Saturday, February 23, 2013

Baking and Pastry - Nuts and Nuts products Paper


Nuts and Nuts Products
Free write
I always liked any kind of nuts, now that I have learned about I like even more, a handful of nuts everyday is really good for our healthy some are better than others but they all help lower the cholesterol because of the good fat, and because of this fat, and because of this fat nuts get rancid easily. Unfortunately many people are allergic to three nuts and are not able to taste these delicious earth flavor of nature, most individuals who are diagnosed with an allergy to tree nuts tend to have a lifelong allergy. Tree nuts include, but are not limited to, walnut, almond, hazelnut, cashew, pistachio, and Brazil nuts. These are not to be confused or grouped together with peanut, which is a legume, or seeds, such as sunflower or sesame.
There are many different kinds of nuts but three of them are the most important at bakeshop, almond, hazelnut and walnut. I thought that peanuts and pistachio would be in this category but they don't I guess it is because of their characteristics and strong flavor. It was very interesting to see some of their shells for the first time.
Nuts are versatile can be used in a large variety of  for savory and sweet dishes and baking, found in paste, ground, raw, toasted, whole, chopped some in puree and glace in syrup.  Nuts flour the most used in fine pastry. Nuts taste best when toasted because it ensue the flavor and give a crunchy texture. place nuts in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to six months or in the freezer for up to a year. To freshen any type of nuts before you eat or cook with them, toast on a baking sheet in a 350 F oven for 10 minutes.
Notes
Almonds - One of the most important, versatile and popular from the tree nuts. Available natural (skin on) blanched (skin off), whole, split, slivered, chopped and ground (almond flour). Can be found as almond butter and almond milk too.
Almonds are grown on a beautiful, medium sized tree of the rose family, and are closely related to peaches, plums and apricots. The fruit consists of two parts: the interior edible seed and the surrounding hard outer shell, also called the hull. When almonds reach maturity, the hull splits open. If dried, the nut can be easily separated from the shell,  the almond pit is eaten while the thin fibrous external flesh is discarded. Today, ninety-nine percent of the almonds grown in the United States come from California The main reason that almonds grow so well in the north central California climate is because almonds prosper in hot, dry climates. After the nuts are harvested, they are dried to reduce moisture content to less than eight percent.
Almonds have symbolized everything from good luck to haste throughout history and the favored method of consumption ranges from culture to culture. During the Biblical times, the Hebrews viewed almonds as a symbol of haste because almond trees quickly blossomed when placed in water in a warm place. Then, during the 1200s and 1300s in Europe, almonds were extremely popular and inexpensive, which was good for the people because they were believed to bring good luck, long life, and happiness. In Spain, the glistening ceremonial Jordan Almonds are tremendously popular. Today, Jordan almonds are available in every shade imaginable and are commonly used in wedding ceremonies around the world.
Brazil Nuts- Naturally healthy nut. Brazil Nuts are high in protein, calcium, iron, zinc, and are one of the best natural dietary sources of selenium.
Brazil nuts have about 2,500 times as much selenium as any other nut. Selenium is a powerful antioxidant which has been proven to protect against heart disease and cancers like prostate cancer  also discourages the ageing process and stimulates the immune system. Like all nuts, brazil nuts are an excellent source of protein and fiber.  Brazil nuts are high in minerals including zinc and magnesium, and contain useful amounts of phosphorous, copper and iron.
Cashews- Cashews are an excellent source of fiber, protein and low in carbohydrates. Cashew nuts are also a good source of potassium, B vitamins and folate. They contain useful amounts of magnesium, phosphorous, selenium and copper. They are rich in healthful mono-unsaturated fats that might be conducive to heart protection. Raw cashews are used for baking, cooking or snacking.
Chestnuts - Must be cooked, used as puree and glace (in syrup), found in flour (gluten free) and dried. To cook chestnuts, you can boil them or roast them. When roasting, cut a small slit in the chestnut to prevent them from exploding during the roasting process. Bake in the oven at 425 for 10-15 minutes or until the outer skin begins to peel back. You can also cook on the stove top or over an open flame.
Chestnuts have a very high moisture content, and are extremely perishable. They must be stored under refrigeration in as close to freezing temperatures as possible.
Coconut - Sweetened most used for cake decoration, Unsweetened used in wide variety of goods, cookies, macaroom, cakes, fillings and so on. Available in grains, flakes, shreds, chips also flour ( gluten free) and  oil (cold pressed, Cholesterol- and trans-fat-free; non-hydrogenated; about 50% lauric acid for healthy metabolism). Used as cooking oil, butter substitute, shortening substitute in baking, and massage/body oil.
Hazelnuts- Best if toasted before use, hazelnuts are the most important nuts with almond and walnut. Available natural, blanched, toasted , as flour or meal. Natural hazelnuts (filberts, is a alternate name for hazelnut ) are high in protein and low in fat.
 Hazelnuts contain nearly 91 percent monounsaturated fat and less than 4 percent saturated fat. Over 30 tree nut studies indicate this high level of monounsaturated fat is likely responsible for a reduction in both total blood and LDL cholesterol levels when hazelnuts are consumed as part of a low saturated fat diet. It also contributes significant amounts of protein, fiber, iron, phosphorus, vitamins B1, B2, C, and E, folate and many other essential nutrients. Replacing a less nutrient dense snack with heart healthy and flavorful hazelnuts has many health benefits.
Macadamia nuts - Macadamia nuts have an extremely hard shell that is very difficult to open, regular nut crackers will not open macadamia nuts in the shell, and may even break. You must use a nut cracker specifically designed for macadamia nuts.
Macadamia nuts are high in monounsaturated fatty acid ("good" fat), which can help reduce overall cholesterol levels. Macadamias contain flavenoids (a phytochemical) and tocopherols (vitamin E), which are potent antioxidants and can help protect against cancer and heart disease. Also contain vitamin A, thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, and iron. The macadamia nut is one of the few foods that contain palmitoleic acid, a monounsaturated fatty acid.
Eighty percent of fat in macadamia oil is monounsaturated - six percentage points higher than olive oil, which checks in at 74 percent. Macadamia nut oil contains Omega 3, known to reduce the risk of heart disease and high blood pressure.
Unsalted macadamia nuts contain no cholesterol and are low in sodium and saturated fats.
Pecans- more expensive than walnuts. Pecans not only taste good, but they are good for you, especially when it comes to lowering cholesterol levels. handful portion of pecans daily can significantly lower LDL cholesterol levels in the blood, helping to clear the arteries. The nutrients in pecans isn't so bad for you either, zinc helps guard against infections, vitamin E protects against cancer, and vitamin A helps keep your complexion clear.
Shell Pecans are a much smaller and narrower sweet pecan compared to the hard shell.
Peanuts - The peanut is not a nut, but a legume related to beans and lentils. A diet containing peanuts and peanut butter is a good source of protein and helps to include more of the "good fat" (unsaturated fat) and both naturally have zero cholesterol. Many people still love to boil them. They just need be soaked overnight for at least 24 hours.
Pine Nuts or pignoli- The pine family is one of the most familiar groups of evergreen trees in North America since it furnishes most of our traditional Christmas trees. Usually toasted to enhance the flavor, specially important in Italian pastries. Pignolia nuts may be eaten out of hand, raw or roasted, they have the distinction of being the only nuts used predominantly as ingredients for cooking. For many centuries in European cookery, they have been blended with meats, fish and poultry, and have been used in many different sauces.
Today the Chinese pine nut is often found in the United States because of its availability and price. The Chinese and Italian pine nuts are already taken out of the shell and can be eaten raw as bought, roasted, or used in cooking. The pinon nut grown primarily on Indian reservations in the Southwest United States is normally roasted in the shell. Their availability is rather scarce, and the pinon nut must first be removed from the shell prior to consumption
The best thing about pine nuts is their high concentration of monounsaturated fat, which paves the way for a healthier cardiovascular system. The vitamin D in pine nuts leads to stronger bones and teeth, by improving the body's ability to absorb calcium, and vitamins A and C may sharpen vision and boost the immune system.
Pistachios - Often used in decoration because of its green color.  A one-ounce serving of pistachios equals 49 nuts -- more nuts per serving than any other nut and contains more than 10% of the Daily Value for dietary fiber, vitamin B-6, thiamin, phosphorus and copper.  You can get more dietary fiber from a serving of pistachios than a 1/2 cup of broccoli or spinach.
Pistachios are especially rich in phytosterols, which are directly associated with lowering cholesterol levels, and may offer protection from certain types of cancer. One serving of pistachios has as much potassium as half a large banana. While pistachios contain fat, the fat is predominantly monounsaturated, similar to that found in olive oil.
Walnut - Walnuts are low in saturated fat and high in both polyunsaturated and mono-unsaturated fat. Eating walnuts is one of the easiest things a person can do to improve their health. Best of all, they taste great and are ideally suited for inclusion in any diet, as part of meals or snacks. walnuts are heart- healthy. It is one of the three most used nut in a bakeshop.
 Walnuts are an excellent source of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, particularly when bought in their shells and eaten while fresh. Walnuts contain no cholesterol and are an important source of dietary fiber and protein. They are also a good source of many vitamins and minerals including potassium, magnesium, phosphorus, copper, zinc, vitamin B1, B6, folate, and vitamin E. Also are low in saturated fat and high in both polyunsaturated and mono-unsaturated fat. Walnuts are a natural source of phytochemicals and antioxidants which protect cells from free radical damage that could result in cancers or heart disease. Eating a handful of walnuts a day can lower blood cholesterol.

Nut Products (standard ingredients at bakeshop)
Almond Paste - Expensive but highly versatile nut paste made from 2 parts finely ground amonds,1 part of sugar and enough moisture to combine in a proper consistency. Can be frozen so it can last for up to a year.
Almond paste adds a delicate depth to any dessert, almond cookies and fruit tarts to delectable almond croissants and wedding cakes, and so on.
Marzipan - Sweetened almond paste, used in decorative and confectioning work, can be purchased or made in the bakeshop from almond paste. Used in cakes or to make small marzipan imitations of fruits and vegetables.
Pistachio Paste - Pistachio Nut paste is an all natural sweetened nut paste ideal for fancy and elegant pastries. Pistachio Paste is ideal in cookies, cakes, candies, and breads.
Praline Paste - Made from almonds and /or hazelnuts and caramelizes sugar all ground to paste, used as flavoring for icing, fillings, pastries, creams, and so on.. 
Hazelnut Praline paste is an all natural sweetened nut paste ideal for fancy and elegant pastries. Ideal in cookies, cakes, candies, and breads.
Nut Flours- Nuts grounded to a powder, not so fine as to turn to a paste. Almond is the most widely used (gluten free). Compared to other flours, almond flour is especially flavorful, with a nutty taste that works well with many other foods. It produces baked goods that are especially light and moist. Almond flour is very easy to use, and doesn't require any sifting or kneading.





Week 11 - Baking and Pastry Class


Practical test was great. I went to class as soon as I finished my art final. I wasn't sure if I should go to class before the time but I am glad I did, this way I could help starting cutting the ingredients for our pizza for lunch, despite the dough that was to stick to open it was really good.
I was very confident with what I have to do with my recipe, I did three different flavors at home not only to practice but to make sure which would be the best flavor to present to Chef; I didn't want any conventional flavor I was looking for something different. I tried Matcha green tea, Chai tea and Cardamom with saffron ( this idea came while I was talking to one of my clients from India, I love India food and spices very much so I decided to give a try and turned out being the winner).
The test started and we had 2 hours to plate 4 identical puffs for Chef to taste and grade. While working on our recipes we were allowed to talk and ask questions to our classmates so I did help as much as I could answer questions about the recipe execution. Even being my first time in a practical exam I was calm and ready, I know what I had to do.
My choux paste looked much better in class than the one I made at home, it did hold the shape better when I piped it was so beautiful, but I guess that the way I piped, made the éclair come up from the oven in a funky shape I am glad I made 4 round one that came up better and these where the ones I showed to Chef.
I started with the mise in place of both recipes, making sure I didn't get confused with any measurement. First I made the pastry cream, first I infused my spices in the milk this time I used more cardamom then I did at home because I thought the one I made at home wasn't taste enough. Once this was done I strained it to remove the spices from the milk then I added ½ of the sugar and back to the heat, wait until starts steam coming up, in another bowl whisk together egg, egg yolk , other ½ of the sugar and sifted corn starch, start the tempering adding the milk into the egg mixture slowly and whisking at the same time, once mixed bring back to the heat and keep whisking until thick when starts bubbling cook for an extra minute to remove the corn starch flavor when done remove from heat and add the butter whisk until completely melted, strain the cream in a plastic wrap covered sheet pan then, close with plastic wrap touching the cream to avoid making a crust and bring to refrigerator.
I did my dishes in between recipes; this was good to avoid a big mess in the kitchen. I stated the choux paste. In a pot I added butter, ½ milk, ½ water and salt, when started bubbling remove from heat and add all flour at once and mix with a wood spoon, bring back to the heat keep mixing until forms a ball and release some moisture, once done bring to the mixer bowl with paddle attachment, mix it in medium to realize steam and get a little colder before adding the eggs. When ready I sated adding the eggs little at a time, looking for a shiny paste. I wish I had piped it differently, but it is okay we learn something each time and I am sure this will improve with time and more practices; the important is that I was happy with my final product and seams that Chef was happy too.
I whipped the heavy cream by hand the way I did at home, I thought that this was something that I should practice when possible. I added full spoon of it to my pastry cream to make it more creamy and light. For my icing I infused the spices with milk, strained it then added confectioner’s sugar.
I practice for a 100 % grade unfortunately I couldn't find the grade paper that Chef gave to us a previously week so she took me 3 points end up being 97, I was sad but it thought me to take a better care of my paper specially because in college we have so many of them, but at the same time i was happy to hear that my was the best so far.
My puff cream turned out delicious and beautiful I was happy with the results J
I am just sad that I won’t have more baking classes L
Thanks Chef for everything you thought me, taking this class with you made me love baking more than ever. Thanks for your dedication and patient. 



Week 10 - Baking and Pastry Class


Today was amazing. We did so much in class, unfortunately Chef was mad at us because we all did something wrong today. I was very disappointed at me for the fact that took me 10 weeks to do something wrong, not that at the first week would be better  but after all these weeks, my work flow should be more consistency paying more attention on what I am doing. Usually I avoid asking to many questions to Chef. I had a problem with a measurement , I got confused and thought that the amount of milk was wrong but I was the one who measured the milk wrong and before I asked Chef I asked my partner and he got confused too, only later he realize what happened :( I felt so stupid, I should know measurements without thinking, then I didn't notice the fact that the milk was cold and should be body temperature, so I should have warm it up a little before starts the sponge process, even my partners saw that and this makes me sad, more attention more attention!!!
I am so glad we didn't have to throw the sponge away we saved it with one of my partners great idea of using a bowl with hot water under the bowl with the starter. Seams that our recipe was one of the most challenge Christmas Stolen bread, it was the first time I made elaborated bread.
We started with a sponge, whisk together bread flour, instantaneous yeast and (warm) milk and let it rest (grow) for at least 20 minutes. While my partners were gathering the other ingredients for the bread I was working on the sugar mixture, sugar, confectioner's sugar and vanilla bean, open the vanilla and rub it in the sugar to release the flavor. The almond filling was done already from the Monday class.
To make the bread we used the big robot mixer machine, we started with paddle attachment and creamy method. In the bowl sugar, liqueur and almond paste then add the butter little by little until all is evenly mixed, then we add spices, salt then we add the eggs and pasteurized egg yolk little at a time until well incorporated, when done at low speed we add the dried fruits ( currants, cherry, orange candy, golden raisins mixed with brandy. We added it all and mixed just until incorporate it into the dough. When done we let it rest a little while that happened we started braiding the Challah bread we had a lot of dough so we all help with that, when was time to work on our bread we weighted the portions and start pressing to make a rectangle shape, pipe a line from one side to the other with a almond filling, roll it twice leaving a edge at the end, press with fingers around the filling. Bake it when ready and  still hot brush clarify butter in all the bread then dip in in the sugar mixture until covered all bread.
Class Notes
Braiding the challah, press the dough with fingers like a cigar, punch and roll, do not use too much flour, to start pinch them together and tuck under.
Presentation
Emulsion, fat + water – made into one
Emulsifier- egg yolk, lecithin (yolks, soy), mustard
Process-example: mayo and hollandaise
Room temperature ingredients, yolk, seasonings, vinegar (acid), drizzle in oil very slowly in droplets, too fast will break the emulsion.
Alcohol (flavor) Sauces, Marinates, main ingredients, some substitutions are okay some are not, who’s the audience. 173F boiling for alcohol.
Extracts-alcohol based, vanilla
Leavening agents – yeast
Gases produced- CO2, Air and Steam
Air bubbles (cells) lighter texture
Chemical- baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)
Yeast – leaving organism
Fermentation Process, produce CO2 (yeast works on sugar)
140F yeast dies
Commercial yeast
Wild yeast (natural) more acidic
1. Fresh (highly perishable)
2. Active dry refrigerated
3. Instant dry, doesn't need to be dissolved
Cocoa + Chocolate
Chocolate liqueur
Cocoa butter
Unsweetened 100% cocoa liqueur + cocoa butter
Bitter- little sugar
Semi sweet-more sugar
Milk- sugar and dairy
White chocolate- sugar- dairy, cocoa butter, no cocoa liquor
Salt- gives flavor, strengthens gluten, inhibits yeast growth
Spices- seed, flower bids, roots (ginger), bark (cinnamon), leaves (herbs)
Use it judiciously-strong in flavor
Vanilla Bean (split in half and use the seeds)





Week 9 - Baking and Pastry Class


Today we had double quizzes and three presentations, egg, gelatin and fruits, classes are almost finished and we have a lot to catch up with the presentations, next week will be me.
I had so much fun today, first because I worked with a great group, we started mise en place our ingredients, while some were pealing and cutting the apples me and the ot took care of the strudel dough, it was pretty easy to make the dough, we used the big mixer with hook attachment, all ingredients in at once, bread flour, salt, water, oil and eggs, let it beat for ten minutes on medium speed. It is very soft dough; let it rest for one hour at room temperature in an oil covered sheet pan, before cover with plastic brush some oil on top of the dough to no stick on the plastic wrap.
While we were waiting for the dough we started working in the fillings, apple filling and cheese with dried cherries. Everything was pretty easy to make basically mix all ingredients together.
The best part of the day started when the dough was ready to be used, the amount of the dough wasn’t much but even though we divided it into 4 parts and we did four strudels 2 of cheese and 2 apples. It was amazing experience to work with this dough a little challenge but I love challenge J our group was the first to open the dough with chef’s help, each one of us was holding on side of the dough and with both hands with the palm down we started stretching the dough from the middle out very careful to not make a hole, suddenly we had a huge stretched and thin dough on the table that was covered with a towel that would help us roll the dough with the filling in, once it is open we add a layer of clarified butter with a brush little of crumbs on all superficies of the dough then add a thick line of filling at one side, it was a little trick to roll the strudel after each time we rolled it we brush some clarified butter in between this helps to keep the layers, separated and give more texture when baked.
Other groups had worked in different recipes and at the end we all brought home a box full of delicious desserts that we all had made.





Week 8 - Baking and Pastry Class

Thanks giving week, we baked lots of pies!!






Week 7 - Baking and Pastry Class


Great class today, the presentations were moved to next week because today we had a lot to do, even the quiz we are taking home because we didn't have time.
Chef explained to us about Bavarian, Custard and Mousse. The first demos was chocolate mousse, melt the chocolate  in banio marie, remove from heat add the butter and mix until melted and well blended, make sure the chocolate mixture is not hot before adding the pasteurized egg yolks. In a separated bowl beat the pasteurized egg white with salt when it get a foamy texture, add the sugar and beat until soft peak. Sacrifice the first third whisking it into the chocolate mixture, then with spatula fold in the rest of the egg whites into the chocolate, mix until just incorporate. Make sure your equipment is free of oil before starts beating the heavy cream in soft peak, chef stopped beating before it was done so she could finish beating by hand, this way we don't take the risk of over beating the cream. Fold in the chocolate mixture. Move to a piping bag with a large star tip, she piped the mouse inside a foil pot in a rosette shape.
Then she started with fruit Bavarian (special ingredient in Bavarian is the gelatin, that we used in powder. It was very easy to make, she heat a fruit puree with, lemon juice + sugar remove from the heat and add the blooming gelatin, mix it to dissolve into the hot fruit sauce over a bowl with ice and water to get the sauce colder. Beat the heavy cream on soft peak and fold into the fruit mixture, sacrifice the first third. It was really good with a beautiful color. I didn't try it when set but I had a taste while she was finishing the recipe.

Today my  partner was great to work with, but I am glad I was all the time around while executing our recipes because if I wasn't he would miss some steps and ingredients, but that’s why we all work together to help each other.
We started with a full recipe of crème Brule, while our chocolate for the mousse was melting in Banio Marie.
CrèmeBrule was very easy to make, in a pot we mixed heavy cream, vanilla bean, pinch of salt and 1/2 of our sugar, in a  separated bowl we mixed the egg yolk with other 1/2 of the sugar whisk to have a smooth mixture,
when the milk started to have some steam coming up before boiling point. Starts tempering add a little of the hot milk into the egg yolk bowl, when we had mixed all we used a sieve while we transferring the cream from the pot to a jar, to make it easier to pour in a porcelain dish to bake, in banho Marie, it took about 25 minutes to bake the small pot and about 35 for the large one, which had a lot more cream in. When baked we brought to the refrigerator.
We were the first to finish our recipes, so we did some clean up I helped chef to the inventory which is basically write down in a paper what was left of ingredients we began class with. We cut some fruits to garnish our mousse. I made a fruit salad with what was left from the fruits. Then we started working on the crème Brule with raw sugar crust, using the torch for the first time in class. Everything was delicious, one weird thing happened was that we used only one pinch of salt, in our dishes and it seemed that make all very salty on the mousse, chef notice it and the Crème Brule someone thought it was salty too, I was so sad because I was sure the amount of salt that I had used and I was happy that Nick was by my side and saw that too. After class talking to another student she told me that she had a problem with salt too. I am sure I haven’t overdone it, has to be a salt problem J The salt was with big grains, could have another kind of salt mixed with the Kosher? I don’t know but even that way I though our desserts were delicious, I was happy with the consistency and results with the final product. I am even thinking of change the recipe of chocolate mousse that I have been using for many years after I tried this one in class.
My recipe is very simple with fewer ingredients, basically break the chocolate in pieces in a bowl with a can of crème the leite, bring it to microwave until melt the chocolate and become a smooth consistency. Whip egg whites with a little of sugar in soft peak, fold into the chocolate mixture and let it set in the refrigerator, the final product is soft, light, deep chocolate flavor and color different from the one we made in class, it sets it became harder not so soft and a lighter color probably because of the whipped cream that we folded in.
While we were eating and tasting our desserts, chef showed us how to open a pie dough and plat it so we can make next week for thanksgiving.
I can’t wait for next week J

Class Notes

blend shell- Shell baked 'without filling
Dock- make roles in the dough to the steam come out

In order to be custard you need
                
Eggs (whole, Yolks, or both) - Coagulation of protein tightening
Milk (whole, heavy cream, ½ and ½ or combo)
Can be sweet and savory
Sweet
Stirred Custard (stove top)
Crème anglaise
Pastry cream
Cornstarch pudding-variation of pastry cream (sometime has no eggs)

Savory
Soufflé – spinach, cheese
Quiche – spinach, lardan=unsmoked French bacon/ onion
Broccoli, cheddar
Baked Custard (oven)
To firm texture use whole egg. If you find a recipe with whole egg and egg yolk the extra egg yolk is to give flavor, color, richness
- Flan
- Cream Brulee (pot of cream with caramelized crust)
- pot the crème
- Crème caramel-(French sibling of flan)
- Bread pudding
- Pumpkin pie (felling)/ sweet potato pie
- Pecan pie
- Cheesecake

212°F-water boiling

Custard-
Usually baked in water bath (Bain Marie)
hotel pan and place ramekins, cake pans, or other pan inside and fill half way up with hot water
cover entire hotel pan (steam)
Baked Custards (cooked in oven)
In a pot - dairy (liquid), sugar, pinchof salt and (flavoring)
In a bowl – eggs (yolks), sugar and mix using whisk
Scald e dissolve sugar
- temper all liquid into eggs
 - strain mixture
 Bake 325° the time depends on the size, to check if it is ready, stick a knife in the middle, it has to come out clean, or when you move the dish and the filing doesn't move.
Scale properly
Mousses and Bavarians
Light, fluffy texture created by the addition of whipped cream, whipped egg whites or both.

Chocolate benefits from a little salt- chef uses even m hot chocolate
Mousses (include Bavarians - gelatin)
                        
Chocolate mousse IV
- melt chocolate
- Add butter, stir, then add eggs yolks, stir
- make meringue, gently fold in (add pinch of salt)
- make whipped cream, gently fold in
- Transfer to pastry bag and pipe into aluminum ramekins.
Teacups-to make pate a cream (common in France)
Bavarian (always with gelatin)(Very European, cake using ring to unmold, heat the sides of the ring with touch)
molded desserts
Base (crème anglaise) + gelatin + whipped egg white + whipped cream
1) Heat up the fruit puree, sugar, lemon juice (pinch salt)
2) Bloom gelatin, add to hot puree to dissolve
3) Transfer to a bowl and stir ores iced water bath until thicker like pancake batter
4) Fold in whipped cream.
simple but very trick / watch time and temperature
- measure the water and even sprinkle the gelatin into the water
leaf gelatin-you don't have to measure the water, put the sheetsin and wait to get soft, squeeze and use as you would with the powdered, adding to the hot sauce and mix until dissolve.
Panna cotta-cooked cream (grow up Jell-O)
Flavored cream set with gelatin
Typically with sauce usually little acid (raspberry sauce + fruits)
Me and Nick working together in ½ chocolate mousse recipe and crème Brule. (Culinary institute of America Book)
Chocolate mousse 60% chocolate bittersweet
1) melted chocolate in( bain marie) remember to clean around the bowl edges to not get dirty
2) add the butter, melt it in, always work very gentle with chocolate
check the temperature
3) add the egg yolks (pasteurized, it is safer) make sure the chocolate is not too hot.
The cream should be cold (chilled)
egg white in room temperature.
4) make the meringue- wait to get foamy before add the sugar (more like sea foam) add the sugar, scrap the bowl if need. looking for soft peaks, hold in shape, beat at high speed. We are looking for a glossy mixture and the bubbles are very tiny (like shave cream)- Good when is holding the shape. Use the whisk to fold the meringue in only for the first third , sacrifice the first 1/3, shake the excess from the whisk do not over mix the mixture. Use the whisk to fold only the first 1/3 then use the spatula. Make sure you don't deflate the egg whites.
5) Whip the heavy cream in the same bowl of the egg white, soft peak, do not ones mix, fold gently in the chocolate mixture 1/3  at a time. If over mix the cream won't be easy to fold in the chocolate mixture.
Use a pinch of salt when whipping  the egg whites (chef forgot)
She piped with big star tip in pots.
Fruit Bavarian
Fruit puree into the pot + sugar + pinch salt + little lemon juice ( high the flavor) (temp 18) make sure dissolve the sugar. Then add the gelatin and mix until dissolves,
Get a bowl with ice and water, pour the bowl with the chocolate mixture and keep stirring to cool the mixture. You can whip the cream before and let in the refrigerator.
Remove from water bath and keep stirring.
We want the cream waiting for the sauce not the other way around. This is a critical moment. Touch the mixture to check the temperature, keep moving the mixture to get an even temperature.
Add first 1/3 of the whipped cream in the mixture and mix fast.
Put in a piping bag and pipe in pots and refrigerator. After pipe and sets will keep soft mousse.

garnishing - use odd numbers
if you want to leave the green on the strawberry cut in half and slice.
kiwi - cut in half and slice
symmetry  is not good for food
When open a dough think circles
X movement with the roll
after open duck the dough, in the pie plate
push the dough in and trim the excess, tuck in the side let the dough test, press finger out with finger at the back to make nice and beautiful
blind bake-pie with no filling
custard pie around 20 min.
disc pie can freeze 3 month (dough) blind bake too.
make pie dough then when you need you bake
Brulle-sprinkle sugar raw and use the torch




Week 6 - Baking and Pastry Class




Week 5 - Baking and Pastry Class


As usual we had a quiz at the beginning of the class and I guess I did well this time.
We had a long presentation about milk and milk products , which was a lot of information to absorb.
Chef made a demo of yellow butter cake and angel food cake which was really good, we had a slice at the end of the class, it was platter with blueberries and raspberries sauce on top with a spoon of soft peak whipping heavy cream, it was really delicious but like chef had said the cake was very sweet, it made a perfect combination with the berries and cream. Today me and my partner of the day, whom was pretty nice, we made 1/2 recipe of pastry cream and 1/2 recipe of yellow butter cake, we made them all very fast and without problems, they turned out really good for my taste.
We started with the pastry cream, milk, salt, vanilla bean and 1/2 of the sugar in a pot heat it up until before boiling, in other bowl we whisk the eggs, egg yolk, other 1/2 of sugar and sifted corn starch. Then we started tempering the milk into the egg mixture little at a time, back to the heat whisking vigorously until thicker and desirable consistency when started bubbling we kept for a extra minute to remove the cornstarch flavor, when done we put the cream in a prepared sheet pan wrapped with plastic and cover with plastic on top of the cream to not form a crust and let cool in the refrigerator.
Then we started with the yellow butter cake, creaming method. In a mixer bowl with paddle attachment beat the butter until smooth add the sugar scrapping the bowl to make sure you get all mixed in the fat and beat until pale, light and fluffy , then add the eggs with vanilla a little at a time scrap the bowl after each addition, sift the cake flour with baking powder and salt, add the dry and liquid ingredients in parts beginning and ending with dry ingredients, should be 4 times flour and 3 times milk until finish, do not over mix when starting adding the flour to not develop gluten and make a though heavy cake, we want a lighter cake. We divider the batter in two equal parts in two 6" pan lined with parchment paper and butter and flour tap the excess of flour before adding the batter, as the batter is in the pan tap on the table to remove the bubbles. Bake at 325F oven, our cakes took about 30 minutes to get done, we started looking after 18 minutes, to test if it was ready we used a wood pick inserted in the middle if it comes out clean means the cake is ready. We should wait at least two hours before start cutting the cake since we didn't have the time we left for a short time in the refrigerator, it wasn't enough when we started cutting with a serrated knife in 1/3s turning the cake ,the top to make even and in have horizontally to add the filling it break a little it was still warm.
We used the pastry bag without tip to add the pastry cream in between layers in a swirl movement starting from the middle to the edges, the top layer we turned the top part down to make it even and flat to add the icing, we used a chocolate sauce made of heavy cream, chocolate, corn syrup and butter, the cake name is Boston Cream Pie, we all took our cakes home, the icing got hard and make the cake very stead, it looked good even after a bike ride back home, it was delicious!!
Class notes
Presentation Milk and Milk Products
Raw Milk- Vat Pasteurization 145F for 30 minutes, cooled 34F expensive method because it takes more time.
Pasteurized ( High temperature, short time HTST method) 161F for 16 seconds
Ultra pasteurized or (UHT ultra high temperature) 275F 1-3 seconds
Why milk boil? Milk solids, the fat goes up forms a layer on top, water steam goes up can't hold all the water steam.
1. keep stirring to avoid boiling
2.lower the heat down
Whole Milk 3.5% fat, 8.5 milk solids, 88% water, fat, milk fat or butter fat
Skim or non fat Milk 0.5% or less
Low fat milk 5% to 2% fat
Fortified nonfat or low fat milk, vitamin A+D
Homogenizing- process so the cream doesn't separate, same consistency, force the milk from microscopic screen, particles fat
Fresh Cream products
Whipping Cream- light, heavy and extra heavy
Butter cream- you can make it with 1 cup of milk with 1 tablespoon of acid let stand for about 5 minutes
Pasteurization- kill the bacteria ( industrial revolution) squeeze in lots of animal in small space
You can find raw milk in black market
Objectives of creaming method Cakes
1. keep emulsion (uniform batter)
2. Form  air cell structure
3. Limit gluten development
Creaming Method for cakes
1. Mise in place ingredients, prepare pans, sift dry ingredients
2. Cream fat alone with paddle attachment until smooth
3. Add the sugar and cream until pale, light, fluffy (PLF)
4.Add eggs, little at a time, scrapping down the bowl between additions, add extract
5. Alternate adding dry ingredients with liquids, 4 parts dry,3 parts liquid , scraping down the bowl between additions
Each group 1/2 pastry cream, 1/2 yellow butter cake (two 6" cake pan) Boston Cream Pie ( Me and Stephanie)
Demo - Yellow Butter Cake
In the mixer bowl with paddle attachment beat the butter on high speed until get smooth, most important build air structure, add sugar( crystallization with fat)
Scrap down the bowl
Add the extract to the eggs, before add the eggs to the batter, or after the eggs, add the egg little at the time, scrap down between addition (3 additions) keep emotion, things get together even
Alternate dry and liquid, always start and finish with dry ingredients, mix until just combine ( allows gluten slowly absorb the liquid) finish by hand.
Divide the batter in 2 pans, give a tap on table to release excess of bubbles, bout 18 minutes  at 325-350F oven test with wood pick.
Demo - Angel Food Cake
Oil free cake ( make sure the equipment is oil free)
Beat egg white with whisk attachment alone until foam, after a little add salt and cream of tartar until soft peaks
Cake flour and 1/2 sugar sifted
Use pan with role, do no grease.
Add 1/2 of the sugar and beat until medium peaks (high speed) soft enough to add the flour and other 1/2 of sugar fold with spatula with small movements in 3 parts them add the liquid vanilla
No taping on table to keep the air bubbles
Bake it at 350F oven for about 40 minutes and let it cool upside down
-Egg white freeze beautifully.
Assemble Angel Food Cake with cream and berries sauce
Heavy cream, whisk it back and forth using hand whisk. Whipped Cream soft.
Sauce- blueberries + raspberry + sugar and lemon juice in the heat, for thicker sauce use cornstarch or let it reduce
Other option, in a shallow bowl fill with cream anglese one slice of angel food cake some berries around and more crème anglese on top of cake.
Assemble the yellow cake
To cut it straight the top, spin every 1/3 using serrate knife until finish use the same tecnique to cut the cake in half in the middle. Pastry cream in a bag without tip pipe a swirl starting from the center out to the edge, turn the top layer upside down to have a even  straight finish and place on top of the cream. With ladle  add the chocolate sauce in one motion fast.
Glassage Sauce- heavy cream, chocolate, corn syrup and butter


Chef's Chiffon Cake

Our Boston Cream Pie

Week 4 - Baking and Pastry Class


What a crazy day, chef was upset with us because of uniforms and that we were too slow.
We left class late around 3:10pm. We had a new student which turned out being my partner for today's recipes Pate a choux and pastry Cream .
The quiz wasn't difficult, I didn't study sugar and fat as I did cookies so I didn't go as good as last week but it's okay when these things happens make me feel that as much as I think I am doing still not enough.
So we started measuring the ingredients for both recipes and I got a little upset with my partner because he wasn't as neat organized and precise as I try to be, I didn't like his attitude towards some students when they came to get ingredients from our station, I didn't say anything in respect for him being a new student and older than me.
We started with the cream, I have done this kind of cream many times but with one difference that in Brazil we make it with condensate milk instead of sugar. In a pot we mixed milk, 1/2 of the sugar, salt and 1/2 vanilla bean, heat it up until starts and get to a boil. In other bowl mix the egg, egg yolk and the other 1/2 of the sugar whisk with sifted corn starch. Starts the tempering progress adding a little of the hot milk to the egg mixture back to the heat, whisk furiously when starts getting thick and bubbly come up you keep for one more minute to remove the starch flavor.
Our cream didn't get to the right consistency at first so we had to add a mixture of a little cornstarch and cream to get the thickness we wanted, when ready we add the butter. We prepared a half sheet pan with plastic wrap them we put the cream on it to get cold, when I look at it he was scraping all the stick part from the bottom of the pot into the cream, so I remove from the pan and strained to remove all lumps, back to another prepared sheet pan with plastic wrap and we cover with plastic right directed to the cream to no form any crust, put in refrigerator.
To make the puff we heat up the milk and water, fat and salt when it came to starts boils we remove from the heat and add the flour all at once and mix with wooden spoon, back to the heat cook a little longer until it get as a ball of dough and no stick on the sides of the pot. When this is done bring the dough to the mixer bowl with paddle attachment and mix until a little of the heat is removed so we can add the eggs, one by one we are looking for a kind of shiny dough, so sometimes you won't need all the eggs. When you need to add more eggs but to the whole egg you can beat it with fork and use as need. When it is done we put the dough in a piping bag, we used a flat texture tip, then pipe it in round shape in a sheet pan lined with parchment paper. Oven at 400F for complete 15 minutes then 325F for about 10 minutes more or until you get the desired color and when you hold the puff and feel light weight, not heavy as raw uncooked would be. Only them I realize we forgot to use the egg wash before go to the oven.
They were okay, we didn't get a even size and wasn't looking as nice as chef made, she said that the finish outside texture of ours was a little different because had more egg than needed. At the end of class we remove our cream from the refrigerator and mixed with one spoon of whipping heavy cream to make it more light and spreadable, we put the felling inside a piping bag without tip. Made a little role in the puff where we introduce the cream, make sure fill the whole apace. We used sugar 10X sifted on the top of the puffs. The final products tasted good. We took the extra one home.
At the end of the class he asked me if I was military, I asked I was too bossy that's why he was asking it , and we laugh.
I froze the extra puff that I brought home and use it as chef though us to reheat at 325 for 5 minutes, I use ice cream inside and melted chocolate on the top, my husband loved it.
It was a great experience to make these recipes now I don't feel scary of making éclairs as I used to be.

Class Notes
Sugar presentation
Addicted substance, stimulate brain, work as drugs
Carbohydrate/ sucrose
sweetened agent, sugar become toxin over time, diabetes.
High fructose, corn syrup (1/2 of the price) sweeter than sugar.( ketchup, crackers)
Insidious hidden, your brain doesn't register that it is sugar, and wants more.
1. Sweetness
2.Tenderizes
3.Allaws air development ( sugar + fat = creaming method, sugar+ eggs= foaming method)
Sugars that bakeshop uses
- granulated sugar
- confectioner's sugar, powder sugar, 10X
-brown sugar, molasses, moisture
(chef Maii usually uses light brown sugar and if need a more flavor she adds molasses)
dark + molasses
light - molasses
- sugar in the raw, has texture sprinkle, crunch in cookies
There are people with, super taster, regular, taster and no taster, smoke kills you palate.
Fats Presentation
- adds moisture
- increase, keep quality
- adds flavor
- assist in leavening
 Characteristics- melting point, softness or hardness in room temperature, flavor, ability to form emulsion.
Saturated (animal fats, solids)
Unsaturated ( olive oils, liquid)
Shortening- Tenderizes a product by shortening gluten strands, it is white and tasteless, 100% fat, manufactured
Regular Shortening- Tough waxy texture, easy to mold at room temperature
Butter- Fresh butter has 80% fat, 15% water, 5% milk
natural flavor that changes depending where it came from , melting qualities, cow butter/ goat butter ( whiter)
salted- absorb flavor
unsalted- usually more perishable, fresher, sweet taste, natural
Margarine- manufactured, hydrogenated( process that converts liquids fat to solid fat) animal + vegetal fat. 80/85% fat, 15% moisture, about 5% salt, milk solids and other components.
Oils
-liquid fat
-lard ( rendered fat from hogs) Leaf  Lard, cut it in small pieces, put in the oven on 250F to cook. It lasts forever in the freezer, you can use 75% butter and 25% lard in the recipe, it is a powerful agent flavoring.
Fats get rancid if left out for too long, keep it in cool dry place.
Pate a Choux (cabbage paste)
1. Versatility
Savory
Used as canapés
hors d'oveures, fill it with all kinds of things,
Gougeres- typically made puff with gruyere, cow, semi hard cheese, but you can use any cheese.
Secrete ingredient - when you fell that something is missing add a little  Coleman's dry mustard and Worcestershire sauce ( fish sauce)
Sweet
Cream puff
Éclair
Swans
Gateau St. Honore, Croquembouche ( used in French wedding, they are all glued together with caramel.
2. Unique and twice cooked
1st  stove top
2nd in oven
Pate a choux Method
1. In a sauce pot combine liquid, fat, salt and bring to a  boil.
2. Remove from heat and add all flour at once and mix with wooden spoon.
3. Return to the heat and continue mixing to release excess of moisture and ball forms
4. Transfer mixture to standing mixer with paddle, mix on medium high to release steam
5. Add eggs one at the time, scraping the bowl between additions. Looking for a little shine dough, but still stiff enough to pipe.
6. Pipe into uniform shapes, use a egg wash on top.
7. Bake  in 375-400 F oven for 15 minutes and finish baking at 325-350F until cooked through and light weight.
Pastry Cream (Crème Patisserie)
1. In a sauce pot combine liquid, half sugar, pinch salt, vanilla bean ( if it is liquid ad at the end). SCALD-right below simmer.
2. In a bowl mix together egg, egg yolks, 2nd half of sugar, and sifted corn starch.
3. Temper, return the saucepot to medium high heat and whisk vigorously, continuously until thick.
4. Bring to a boil, continue to cook, whisk and cook for a 1 more minute to remove the corn starch
5. Remove from heat, whisk in butter ( after butter , melted chocolate, praline and other flavor)
6. Transfer to prepared pan and cover the surface directly with plastic wrap. (wrap the pan with plastic before you add the cream) food contact with aluminum get color sometimes).
Mousseline- when you add whipped cream to the pastry cream.

Cream Puff and vanilla cream - 10X powder sugar on top - 1/2 of each recipe
1. Cream first to have time to cool . In a pot add milk, 1/2 sugar, vanilla bean ( scrape the seeds from the been with the outside of the knife) and a pinch of salt.
2. In a bowl whisk the eggs, egg yolks, sugar and sifted corn starch, do not leave it sitting too long without whisk, will create lumps.
3. Temper - milk into a egg mixture ( get all the dimes out of the bowl), back to heat, whisk fast to not create lumps, remove from heat and add the butter. After butter add pistachio past, praline, chocolate, get a little of the cream and mix with the paste before ad to the rest of the cream, it makes easier to incorporate, about 2 general spoon of paste.
4. let cool in a prepared sheet pan wrapped with plastic
Pate a choux
In a pot add the milk, water, butter, salt, bring to a boil (don't overcook it) stove20, add all the flour at once (bread flour), back to heat, stove 15, and cook until form a ball and get the moisture out. Transfer the dough to the mixer with a paddle attachment, in medium high and beat until cools a little. Add eggs one by one , scrap the bowl between addition, we are looking for a little shine, some time the whole egg is too much so you have to whisk with the fork to be able to use only half of it.
In a pastry bag, do not fill more than half, using a tip big star or round plain, twist the bag so anything comes out or use a container. Put a little of dough in the sheet pan and the parchment paper on top use it to stable the paper. Press a round shape like a rosette. For éclair squeeze consistently squeeze at the pull back. Swan pipe with lots of pressure and let it go like a shell and separated a s shape with a head and 2 slices of almond, which is the neck of the swan.
Egg wash to make it shine. Bake it at 400F for 15 minutes and finish baking at 350F.
We can freeze the puffs for a month, at 325F oven for 5 minutes .
For filling, make a small role with a knife on the side or bottom of the puff, can be cut across too, use a piping bag without tip to fill the puffs, make sure fill all , we used powder sugar sifted on the top.
To make the swan, cut in half fill the bottom part with cream, cut the top in two parts and stick it in the cream and attach the neck.




these are with ice cream at home