Tuesday, November 29, 2011

#60 - No, I am not giving the world the finger

Went to the doctor for my hand because it didn't feel right.  Got sent to the Burn Unit at Queen Mary's Hospital (an hour away)...can't cook for 2 weeks, possibly longer.  Blister is now gone but there were a few tears during cleaning.  Hoping surgery not needed to fix burns.

Went back to school.  Unsure re rate of recovery but they will let me prepare as though I will be able to take final exams, albeit with a couple of concessions for handicap (a couple of extra days for Pat portfolio, someone to help me write for the 2 written exams, both on Monday coming.

Have been fed due to kindness of classmates.  Plating might not be fancy but it was delicious.  Chef FJ had me tasting presented dishes, so hopefully palate is workin a bit better.  Amazing how things can taste so different using same ingredients and recipe (although seasoning plays an important role there).

Until next time, may your life be as filled with the kindness of everyone as mine has been today.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

#59 - Happy Thanksgiving!

I am thankful for all of my lovely family and friends; the opportunity and time to come to London on such a huge adventure; to being able to find the silver lining in almost any situation; living in London and getting to enjoy all the pretty lights along so many of the streets; winter thermals arriving just in time for it to start really getting cold...


Thanksgiving in London
Couldn't do practical on Thursday (venison).  Unfortunately Cuisine classes require knives for almost everything so even if it was just to stir sauce with the uninjured hand, you have to butcher/trim meat to be able to make sauce.  So went and had Thanksgiving dinner with LM instead - she leaves in just a few days so it's our last dinner for a while.  She found a bar where we could get Thanksgiving dinner!  I have to say their chicken wing starters were so delicious and I was glad to see they are part of the regular menu.  The crab cakes were a bit dry and made from (not super great) frozen crab meat - adequate, but couldn't stand up to the chicken wings.  No pics of the starters because we started eating as soon as the food arrived.


Crippled hand version
Normal version

Turkey was pretty good although mine was a little cold around the edges. LM liked the sauce/gravy/whatever better than I did. Not surprising since it was quite sweet. The bar and waitress were really kind. I explained that I had injured my hand, so they were happy to cut up the turkey and stuffing.


Then dessert.  Not sure what was going on with desserts - pumpkin pie was missing something and the NY cheesecake seemed a bit too ricotta- y.


Have noted we are really spoiled for ingredients and things because of school (hence comment about freshness of crab meat or desserts, etc.) as well as what we have sampled in demos.  Must remember that we have been tasting food prepared by absolutely amazing chefs.  Our own efforts don't come close to matching their dishes so we shouldn't expect anything close in our meals unless we are at Michelin starred restaurants (or something comparable).  Similarly, shouldn't expect same quality frozen crab at a BBQ joint where they charge you GBP4 for two crab cakes.


Hand is still out of commission.  Swelling has gone down a little so fingers no longer look dislocated but still looks bad from the uninjured side.  Blisters haven't popped yet and am in no hurry to do so - the little bit of extra cushioning really helps with lessening the pressure on the burn site although the muscles in my arm havebeen affected by the swelling.  As long as it gets better in time for me to finish my assignments and get through finals, it's all good.  Recovery a bit late for Cuisine portfolio which was due last Friday, but luckily that one was mostly finished.  At the moment, that's looking a bit doubtful as I still can't hold a pen or spoon, much less knives.


So until next time, may any injuries be minor and pain free.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

#58 - A day off, followed by ER (minus George Clooney, Noah Wylie et al)

Day off and confusion reigns for 10 minutes...
Monday was a day off.  I assumed it was a public holiday - it wasn't.  I called school to make sure I had read my schedule correctly - we never have a day off during the week!  Ok, we did...

So it was mostly a nice day. I'm skipping the not nice bits - because it hurts to type.  Afternoon tea in St James's Place followed by a walk to Covent Garden and the Royal Ballet.  Graduation present (belated) for LM.  Found out later it was her first ballet, so glad we did it right.  Fun girly day / night out.


ER (don't look if you are squeamish)
So yesterday was another day of sugar.  My sugar leaked a little out of piping bags...got some spectacular burns - put my hand in water / ice periodically, but wanted to finish class.  I think the smart thing would have been to go to the doctor right after, but I had another class so I stayed for that one too. Finished the centrepiece but still have a few kinks to work out for the final.  Pretty safe to say I will avoid piping sugar for the final so will need to consider alternate technique which minimizes potential to come into contact with sugar.
After class, before ER
Unsuccessful attepts to blow sugar during second session. May have had a little to do with the fact that my dominant hand was useless.  Blown sugar will break if you blew it thin enough and then don't pick it up gently enough.  Definitely no apple of discord in my batch of misshapen fruits.  Finished with a practice rose so class wouldn't feel like there was nothing to shoe for it.

Finished early so got a book and went looking for the nearest ER when my fingers started go feel numb.  Surely that can't be good...Google said there was one about 10 minutes' walk away.  Turned out it was some kind of meeting group organizing thing, which is good.  It was in a building where I expected lunatics to come barreling out from nowhere (I pressed a button to get in, the door buzzed to let me in, reception was closed and no one seemed to be around.  Just saw a lot of empty rooms...).  Eventually found someone who gave me directions to the hospital (you go along this road, then turn right).

24 hours after injury...
Temporarily crippled
Eventually got to hospital where I had to ask for directions for the entrance, then directions to the ER. When I finally saw the triage nurse, she asked why I had waited so long to come in. I told her I had class, then got lost. Eventually saw the doctor. One look at my hand and she went to get a more senior doctor. Left hospital a little after midnight with note so I can miss class while my hand regains some functionality. Hmmm, might be while, today is worse than yesterday. Can't be good when the chefs freak out after they see my hand.

Had a pretty walk to class this morning, then yummy dinner near St Paul's - Gordon Ramsay's Bread Street Kitchen - although I didn't know it was Gordon Ramsay's when I picked it or might have boycotted it (you know, general bad language, personal attacks on people, etc etc).

So food:  seared scallops with apple and bacon, short rib burger, green beans with shallots, mac 'n cheese (all of which LM and I shared);
then dessert:  pineapple upside down cake for her and another mac 'n cheese.  The waitress laughed when I ordered my dessert, then laughed a little more when I told her it was the best dessert in a while.

Took forever to wash hair with one hand unable to do anything.  Need more painkillers but afraid to take any.  Dinner was a while ago and you have to take these with food...

Have mock exams coming up but hand is out of commission for at least 7 - 10 days.  Need to do the practice but don't want to damage hand further with exams just over a week away.  Can't hold a pen or spoon, much less a knife so will have to figure something out.  Silver lining - can't fake this kind of injury.  Tiny lining, but there nonetheless.  Going to sleeep now, hopefully some healing will begin to make itself felt because it's starting to hurt a bit now.  Any mistakes are due to exhaustion and pain, but apologies anyway.

So until next time, please stay safe and may you not need to search for silver linings.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

#57 - Sugar, fish, lights, action!

Long day Wednesday
Wednesday was Day 2 of sugar in Patisserie.  I got so used to Patisserie being late sessions (3 - 9pm) that I completely misread my schedule.  I want to say it was because I was on painkillers, but that would be untrue.  On the other hand, although I was still (mostly) in bed at 11:45am, that was more due to the fact that I was trying to get my back into working order.  Back spasms are kind of inconvenient when you have to push, pull and carry things.  Anyway - got a text from one of the girls in class - I was late!  Major rushing (also not good with bad back) and staggered into class.  Managed to finish the bow and ribbon, but I think I didn't pull the sugar enough.  For whatever reason, I didn't cool it enough before I put it together, so the ribbons looked ok when I put them together.  A few minutes later, however...


Then the centrepiece.  A second try - I tried out a couple of things, quite unsuccessfully.  I say unsuccessful because the second try turned out worse than my first try.  Also, I managed to drip some sugar on myself - a couple of burns on my fingers.  The blister on my middle finger burst in class on Friday morning while I was cleaning my knives.  The other one is still on my pointer finger, so we'll see how cleanly they heal.


Wednesday afternoon was the official ceremony to turn on the Christmas lights for Marylebone Village.  I was in class during the time when the street was closed off, but the lights were on when I was on my way home.  I must admit that any Grinch-like tendencies which normally want to rear their heads around this time of year have been quiescent - mainly because lights at nightime are pretty, regardless of the time of the year.  They are just more effective at the moment because the sun sets before 4:15pm so it's pretty dark by the time we get out of class and head home after 9pm.  No Christmas music yet (thank goodness) but the lights, the cold wind at night and breathing air which feels cleaner because of the drop in temperature all help alleviate any slightly depressed feelings that might otherwise make us a little more like Scrooge rather than Tiny Tim.


Cuisine Thursday...
Normally they give us a little leeway when plating now.  I took this to mean that the spinach could go the plate the way I wanted - as a swirl instead of a quenelle.  Apparently not.  I presented my plate and Chef FJ said "funny."  What do you mean?  "Funny plate, funny quenelle, funny lemon...are you feeling all right?"  When a teacher says they can tell you are tired and sore - that's not a good thing.


So the dish - halibut grilled...with Bearnaise sauce and other stuff.  I gave my fish to Chef P in the production kitchen.  I didn't give him the Bearnaise sauce because it was too light in texture (and I hadn't cooked the sabayon well enough at the beginning so I had to fix it by cooking another yolk / sabayon), but at least it tasted ok.  The potato is supposed to look like a rose but having to slice pieces that thin and long, like an apple peel, almost caused a nervous breakdown in class.  Apparently the potato rose tends to do that to people.  The potato is slippery, the peel gets oddly shaped and breaks off in short pieces which makes it hard to fasten into a rose.  Then when you cook it, it expands a bit - great if well assembled, but otherwise it falls apart or looks like mine.  It's supposed to be crispy outside and creamy/soft on the inside of the rose.  The centre was ok but something was wrong with the outside, I just can't remember what.


Then we had our wine tech class. It was the Patisserie wine tech (dessert and wine pairing), which means sweet and sticky wines. I like the flavors much better but generally this is also where we run into fortified wines. Even with the (inelegant) spitting, my ears still got really hot. Good thing it ended a little early so that I could actually get to the theatre in relatively good repair.


Chicago!
Tursday night capped off a slightly crappy practical with a show in the West End - Chicago, in case the heading to this section didn't tip give it away.  It was at the Garrick Theatre, near Leister Square.  I was expecting something like Broadway but this was almost more like off-Broadway.  Some of the singing was good and some of it mediocre (America Ferrera, of Ugly Betty fame, was Roxie Hart) - oh dear..her voice isn't bad but there were a few spots where I couldn't tell what the tune was.  She can carry a tune, but it's like she dropped it for just a couple of notes here and there.  Quite an entertaining show - I'd only seen the movie before - and the staging was great.  I loved having the characters move around the orchestra / band which was sitting up on stage, as a part of the set.


Thoroughly corrupted?
Afterwards I wanted something sweet.  Very unusual, I'm not normally a big sweets person.  My parents would be surprised by this picture.  I was a bit shocked - at the size of the ice cream thing whose name I've forgotten.  Something to do with chocolate.  Anyway, managed to get LM to have a teeny, tiny taste.  Pretty good for that time of the night, although it wasn't something that I could finish on my own.

Friday - Breakfast of champions?
We had an 8am demo on Friday morning. The practical which corresponds to this demo is our mock exam next week. Similar (but not same) conditions during the mock exam. In the meantime, Chef FJ prepared a standing rib roast, a Bordelais sauce, some mushrooms and mac 'n cheese.  Let me just say, normally I hate blue cheese. There is now an exception to this rule, which is gorgonzola in mac 'n cheese. I think they did something like this at some fancy restaurant - Ducasse? - although of course they call it by it's proper name, macaroni gratin. Anyway - wow! I don't think I can post pictures from demo because I don't have permission from the school or the chef, but I have the recipe so it's definitely on my list to make at some point in the near(ish) future.


Our dish for that day's practical was a Dover sole and crayfish timbale.  It was a fish mousse, blanched crayfish and crayfish sauce encased in a fillet of sole, served with more crayfish sauce and a champagne sauce.  Maybe it's because I don't drink, but I could really taste the champagne in the sauce so I put in butter at the end to soften the alcohol.  The result:  "too much butter".  Then Chef JB looked around and asked if he had just said there was too much butter.  We couldn't believe it - on the other hand, it wasn't that the sauce was super buttery (it kind of was, but I don't eat much butter at home either) - his objection was that he couldn't really taste the champagne.  I had put some aside to add at the end but didn't, so I added the reserved champagne and asked him to taste it again (marking was over).  Nope, still too buttery.

Then it was a bit of a hurry because I had dinner plans with MD.  We were going to meet for drinks in Gerrard Street, then head to dinner in Chinatown where her man was going to join us.  But first, the fish, mousse and crayfish needed a home.  I went to my go-to guys and even got a little cuddle.  Apologies for the school uniform - Michael had himself a little laugh but I felt so disgusting and sticky after cuisine, I couldn't bear the thought of changing into my civvies without having a shower first.  Not even the croquembouche decoration helped because it was quite a warm day so we didn't cool down much between end of cuisine and leaving school altogether.  Having seen Chef NH in action, I can only see how far we all have to go before we could even begin to look as smooth as he does when he works.

Harder than it looks (or else any monkey could do it) - aka guess the chef
It's actually like that with all the chefs.  Somehow they make it all look so easy, then we go to class and things fall to pieces.  People forget about the sugar ("Geraldine, I see blue smoke!  Who's burning the sugar?" or "The monkey used scisseaux to cut that.  I don't remember the monkey tearing the foil."  Or "I didn't say it was easy.  I didn't say a 2-year old could do it, did I?"  to which the reply was "No chef - you said a 5-year old could do it with one arm tied behind his back.")  Sometimes we forgot other things ("you can't pour the sugar on the side - you can't get it out")  In any event, it always seems that the thing which looks so easy in demo then is super fiddly in practical.  Occasionally it can make you want to throw the stupid potato across the room.


I'd write more but I have been falling asleep for the last 2 paragraphs so it's time to get some sleep.  so until next time, patience, Grasshopper!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

#56 - And now for something completely different


Tuesday night - Pave d'Espadon Grille, Cannelloni de Crab et Vinaigrette Tiede au Coriandre
We had only a single practical - grilled swordfish steak (marinated in ginger, garlic and pepper first) with crab and leek cannelloni, pea puree and warm coriander (cilantro) vinaigrette.  Late start (6pm) so I had time to meet a friend for coffee, channel ET and call home, stationary shopping to get some supplies and find holiday cards that don't all say Christmas on them and fill out part of my Cuisine portfolio - although I'll have to check the numbers because I was falling asleep while I did them.

It's the first time I've made pasta dough in a while. The last few times we've made it, it was in pairs and somehow my partner usually ended up making the pasta while I did other stuff. I was glad to do it again, although I missed Chef EB's ninja move during demo when he put in a teeny tiny bit of oil. I couldn't figure out why dough was so dry...and when I checked, he told me to start again. Drat! On the other hand, I'll never make this mistake again because, as he said, I felt the pain. There was also a minor incident with my stove - somehow the burners were reversed (the hot one wasn't getting hot, the cool side was so hot the cooktop was white) - and I ended up burning my leeks for the cannelloni stuffing so I had to re-do that one as well. Still, I finished on time. The others finished a bit earlier but some of them worked in pairs and another one didn't mess up her dish, so it could have been worse. It could have been better too.

I thought I had been quite careful about the amount of cayenne pepper I put in my crab / leek stuffing. Um, not quite careful enough. It's a slow burn and initially Chef said it was a bit too spicy - then it really hit the back of his palate. I hate to see a grown man almost cry - and I have never seen it happen over my cooking.  So sad that they weren't tears of bliss...the pasta ended up fine even though I had some concerns over how dry it looked. No longer intimidated by making fresh pasta on my own, or using a pasta machine on my own either. There's a bit of hands crossing over each other to feed the dough in and to collect it out the bottom bit, but pianists deal with considerably more difficult coordination so this is humanly possible.

Anyway - it wasn't horrible.  Actually, Chef said it was good today - but maybe because he saw that I was a little bummed out that it wasn't that great.  Still, except for the too much pepper thing, the other comments were little things.  They add up but for the moment, I think I might make an acceptable home cook.


So until next time - may the tears you (or the grown man next to you) be because they are so happy and not because the food is too hot.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

#55 - Tired, confused...and a little cooked

Cause for celebration
My memory stick adaptor may have gotten laundered, but 24 hours in a plastic bag with some rice grains seems to have dried it out and I can get photos off my camera card!  So on with the post.

A little cooked - Monday - Day 1 of sugar, Session 1...
Everyone said to be ready to get burns and blisters when we started our sugar module.  I was lucky enough to get away today with a couple of minor burns (but stay tuned - we don't finish until next week) when we did our poured sugar.  I forgot to grease my measuring cup for the sugar fountain, so it stuck to the sides.  One of the porters saw what I had done wrong, so he whispered that I should also pour the sugar down the centre of the ice cubes, not the side of the measuring cup for my coral.  I thanked him profusely and got a wink in reply, especially when Chef CB told me the same thing a few minutes later, although his language was a tad more colorful.  Yes, I am forgetful.

Anyway - sugar duly poured, I have quite a few things to work on for next time.  A few unintended things happened, but over the next few days a design should take shape because we have to do one of these for our final exam - a minimum of 2 - 3 platforms because our petit fours (the truffles and sable biscuits) are supposed to be able to rest on these.




Session 2 - The Rose
This is the one where we had to pull out our gloves.  I had bought mine last term while getting other supplies.  Even better, I remembered to take them to class!  So while some of the guys were whimpering from the heat, the girls who had gloves were happily pulling our sugar to make it satiny and shiny.  The final part of pulling the sugar got to be a bit of hard work - I had to basically lay over my hands over my sugar in order to press it after I'd pulled it.  We had to make sure it was shiny and silvery, keep it under a heat lamp, then pull bits off of it to make a rose and some leaves.



Eggs and potatoes
Also, as promised in the last post, here are a couple of pictures from the poached eggs and Hollandaise yesterday - oh, and the fondant potato.  A small piece of potato (well, we'll have to cook two pieces) slowly confited in an obscene amount of butter and only enough chicken stock to keep things from sticking to the bottom of the pan.  Not that the poaching of eggs needs a lot of practice, but I forgot a couple of things so now I think I'm set.  The only thing is the potato - AM and I cooked them for about an hour and twenty minutes - and they still could have used a bit more cooking.  Thank goodness the final exam is 4 hours long.  I have to say, the egg could have been worse.  Still not my favorite with the runny yolk, but surprisingly edible.
We are all tired and confused.  I'm a bit sad because I hate being confused - I hope it passes soon because we've still got a fair amount of work left to do and I think this is when we will really need to dig in and work hard.  I'm trying to think the last time I shed a few tears over exams - hm, not since Intermediate when I wasn't sure if I'd make it through the practical exams, actually.

At least I have the comfort that my shortcrust pastry for the exam has the right consistency this time, even though it's still too thick (and it's see through when I line the moulds).  One of these days...
So until next time - may you be less tired and confused than I am.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

#54 - In which people start to imitate zombies

I just realized that Friday was the end of week 5.  Half way if you look at the term dates, but actually more if you consider that this takes into account start of term to graduation.  If you take out graduation and exams, we have less than 4 weeks left.  Ok, I just freaked myself out about the patisserie exam.  It seems like last term's Superior Patisserie group were already quite set on what they were going to do for the final.  I'm still trying to get my recipes set because the dome idea I had isn't going to work.  And the thought of having to buy all that cream, milk, etc. etc. to practice is making me quite depressed about my refrigerator and its lack of space.

There have already been a few panics by various people as they contemplate the amount of work ahead of us (less than 2 weeks to finish our Cuisine portfolios, the Patisserie ones due a week after that).  It helps if you break it down - until you realize how many components there are.  I've started doing the math just in case something goes wrong (you know they almost always do) and a decision as to be made whether to skip an element, take a time penalty or to present it but it's bad (sometimes you get partial credit, sometimes it's all-or-nothing).

In which we imitate zombies
Although the service part of the Tea Party had been quite easy, the lead up to it had had a certain urgency to it.  I asked Chef GB if he was nervous.  He asked why should he be nervous, to which I replied that he was now letting us loose on the public - mostly family and friends...but there was a rather large press table, at least one of whom has attended previous event/s before.  Chef said no, he wasn't nervous, but given that he had just given us a little talk about how we were representing the school, its reputation and how he took it seriously, I had my suspicions on that score.  In any event, you already know the details so I'll continue on with last week.

St Pierre en Croute de Chorizo, Mille-Feuille de Grenouilles aux Amandes (John Dory with chorizo crust, frog legs mille feuille with almonds)
8am Thursday morning we had another Cuisine practical. Everyone was moving in slow motion.  Apparently we still haven't quite recovered from the Tea Party and people are really starting to panic about how fast the time is going by.

I admit that I tried the cuisse the grenouilles (frog legs) in demo.  Not a big fan.  Apparently they are nice when they are fresh but for me they go into the basket marked "was on my dissecting table, won't eat".  These were frozen, which changes the texture of the meat.  I found them really mushy and kind of tasteless.  This is after they were cooked by a really amazing chef.  Needless to say I didn't taste them when I made them and neither did our teaching chef, Chef JB.  He doesn't like them either, unless they are fresh.  So this was just an exercise in French trimming the legs and frying them (longer than you think).

The John Dory was as delicious as ever, but I'm not a huge fan of the chorizo crust.  It might have been better if it had been crispy, but we had to make a call as to whether to crisp the crust (and overcook the fish) or have the fish perfect but the crust a bit soggy.  Opted for the fish, seeing as how it's the main component of the dish.  We also did a puff pastry with spinach (below and inside) and the small bits of frog leg we took off when we trimmed the bones.

The sauce is made from crabs.  Mine was very crab-y ("it's more like a really lovely crab stock.  Just too much for this early in the morning.") and I thought, quite salty.  By the way, that's after I added so much butter that I don't even know how much I put in.

Fusion?
I didn't want to cook dinner when I got home but I didn't want to eat we'd made in class exactly.  I had to buy some salad anyway, so a stop in Waitrose also resulted in buying 3 large scallops.

Oh, ew, Waitrose!
A little detour here.  I was so completely disgusted - I took a couple of days to think about it and I am still grossed out.  The lady at the checkout counter was sick.  How do I know this?  Aside from the miserable look on her face, she handed me a plastic bag to pack my own groceries - no problem.  But in the middle of scanning in my groceries, she took out a wrinkled tissue from her pocket, blew her nose, returned the tissue to her pocket and then continued to handle my groceries, among them now my raw vegetables.  I have seen other employees use hand sanitizer, but she didn't.  And then - she did it again!  I'm not sure if it was the same kleenex, but given that she kind of had to hunt for what I assume was a dry spot, I didn't quite know what to do.  It's not like I could complain to the manager - I can't imagine she would go to work when she obviously felt so crappy if she didn't need to go.  For me, it's just a disgusting ick factor, whereas I have no idea what it was for her.  I just made sure I handled my debit card and washed, peeled and/or cooked everything carefully when I got home.  One of the girls at school told me that they are supposed to have antibac by their stations though, and that it's part of the health and hygiene things people are taught.

But back to the food...these are big, fresh King scallops (Scotland?  I forget) - needed to clean off the roe.  Then I happend to glimpse panko crumbs and furikake (seaweed sprinkles, for those who didn't grow up in Hawaii, Japan or eating Japanese food) and dinner was sorted:

An attempt at something like the starter from the student event - Pan fried King scallop in furikake and panko crust with crab vinaigrette.  I used a few drops of the "crab stock" from the John Dory in a vinaigrette - quite similar to the one we did with the lobster lasagne a few weeks ago.

The salad I have been craving for who knows how long - it needed to be colorful, have contrasting textures and in this case, contrasting temperatures, so that it wouldn't be boring.  In an attempt to be organized I packed some salad (sans dressing) in a tupperware, thinking I would take it to school yesterday for lunch and how easy it would be to do this when I go back to work.  Well, yes - as long as I remember to take it with me.

Finally, dinner!  I made rice because we didn't make any starch with the John Dory (puff pastry doesn't count - I chucked it because it doesn't travel well) and I thought it might soften the flavor of the chorizo crust.  It didn't so I scraped off the chorizo, but only after I took the photo.  I can't remember what else I did to the crab sauce (maybe more dressing?) but it tasted pretty good.  Some people say they don't eat leftovers - personal preference, I have no issue with that.  I just wonder, is it leftovers if you didn't eat it?  I think it took me the time it took to cook the rice to do everything (I had to empty the dishwasher, do the other dishes and a general clean up - it didn't take 20 minutes to make scallops!)

Teamwork...
Then yesterday at 8am was another practical.  Two dishes this time, a starter and a main.  We were working in teams of 2.  It kind of threw me because I had a plan for everything and I think I could have done it on my own.  On the other hand, it wouldn't have turned out as pretty.  We were told that this was a test of teamwork (some teams were told they needed to communicate better).  ML and I had a couple of little blips but nothing that couldn't be fixed.

Feuillete de Fromage de Chevre et sa Salade d'Herbes, Miel et Fleur de Sel (Puff pastry with Goat's Cheese, herb salad, honey and Fleur de Sel)
We had Chef LM who is just amazing.  He said he didn't really care what we did as long as it was beautiful (think all this in a French accent).  The other classes who didn't have to do extras finished earlier, but I think our dishes may have also ended up a bit more creative.  ML, my partner for the day, insists she isn't creative, but she came up with the vol-au-vent idea for our goat's cheese starter.  We did the mise en place together, but plated our own individual plates.  My plate needed more salad (see the name of the dish) but he liked the little extras we did.  I sprinkled my peanut pistachio praline bits on the dish, ML put hers in the base of her vol-au-vent with the little apple compote we made - a nice little surprise, which I thought was a great idea (and wished I had copied...)

Chef LM said they do starters like ours in restaurants quite often.  Of course we were given some suggestions (like, "you can't just give me apples like that, you have to turn them" or "what else can you do with the apple peels?" or "those apples don't have any color - what will it look like on the plate?")  Suddenly what was pretty straightforward had teams discussing and scrambling to get the extras done.  We were fortunate enough that if we wanted other ingredients he was willing to arrange to have them provided so that we could stretch ourselves a bit.  We ended up with an apple infused vinaigrette on our herb salad, the apple compote, a vol-au-vent (instead of plain rectangles) and the praline/brittles.  I messed up the caramel a bit (too much butter) so I just poured it off before adding my toasted nuts.  Not great technique, but sometimes they don't care if it looks and tastes good.

In some ways this reminds me of what one of the girls was saying at the pub on Friday night after class.  She did Basic and Intermediate at the Paris school and she is here with us for the final push in Superior.  She said that London focuses a lot on technique while Paris really does amazing presentations and pushes you to be creative.  I'm glad I'm here because I find pressure thends to quashy any creativity which sometimes comes in unlooked for bursts.

Dourade en Croute de Sel, Huile de Ciboulette (Baked Sea Bream in Salt Crust, Chive Oil)
Mains:  ML made the egg white and salt meringue for our fish.  Chef LM wanted to see our fish before we took them out of the crusts so we had to make it pretty (the other groups didn't have to do this).  Chef DM happened to pop his head into the kitchen while we were doing this and he said that he used to have people pipe on the meringue (or have the pastry chefs where he worked do something to it, I've forgotten what).  In any case, ML handed me a piping bag.  I didn't feel like diving into the knife kit to get a tip so I just piped it straight from the bag.  She thought the little puffy scales were quite cute so she did hers like mine too.  Our ovens are a bit uneven (I had an oven thermometer which we use to check because the dials are so old the numbers have rubbed off and the temperature gauges aren't particularly reliable) so our crust, which should have been white, turned out golden.

We were told in demo to keep the bok choy kind of crisp, for a texture contrast from the fish. However, given it was Chef LM in the kitchen, ML and I decided we would cook our vegetables a tad longer (yes, confusing with the initials).  So there are the photos (minus the ones with the whole gutting them thing).  Chef LM wanted to know if my fish was sick because the I hadn't smoothed the salt crust over the head very well.  He also said that if we weren't good at this sort of thing, you could use a spoon to make the fish spiky...

Cheese and Wine
Back to the other bits of the week.  We had our cheese tech on...Wednesday night?  I'm not sure...then our last Cuisine wine tech yesterday - the Patisserie one is next week.

Cheese
Anyway, Tom the Cheese Guy is extremely entertaining.  He is so sweet, how enthusiastic and passionate he is about cheese, although I always worry when I see an anticipatory, gleeful smile on his face.  I have learned that the cheese making the rounds is going to be particularly stinky / strong.  Some of the gems from our cheese lecture:
  • Calling the Cloche (goat's cheese from Touraine - see left) "utterly beautiful" in reference to its rippled texture which looked like the ridges on a brain to me;
  • "decent, sexy cheese" (cause for a ripple of amusement through the class);
  • "become one in unholy decay" in reference to his love of cheese and what he hopes will happen to him upon his demise and being interred with...Roquefort? - resulting in outright laughter (in a nice way);
  • Roquefort being "carried down to limestone caves and being stroked by little Frenchmen" (also how Stilton should be treated);
  • "If they're calling for wine, they're not really English [cheeses].  They're probably a Frenchman in disguise".
Brillat Savarain - triple cream
also a party favorite (mild, creamy)
Vacherin - seasonal, stinky
one of my favorites





Wine
This one was more fun by virtue of the fact that we got to eat canapes prepared by the production kitchen with the wine to test food and wine pairings.  I enjoy food but the wine thing is a very slow process, although considerably facilitated by the past few months here.  View of canapes to the right - on the overhead mirror, which is why it looks upside down.

Have come to the conclusion that I shouldn't do tasting for food and wine.  The only pairings I thought were good were the ones everyone agreed on.  Those who know about wine could talk about complexity, etc. etc.  Sometimes they went well, sometimes it tasted atrocious - a suggestion was made that I ought to practice more drinking.  Hmmm, usually classes don't encourage you to drink...photo of my favorite on the right (of course - dessert, fortified, very sweet...)

All the sitting in class made me very twitchy so after a quick stop at the pub after our wine lecture, I took myself off to ballet class.  Sometimes it doesn't feel like I'm working as hard as I could in class - but that doesn't mean that it doesn't still hurt the next day.  I spent last night stretching out from the unaccustomed exercise on Friday night and the extensive walking on Saturday.

Saturday excursions
Yesterday was a trip to see more of London's sights. In this case - a snack at a market near Bermondsey on Maltby St where LM introduced me to the best grilled cheese sandwich ever. I have an aversion to sourdough bread because it tastes like it's rotten - but wow! I seem to have missed the list of ingredients, but here they are, preparing the sandwiches, with a view of LM's excited face - she's been talking about these sandwiches for a couple of weeks now.  After the grilled cheese that changed my view on sourdough, we had a bit of a walk around to see what else was around.  Maltby St market didn't seem to have many places open but the ones which were, seemed to be quite foodie heaven-y.  (Yes, I know that's not a word - but if it got my point across, who cares?)  One of the things we saw was this grocery stall which was much more like a shop - quite big and had a bunch of things which I had been looking for in other places but haven't seen in a while - like micro greens (remember my fish tacos a while back?) and these interesting looking mushrooms.  No idea what they are, I couldn't see a sign.  I was just enamored of the lavender color on something which looked a little like a cross between girolles, shiitake, oyster and who knows what else.

Having seen most of the Maltby Stree market, we went to Camden where we only saw a fraction of the markets.  We started near this canal thing where they have a bunch of food stalls and a small indoor section which reminded me of some of the shopping arcades in Sydney.  The weeping willows are still green and we had to pass under a hanging curtain of the branches to cross the little bridge to the other side.  (Q:  Why did the Anna cross the bridge?  A:  To get to the food on the other side.)

It was even prettier because they had strung up lights, which were particularly effective as it got darker.  It was pretty to see all the lights on as the overcast day got darker (the sun is now down by 4:30pm and getting earlier every day).  Some sections have names (The Stables; Designer Row?) - generally it seemed like similar things were sold in the same general location, like the little place with furniture stalls, which were more like shops, the stalls off the main street which sold similar looking dresses/sweaters/sweatshirts, the food section...I kept thinking of it like a fair because of all crowds and the food.  The art and the crafts were much better though.  I hope to make it back to do a little Christmas shopping, but we will see how the time goes.  It is rapidly slipping away and I still have a lot to do.

Early to bed
I think we walked for about 5 hours straight - I was too afraid to sit down near the end of the day because I was afraid I wouldn't be able to get up again.  I was in bed by about 8:15 with a Dr Watson and Mr Holmes, never having read all of their adventures consecutively.  They await me patiently as I finish this particular entry.

I don't have photos of my tartelette with poached egg and Hollandaise sauce (which turned out a strange gray color - I will have to ask the chefs why it looks so weird) because I accidentally washed the memory stick adaptor for my camera with my laundry.  The Hollandaise didn't split!  Cause for a mental happy dance even though it was a little thin, except still wondering about the color...photos later, once I manage to get things sorted out.  Late start tomorrow - Holmes and Watson are calling me, so I must go.

So until next time, may you enjoy your little successes as much as I have enjoyed mine.