Jump to content

teonzo

participating member
  • Posts

    1,290
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by teonzo

  1. Some questions. Why do you need to fill it completely with chocolate? If you need a hollow piece, then there is no need to fill a big mold completely with chocolate. If you need a full solid chocolate figure that big (4 liters) then you'll face hell with latent heat of crystallization. Why do you need to know the exact chocolate weight you need to fill the mold? It's always better to melt more chocolate and being sure (some chocolate always goes wasted during any passage), the exceeding chocolate will be re-used in another way. Unless you are planning to make some expensive one-of-a-kind chocolate with the melangeur. If you are planning in making blueberry chocolate or similars then it's totally understandable you don't want to make more considering the costs, but in this case knowing the density of melted tempered chocolate would not help you, since the density would be different and depend on what ingredients you use. It's easier to help you if you explain your project. Unless it's a secret and you risk to find a Sith Lord at your door, of course. Teo
  2. A cheap and quick source for soy lecithin is soy milk. I don't know what recipe you are using, but I suppose you could substitute few grams of cream / fruit puree with soy milk. I'd try substituting 2% (substitute 100 g of cream with 98 g of cream and 2 g of soy milk), there should be enough lecithin to do its job. Teo
  3. I'm pretty sure Amazon will make much more profits from related implications than from the direct food sales. Food is the only thing that a person needs to survive. Food habits can say a lot of things about a person's preferences. Amazon bases a lot of their sales on targeted marketing, suggesting people what to buy after analyzing their previous orders and searches. Their current database is worth billions only for this. If they add food choices to their database, then they can exploit latent needs much more efficiently. I'd dare to say that their database value would more than double after adding data on fresh food habits. If they break even considering only the food profit sales, then it would not be a problem, absolutely, they would hugely increase their profits on the other sectors. There are other profit sources too. Suppose you own an insurance company and are evaluating the health insurance costs for a 30 year old person. Having access to his/her medical history gives some infos but not everything. Having access to his/her eating habits would give you a much more detailed perspective on his/her probabilities of having health troubles in the following years. Teo
  4. Always wear a surgical mask and glasses when spraying. Teo
  5. <broomstick_up_there geek mode on> If we want to be precise then we should specify everything! Even altitude and atmospheric pressure! I just looked in my Minifie book, no data on chocolate density whatsoever. I gave a look at Wolfram Alpha too, expecting to find a detailed multidimensional graph that would give the answer for all possible combinations. Nothing! I'm supremely disappointed! <broomstick_up_there geek mode off> This is really funny, since the only chocolate I have at home is a 72% dark, today I baked some meringues which I was planning to dip in chocolate in the next days. So I am in the position to answer to this question without much hassle when I'll finish those meringues. But before I need to bake other batches (I can't stop eating chocolate dipped meringues), one of them will be an experimental dried porcini meringue (I'm serious about this). Teo
  6. You did not specify which kind of chocolate and at what temperature. Teo
  7. Doesn't seem odd to me. Whole Foods stores have a distinct image about their products, if they add stuff that's out of that image then the whole brand looses a lot of the value it built up until now. There's a big potential market for food stuff that's not top price like Whole Foods: people with standard jobs whose paycheck does not allow for top class food and who have troubles finding time to go to a grocery store during the day. If you work as a nurse, a clerk or whatever and have children, then you don't have the financial resources to afford for prime ribs or wild blueberries, plus you would be more than happy to save time going shopping (this would mean more time for children). A lot of these people would be more than happy to buy food on Amazon for cheap price and getting it delivered conveniently (on their job place, at home or else). They would save time and money, and they are not the demographic for buying Whole Foods' stuff. To me it seems like the Whole Foods acquisition was the first step for fresh food distribution: Amazon was testing how to manage it and what are the best methods to organize such a business, since it's totally different logistic wise. Being fresh stuff you need localized storage places (stores) with a highly efficient organization (minimizing wastes is the biggest problem). Now they have enough data to know how to maximize their revenues, so they are making the first moves to get ahold of this huge potential market. Teo
  8. This is strange, since the sugar is part of the inclusion. This means that if you work correctly then the sugar is surrounded by butter and dough, it does not come in contact with air. Being included there should be no way for syrup to escape out of the dough. I can only suppose you are making some tears / holes in the dough, which is a pretty common error when starting making laminated doughs. I don't know what your sources say (probably they mention it), but remember that traditional kouign amann is made using salted butter. A lot of people makes the mistake of using unsalted butter. The peculiarity of this viennoiserie is that it tastes of salted caramel. Teo
  9. They were all personal friends, so I knew there were no risks. Teo
  10. It's just the look... never liked scales, I really hate snakes. Years ago I made a dual layer bonbon that had a prawn bisque ganache (dark chocolate) and a hibiscus flower ganache (white chocolate), here is the page I made when I had a blog (it's in Italian). Taste was very different than what I expected: the toasted notes of the bisque overlapped with the toasted notes of the dark chocolate, while the "fruity" notes of the prawn overlapped with the hibiscus ones. So it tasted like a weird hibiscus praline and not a fishy praline. You could tell there were prawns, but it was not frontal. After making them I gave one to various people (separately), without saying what it was, this way: me "hey, please try this new praline I made and tell me what you think" people "ok... uhm, it's weird but it tastes fine" me "so do you like it?" people "yes, it's good" me "would you buy it?" people "yes, I think so" me "what do you think the flavors are?" people "I can't say... tell me" me "it's prawn and hibiscus" people "...PRAWN???" me "yes, prawn, the crustacean" I'm an idiot and didn't carry a camera to record their faces. Teo
  11. The usual suspects: Wybauw Jean-Pierre - "The Fine Chocolates: Gold" It's a collection of the 4 Fine Chocolates books, so you get the same content for a fraction of the price. I would suggest you to go with this one as the next purchase. Notter Ewald - "The Art of the Chocolatier: From Classic Confections to Sensational Showpieces" Good explanations and very good recipes. Personally I prefer the books by Greweling and Wybauw. About half of this book is dedicated to chocolate sculptures. Curley William - "Couture Chocolate: A Masterclass in Chocolate" This has some really good ideas for flavours. Ganache recipes are on the "difficult" side (high quantity of cream/liquids). Chocolate bonbons are only a part of the books, there are lots of other recipes with chocolate (cookies, cakes and so on). Morató Ramon - "Chocolate" This is on the artistic side and really expensive. It has some great explanations for balancing ganache recipes (plus others, the explanation for balancing chocolate mousses is even better). Bonbons are a fraction of the book, you find all kind of sweets you can make with chocolate, from spreads to plated desserts. All recipes are "artistic", meaning difficult and weird, so it's not as useful as the Greweling book for everyday production. Each of these books has its own style. This means a book will say "the best way is A", while another book will say "the best way is B", A and B being totally different. Different styles, different results. Teo
  12. What filling did you use? If you made a turtle soup ganache then you'll be my hero! Teo
  13. That's the reason why I don't find them appealing to eat... Teo
  14. That effect is based on the non-miscibility of water and fat. If you add water to fat (just adding, without emulsifying) then they will remain separated. Mirror glazes are fat based (dairy fats in milk and cream, cocoa butter...) while neutral glaze is water based. You use the neutral glaze at a higher temperature just to retard the gelification (of the gelatin proteins) and crystallization (of the cocoa butter) in the mirror glaze. If you try pouring a mirror glaze over another mirror glaze (different colors) then you'll just get a shaded effect, not a spider web effect. Here is an old thread about this: If you add the word "Sattler" to your google searches then you'll get plenty of results (both pages explaining how it works and videos). Gérard Sattler is the French pastry chef who invented this technique. Teo
  15. My apologies, I understood that you just made the jump from home baking to professional baking. My book suggestions remain valid, you find all the answers you need in those 3 books. Teo
  16. Replacing them would change taste, texture and shelf life. Taste will change depending on what you use as substitute, this is totally obvious. Texture will change depending on what you choose to do (just omitting it or substituting it with something else). Liqueurs contribute to the liquid phase of the ganache, if you lower the water content then you risk to unbalance the fat/water ratio, risking to get a grainy ganache. So better substituting the liqueur with another liquid (better milk than cream, due to the fat content of the cream). Alcohol contribute to get a smooth texture, so you are going to loose a bit on this side (texture wise). Shelf life will be shortened due to the missing alcohol, it can be a problem if you need the longer shelf life possible. Teo
  17. When done well (the bottom 2) this decoration is simply AWESOME. When done with mistakes it's definetely not appealing (I would not be tempted to eat the first and third from the top left), this seems to be a technique that does not forgive any small errors. Since we can see the results when it's not done well, we can try to get some ideas about how it's done. I'll try to give some guesses. The one on top left seems to be brushed abruptively. So I would assume this effect is made using some kind of bristle brush: spraying the grey cocoa butter, then pressing a bristle brush on the cavities (only vertical pressure, without moving the bristle laterally). You should need a brush with large bristles that can absorb the cocoa butter, where to find it I have no idea. The other "errors" look consistent with this idea: if you look at the 4th and 5th (counting from the top left) the parts that remained grey still have a red perimeter, this looks like that a single bristle went in contact with the mold but with not as much pressure as to touch it completely (just the perimeter and not the full tip surface of the brittle). If my supposition is right, then I would say it's almost impossible to get a perfect result for all the cavities of a mold. Teo
  18. If you are asking just for personal knowledge, then the best thing to do is buying these books: Gisslen Wayne - "Professional Baking" Suas Michel - "Advanced Bread and Pastry" Figoni Paula - "How Baking Works" and studying them extensively. If you just moved from home baking to professional baking, then ask to your chef / supervisor to give you the due teachings / explanations. If you just moved from home baking to professional baking AND are the one responsible for producing a dessert buffet for 500 people, then it's impossible to help you from here. It's not polite to say this, but if this is the case then you are doomed. Better going to your employer and admit you are not qualified for the job, before experiencing some total failures. Teo
  19. Other stuff (this 2019 seems slower than the previous years): Humm + Guidara - "Eleven Madison Park: The Next Chapter, Revised and Unlimited Edition" This is the revised edition of the second EMP cookbook. It's not clear if there is missing content, if there is added content or whatever if compared with the limited edition. I hope they take the Blumenthal road (same content, more basic package), but judging from the number of pages this does not seem the case. Michot Alexandra - "L' Esprit Chapel" A book about Alain Chapel and his restaurant, with recipes and stories by customers, people from his staff and so on. Bruneau + Chatal + Python - "La coupe du monde de la pâtisserie" A comic book / manga that tells the story of a (fictional?) team competing for the Coupe du monde de la pâtisserie in Lyon. Röllich + Carreño - "Bar Chef: Handcrafted Cocktails" Creative cocktails by a Los Angeles bartender. Bombana Umberto - "8 1/2 An Italian Chef in Asia" The only Italian chef with 3 michelin stars outside of Italy. His style is pretty classic, lots of truffles everywhere. Robicelli Allison - "WWE: The Official Cookbook" After this we just miss a Woody Woodpecker cookbook. I couldn't come with a WWE joke for Woody Woodpecker E__________, sorry. Glacier Stéphane - "Tartes et Gâteaux de voyage, pâtisserie boulangère" New book by this MOF, to be honest I'm not that excited, it does not seem to be on par with his best books. Price is way too high for the number of pages. Guichon Amaury -"The art of flavor" First book by this young pastry chef, king of social media like Grolet. I'm becoming a bit bored by this kind of books. Lot of aesthetic research, tons of silicone molds, after that nothing new. Teo
  20. If you want to cream butter (adding air) with only honey (no sucrose) then it's a bit difficult, honey tends to prevent the increase of volume. For laminated doughs you just need to mix butter and honey until homogeneous, you want to avoid adding air, no need to cream the butter. The mixture will become softer and softer the more honey you add, unless you want to get something uber sweet then the mixture should hold it's shape and be pliable at refrigerator temperatures. If your dough starts weeping syrup quickly then you are doing something wrong, or you are working in an enviroment with too high umidity. Teo
  21. What are you planning for the wedding cake? Teo
  22. That's the kind of customer it's better to loose. Only troubles after that. Teo
  23. @Alleguede, so you prefer spending time with your new love instead of documenting your trip here on eGullet? When you come back the Doc should prescribe you some suppositories! Teo
  24. You are asking for something that people do for a living. Chocolatiers who explain these details do so in classes or consulting jobs that cost thousands of dollars. Unfortunately we do not live in a fairytale, people who gain knowledge after years of hard work are not supposed to give it away for free to anyone. Best thing you can do is buying "Fine Chocolates: Gold" by Wybauw and study it from cover to cover, then decide if it's the case to invest money in a class with Melissa Coppel or other professionals that have that kind of knowledge. Teo
  25. It would be easier to help you if you wrote the recipe you are using... Teo
×
×
  • Create New...