Friday, February 27, 2009

Regional: Auvergne, Basque, Ile de France




















In Cuisine this week, we reviewed regional dishes of Ile de France (of which Paris is a part) with Asparagus d'Argenteuil with mushroom flan, Cotes d'Agneau Champvallon (lamb chops cooked in a potato gratin, which made a very yummy dinner above).  From the Basque country, where a very tasty blend of Spanish and French cuisine gives you piquillos peppers stuffed with salt cod,  chicken basque-style (rolled in bayonne ham and cooked in a tomato based stock), and from the Auvergne country, a very interesting stuffed cabbage dish.  The sauce is delicious!  The picture with the red check tea towel was my cabbage (wrapped in caul's fat) before cooking.  

Cakes!! Give me cakes!! - Marjorie from "Little Britain"









It's easy to see why the Fat Fighters are so crazy about cakes, it's pleasing to the eye as to the tongue, not many pleasures in life give you that.... 

I have submitted my post on the Opera cake in the other blog, so here, we have, a Jamaica: mango - passion fruit mousse on thin layer of choc sponge filled with coconut mousse with rum pineapples.
We have Royal Chocolat - soft smooth choc mousse cake with a crunchy layer in between, very delicious.   We also have a Lemon chocolate mousse cake, and a vanilla/chocolate 'buttercake' lined with roasted almonds.  A small dessert from Cuisine: Strawberries in Red Wine "Soupe".

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Sweet endings...










































The last practical for pastry for the week was a very simple chocolate lava cake with a mousse and coconut ice cream, but the important point was to test our plating.  (Mine is on the grey marble).  We also made a strawberry cake (fraisier), which I believe most people incorrectly label it as a strawberry shortcake, in fact there's nothing 'short' about it at all ('short' meaning a heavy butter-based crisp, crunchy e.g. shortbread biscuits, tartshells).  This is just a plain and simple sponge with mousseline cream and fresh sweet strawberries.   The green layer on top is marzipan, edible of course!

For cuisine, we deboned a fish (while keeping it whole!) and stuff it with mushroom duxelles, we made an easter pâté in puff pastry (with lotsa eggs!  Doesn't it look like a SG 'steamed meat bun??), typical of Le Berry region of France, lastly, cod (real cod!) panfried, served with flemish-style red cabbage and beer jus vinaigrette.

Other dishes on demo, was a 'belgium pizza' - flammenkuchen, potjevelesch (a sort of jellified cold dish with various meat in it, it reminds me of some chinese cold appertiser), rooster in red wine finished with sauce thickened with fresh pig's blood.  2 plated desserts: mirabelle parfait, and caramel chibouste with speculoos (a type of thin spice cookie), and le poirat - pear tart.


Monday, February 16, 2009

Sweet Beginnings




















St Honoré - Named after a famous street in Paris, très chic, with lotsa pastry shops, or named after the patron saint of patisserie, either way, this cake is yummy.  Chibouste cream with crunchy caramel choux puffs, we made some spun sugar for deco.  The criss-cross chibouste cream piping is not easy.  

Bavarian Cream cake in Three Chocolate: It's very light!  I think I can eat half a cake at one time!

Thursday, February 12, 2009

More puffs.......













One of my earliest recollection of French pastry was.... the classic marbled millefeuille!!  Din and Moira had the (good?) fortune to taste it last weekend during they trip over here.  Sorry for the rest of the guys, it should be consumed within a day for better taste!  Another variation is the hazelnut praline type.
Next, chocolate souffle with orange ice-cream, and a type of brioche popular in the south of France in replacement of northern France's King's cake, eaten during Epiphany, which you see here in a golden disc of puff pastry with crème frangipane (almond and pastry cream) -Pithivier.





Lobster and terrine





















Lobster, an item you see on the menu, but never dared order it, cos' it costs way too much!  Well, we had a chance to make our very own lobster dish.  The grey/black lobster (before) flew in the very morning, almost late for our class, still alive of course..... the legs were moving and it was trying to get away from my platter of ingredients for that morning.  Sad fact is....we had to kill it.  No freezing, no dipping into boiling water.  Just a sharp knife, tip goes in, 'crack!' and split the head in half.  Squirmish girls may beckon the french chef instructor, ever willing to help..... Lobster a l'americaine, the red one (after), with raisin pilaf rice.  Why american?  Legend has it that a few americans showed up at a parisian restaurant late one night, for lack of ingredients by the time the restaurant was closing, a pair of lobster was idling in the fridge... the chef created a new recipe, the americans loved it, and it went on regular menu.
We also made guinea fowl with cabbage pie in class.  

Starters:  Eggplant caviar on toast with semi-oven dried tomatoes, verrine (terrine in a glass "verre") in 3 colors (tomato, goat cheese, avocado) with raw sea bream marinated in vanilla-infused olive oil.  Second, millefeuille wit tomatoes and confit fennel.  Third, white boudin, with caramelised apple.  We stuff our own sausages, of course.  (... and we hide it well too.)

The next dish on practical took over 2 sessions to prepare:  ballotine of chicken with foie gras mousse and pistachio.  It's like a sausage, or a terrine, if you like, wrap in a whole chicken, deboned.  Man, it's hell trying to debone a whole chicken in one piece!  Why they have so many bones anyway?  (By the way, we also have also made our own sausages in last week's recipe of duck legs pot-au-feu, fun stuff.)  It has to be slow cooked in prepared stock, and leave it in until it cools, thus, we only had the product today.  That is not all.  This is typically served on a buffet spread, and you need to have a presentation platter.  The first layer is a thick white coat of milk and gelatine, and next you make some decoration, and set it with a layer of thickened chicken consomme.   Each year there is a competition in France for such presentation platters.  Yes, you can each everything on the platter.  The squarish platter was the chef's demonstration, and the roundish one, mine.  I think I have to go for some fruit and veg carving class after this.  It's a very pretty picture.  You may not see it so well in the pics, it's like an archaic mirror.