Friday, January 8, 2010

Chocolate Mousse Cake

Intro to Basic Pastry: Cake Station, Day 3

Chocolate Cake base with a 3 inch layer of Chocolate Mousse. Frosted with Chocolate Whipped Cream.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Pumpkin Cake

Intro to Basic Pastry: Cake Station, Day 3


Pumpkin Chiffon Cake filled with Cinnamon Cream Cheese. Frosted with Vanilla Italian Buttercream. Marzipan Pumpkins.

Orange Raspberry Cake

Intro to Basic Pastry: Cake Station, Day 2

Orange Chiffon Cake filled with Orange Italian Buttercream and Raspberry Jam.
Also made mini Boston Cream Pies, no pictures though.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Mocha Cake

Intro to Basic Pastry: Cake Station, Day 1


Chocolate cake filled with coffee Italian buttercream, frosted with chocolate Italian buttercream. Chocolate ganache and shavings as garnish.


Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Hamentaschen

Intro to Basic Pastry: Cookie Station, Day 2


Edit: Baked by Erik on 1/7.

Raspberry Mirrors

Intro to Basic Pastry: Cookie Station, Day 2




Edit: These were baked on 1/5 by my blockmate, Erik.


Saturday, February 7, 2009

Sandwich Rye Bread

Recently I have become obsessed with all things yeast. Whole wheat bread, cinnamon buns (coming soon) and, of course, this Rye Bread. People warned me that it would be sticky and hard to work with, but my dad really loves him some rye toast in the mornings so I pushed all the possibilities of failure to the side and searched for a dairy-less recipe (because my family keeps kosher, the bread can't contain dairy if I want to eat a roast beef sandwich on it!).

I've made this bread three times in the same number of weeks- that's how good it is. And I thought I didn't like rye bread...until I tried this one. It has a fine grain, mild flavor and goes perfectly with turkey pastrami and mustard. You can find the recipe here. I used the King Arthur Rye Flour Blend instead of the pumpernickel called for because well, that's what we bought and it's the reason behind the more mild rye flavor (which I like better anyways). The greatest part about the whole recipe is the pickle juice used in place of some of the water- it really adds a whole other deli-dimension to the bread. Plus, although King Arthur claims this bread isn't a high riser, just check out that finished loaf. It's the epitome of a perfect sandwich slice.