December 20, 2011

tiramisu reimagined

After sausage and cheese, Tishara and I got to work on crafting the dessert while Jason, Dustin and LaToya worked on an entree. While poring over the pastry textbook in the library, Tishara mentioned that she liked ladyfingers. While I didn't want to make tiramisu, I thought we could make something that was the tiramisu deconstructed.

To do this I thought about the flavor components involved in tiramisu - chocolate, cinnamon, cocoa, cream. Each of these components would be reconstructed as something else.

First there was chocolate. We decided to do chocolate cups to hold our dessert. To do this we had to inflate some water balloons with air, manually. My lungs weren't up to the task, but Tishara got it done.

chocolate-glazed balloons

Glazin the balloons (to form the cup shape) proved to be no easy feat. Although we chose to use chocolate glaze (easy) as opposed to tempering chocolate (hard), what gave us trouble was trying not to have the balloons explode on us. First the glaze was too hot, then we were applying too much pressure. Eventually I was able to get the balloons all glazed by rotating them through the glaze on an angle (as opposed to sinking them directly in). Then we had to double-dip them because the glaze was too thin.

The next day we eased the balloons out by poking them with a skewer and letting the air out slowly (popping them would have destroyed the cups). Chef told us that they would come out more easily if we had sprayed them with oil and wiped them off (for just the thinnest layer of oil).

cinnamon ice cream

The cinnamon and cream components were turned into cinnamon ice cream, made with the help of an ice cream maker (and Devon's expertise). Cooking the creme anglaise (ice cream base) was the hardest part - one batch was destroyed because the temperature got a little high and the eggs in the cream got cooked.

tiramisu reimagined

The cocoa component was the finishing touch - in the form of cocoa nib tuile cookie garnishing the tops of each dessert.

We kept the ladyfinger component though - they're crumbled in bits underneath the ice cream.

Turned out delicious, and that's just the beginning of my journey in dessert.

making cheese

There are some simple miracles in cooking that seem to make everything worthwhile. Meringue is one of these miracles. Making cheese is another one, as I so discovered.

simmered milk and citric acid

This is milk, brought to a simmer with citric acid added in. It took a few tries with the citric acid for it to curdle, but then all I did was pour the mixture through a china cap strainer layered with cheesecloth...

ricotta cheese

And there, freshly made ricotta cheese.

mascarpone

Making mascarpone cheese wasn't much different, simmered heavy cream with the addition of tartaric acid. Then poured into coffee filters set in plastic baskets, chilled in the refrigerator overnight.

You can make your own too! Supplies here.

making sausage

Finally, skills week came for my team (Jason, Dustin, LaToya, Tishara) and I. Together we made the five mother sauces (bechamel, veloute, brown/espagnole, tomato and hollandaise), which was great fun because we did it all in order with each other, going from one prepped cup of ingredients to another, all the while angling for pans and stovetop space.

After the first day we divided ourselves up for the smaller tasks. Tishara and I decided to make sausage, choosing cajun boudin out of a recipe book.

While a great many sausages utilize pork butt as the main protein, our recipe called for cooked pork butt.

sausage mix-ins

Besides meat there is generally some starch (rice, barley, oatmeal, etc.). Our recipe called for nishiki (short-grained) rice. We didn't have any so we substituted sticky rice. Besides that there were scallions, parsley, oil and spices.

grinding pork butt

Then we ground up the cooked pork butt into the mix-ins.

making sausage

And used the sausage machine to shoot the meat mixture into casings.

cajun boudin sausage

After the casings were filled, we twisted them into sausage-lengths (kind of like twisting balloon animals). Then we boiled them and tried one - very mushy. Next time I will try using raw meat instead.

chaud-froid

One day we had little to do in meat lab, having butchered all of the meats that the upstairs kitchen(s) needed, so Chef Oakley told us we had some time to play.

blanched vegetables

So we arrived that morning to a giant bowl of blanched vegetables. Turns out we were going to do chaud-froids. (Chaud-froid, meaning hot-cold in French, refers to foods that are made hot but eaten cold.)

glazing chickens

In our case it involved roasted chicken with breasts made skinless for display purposes. The breasts were glazed with a mayonnaise/gelatin mixture, which provided a white background for decoration.

flowered chicken

The blanched vegetables, as it turns out, were meant to be sliced thinly, have shapes cut out of them with different mold cutters, then pasted on with more liquid gelatin. As luck would have it, when I started thin slicing some red bell peppers, the natural grooves in the pepper led me to cutting these petal shapes, which ended up forming the basis for my flower/butterfly design.

human body chicken

Working across from me, Jason created a whole organ system for the chicken.

island chicken

Working next to me, JD created his dream vacation.

(More of my classmates' chicken art can be found in this set on flickr.)

washing chicken art

In the end Dustin had the painful task of washing away all of our art. Chickens are for eating, after all.

November 20, 2011

sushi workshop!

The Five Star Club on campus hosted an after-school workshop on sushi-making. I love to eat sushi and didn't get to attend last semester's workshop, so naturally I went.

Chef Andy from We Be Sushi was our guest instructor for the day. He's been making sushi for 50 years, and his mother for 50 years, so with a century of accumulated experience, I knew this was the real deal.

sushi wrapping instructions

Before diving into the hands-on stuff, we got a mini lecture, replete with diagrams, on how to (and not to) wrap our sushi. For regular maki rolls, you want to spread your rice (get two mounds about the size of two large eggs - wet hands to prevent sticking) over the rough side of a half sheet of nori (seaweed), leaving a half inch of space at the top. The rice should be heavier on the top and bottom with a trough in the middle for the other ingredients.

base layer

Sprinkle a layer of sesame seeds and swipe a pinch of wasabi (if desired) before laying on fish/vegetable/etc. Make sure the nori is positioned half an inch from the bottom edge of the bamboo mat (which is wrapped in plastic to prevent sticking).

double press

The actual rolling motion occurs twice. The first roll has the bottom edge of the bamboo mat touching the top edge of rice. The second roll incorporates that half inch of seaweed space. To keep the rice fluffy, apply only a little pressure to the rolls. When finished, place the roll with the seam side down so the steam moisture can seal the nori edges together.

rolls

We made a lot of different rolls - cucumber, mushroom avocado, spicy tuna, salmon, tamago (egg), and California roll. For the inside out rolls, rice should cover the entire half sheet of nori and there only needs to be one rolling motion.

rice shaping instructions

After that we moved on to nirigi sushi, with precise shaping instructions. First lay your fish in your palm vertically in the crook formed by your fingers, then dab a dot of wasabi in the middle. Then grab a matchbook-sized piece of rice and lay that on the fish. Then pinch the top and bottom of the rice once (with thumb and index finger), then half-close your hand (as if making a fist) while laying your index finger across the rice pressing down (as shown above). Then rotate the piece so the fish is on top. This time pinch the left and right sides (with thumb and middle finger), then lay your finger across the fish pressing down. Finish by rotating the piece 180 degrees, pinching the the left and right sides (with thumb and middle finger) and laying your finger across the fish pressing down.

We made shrimp, salmon, albacore (white tuna) and unagi (eel) nigiri.

After that Chef Andy showed us how to make sushi rice from scratch, without a cooker (the rice we had used for our rolls/nigiri had been pre-made in a cooker). The pictorial instructions are here, but basically you take equal parts of nishiki rice and water, let the rice soak in the pot for at least an hour, then bring the pot to a boil over medium high heat and let it boil for 1 minute, then let turn the heat down to medium for 2 minutes, then turn the heat down and simmer for 7 minutes, then turn the heat off and let the pot sit on the stove for 15 minutes.

sushi rice making

After that the rice is combined with sushi vinaigrette. For 1 quart of rice you'll need 7 oz Japanese rice vinegar, 4 tablespoons sugar and 1 heaping tablespoon of salt. The vinaigrette mixture can be boiled if you want the salt and sugar fully dissolved.

Using a big bowl, combine rice and vinaigrette, then comb through the rice with the skinny edge of the rice paddle to break up any lumps. Use immediately, or keep in a covered container.

And there you have it, sushi and sushi rice as a master taught it.