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Confections! What did we make? (2017 – )


kriz6912

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6 hours ago, Rajala said:

Strawberries and matcha. Accidentally made the world's thinnest bottom on the one pictured. :D

 

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Thank you for sharing your recipes and methods on Instagram! So, how did you like the flavor combination of strawberries and matcha? I’m not a fan of every matcha dessert but I do enjoy some of them.

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  • 3 months later...
On 6/11/2024 at 4:18 PM, curls said:

Thank you for sharing your recipes and methods on Instagram! So, how did you like the flavor combination of strawberries and matcha? I’m not a fan of every matcha dessert but I do enjoy some of them.

 

Sorry, missed your question. I really did like it. I didn't go crazy on the matcha though.

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On 12/17/2023 at 5:31 PM, Kerry Beal said:

I put together a recipe for Rodney for a competition a couple of years ago sponsored by Amarula - it wasn't for a chocolate filling - it was a tart riffing off Cape Breton 'Pork Pies'.  What I learned from that - dates and amarula go well together.  

 

I came across this post and realized that I had not updated the idea from @Kerry Beal of pairing Amarula cream liqueur with dates.  It has become a hit with customers (not to mention with the chocolatier).  I use lemon to counteract some of the dates' sweetness and also add some nutmeg, which seems to have an affinity for Amarula.  Amarula has an almost magical relation with Aw--I can add what seem huge quantities of the liqueur, and the water activity reading is 0.72.   I had to test it several times before I believed the reading.

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1 hour ago, Rajala said:

Apple Pie Bonbon. Apple caramel. Vanilla ganache. Crumb layer (mixed the crumbs a bit too much 😅, but you get the taste)

 

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Another interesting and delicious-sounding combination.  For my "apple crisp," I use a layer of apple pâte de fruit with the usual apple pie spices, then a layer of vanilla buttercream, ending with a crispy layer made from Speculoos cookies.

 

What do you mean by "mixed the crumbs a bit too much"?  They lost their crunch?  Recently I made a bonbon that called for a cookie layer on top (actually it was your carrot cake bonbon!), but I had filled the cavity too much, so I used my heavy Robot Coupe immersion blender to pulverize the cookie layer more than usual so that it would flatten once piped.  This worked, and I didn't detect too much loss of crunch.  I think cookie layers in general are tricky to get right--sometimes mine don't firm up enough even though I have done exactly the same thing as I always do.  Including clarified butter is an issue:  Kalle Jungstedt includes it, but the reality that butter doesn't firm up as much as cocoa butter does means that a layer with butter will always be a little soft--or at least that's my guess.

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10 hours ago, Jim D. said:

What do you mean by "mixed the crumbs a bit too much"? 

 

I made what we in Sweden call "smuldeg" (crumb dough). It's essentially just some flour, butter and some sugar (quite low amount of sugar actually). You use that to make a pie very quick. Called "smuldegspaj" or "crumble dough pie". I did just that, but for me I blended the baked dough too much, as the pieces kind of turned into something resembling caster sugar crystals in size. I would've liked to have it a bit bigger. :)

My first idea was to use some kind of apple PDF as well. But then I thought: well, when you make an apple pie you do get some
caramelization and such - so I ended up with the apple caramel instead. I think it worked out pretty well. But in hindsight, I probably would've baked the apples before using them in the caramel to get out even more flavor.

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15 minutes ago, Rajala said:

I call it the Matsafello.

Those are so beautiful! 
 

What’s inside and how did you get the coconut to stick so evenly on the outside? 

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31 minutes ago, GRiker said:

Those are so beautiful! 
 

What’s inside and how did you get the coconut to stick so evenly on the outside? 

 

It's a pretty simple filling in the end, but it involves a melanger where I run desiccated coconut, whole milk powder, sugar, vanilla, cocoa butter, and coconut oil for a very long time. I mix that mass with some salt, crushed flaked almonds, and some pailleté feuilletine.

 

I dip the chocolate in some tempered chocolate and put it in some coconut and let it crystallize.

Edited by Rajala (log)
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