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| Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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King's Crown wrote: Very cute! You did a really good job. I bet everyone loved eating it.... after saying "It's too pretty to eat." Thanks! They didn't believe I made it. One woman kept thinking I was joking. Have you tried making Chocolate Clay for decorating. I find it fun to work with. In the summer sometimes transporting a cake some where can be tricking, because of the possible melting problems. Lynne snip Thanks for the tip! Will this work with white chocolate? I'll save the recipe for later use! -L. |
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"-L." wrote in message oups.com... King's Crown wrote: Very cute! You did a really good job. I bet everyone loved eating it.... after saying "It's too pretty to eat." Thanks! They didn't believe I made it. One woman kept thinking I was joking. Have you tried making Chocolate Clay for decorating. I find it fun to work with. In the summer sometimes transporting a cake some where can be tricking, because of the possible melting problems. Lynne snip Thanks for the tip! Will this work with white chocolate? I'll save the recipe for later use! -L. I use white chocolate and then color it. I also buy the colored chocolates and make it. It starts our really sticky and gross and then with enough kneading it suddenly turns into this wonderful easy to shape chocolate clay. The only summer problem I had was when I made a giant sunflower for a friend who loves what eles sunflowers. The stem was in direct sun light and I was driving and couldn't do anything about for about 20 minutes. It melted and dropped off onto the plate. By the time I got to her house it had cooled off I reshaped it and pressed it back together and no one but me knew what happened. Lynne |
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Looks great. I have not worked with Marzipan myself. I think your cake
looks terrific. I've taken a few cake decorating courses and loved them. I'm one of the least artistic people I know so cake decorating is a huge challenge. In one of my classes I spent lots of energy baking the cakes we were to decorate - that was the easy part for me. Then I'd sweat buckets over the decorating. Some of class mates picked up all kinds of prebaked cakes and made them look beautiful with no effort at all! Wendy ----- Original Message ----- From: "-L." Newsgroups: rec.food.baking To: Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 1:04 AM Subject: Birthday Cake report -L. wrote: I made a "finding Nemo" Birthday cake for my son's birthday and decorated it using marzipan to make sea weed, coral and sea creatures. I am pretty pleased with the way it turned out, but next time will color the marzipan before forming it, rather than painting it with food coloring. This is only the second time I have worked with marzipan, and although I am pleased with the results, I felt it could have been a little more moist and pliable than it was - I didn't have time to hydrate it more, so just used it as it was. I also am thinking of taking a cake decorating course to learn more technique, as I am sort of flying by the seat of my pants. Here's a photo for anyone interested: Sorry - That should be: http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/usenetlyn/my_photos Let me know if you still can't see it. Two shots - about the same. -L. _______________________________________________ Rec.food.baking mailing list http://www.otherwhen.com/mailman/lis...ec.food.baking To unsubscribe send a mail to and then reply to the confirmation request. -- Internal Virus Database is out-of-date. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.362 / Virus Database: 267.14.19/231 - Release Date: 1/16/2006 |
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Wendy wrote: Looks great. I have not worked with Marzipan myself. I think your cake looks terrific. I've taken a few cake decorating courses and loved them. I'm one of the least artistic people I know so cake decorating is a huge challenge. In one of my classes I spent lots of energy baking the cakes we were to decorate - that was the easy part for me. Then I'd sweat buckets over the decorating. Some of class mates picked up all kinds of prebaked cakes and made them look beautiful with no effort at all! Wendy My philosophy is that it needs to taste better than it looks! Thisone was pretty tasty - lemon cream cake filled with a strawberry-apricot filling. -L. |
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-L. wrote:
Wendy wrote: Looks great. I have not worked with Marzipan myself. I think your cake looks terrific. I've taken a few cake decorating courses and loved them. I'm one of the least artistic people I know so cake decorating is a huge challenge. In one of my classes I spent lots of energy baking the cakes we were to decorate - that was the easy part for me. Then I'd sweat buckets over the decorating. Some of class mates picked up all kinds of prebaked cakes and made them look beautiful with no effort at all! Wendy My philosophy is that it needs to taste better than it looks! Thisone was pretty tasty - lemon cream cake filled with a strawberry-apricot filling. LOL Agree with the taste/beauty relationship. But sometimes you luck out. My daughter is taking French in school and I'm not above helping her suck up a bit - good grades are good grades. Over the past two years and this, we've made baguettes a few times. Brioches. A couple ****aladieres. Fougasse. Croquembouche (She walked into class carrying it and one kid who didn't see her come through the door and was standing with the teacher finally saw it and blurted out, "Holy shit." Teacher laughed so hard she fell into her seat.) Madelaines. Choux swans (filled with Bavarian cream). A tall Eiffel tower in gingerbread for X-mas that was wonderful and that she gave to her teacher. Smart kid. Last evening we made the layers for a dacquoise and assembled it this morning. Two different meringue layers - one with ground almonds like an Italian amaretto cookie, the other with cocoa and orange zest. Fillings were orange mousse and chocolate mousse, finished with mousse on the sides, ganache on top with finely chopped pistachios sprinkled through a paper doily onto the chocolate. She ought to get about 150% for this one. It's gorgeous. Should taste very good, too. She piped the layers out and, as you'd expect from a kid, got them all bumpy and irregular. Tried too hard to make it perfect and, of course, got them spluttery and uneven because of trying too hard. Showed her a wet spreader/spatula and what a wonderful tool it is. She made them more or less even and we dried them in preparation for this morning. Perfect texture, still a bit less than perfect-looking. But wait, here come the mousses and see how splendidly they mask all those imperfections. I pointed that out to The Kid and she laughed at all that worrying. She did the assembly while I made the ganache. I even peeled a bunch of pistachios, rubbed the skins off and chopped them. How good a daddy is that? She beamed when it was done. "It's pretty good, isn't it," she said. I laughed out loud. Many bakeries I've been in wouldn't have done as pretty a job as that. Did I remember to take a picture? Why do you ask? Of course not. Not until we were halfway to school and remembered that we hadn't. Not that we were giggling like, well, schoolkids or anything... There's Murphy's Law and Murphy's Dammit Law. Pastorio |
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Sounds like a school I'd like to go to. I might even be able to learn
french....although I've tried so often I've about given that up.. However I could certainly learn some good baking tips! wendy ----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob (this one)" Newsgroups: rec.food.baking To: Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2006 8:02 AM Subject: Birthday Cake report -L. wrote: Wendy wrote: Looks great. I have not worked with Marzipan myself. I think your cake looks terrific. I've taken a few cake decorating courses and loved them. I'm one of the least artistic people I know so cake decorating is a huge challenge. In one of my classes I spent lots of energy baking the cakes we were to decorate - that was the easy part for me. Then I'd sweat buckets over the decorating. Some of class mates picked up all kinds of prebaked cakes and made them look beautiful with no effort at all! Wendy My philosophy is that it needs to taste better than it looks! Thisone was pretty tasty - lemon cream cake filled with a strawberry-apricot filling. LOL Agree with the taste/beauty relationship. But sometimes you luck out. My daughter is taking French in school and I'm not above helping her suck up a bit - good grades are good grades. Over the past two years and this, we've made baguettes a few times. Brioches. A couple ****aladieres. Fougasse. Croquembouche (She walked into class carrying it and one kid who didn't see her come through the door and was standing with the teacher finally saw it and blurted out, "Holy shit." Teacher laughed so hard she fell into her seat.) Madelaines. Choux swans (filled with Bavarian cream). A tall Eiffel tower in gingerbread for X-mas that was wonderful and that she gave to her teacher. Smart kid. Last evening we made the layers for a dacquoise and assembled it this morning. Two different meringue layers - one with ground almonds like an Italian amaretto cookie, the other with cocoa and orange zest. Fillings were orange mousse and chocolate mousse, finished with mousse on the sides, ganache on top with finely chopped pistachios sprinkled through a paper doily onto the chocolate. She ought to get about 150% for this one. It's gorgeous. Should taste very good, too. She piped the layers out and, as you'd expect from a kid, got them all bumpy and irregular. Tried too hard to make it perfect and, of course, got them spluttery and uneven because of trying too hard. Showed her a wet spreader/spatula and what a wonderful tool it is. She made them more or less even and we dried them in preparation for this morning. Perfect texture, still a bit less than perfect-looking. But wait, here come the mousses and see how splendidly they mask all those imperfections. I pointed that out to The Kid and she laughed at all that worrying. She did the assembly while I made the ganache. I even peeled a bunch of pistachios, rubbed the skins off and chopped them. How good a daddy is that? She beamed when it was done. "It's pretty good, isn't it," she said. I laughed out loud. Many bakeries I've been in wouldn't have done as pretty a job as that. Did I remember to take a picture? Why do you ask? Of course not. Not until we were halfway to school and remembered that we hadn't. Not that we were giggling like, well, schoolkids or anything... There's Murphy's Law and Murphy's Dammit Law. Pastorio _______________________________________________ Rec.food.baking mailing list http://www.otherwhen.com/mailman/lis...ec.food.baking To unsubscribe send a mail to and then reply to the confirmation request. -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.362 / Virus Database: 267.14.22/239 - Release Date: 1/24/2006 |
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Bob (this one) wrote: Last evening we made the layers for a dacquoise and assembled it this morning. Two different meringue layers - one with ground almonds like an Italian amaretto cookie, the other with cocoa and orange zest. Fillings were orange mousse and chocolate mousse, finished with mousse on the sides, ganache on top with finely chopped pistachios sprinkled through a paper doily onto the chocolate. She ought to get about 150% for this one. It's gorgeous. Should taste very good, too. She piped the layers out and, as you'd expect from a kid, got them all bumpy and irregular. Tried too hard to make it perfect and, of course, got them spluttery and uneven because of trying too hard. Showed her a wet spreader/spatula and what a wonderful tool it is. She made them more or less even and we dried them in preparation for this morning. Perfect texture, still a bit less than perfect-looking. But wait, here come the mousses and see how splendidly they mask all those imperfections. I pointed that out to The Kid and she laughed at all that worrying. She did the assembly while I made the ganache. I even peeled a bunch of pistachios, rubbed the skins off and chopped them. How good a daddy is that? She beamed when it was done. "It's pretty good, isn't it," she said. I laughed out loud. Many bakeries I've been in wouldn't have done as pretty a job as that. Did I remember to take a picture? Why do you ask? Of course not. Not until we were halfway to school and remembered that we hadn't. Not that we were giggling like, well, schoolkids or anything... There's Murphy's Law and Murphy's Dammit Law. Pastorio snip Hell, with those skills she can pay her way through college working in a patisserie! Sounds awesome. -L. |
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-L. wrote:
Bob (this one) wrote: She beamed when it was done. "It's pretty good, isn't it," she said. I laughed out loud. Many bakeries I've been in wouldn't have done as pretty a job as that. Did I remember to take a picture? Why do you ask? Of course not. Not until we were halfway to school and remembered that we hadn't. Not that we were giggling like, well, schoolkids or anything... There's Murphy's Law and Murphy's Dammit Law. Pastorio snip Hell, with those skills she can pay her way through college working in a patisserie! Sounds awesome. I was busy writing for a deadline yesterday and didn't pay a lot of attention to her. We made dinner and I went back to my computer, she to her homework. I heard kitchen noises and didn't pay much attention to that, either. She came walking into my office with a yellow cake she had made from scratch, covered with whipped cream with sliced strawberries and asked "Exactly how busy are you?" Twinkle in her eye... We ate cake. Later she told me that the first time, she had "messed up some mixing when I didn't watch it closely." Her cut layers were uneven (I told her a few ways to deal with that this morning. She looked like a light bulb went off over her head.), cake was a tad dry (She waited until it was "brown" before sticking a toothpick in.). But I think it's cool that she did it all alone. Recognized that she had made a mixing mistake and dealt with it. And recognized that my telling her how to cut layers evenly wasn't a negative criticism. I was in the process of eating my third slice. How badly could I feel about it? I told her nobody's gonna get up from the table and leave if the layers are uneven. She laughed. I asked why she wanted to do it. She said, "Because." G Good enough for me. Pastorio |
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Bob (this one) wrote: snip I asked why she wanted to do it. She said, "Because." G Good enough for me. Pastorio She sounds like a real sweetheart. How old is she? The thought of parenting a daughter terrifies me. Stories like yours make me want one, though. ![]() -L. |
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-L. wrote:
Bob (this one) wrote: snip I asked why she wanted to do it. She said, "Because." G Good enough for me. Pastorio She sounds like a real sweetheart. How old is she? The thought of parenting a daughter terrifies me. Stories like yours make me want one, though. ![]() She's the center of my universe. And she's growing up which means we can share more sophisticated ideas, and she's growing away, which is inevitable as she begins to shape her own life, which means she approaches and avoids... She's more fun than most adults and her sense of humor and mine intersect most wonderfully. She's 14, a freshman in high school, pretty, graceful, articulate and generally attractive to boys. A couple seniors have indicated interest and I only had to threaten one for both to understand that she's too young for them and their intents. But she much likes their attention... So I'm a daddy of an utterly unique child - just like every other kid... LOL Her dacquoise drew a few teachers into that classroom and the principal found his way there before it was gone. Kind of culinary telepathy... Pastorio |
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Bob (this one) wrote:
She's the center of my universe. And she's growing up which means we can share more sophisticated ideas, and she's growing away, which is inevitable as she begins to shape her own life, which means she approaches and avoids... She's more fun than most adults and her sense of humor and mine intersect most wonderfully. She's 14, a freshman in high school, pretty, graceful, articulate and generally attractive to boys. A couple seniors have indicated interest and I only had to threaten one for both to understand that she's too young for them and their intents. But she much likes their attention... So I'm a daddy of an utterly unique child - just like every other kid... Is this the caviar daughter, i.e. "Your Ladyship"? That's a great story. -- Reg email: RegForte (at) (that free MS email service) (dot) com |
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On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Bob (this one) wrote:
She sounds like a real sweetheart. How old is she? The thought of parenting a daughter terrifies me. Stories like yours make me want one, though. ![]() She's the center of my universe. And she's growing up which means we can share more sophisticated ideas, and she's growing away, which is inevitable as she begins to shape her own life, which means she approaches and avoids... She's more fun than most adults and her sense of humor and mine intersect most wonderfully. She's 14, a freshman in high school, pretty, graceful, articulate and generally attractive to boys. A couple seniors have indicated interest and I only had to threaten one for both to understand that she's too young for them and their intents. But she much likes their attention... So I'm a daddy of an utterly unique child - just like every other kid... LOL Her dacquoise drew a few teachers into that classroom and the principal found his way there before it was gone. Kind of culinary telepathy... Pastorio Bob, as the proud father of three girls in the same age range (13, 13, and 15), I can say you speak for a lot of us! And they are indeed unique... One is my baking and cooking companion, and I'm thankful for at least one to be. Another loves math and all things techie, and has great confidence in her ability to handle *anything* she puts her mind to. (Now, with a few more years of common sense, she could do great things!) The third is just a lovely, every girl-next-door princess. All beautiful, all different, and all very special... Dave |
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Reg wrote:
Bob (this one) wrote: She's the center of my universe. And she's growing up which means we can share more sophisticated ideas, and she's growing away, which is inevitable as she begins to shape her own life, which means she approaches and avoids... She's more fun than most adults and her sense of humor and mine intersect most wonderfully. She's 14, a freshman in high school, pretty, graceful, articulate and generally attractive to boys. A couple seniors have indicated interest and I only had to threaten one for both to understand that she's too young for them and their intents. But she much likes their attention... So I'm a daddy of an utterly unique child - just like every other kid... Is this the caviar daughter, i.e. "Your Ladyship"? That's a great story. Yes. When she was about 9, I guess. Long story short, I was showing off for the woman who is now my wife and The Kid was there. I was doing all sorts of professional culinary showoff stunts and finally plated dinner. I garnished it with a sprinkle of caviar. The Kid tastes and wrinkles her nose. Says, "Daddy, I don't like caviar this way..." *This* way..." My aristocratic daughter... Cracked me up. I spit a lot of food all over my wife to be. Pastorio |
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Dave Bell wrote: Bob, as the proud father of three girls in the same age range (13, 13, and 15), I can say you speak for a lot of us! And they are indeed unique... One is my baking and cooking companion, and I'm thankful for at least one to be. Another loves math and all things techie, and has great confidence in her ability to handle *anything* she puts her mind to. (Now, with a few more years of common sense, she could do great things!) The third is just a lovely, every girl-next-door princess. All beautiful, all different, and all very special... Dave Awwww...you guys are making me want to adopt a girl! -L. |
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