Beautiful and oh so scrumptious! So what you have there in the glass is a
coconut biscuit. Before cooking, we hid
a frozen sphere of mango sorbet in the middle of the batter, so when you bite
into it you get a gooey mango surprise. Surprises
in the middle of desserts is my new found obsession since reading the book Spiced
in which the pastry chef who wrote the book loves to hide little bits of heaven
for her guests to discover. I will
definitely be playing with that soon! We
also placed small edible flowers on the top to give the cake a pop of color.
That gorgeous honey colored swirl coming off the cake and
down to the plate is a coconut thin. For
those in the culinary world, it’s really nothing more than a tuile cookie made
with coconut. But it will make you look
at tuiles in a completely different light and have you flavoring yours from now
on!
Underneath the thin is a perfect cornelle of ginger ice
cream. I wish I could take credit for
the immaculate shaping of this ice cream, but to save time, Chef did all of our
ice cream scoops for the week. He does
it with one large spoon off the side of the container. I must practice that! Those of you who know me and my love for all
flavors Asian, know this ice cream was right up my alley. Perfect compliment to the cake and
mango. I will be making this again! Also, hidden underneath the ice cream is a
small and simple sable cookie topped with peanuts. We used these cookies in all our desserts to
keep the ice cream from melting into a puddle on the plate. I was surprised at how long the ice cream
actually stayed solid.
The garnishes on the plate consist of artistic swoops and
dots of mango coulis, a small dusting of cocoa powder and a thin line of
coconut flakes on the edge of the plate.
I wish I could find the words to describe the taste of this dish, but
none seem to do it justice. This would
be my favorite dessert of the week.
Dessert #2…Mariage
Carotte et Manque, un Soupcon de Noisette
The squares on the plate are made of hazelnut daiquoise, an
air leavened light cake. On top of the
cake is piped lines of sweet carrot cream.
Alternating circles of candied carrot and mango top the cream and a
small square of carrot thin is placed in the corners. I found that the carrot thin was a bit too
sticky and got stuck in your teeth easily, so perhaps it stayed out at room
temperature too long and took on too much humidity before plating.
The large circles on the plate are a reduction of carrot
juice and sugar, while the small circles are mango coulis we had left over from
the previous dessert. The sorbet for
this dish was mango carrot. This made
the dish for me. I could have eaten a
whole bowl of just the sorbet. The
sweetness of the mango paired with just a hint of carrot was an amazingly
refreshing combination. And, of course,
our sable cookie kept it from melting into a pile of goo.
Last plated
dessert…Arlettes aux Poires, Crème Brulee Vanille Bourbon, Eclats de Marrons
Confit et Glace a L’Huile D’Olive du Domaine Lagarance
The main part of the dessert is layer upon layer of all
kinds of goodness. The base is an
arlette, or a piece of puff pastry rolled very thin, dredged in powdered sugar
and baked until crunchy. These were
divine even on their own. The outer
edges of the base arlette were lined with pear rounds which had been
caramelized in brown sugar. In the
middle of the pears was placed a thin line of frozen crème brulee. A confit of chopped chestnuts was placed on
either side of the crème brulee and then a layer of sweet vanilla cream was
piped to fill in all the gaps. This was
topped with another arlette and the same layering as the base, but without the
crème brulee this time. Finally, the
dessert was topped with a final arlette, a thin line of powdered sugar, dollop
of sweet vanilla cream and a half a chestnut.
The ice cream on this plate was an olive oil ice cream. This was my favorite part of the
dessert. The olive oil gave the ice
cream a dimension I’d never really experienced before. It really got me excited about experimenting
with ice creams when I get back home.
Also on the plate were thin lines of pear coulis outlining
the dessert, a small dab of cocoa powder and (of course) our sable cookie
resting under the ice cream.
One more thing…The
Game
So by Thursday, we had completed all the desserts
above. This gave us Friday with an “open
day”. Chef told us on Thursday that he
was planning a game for us on Friday, so I went into class with much
anticipation about what he had in store.
When we arrived in class on Friday, chef told us we would be
crafting our own mini dessert, which had to be plated. He wanted the dessert itself inside a small
glass but presented on a plate. This is
the type of dessert that is commonly served before the actual dessert in a
gastronomic restaurant in France . Yes, they have two…well rather almost
three…desserts. But more on the “full
course meal of the French” later.
His only requirement other than the size of the dish is that
we utilized left over poached pears we had in the kitchen. That was to be the fruit and focus of the
dessert, but other than that we had free reign.
Awesome! I spent the first bit of
time exploring the kitchen to find things I thought would work well with the
pears, but still things I could play with.
I didn’t want to try any new techniques, but I did want to experiment
with flavors we hadn’t done already that week.
After all, here was a golden opportunity to play. I took full advantage and came up with this
beauty…
In the glass, you have layers of pistachio biscuit, chopped
poached pears mixed with peanut and pecan brittle and coffee cream. A thin strip of chocolate garnishes the top
of the glass. Peanut and pecan brittle
lines the plate where alternating squares of poached pear and chocolate discs
serve as the garnish.
Chef thought the design of my plate was good, although it lacked sauce which he didn’t like. He also applauded my efforts to try new flavors, but thought I had incorporated one too many ingredients. His suggestion was to get rid of the addition of coffee and flavor the cream with a spice that was found in the poaching liquid. Strangely enough, I had thought of doing that, but thought it would done by others and I wanted to be different. Overall I was pleased with how my mini dessert came out and look forward to being able to play this game again!
Of course Chef whipped up a mini dessert of his own,
utilizing only about a fourth of the time we had and came up with this little
masterpiece.
Can you believe we’ve
been here a month???
No comments:
Post a Comment