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ejw50

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Posts posted by ejw50

  1. Aloha ejw50! Sounds like you had a good trip. Can you tell us about your dinner(s)

    at Spago? I too love it!

    I enjoyed Nick's as well, I was amazed at how many people were serving our table

    I kind of lost track. Their flaming desserts are fun.

    It was a year ago; I wish I remembered the details. One one night I had the steak and another the lamb. My wife had fish both times. We both thought it was the best meals we had in Maui.

    We bought "Wolfgang Puck Makes it Easy" autographed, and a bunch of things in our meal were in the book. This includes the Pineapple upsidedown cake, the potato purees, and a few of the marinades (inculding soy-mint one).

  2. I think I'd try to make Pierre Herme's Lemon Cream with limes. Made with lemons I've kept it for up to 2 weeks in the fridge. I think the recipe says about 5 days otherwise freeze it.

    Pierre has a lime cream recipe in his other book (The Patisserie of Pierre Herme). If I remember correctly, it's the lemon cream recipe with lime substitution (equal weights). If you're doing it from "Desserts by Pierre Herme" you have to account for the fact that limes are smaller than lemons.

  3. I switched over to 'ebay vanilla' a couple months ago after getting fed up with the ridiculous local vanilla prices. My local specialty food supplier charges $40 for a 1/4 lb of Tahitian beans and $21 for a 1/4 lb of Madagascar Bourbons and the beans I've bought from ebay are easily as good if not better quality than them. I just paid $6.00, which included shipping, for 30 PNG Tahitian beans and they are great. I think they weighed out to around 1/3 lb and I paid $29, including shipping, for a pound of PNG Bourbons.

    You have to figure that even if the ebay beans were inferior you could easily double or triple the amount used per recipe and still save a bunch of money.

    Hope this helps.

    thanks for the ebay tip. Did not know about that before; just bought myself a pound.

  4. Pierre a similar cake in his book 'The patisserie of Pierre Herme". Can't recommend this book enough. $150 or so, but worth every penny. The recipe in the book uses genoise instead of dacquoise.

    Pierre's recipe is 1:5 pastry cream to butter cream plus pistachio paste. He has different mousseline creams in the book that use different ratios.

  5. You would use the PCB biscuit transfer sheets, just like you were using parchment paper.

    Put the transfer sheet on the bottom of your sheet pan. Spread the batter evenly on top. Bake.

    As soon as the cake comes out of the oven, sprinkle the top with rice flour (my preference), put

    a piece of parchment on top, then put another sheet pan over that, then flip the whole thing over.

    Remove the sheet pan, then carefully peel the transfer sheet off.

    Hope that helps!!! :smile:

    ah, that makes sense. It seems it's just as you'd use cigarette paste + parchment.

    I am used to chocolate, where the transfer sheet goes on the top (duh, should've known).

    Thanks for that tip, will look into it!

  6. Spago is in the Four Seasons in Wailea, I loved it it the 2x I went.

    Gerard's in Lahaina is mentioned in both Frommer's and Fodor's as one of the best.

    I thought Humuhumunukunukuapuaa was a little overrated. OK food, small portions, expensive. But their fishtank is beautiful.

    Second the mention for Nick's Fishmarket. Excellent service, very good food.

  7. I like the Wybauw book better, but only after the "second translation" provided on the forum by DavidJ, you, Kerry, John, serj, and others. After getting the info from the classes, it's like a whole new book.

    They do look good.  I've never made marshmallows but this looks like a good recipe to try.  The book is great (although I did find some typos), i find it a little more accessible than the wybauw book.

    as much as i love wybauw, i have to agree. i think a lot of it has to do with poor translation whereas the peter greweling book was written by a native english speaker in his own language being read by native english speakers.

    is anyone else disturbed by the photo opposite page 114 (cinnamon stacks)? we're always being warned that we need to make sure that our chocolates have no air, etc. in them, but this method clearly allows large air gaps between ganache piping which goes against what i've been taught.

  8. Thanks for the tips. I will check the temperature of the cocoa butter and chocolate. I think the chocolate temper is OK, as I don't get any streaking, spots, color-change-to-white-over time thing. It doesn't seem to be all of the chocolates, just some of them - maybe 5/30 or so.

    First of all, you don't want your cocoa butter to be too hot:  Probably around 31ºC ± 1ºC.

    Secondly, when you put your next layer of chocolate, you want to be sure it's tempered and at the upper end of the working range.  If it's too cold, you might get some sticking. 

    I'm sure I don't have to say this, but after you've chilled the molds, be sure that they've come to room temp before adding any chocolate; otherwise, condensation can really mess you up.

    Take a moment to review:  Chocolates with that showroom finish

  9. I am having this problem, maybe somebody could help me with it.

    I am trying to make molded chocolates colored with cocoa butter.

    All standard technique - I spray the cocoa butter in, chill, put the chocolate in, chill, fill, wait, cover with chocolate, chill, demold.

    Sometimes I am getting the cocoa butter sticking to the mold instead of to the chocolate. This leaves an ugly chocolate that has the look of something untempered. (If I knew how you all posted pics, I would)

    Is it a matter of cocoa butter thickness? Temperature or cooling rate? Cleanliness of molds?

    Any help would be appreciated.

  10. Thanks partly to this forum, I went to Piron last Christmas while I was in Evanston. Great chocolates. The flavors are pretty traditional, but they do them all very well. "Fanciest" one is the cherry cordial. Flavors were consistently excellent. And, as the review states, extremely reasonably priced - I got ~8 chocolates for ~$12.

    I did notice a few pits and cavities in the tops of their molded chocolates, which made me feel better about my own work. I asked the guy how they temper, and he said they use the slab method. Interesting to me anyway as I thought most people these days seed (could be wrong here)

    I liked these a lot.  They had a nice strong flavor of the primary ingredient of each chocolate, and they were very high quality (great "mouth feel", etc).  In addition to the more conventional contents, some of these had more unusual ingredients, like curry powder, ginger, wasabi, etc.  If this is what you are looking for, I liked the ones from Vosges better than the others (below) who had similarly unusual ingredients.

    With one exception, I've always found Vosges flavors to be subtle to a fault. As a person who likes the unconventional flavors, they sound wonderful, but I usually find the flavors almost undetectable.

    The one exception I had was a fresh truffle rolled in curry powder (not just dusted on top like the Naga) that was made that day and purchased at their boutique on Michigan Ave. That one was a powerhouse, but the rest have paled in comparison.

    From my experience, they are over-priced for what they are. I agree that some of her flavors are to subtle for me, and a few, most memorably the "Rooster," was downright offensive. I often gravitate toward unique and novel combinations, but Taleggio cheese and chocolate was not a match that I cared for.

    When Markoff got going a few years ago, her truffles were much better, IHO. Recently, I've altogether abandoned her truffles for her bars. The Oaxaca, Red Fire, Creole, and Barcelona (the only milk chocolate I'll ever consciously put in my mouth), are among my favorite.

  11. If you just want a big sheet, I second the person who said local art store. Won't have to pay shipping, and you can test out the technique. Agree with everybody who said it's the same stuff.

    If you want pre-cut rolls for cake lining, then agree with jbprince.

    luis,

    the price at jb prince is the best, but shipping adds on a lot.  you can also successfully use what is often called 'guitar sheets' which is a more flexible plastic, sort of what transfer sheets are printed on.

    you can check at tap plastic (there's one in mountain view).  they sell rolls of acetate, but it can get quite expensive.  25 inches by 100 feet for anywhere from $80-120 depending on thickness.  But I bet 100' would last you a while.

    and i agree with everyone else, it is the same stuff whether you buy it at office max or specifically for food related stuff.

    thanks alana,

    I will get it from jbprince. the thing that sucks, I was just at their store last month in NY. oh well

    luis

  12. Just to quote the master, JP Wybauw says (in his book) there are a few possibilities

    1. chocolate is undercrystallized

    2. chocolate is over-crystallied

    3. insufficient cooling

    can be avoided by

    1. working with chocolate with correct amount of beta crystals

    2. ensuring smooth but not overly rapid cooling

    Basically what Kerry said.

  13. The throwdown was all right. Bobby Flay made some ganache with ancho chili, cinnamon, and dark/milk chocolate, dipped in dark chocolate and drizzled with colored white chocolate. Fritz Knipschildt was slated to make a regular truffle, but at the last second busted out the molds with painted cocoa butter, luster dust, and I think a dark chocolate coating with caramel inside.

    The sculpture was no contest.

    Tough one for Flay as his skills in this arena were way below the level of his competition. I thought he did OK for somebody who is not a pastry chef. Fritz seemed to have fun with the whole thing. We got to see him demoing his technique on the molded chocolates, which was the neatest part for me.

    Batali vs. Laiskonis was on right before.

  14. A vote for molded here.

    Tastewise, I prefer a creamier ganache over a dense ganache.

    Aesthetically, I prefer the shine and color possibilities of molded. Also, as an (amateur) chocolatier, I can appreciate the "difficulty rating" of molded vs. enrobing.

  15. I have the book too (first review on Amazon). My only complaint is the book says it g pectin is a pectin "that I developed", but it that isn't sold at garrison confections website. So there is no real way to know how to use it or substitute for the lay person who doesn't come on this site. I appreciate that Andrew has let us know how to order it.

    I haven't tried the recipes, but the ideas have a nice range of classic to more modern flavors. There are some nice ideas and a nice table of appropriate spice/chocolate/flavor pairings.

    I like the techniques sections the best. For $25 (list) you can learn all the techniques you need to be a chocolatier. In that way, I think it's a revolutionary book in the field.

  16. Thanks you.  I had to register just to say that this is the greatest post of all time.

    Welcome ej, great place for a first post. Are you into chocolate in a big way?

    HI Kerry

    It is a hobby for me. Enough to where I got one of those table-top tempers and an airbrush to recreate what I saw in a Norman Love demo in an old Pastry Arts and Design article. Not enough to sell them or anything. David's report really does reinforce all the lessons JPW tries to teach in his book.

    This is a great forum. Thanks to everybody who has posted. You've all helped me a lot already. All of the problems I've had - difficulty in sealing molds, differences in chocolate viscosity (which David answered, I had no idea about the different Callebauts) - I"ve seen discussed on this forum already.

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