Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Cakes For Afternoon Tea



One of my great loves has recently been brought back into full realisation, Baking. With a new career beginning in the private scene of the dining world I was faced with a question in the afternoon on my very first day- “do you have anything for them for afternoon tea?” Having very little clue as to what may or may not be expected I thought quickly as to what I might expect if it were me sitting out there....”sure I do, it’ll be about 45 mins” and raced to my little note books and made the first cake I could see in there. From then on in, I’ve found that they aren’t explicitly necessary, they will settle for some biscuits I’ve been told, but truth be told I find it hard to stop myself from doing so right now....

There is something magical about a freshly made cake, pastry or biscuit. While they bake they slowly create an aroma that weaves its way through every crevice into every room of where ever you may be, and then finally exploding into a rapturous scent when the oven door opens that makes everyone in the vicinity begin salivating and wanting....even if they claimed not to be hungry...having the pleasure of eating them while still warm, brings every previous conversation to a stop, and the only thing people can think about it what is before them. I love these moments.....it’s what it’s all about.
I have only had the time to snap some quick shots of a few, but every single day there is a different type made, and I hope to get more shots soon.

The first are rhubarb bars, a very crumbly shortbread is ¾ of the way cooked through, then a rhubarb curd is poured on top and baked until the curd is set. The tart curd against the crumbly shortbread creates an amazing contrast in the mouth.

The second round are different flavoured financiers. This little burnt butter friand is a favourite of mine. In this selection are raspberry, blueberry, strawberry and black currant.

After that is a cake that was not for afternoon tea but for dessert, but I feel it qualifies on its cakey nature..flourless chocolate cake that was basted with a syrup made from braising cherries in port, pureeing and passing. Then garnished with morello cherries and coco.

Lastly is one hell of a cake! Caramelised pear and ginger cake. Reminiscent of ginger bread, but soft, and luscious in its texture, the pears lending a touch of gooey goodness to it’s spongy surroundings.


What to make next......

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Fois Gras On Toast







freshly toasted baguette, warm fois gras, beetroot and

red onion jam. Glass of champagne and that is a good afternoon!

Strawberries And Cream



When you find beautiful ingredients, you don't need to do much to make them seem special. While at the markets in Barcelona, in the grip of a sintilating mix of terror, stemming from my nearly absolute imcompetence with the spanish language, excitment at actually being in this situation, in this market, in this current position and fear, due to the fact that my situation was to do something I thought I had no idea how to do what was required of me in my new career.

But when the world presents you with an opportunity like this it brings you back and shows you why you are here, to see how beautful the world can be. These apline strawberries are some of the most fragile fruits I know of, a perfect example of how we need to respect our ingredients. Picking them with rough hands, packing them thoughtlessly, transporting them like and elephant in heels, or showing malice in the final preparation before eating, all result in the same outcome- 'good, but not great.'

I seperated mine into 2 batches. One batch was packed away carefully while the other was tossed with a little bit of icing sugar and sat in a seive over a bowl and wrapped. left over night in to fridge, they collapsed under the weight of their intensely delicious juice and released it into my anxious dish below. I pureed the sunken berries and passed them through a fine sieve.

Mascarpone lightly whipped is a wonderful change from whipped cream, and to compliment the deep, rosy sweetness of the berries I sweetened the cream with some vanilla and honey. Shaving the sable dough from the log instead of rolling it delivered me with refreshingly free form biscuits. a quick toss of the fresh berries in the macceration liquid and to the plate.

Basic Living in Spain




sometimes poor living isn't too bad, packet tortelini, tinned mushrooms and emmental came together with my little peice of onion, some garlic and some left over white wine to make a scrummy little fried pasta to appease the hunger gods for another evening

Poached Pear Brulee




For my own personal tastes, desserts are more than often far too sweet, and having worked pastry for numerous years in varied styles of cuisines, I feel more pasionate about it than ever. A tradtional poached pear in many peoples hands can be so overwhelmingly sweet in it's self, only to be smothered in a thick blanket of rich chocolate sauce. I understand that alot of people drool when they think about something like that, but it's just so rich that it weighs you down for a long time afterwards.
For this version I wanted to attempt to limit that uncomfortable after effect so we can enjoy our dessert and then possibly stay awake afterwards without too much pain. To balance the sweetness of the pear its self, I made a salted sugar syrup, simply balancing the flavour into something a little more savoury and less offensive to the dental work. Flavouring the syrup with some vanilla and cinnamon. Prior to poaching all the pears were removed of thier core, allowing me, once they were cooked and cooled, to fill their little bellies with a sharp lemon mousseline. After rolling the pear in demera sugar and bruleeing with a blowstorch, I left them to rest on a dollop of lemon curd. Dishes like this excite me, for something so seemingly simple when you first look at it, it reveals it's self once on the palette and tantelises the tongue with fun flavours and textures.
The picutures are unfortunatly not as sharp as I wished, but we can't have everything :)