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Plated Desserts


Fine apple tart with caramel sauce and vanilla ice cream

I promised plated desserts (i.e. served on a plate, fancy-restaurant-style, for those unfamiliar with the terminology) and here they are!

We started off with some traditional desserts. However, being a new year full of changes, the chefs actually switched up the recipes for this class and gave us some new traditional dessert recipes to test out. In class, we made Grand Marnier Soufflés and these little apple tarts. Since there were so many things on the plate, we didn’t actually have to prepare the puff pastry for the tarts…a blessing for timing, but a bummer for our taste buds. The puff pastry was from – get this – the grocery store. A sacrilege!

The class went by pretty easily. We had a cuisine chef oversee this practical, and he very helpfully came to my side when my caramel sauce was about to finish cooking…and took over. He let the sauce sit for too long, though, and I wasn’t happy with the taste of the caramel sauce at all – it was burnt and bitter, yuck! One of our favourite chefs stopped by the kitchen when we were tasting our desserts, and he made a very unimpressed face when he tried my caramel sauce. Bah, what could I say?

The Grand Marnier soufflés were strongly flavoured with just the alcohol, nothing else. The recipe was interesting, though, as it is not a typical recipe from what the chefs told us. I found the texture quite light and springy, which was good. I am not a fan of a lot of alcohol in my desserts, but I’ll definitely be using the soufflé recipe as a starting point to make something else! (Also, too busy indulging in my tart with ice cream and caramel that I didn’t even bother taking pictures of our soufflés when they came out of the oven – oops!)

The second dessert we made was “contemporary” desserts, again with new recipes for 2012. Since our class was the first group to try to put these recipes into action, we followed the demonstration chef’s instructions on the order of preparation in the kitchen. We were to make a chocolate shortbread cookie base, creamy/frozen chocolate mousse-cream-disc, chocolate glaze for the top, cocoa nib crisps, and white chocolate ice cream (all within 2.5 hours, might I add, including plating and cleaning up). I think the order in which we began was totally wrong…we started off on a strong note, and then quickly got hindered by those damn cocoa nib crisps. They were delicious and easy to make, but took forever to bake in the oven. My friend and I watched the oven anxiously, and had nothing to do but wring our hands and plead the tray in the oven to hurry up. By the end we were severely out of time, with a very stern chef who was not pleased at all about how slow we were, and I hastily threw together my presentation just before time was up. The glaze got a little runny on the plate because I didn’t have enough time for it to set properly, and the ice cream melted quickly into a puddle on the slightly warm plate. The chef tutted at the less-than-spectacular presentation, and I was a little disappointed that I couldn’t have done better. The dessert is to-die-for, though, so next time you’re invited to a dinner party chez moi, ask me to make it!

Oh yes, in my haste that day to leave the apartment, I forgot my camera, too. I borrowed a classmate’s, but the picture didn’t turn out very well that I’d rather not post it.


Dark chocolate sphere with dark chocolate brownie, praline crisp, creamy mango coulis, milk chocolate cream, and hazelnut crumble

Lastly, we made our “prestigious” desserts. For the demonstration, the chef showed us some neat things like using chemical reactions to create “chocolate caviar” – chocolate flavoured little drops that look just like caviar, but taste of chocolate. Each dessert was painstakingly and lovingly assembled, hence the “prestigious” title. I guess this is why the Ritz is allowed to charge obscene amounts of money for their desserts!

Making this dessert in class was fun and easy – we got to work in partners, which made things go by a lot faster. Thank goodness we didn’t have to temper the chocolate, too, or else it would’ve been a lot more stressful. We had the young chef, who had witnessed my previous debacle. His presence caused severe anxiety the whole class, as I was determined to make something better this time. The hardest part was the end, when we had to poke holes in the chocolate top. I wish I had invested more time and care into making just one top, rather than two tops (in case one broke), because I didn’t have time to clean off the edges of each circle cut-out very well. Apparently at one of the famous restaurants in Paris where they make a similar dessert, there is someone who spends all day doing these chocolate spheres! I shudder to think how nerve-wracking that would be…

When I presented my dish, the chef looked at the plate and began with a compliment, which was a relief. He muttered on about the dessert and before I knew it, this is what happened:


Um, could you give me a warning next time before you do this??

The chef dug right in to see my layers and the consistency of each one. I actually had not taken a photo of my creation at that time. My jaw just dropped to the floor and I had to remind myself to keep shocked and angry comments to myself. I don’t actually remember what he said about the layers, because I was so fixated on the broken pieces in front of me, haha.

Fortunately I had saved an extra bottom half of the sphere, too, in case of breakages, so I plopped everything back on my plate and took some pictures before class was over. Phew!


So this isn’t exactly what I presented to the chef in class…but very similar

Now we’re officially off desserts, and onto chocolate tempering! I would cheer about how cool it’s going to be to make sculpted pieces out of chocolate, but chocolate tempering still makes me extremely anxious, so stay tuned for what happens!

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February Wallpaper


I made this on January 31st, I really did! I know I’m yet again a little late to this wallpaper thing, and I have no good excuses. My only crap excuse is that this past week has been 6:30AM wakeup calls for me everyday, and an exceptional 5:30AM one on Tuesday for a school field trip to the markets outside Paris. I’m just a little tired, given that unemployment has made me less of a morning person.

We took this photo at the Parc Floral de Paris on the last sunny and tolerably warm day in January before the weather gods became evil. Some creative soul had come along and strung together all the fallen leaves into hearts, and hung them on the trees. This is why Paris is the city of love!

Download the 1920×1200 February desktop wallpaper
Download the 1440×900 February desktop wallpaper
Download the 1280×800 February desktop wallpaper

(New size has been added at a friend’s request, and I’ve removed an outdated size. Again, leave a comment if your preferred size is missing!)

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Mini Desserts


Petits Fours

We spent a couple of classes on smaller desserts…things that might be served with an afternoon tea, or at the end of the meal with coffee (and after a proper dessert).

I didn’t take my camera with me to class, so here are the photos in Insta.gram from my phone.


Passionfruit white chocolate macarons


Green tea financiers with a white chocolate ganache


Chocolate shortbread & piped jasmine shortbread


Chocolate shortbread dressed up with white chocolate ganache

We worked in teams of four for these petits fours and split up the duties. I spent some time agonizing over the passionfruit white chocolate filling first, because it did not look like anything that should be consumed for a long time there. What happens is after the passionfruit cream is cooked, white chocolate is added. After some intense stirring, the cocoa butter content from the white chocolate oozed everywhere and curdled the cream – yuck! Luckily for me, the recipe then called for some more fats, butter this time, to emulsify the mixture once again (it’s like the chefs knew this was going to stress me out). As soon as I worked in the butter, everything became magical and we ended up with a beautiful passionfruit cream. Phew.

Otherwise the class was easy and I really liked the spirit of cooperation in this class. It is so much nicer to work in a group now that we’ve got the recipes down, and just want to save time while producing beautiful products. My group finished pretty early and the chef was pleased with our work, so we got to leave early, but only after I had consumed way too many “imperfect” pieces during the assembly process. Oops.


Apple & blackcurrant mousse verrine. The chef may have taken pity on me and sliced on the apples on the right for me…

Next up, we made desserts in shot glasses. Cute concept, but not really my thing. I wasn’t a fan of the mousses and creams we used to fill these glasses, and to be honest, I wouldn’t want this served to me in restaurants. These types of desserts would be great for cocktails parties, though. I would want to experiment with different fillings for these shot glasses before trying this one again.


The strawberry one gets a special mention because the crumble topping got a surprise ingredient mixed in – Pop Rocks! The crumble was tossed with a packet of Pop Rocks and drizzled with some white chocolate to keep it all together. The result was somewhat jumpy crumble that attacked my face every time I got too close to the glasses when I was decorating. I also liked this one more because of the fresh strawberries I cut in – probably not practical with fresh fruit sitting on the cream directly, but I think it enhanced the look and taste much more.

After the little shot glasses, we are now onto plated desserts – three classes worth! I can’t wait to see what they bring, since plating is fun, but totally stressful given the time constraints in class sometimes ;)

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