sprouts. 

There are two styles of gnocci. The Italian is made with mashed potatoes, held together with the barest amount of wheat flour possible.  These gnocci are incredibly tender as they are mostly gluten free potato startch.

The French also have gnocchi, Parisian style. These are little dumplings of pate a choux piped into boiling water.  Pate a choux ( translates  to shoe paste, thing sound sexier in French huh?) is a dough made by adding wheat flour to boiling water, this paste is then beaten with raw eggs.

 With all the beating one might expect a leaden dumpling to result. However since the flour is added the boiling water, the high heat prevents much of the gliadin and glutenin from forming gluten.

I made these Parisian gnocchi with Rye flour, a touch of cocoa powder for color and caraway seeds for flavor.

A bowl is inverted over the finished dish and a Smoking Gun is used to pipe in a small amount of apple wood smoke. When the bowl is lifted the smoke wafts out to the diner.

Desserts

Yogurt ravioli.  How does one fill a blackberry shell with liquid yogurt? Very Carefully.

The yogurt is froze in small hemisphere molds. Meanwhile blackberries are juiced and 2% gelatin dissolved. A thin layer of gelatin is set on a silpat, and the frozen yogurt placed on top.  The gelatin can then be poured over the top, setting in a shell around the frozen yogurt.  These are allowed to thaw in the refrigerator before service resulting in a liquid inside the gelatin shell.

Creme Brulee.  My preferred method for cooking custards is sous vide. Here is used Douglas Baldwin's recipe. The custard is cooked in a ziplock back at 185F for about 45 mins, then poured into the service vessels. Refrigerate overnight and you have a perfectly cooked, never curdled, custard without all the Bain Marie hassle. 

 Pears poached in red wine with toasted walnuts.

Chocolate Pot de Creme with Baileys 'Cappuccino' foam. The pot de creme was cooked sous vide as the creme brulee was.
Bailey's is thickened with 0.7% xanthan gum and foamed with a nitrous charger.  This is added to the top of the pot de creme at service.


Twelve Courses in all, 5 friends and a few bottles of wine.  A great way to spend an evening. Lets just not talk about the dirty dishes the next morning....

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Thirteen Desserts




 The thirteen desserts are the traditional dessert foods used in celebrating Christmas in the French region of Provence. The "big supper") ends with a ritual 13 desserts, representing Jesus Christ and the 12 apostles. The first four of these are known as the "four beggars" (les quatre mendiants), representing the four mendicant monastic orders: Dominicans, Franciscans, Augustinian and Carmelites. [Wikipedia]

    Raisins (Dominicans)
    Walnuts or hazelnuts[4] (Augustines)
    Dried figs (Franciscans)
    Almonds (Carmelites)

 I am heading to a Christmas party, and it would be rude to show up empty handed, so I made.

1.        Raisin filled sugar cookies
2.        Candied Hazelnuts
3.        Fig Pinwheels
4.        Almond Cookies
5.        Dark Chocolate Tart
6.        Coffee and White Chocolate Tart
7.        Crème Brulee
8.        Apple Tart
9.        Cherry Clafouti
10.      Lemon Bars
11.      Cinnamon twists
12.      Pears poached in Mulled Red Wine
13.      Bacon Jigglers.


Fig Pinwheel cookies, Almond cookies, Raisin filled cookies and Hazelnut brittle.

Half dark chocolate, half coffee and White Chocolate tart.



Creme Brulee.

Apple Tart

Cherry Clafouti

Lemon Bars

Cinnamon Twists.

Pears poached in red wine

 Bacon Jigglers. These were less than the crowd pleaser that I had hoped for...

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Chocolate Mousse with Salted Caramel

What is it about salt and caramel and chocolate that go so well together?

Bottom layer is just white chocolate, melted, spread on silpat, cut into squares before too hard set.

Mousse

8 ounces bittersweet chocolate , chopped fine
2 tablespoons cocoa powder
5 tablespoons water or Bailies or Bourbon
2 large eggs , separated
1 tablespoon sugar
1/8 teaspoon table salt
1 cup heavy cream (chilled)

Melt chocolate, cocoa powder, water/Booze in double boiler, stirring frequently until smooth. Remove from heat.

Whisk egg yolks, 1 1/2 teaspoons sugar, and salt in bowl until ribbon stage. Whisk chocolate into eggs and set aside to cool until just above room temp.


Beat egg whites and remaining sugar until soft peaks. Fold into chocolate/egg mixture.

Beat cream until stiff, fold into other mixture. Place in piping bag and chill.



Caramel

1 c sugar, 1/2 c water.  Heat over medium high heat in small skillet.  Do not stir until sugar is all melted less you want grainy caramel.  Once melted stir and continue to heat to medium caramel color.  Dip bottom of pan in water to stop cooking.  Pour out on silpat. Sprinkle with coarse salt. Break into shards when cool.


Croquembouche

I was going to the neighbors for '09 Easter supper, and one can not show up empty handed.  I decided to make Croquembouche.  

Apparently the French will use them as wedding cakes. The name translates to "Crunch in the Mouth", or at least that is what the internet tells me, as my French in nonexistent.

Profiteroles

Julia Child's Choux Paste;
1 c Water
3 oz Butter
1 tsp Salt
3/4 c AP Flour
4 Eggs

Boil water, butter and salt. Beat in flour. Cook and stir until bottom of pan is dry. Remove from heat, beat in eggs, may not need all 4.

Pipe to 1 inch diameter.  Brush with egg wash. Bake 425 *F for 20 mins.

Fill with Creme Patissiere
1 c Sugar
5 Yolks, reserve whites
1/2 c Flour
2 c Milk scalded with vanilla bean.
1 tb Butter.

Beat, sugar and eggs to ribbon stage. Add flour, beat to well combined. Stream in very hot milk slowly, beating constantly.  Place over medium heat, bring to boil stirring constantly. Reduce to low and cook 3 mins. Remove from heat, add butter. Force through fine mesh sieve. Place plasic wrap on surface of creme and chill overnight. Beat whites and fold into cream to lighten.

Assembly

Fill all the puffs with cream, and chill while making caramel 'glue'. 1 c sugar with 1/2 c water,  cooked to medium brown. Have a big bowl of ice water standing by lest your fingers come in contact with the Napalm, I mean caramel.

Draw a circle about 8 in diameter on cake round. Dip puff in hot caramel and stick to ring. Repeat with second layer on top and slightly smaller diameter to taper into a cone.

Spread some hot caramel on a silpat and let cool to make garnish.  Sugar can be 'spun' into fine threads by letting cool slightly in pan so it makes long slow runs off a spoon. Then set sheet pan on floor and slowly pour caramel from spoon. It cools as it falls making threads, and a mess.