#1
Posted 17 March 2004 - 09:04 PM
For those of you not familiar with the book, Yard's concept is that desserts can be broken down into assorted components. By knowing the master recipes and variations, you can then combine them to create your own stunning desserts.
Have any of you used the book yet? If so, what have you tried? Were you pleased?
"People are bastard-coated bastards, with bastard filling." - Dr. Cox on Scrubs
#2
Posted 18 March 2004 - 12:17 AM
I enjoyed reading the book, as well, so I do think I'll eventually purchase it for my library.
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#3
Posted 18 March 2004 - 07:07 AM
#4
Posted 18 March 2004 - 01:14 PM
Did any of you notice the discrepancies between the picture and the recipe for the Halsey Tart? I'm fairly certain that the recipe will not produce something that looks like the picture.
#5
Posted 18 March 2004 - 03:36 PM
"People are bastard-coated bastards, with bastard filling." - Dr. Cox on Scrubs
#6
Posted 19 March 2004 - 12:08 PM
www.portlandfood.org
Life is a rush into the unknown. You can duck down and hope nothing hits you, or you can stand tall, show it your teeth and say "Dish it up, Baby, and don't skimp on the jalapeρos."
#7
Posted 19 March 2004 - 12:44 PM
I think the recipe also has a chocolate crust, but the crust in the picture isn't chocolate. I think the picture is the variation mentioned in the rice pastry recipe.The photo looks like it's a thin cookie layer with a whipped cream and chocolate top. But the recipe calls for mini tart pans which means in the photo there should be sides to the base. :hmm:
#8
Posted 19 March 2004 - 01:35 PM
Campton Place hot chocolate -- delicious, I would definitely make this one again.
Lemon pudding cakes (I can't remember if this is what they are called in the book) -- They are made with the master recipe for lemon curd, and baked in ramekins. The cakes were very good, but they weren't what I expected. In the picture in the book, the tops of the individual cakes are very brown and you can see where the "pudding" has separated from the "cake" and settled to the bottom of the ramekin. When I removed my cakes from the ramekin, there was very little pudding. I think I may have overbaked them , but I will try the recipe again because it was pretty tasty.
Coffee cake and sticky buns (both made from the brioche recipe) -- Excellent! Probably one of the best coffee cakes I have ever eaten, I especially loved the filling. My family devoured the sticky buns in record time. Both recipes are favorites of mine and I can't wait to make them again.
#9
Posted 22 March 2004 - 10:31 PM
What I did: made the cookie/tart dough bases by rolling out the dough between two parchment sheets (avoiding flour so it wouldn't dis-color my dark choc.) (oh, by the way it's exactly like those purchased chocolate wafers you use for an ice-box/whip cream cake) I chilled the dough then cut them out with a cookie cutter, baked them off (no need to dock this dough as the recipe calls for). Made her caramel whip cream using caramel I had left over (So if you were lazy you could just buy a jar of caramel and not make your own). I piped the caramel in a doughnut shape then filled the center with straight gooey caramel. Put a second cookie ontop of the whipped filing like a sandwich cookie. Coated it with ganche and a plain whip cream dollop.
This tastes best after the cookies soften a bit from the filling, just like an ice box cake. It's really simple and it can be embelished with endless suggestions.
Another recipe I made was a chocolate short bread and I didn't like it particularly.
BUT, I will say all in all I really like her work and would definately reccomend all of her books! Her chocolate book is outstanding!!!!!!!!!! I really like the fact that she is teaching home cooks about master recipes and working out from them. The fact is she saving you years of work and study...........at least it took me that to figure this out myself with-out classes. I really like her and find her to be one of the better female baking book authors.
#10
Posted 23 March 2004 - 05:40 AM
It is also nominated for a James Beard award in the baking category. So apparently some "noted authorities" also like this book a lot.
Edited by Suzanne F, 23 March 2004 - 05:43 AM.
#11
Posted 23 March 2004 - 08:42 AM
#12
Posted 23 March 2004 - 09:19 AM
A tangent:
Anyone dare compare this book by Yard to the recent one Gale Gand released? They're like night and day! I'm very sad that Gale doesn't publish a higher level of work.........and please-it doesn't NOT have to be that low to pander to the non-baking public and still sell well.
#13
Posted 23 March 2004 - 12:27 PM
Edited by bloviatrix, 23 March 2004 - 12:27 PM.
"People are bastard-coated bastards, with bastard filling." - Dr. Cox on Scrubs
#14
Posted 23 March 2004 - 12:49 PM
#15
Posted 24 March 2004 - 05:58 AM
Gale Gand-hum.... I own her first book and barely worked from it, and I haven't been entised to buy the following ones. They just don't speak to me, at all.
I'm very very interested in her work at the restaurant and I even have enjoyed her foodtv show (she has some top notch freinds that visit her too!!).
My impression of her is very very favorable-she seems really amazing/cool/deep, she's VERY good on tv, etc....In alot of ways were both from the same area and around the same age-so I really relate to her and I'm thrilled with her sucess. Shes like a local hero!!
My only real complaint is how dumbed down her books are-coming from HER because she's NO DUMMY!!! Maybe it's just me, that's why I wanted to hear other peoples opinions. There might be one or two recipes out of each book I'll find interesting but the bulk of her books don't seem to contain info./recipes I'd use or want to.
I wish the publishers would want her to do a serious book. She's certainly capable-she should have a top book to win a Beard award!
Thats my opinion-and I wondered what others thought. On the other hand I think Sherry Yard put forth a educational and interesting book full of recipes that I do want to try. It's unique and presumes her reader is smart.
#16
Posted 24 March 2004 - 07:23 PM
Now if you want to get really technical- a lot of Mary Bergin's recipes came from Nancy Silverton! Many pastry professionals have passed through "Puckdom".
#17
Posted 24 March 2004 - 09:15 PM
"People are bastard-coated bastards, with bastard filling." - Dr. Cox on Scrubs
#18
Posted 25 April 2005 - 08:03 PM
On Sunday, I got to see Sherry Yard do a cooking demo at the LA Times Festival of Books 2005 over at UCLA.
Wow! What a culinary treat! She was so energetic, so ebullient, so entertaining to the crowd. And she knows her stuff. So I HAD to buy the book, "The Secrets of Baking," which did win the 2004 James Beard Award for Best Pastry Book. When I got my book personally autographed
p. 26: [omit the phrase 2 tablespoons potato flour (potato starch)]
p. 42: 1 Ό cups heavy cream [that's "one and one-fourth cups heavy cream"]
p. 207: 3 : 2 : 1 [top line]; SOLID LIQUID LIQUID [middle line]; Flour Butter Water or Sugar[bottom line; omit the word eggs]
p. 322: Eight 3-inch savarin molds [that's 8 three-inch savarin molds]
#19
Posted 25 April 2005 - 08:33 PM
Here's an old thread I started on the problems I had with this recipe. You will see others were kind enough to try it out and experienced the same problems I had. Unfortunately, it has made me distrust the recipes in the book and I've been afraid to try anything since. Too bad, it's a lovely book.
Wouldn't it be nice if all of the errors and corrections were posted someplace on-line for those of us who didn't get to see her?
Edited by JFLinLA, 25 April 2005 - 08:33 PM.
#21
Posted 26 April 2005 - 07:05 AM
OH, wait-I thought Sherry co-authored those with Mary? If not, my appologies.
Gale Gand-hum.... I own her first book and barely worked from it, and I haven't been entised to buy the following ones. They just don't speak to me, at all.
I'm very very interested in her work at the restaurant and I even have enjoyed her foodtv show (she has some top notch freinds that visit her too!!).
My impression of her is very very favorable-she seems really amazing/cool/deep, she's VERY good on tv, etc....In alot of ways were both from the same area and around the same age-so I really relate to her and I'm thrilled with her sucess. Shes like a local hero!!
My only real complaint is how dumbed down her books are-coming from HER because she's NO DUMMY!!! Maybe it's just me, that's why I wanted to hear other peoples opinions. There might be one or two recipes out of each book I'll find interesting but the bulk of her books don't seem to contain info./recipes I'd use or want to.
I wish the publishers would want her to do a serious book. She's certainly capable-she should have a top book to win a Beard award!
Thats my opinion-and I wondered what others thought. On the other hand I think Sherry Yard put forth a educational and interesting book full of recipes that I do want to try. It's unique and presumes her reader is smart.
I have Gale Gands "Just a Bite" and I like it a lot, have used many of the recipes in it. I found it to be intelligent and interesting. I didn't buy any of her other books because they just didn't ring my bell, but this one was good.
Based on this thread, I just ordered Yard's Secrets of Baking from abebooks.com--after checking Amazon, half.com and barnesandnoble.com, it was the cheapest for a book in very good condition--$12. I recommend them highly as I've ordered books from them several times before, and they always have something I'm looking for at good prices.
#22
Posted 26 April 2005 - 07:59 AM
Lemon pudding cakes (I can't remember if this is what they are called in the book) -- They are made with the master recipe for lemon curd, and baked in ramekins. The cakes were very good, but they weren't what I expected. In the picture in the book, the tops of the individual cakes are very brown and you can see where the "pudding" has separated from the "cake" and settled to the bottom of the ramekin. When I removed my cakes from the ramekin, there was very little pudding. I think I may have overbaked them , but I will try the recipe again because it was pretty tasty.
I noticed the same thing, and I'm pretty sure I didn't overbake mine. The picture in the books looks like lemon pound cake topped with lemon curd. I find it hard to believe that you can get the dessert in the picture from the recipe in the book. Following the recipe, the pudding cakes looked like this (before unmolding):

I've also tried the vanilla ice cream, creamy caramel sauce, apple caramel glaze, creme brulee, mile-high apple pie, lemon bars, honey blossom madeleines, banana cake, lemon and blackberry-lime curds, and pannettone from the book. The ice cream, caramel sauce, creme brulee, and apple glaze are great. The apple pie was good, but too runny. The rest were just ok. I didn't like the blackberry-lime curd at all.
Edited by Patrick S, 26 April 2005 - 08:00 AM.
#23
Posted 26 April 2005 - 08:17 AM
#24
Posted 26 April 2005 - 08:44 AM
I'm making an errata list:
p. 26: [omit the phrase 2 tablespoons potato flour (potato starch)]
I think I'm having a stupid day: I don't quite understand this correction. Do you mean to omit the potato flour from the recipe entirely? After all Yard said about it contributing moisture and structure? Interesting. If that's not what you meant, please set me straight. Thanks!
#25
Posted 26 April 2005 - 09:52 AM
I think I'm having a stupid day: I don't quite understand this correction. Do you mean to omit the potato flour from the recipe entirely? After all Yard said about it contributing moisture and structure? Interesting. If that's not what you meant, please set me straight. Thanks!
Yes, omit the potato flour from the recipe entirely. I saw Sherry mark out that ingredient from the recipe on p. 26.
#26
Posted 26 April 2005 - 10:56 AM
www.portlandfood.org
Life is a rush into the unknown. You can duck down and hope nothing hits you, or you can stand tall, show it your teeth and say "Dish it up, Baby, and don't skimp on the jalapeρos."
#27
Posted 26 April 2005 - 12:18 PM
Now I'm really curious: has anyone tried the chocolate souffle with the potato flour? For those who don't have the book in front of you, Yard adds 2tb of potato flour to a souffle containing 4 oz chocolate, 1/2 cup heavy cream, 3 yolks and 8 whites. She also uses a tiny amount of cream of tartar to stabilize.
Edited by yslee, 26 April 2005 - 01:12 PM.
#28
Posted 26 April 2005 - 12:39 PM
For those of you not familiar with the book, Yard's concept is that desserts can be broken down into assorted components. By knowing the master recipes and variations, you can then combine them to create your own stunning desserts.
The concept is correct.
I met her at Sur La Table when she was teaching some recipes from her book. I tend to recommend books that actually try to teach cooking and I think her book does that.
Dean of Culinary Arts
Ecole de Cuisine: Culinary School Los Angeles
http://ecolecuisine.com
#29
Posted 03 May 2005 - 11:40 AM
I didn't like the blackberry-lime curd at all.
I was disappointed with the blackberry-lime curd as well. I ended up turning it into ice cream since I didn't want to toss it. Somehow, that it made it slightly more palatable, but still had an odd bitterness.
"People are bastard-coated bastards, with bastard filling." - Dr. Cox on Scrubs
#30
Posted 24 February 2006 - 04:24 PM
I had borrowed this book from Extramsg who ordered it by mistake and was going to give it back but now I'm considering keeping it and paying him for it. I've been meaning to try her baumkuchen (sp?). Sounds like you guys are having pretty good luck with it over all.
Has anyone given the Baumkuchen a try yet?
The photo is so beautiful and her description of the cake sounds very nice.
I'm also interested in anyone's additional comments with another year gone by. I have the book out of the library and am looking ti over trying to decide whether to buy it or not.
Edited by ludja, 24 February 2006 - 04:26 PM.
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"
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