Jump to content

paul o' vendange

participating member
  • Posts

    856
  • Joined

  • Last visited

1 Follower

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://

Recent Profile Visitors

6,154 profile views
  1. Just a couple of late. A pretty typical German bauernbrot, and a French Levain (an everyday one for us, recipe and process, the late French master baker, Gerard Rubaud). The Bauernbrot is high in whole meal rye, but it is soft, moist ("saftig"), very aromatic due to the use of altbrot, just flour made from my leftover and dried dark rye breads. Really helps the dough take in more hydration without becoming too slack.
  2. Man that is insanely gorgeous. Thank you again.
  3. I just looked him up - glad to say he's still with us. 90!
  4. Thanks! My mom bought the book for me as I'd grown up in love with everything French from very early (like, 5 or 6, began learning the language), and was driven to cooking from, among other things, Galloping Gourmet which I raced to always watch. I was 13 or 14 when I cooked Christmas for our extended family, all from La Technique. My brother sent me some photos....feel really lucky.
  5. Looks really beautiful. I grew up 50 years ago on La Technique so not a lot to contribute here. Which Pierre Hermé book(s) do you draw from, if you don't mind me asking?
  6. We were re-watching Top Chef Season 15, episode 5 ("This is not Glamping") just two nights ago, the very night I found out. I was very saddened to come to know of it. Not too many days prior, I had read the article covering Kwame Onwuachi in the current F & W, and noted the sidebar at the end mentioning Naomi's Cornet Custard Shop. She died after the issue had already gone to press. Peace to her memory and healing to her husband, staff, friends and family.
  7. For what it's worth, a good amount of discussion here and here on "fleur de levain," though it's in German (I'm part of a German baking community on FB). Though these aren't used as leavening, rather just a flavoring component using up excess sourdough or "Anstellgut."
  8. If you'll send it to me, I'll wash it for you.
  9. Yes. There's a part of me that wars with a part of me that misses the classical coulis that is disgusted by most elements of haute cuisine. It's one reason I got out. There.
  10. This is a "gateau orange caramel," which I got from Cuisine et Vins de France. The recipe calls for Grand Marnier in the batter. My wife, whom I lovingly refer to as "kitchen witch" as she loves to make all kinds of liqueurs and extraordinary bitters, provided her "Cointreau." One of these days we will have to source Seville Oranges. The recipe also calls for faisselle égoutté. Easy to make (the soft, drained cheese), I've made it many times but I haven't made any cheese in a log time and have no cultures so I substituted the faisselle égoutté with Chobani yogurt - I made a "sack" with double layers of tight-weave cheesecloth and drained it overnight over a bowl in the frigo. Texture came out beautifully.
  11. @paulraphael: " It's so easy that I don't do anything generic like veal or a white chicken glace. I use a dish-appropriate meat for whatever meals I'm planning. The degree to which this is better than an Escoffier demi-glace has to be tasted to be appreciated. And you don't give up a whole weekend for it." I always believe in using the "thing itself" as much as possible, which is why I was always such a fan of Keller's "quick sauces" approach. That said, because he uses his (extremely light, 40-minute simmer) chicken stock and demi-glace, along with water, for his multiple glazings, I think there can be a tendency for a generic "roast meaty" taste between his duck, squab, lamb, etc. quick sauces, despite the uses of "squab spice" and so forth. Interested in the coulis approach, with meat. Anyway, more of the PC process generally somewhere?
  12. Paul, a sort of master process, let's say. Do you have a "standard" light chicken stock recipe? And what size (make, while we're there) PC do you use? And you're earlier description of a sort of hybrid-coulis process sounds like something I seem to recall Peterson describes, in terms of trying to parse out aromatics given multiple wettings. Is this where you got it?
  13. Thanks. Looking for Puebla y su Cocina, no luck so far but I love these kinds of books.
  14. Loved his autobiography. Ooooooooo, juice! Also loved Tony Bourdain's documentary on him, The Last Magnificent. Saddens me he seems to be a recluse now in Mexico. Wonderful place to be, but I can't help think he was wounded from very early on and left a lot of life behind.
×
×
  • Create New...