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helios3

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Everything posted by helios3

  1. My Votes ----------- West Island: Sgt. Pepperonni. Flavourful, not harsh, not much salt used. The tomato sauce is what makes it great. Prices are on the low end. McGill Ghetto: Amelio's. The five cheese pizza is considered their classic, although their cheese and pepperoni is just fine by me. Cheese is extra oily, the crust is tangy. Their sauce is impressive, and I'm pretty sure they use pastene. But there's something else special in there . . .not sure what. Best Pizza ever: Pepe's in New Haven. A reason to go to Yale all by itself. Crust has a perfect wood-burning over flavour. They are best known from their white clam (and pecorino romano cheese - no tomato sauce) pizza . . .but again, I liked the pepperoni. To answer a question above, yes go with the highest MF you can find for the cheese. 25% is widely available, in a large 340g ball under the brand "National". It's a blue-clear package. If you can stand more pungent cheeses, a book my Joie Warner suggests to try mozz with provolone (for its melting qualities). I have never quite found a good, non pungent provolone. As someone on Egullent mentioned a while ago, generic 'pizza cheese' is specially designed and comes from Wisconson in many cases. Helios P.S. In NYC? Try Famiglia's. Good all-around.
  2. Hi, Generally speaking, all the best pizza places where I live (Montreal) have cheese on their pizza that tastes considerably different that anything I can whip up at home. I have tried High MF mozzerella (25%), part skim mozz, even di buffula (expensive!). It all tastes very yummy, but I'm pretty sure that the pizza places I like (e.g. Amelio's near McGill U or Sgt. Pepperoni on the West Island) are using something quite different. It's probbaly cheaper, I'm guessing. Anyone know the secret? Good pizza I had in the US was Familgia in NYC (Wisconson dairy cheese was it?) and Pepe's near Yale. Pepe's was probably the best pizza I ever had, and I am not quite sure what cheese they use (on standard pizzas). Their famous white clam pizza has just a sprinking of pecorino romano cheese from what the waiter told me. Pizza experts please reply! Thanks, Helios
  3. Hi everyone, I'm surprised this topic hasn't come up more on the site (I did a search). Does anyone has experience with using silpat for cookies? I'm thinking of buying either that or an airbake, since right now all my cookies are burnt on the bottom. The airbake sounds like a good idea, but I do wonder if it works or not. Also, do you use silpats for other things? Should I line the bottom of my cake pan with a silpat so it slips out really nicely? Or is that just ridiculous? Thanks, Helios
  4. Once you start baking, the subtle characteristics of a chocolate are lost because it becomes diluted in the ganache and cake. Therefore, I recommend getting the least expensive of 1. Callebaut (appeals to the widest range of people) 2. Valrhona (very high quality in every product they sell, and while I love Callebaut the most I haven't tried all of their 180+ different types of chocolate so I can't be as confident in a recommendation). 3. El rez (another crowd pleaser, unlikely to be the cheapest) BTW: I'm not so pleased with the Cacao Barry line, which is often sold at roughly the same price as Callebaut. Some of those flavours (e.g Tanzanie Origine Rare) is too exotic and overpowering. If you are making bonbons or even just tasting chocolate directly (perhaps after molding into shapes), I recommend 1. Callebaut. Silky smooth, pure chocolate flavours. Don't go crazy and start making things out of the 72% and assume everyone will like it. 56% isn't too bitter for even inexperienced palates. 2. Valrhona. Again, beware extremely strong tastes. If you pour super-strong chocolate sauce on delecate vanilla ice cream, you'll ruin it. The cariaibe 66% is nice a starting point. I agree with a previous message posted that said the Valrhona baking bar is probably a bit flat for the Valrhona name & price. That's it. I think that you can basically divide chocolate lovers in these two categories. People who prefer Callebaut will likely also like the taste of El rez, but the latter isn't quite as divine in texture and costs more. People who prefer Valrhona will also like Michel Cluzel, but once again it costs more. I think Callebaut and Valrhona are the two gold standards, each representing two ways of making chocolate. Try each and see which you like better. Robert Linxe of Maison du Chocolat in Paris, reputedly one of the finest chocolatier's, is quoted in Patrica Well's Paris Cookbook as stating that the best chocolate in the world is "van couva [sic] from Trinidad". As far as I know that doesn't exist (zero hits on Google) and I'm pretty sure it was meant to be Gran Couva from Trinidad which is a limited production Valrhona. Get it while you can! Helios P.S. If you can get it, there are some really interesting products in the Callebaut line. Like their milk chocolate with hazelnuts (ultrafine, you can taste them but barely feel them in the texture). You can use to make flash desserts that are impressive. E.g. Take heavy cream, whip it (use a blender if that's all you have) to soft peaks and then fold in this melted chocolate. If you start with very cold cream, then you don't need to refridgerate and you can have happy guests in no time. P.P.S. Again, Linxe quoted in that book doesn't refridgerate his mousse (made traditionally with raw eggs) because he feels it blocks the chocolate flavour and so he rather lets it sit in a "cold spot" whatever that means. He is certainly right that you don't want to splurge on really expensive chocolate only to waste it in some frozen cold desserts. Serving temperature is essential!
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