Buttercream

So this week I thought I’d talk a little bit about buttercream, since we make so much of it at the patisserie. It is a real tricky thing to make, at least in the beginning. For those who don’t know how it is made, you first have to boil sugar with a real teeny tiny amount of water, just enough to get the sugar wet basically. Then you have to watch the boiling sugar and make sure that it does not crystallize on the sides of the pot. You can tell when it starts to do this because it looks like little grains of sand on the sides or it gets kind of glossy. If this happens, you have to quickly brush it away with water.

You want to bring the sugar up to a boil, to about 230 degrees before you start whipping the eggs you will need for the recipe. Then, going back to the boiling sugar, once it reaches 238 degrees, you add it to the still whipping eggs then let the two of them go on whipping until they cool down. Once they are cool, you can start to add the butter.

Then you get a product that looks like this.

Buttercream is super tricky and if you make it at home be careful and be sure to have the proper equipment (such as a thermometer and a kitchenaid appliance or something similiar). Homemade buttercream is worth the effort though. It is light and delicious and once I have the boiling sugar down, I will be able to make this decadent topping myself! 


Carrot cake baseball! Can’t go wrong there.


Cannoli cupcakes anyone?



Lovely raspberry white chocolate cake that I can assure you is delicious.

Lovely raspberry white chocolate cake that I can assure you is delicious.


Petit fours are a very diligent process. I personally did not make them but these delicious morsels were made yesterday and I got to watch HOW they were made so now I get to share with the world. You bake cake, let’s say for the sake of this conversation it’s a red velvet cake, very thin on several sheet pans. You let the cake cool then you layer it: cake, buttercream frosting, cake, buttercream frosting, cake. Finally comes a layer of fondant icing which is carefully drizzled over the topas to cover the entire cake. Then comes the design and there you have it, a petit four!

Petit fours are a very diligent process. I personally did not make them but these delicious morsels were made yesterday and I got to watch HOW they were made so now I get to share with the world. You bake cake, let’s say for the sake of this conversation it’s a red velvet cake, very thin on several sheet pans. You let the cake cool then you layer it: cake, buttercream frosting, cake, buttercream frosting, cake. Finally comes a layer of fondant icing which is carefully drizzled over the topas to cover the entire cake. Then comes the design and there you have it, a petit four!


Maple bacon cupcakes. Need I say more? They sold out the day we made them.

Maple bacon cupcakes. Need I say more? They sold out the day we made them.


On Thursday I learned how to make flourless chocolate cake. First I’d like to note that making any baked good without flour is really awesome to me because nearly everything else I can think of requires at least some type of flour (be it almond flour or some other type of specialty flour).

You have to separate the eggs at some point and whip the egg whites (which the pictures illustrate) so that you get fluffy white peaks and fold it into this chocolatey goodness very gently. This is very important, you have to make sure there are no white streaks but at the same time you don’t want to be harsh with the batter and over mix it or you lose the airiness. It becomes this fluffy light mousse-like batter that you bake. It puffs up like a souffle and deflates slightly when it cools but stills looks awesomely delicious. I love how it’s flourless. 


Beautiful.

Beautiful.


This was a big week for Kirsten, she had to made a special cake for a wedding rehearsal and as you can see, it turned out amazing! It took several hours of dedicated work but she got through it and I decided it had to be featured in a post on tumblr.