Sunday, April 29, 2012

Goodly baked goods. A parade!

       I had the wonderful fortune to spend some time in my last restaurant absorbed entirely by the wonderful world of pastry.  Baking, to be honest, is what got me into the kitchen in the first place, and the opportunity to focus on and hone my pastry skills is one of the most rewarding, marvelous things I've ever done.  Let me know what I can bake for your special event!  Hosting a brunch?  Craving a tea party (I usually am...)?  Is it somebody's birthday?  Or, care to simply celebrate a day of the week?  Let me know and we'll design something utterly unique, delicious, and fun!



Morning treats:
Streusel-sour-cream cake.  Doesn't get more moist!
Apple-walnut coffee cake.
A Demitasse original: Buttery baked apples
stuffed with cinnamon-raisin oatmeal. 
Classic lemon danish.


Front to back:  Pains aux Raisins, Pains aux Chocolat,
Currant Scones








Cakes:



Blood Orange Upside-Down Cake.
























Raspberry-Cream Tea Cake.
Coconut Layer Cake
Double-Chocolate Birthday Cake

Chocolate-Raspberry Ice Cream Cake.


Chocolate Pound Cake with Toasted Almond Custard and Cream.




Chocolate-Stout Cake with Orange Caramel.





Savories:
Home-made creme fraiche.  Possibly my true love.
Spinach quiche.
.

Ham, cheese and onion jam turnover.

Parmesan-black pepper pastry straws.

Puff pastry with leeks fondue, smoked cod, and chive blossoms.
POPOVERS!








Cookies and other lil' bits:


Double-chocolate toffee cookie.
This beauty is half-brownie.
Dainties for tea:  cinnamon pastry bites,
almond-frangipane and pomegranate, custard and jam.
Multigrain-raisin w crystallized ginger and lemon zest.

Chocolate pastry straws.
Orange-cardamom cookie sandwich with chocolate sorbet
 and local milk custard, for dipping!
Peanut butter-chocolate ganache sandwich cookies.








Pies and Tarts:


Spiced almond and apple tart.  The tender,
shortbread-like dough makes this more like an
elegant, composed crumble- served warm with cream!

Chocolate-walnut tart with candied orange.

Peach hand-pies.  Perfect picnic food.
Raspberry tart.
Apple-raisin galette.




 Custards (and a souffle, for good measure):



Creme anglaise with poached pears, fresh candied
cranberries, and puff pastry.

Chocolate-almond trifle with chocolate biscotti.



Chocolate souffle with burnt orange
caramel custard and candied peel.









Sunday, April 24, 2011

Attention: I love vegetarians.

Roast Crown pumpkin stuffed with spinach, Fontina, and a poached farm egg.
For ages now, the vegetarian entrée has been a category of project with which I have a special relationship.  Back in my restaurant days, I found myself often the recipient of that challenge-- and there was often a palpable sense of relief on the part of my colleagues, as if they'd escaped it in delegating it to me.  I am a seasonal produce fanatic... I've often said that I think that seasonal produce just may be the seat of my inspiration as a cook.  I can't explain in, but a perfect little head of cabbage can make me batty, and the thought that this New Zealand jaunt means I'll miss out completely on such natural magic as FRESH FAVA BEANS, well... it's almost enough to make me regret coming.  (Almost.)  I honestly will spend whatever sum I bring in my pocket to the farmer's market.  Self control?  None.  Then I will run a relay all week long to use up my spoils before they, well... spoil.  It's like drugs, but, um, not.
Cazuela of lentil and kumara stew (with red wine, rosemary, and cream.  Mmmm...)
with shirred egg and flakey cheese pastry straws. 
Two back-to-back winters = so many root vegetables!  So much winter squash!  Those marvelous cabbages, beets, pears.  I love winter crops too... but knowing that back home the first of the tender greenies are making their way out makes me pout, just a little.

Stuffed cabbage with leek and mushroom risotto, picked up in sage-butter
and finished with a slab of Taleggio cheese.

Living in the bay area might make me extra sensitive about vegetarians... the fact that numerous, beloved members of my family are vegetarians probably also has something to do with how warm and fuzzy I can get about creating something spectacular out of ingredients that are not braggarts, like RIBEYE or LOBSTER, or DUCK or something.  The little vegetables, the humble lentil... I feel that the sensitivity required to transform these quiet morsels into something special calls to me with a unique resonance.  Not that lobster isn't amazing, or isn't as much a gift from and opportunity to connect with the earth as the fresh shelling bean. But the way asparagus is one thing at the beginning of its season, and a week later has evolved from a scrawny yet juicy, tender and sensitive something into a sturdy teenager of its former self, requesting a peeling and a careful, impeccably-timed cooking... this daily shifting connects me to something magical in the earth.  It shuts me up and asks me to listen, it banishes preconceived ideas about a vegetable or a fruit and forces me to start only with what's there, only with what IS, to humble myself in the interest of (the best part--) seeing what happens if I stop thinking I know.  

Bitty tomato-custard tarts wth basil oil, a single, darling pine nut, and Parmesan cheese.

Oh, and it turns out, it's not just entrées!  Here is some more vegetarian fun.  Here's to the vegetable!
Påte brisée bites stuffed with spinach,
mushrooms and Parmesan
Whole wheat bread-box (what else to call it?) Brushed
with butter, toasted, then filled with steaming tomato soup and topped with cheddar cheese.  A lil' minute in a hot oven?  Tastes like your mother loves you.
Broccoli soup with farm egg yolk, Parmesan and black pepper
This one's for my brother, Anders!

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Life gives you lemons...

       Actually, sometimes life gives you lemons, quince, three types of lettuce, two types of apples, a literally endless supply of amazing watercress, and small amounts of the last cherry tomatoes.  All for free.  AND all plucked by myself and master-green-thumb Ron from his cousin's gorgeous garden.  The only way this could have been better is if it had happened BEFORE I placed my produce orders for the week...
                           
      SO-  to work, to work!  I made lemon curd, quince jelly, and in unrelated news, giant batches of granola and peanut butter to put in darling little jars with darling, silky ribbons, and sell from the front-desk.  It was SO FUN!
       Then, when we found ourselves with no guests for the weekend, we had a little dinner party for the staff featuring the beautiful, crisp Romaine lettuce in one of my all-time favorite salads:  add toasted walnuts, a creamy and intensely savory vinaigrette made with mortared garlic, anchovy, and lemon and dust liberally with Parmesan cheese, and THAT, my friends, is the salad that made Caesar blush.  (Okay, maybe a salad can't blush... but you get the idea.)
      

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

More from New Zealand

Ahhh, but they amuse...
       I'm having WAYYY too much fun with this.

Cured salmon and summer squash with mignonette and lemon agrumato.
Roast zucchini  stuffed with fresh walnuts, breadcrumbs, lemon and Parmesan.
Flakey pastry with leeks fondue, smoked moki and chives.
Button mushrooms braised in duck fat, then stuffed with leeks and spinach.



And in more substantial news,

Crayfish special-- Kaikoura, the closest town to the lodge, means "eat crayfish".  When in Rome...


Marlborough Salmon with risotto fritto and zucchini crema.




AND, I though I'd couple the sweet with the social.  Makes sense to me!



SO MUCH FUN with a single batch of brioche dough... 
Rolled into buns with toasted almond custard and brandy-plumped currants.
And chocolate.  And scones.  And the banana bread you can't see.  And, and, and...

       The day before yesterday, we closed the lodge for the day to move from the main kitchen and dining room into the much smaller lodge kitchen and dining room.  We, the staff, took the opportunity to team build and spend some time together just enjoying ourselves.  We worked hard all day schlepping and cleaning and organizing (and decorating!!), and the end result was just so beautiful.  The lodge kitchen feels like cooking in a lovely country home.  And while I do admittedly miss the pro burners (how long could it possibly take to bring up a blanching pot?  Some prep I still elect to do in the big kitchen), I love the cozy, pretty space.  Then we disbanded to pretty up, and got back together for a beautiful dinner party in the lodge.  



The community table in the lodge.


Isn't it beautiful?!

Well-deserved relaxation, and lots of delicious food and wine.  I was so busy enjoying the food, I didn't photograph it!