Bread

I didn’t have time last week to blog or do much of anything. I was busy, busy all week. But one thing I did is bake some bread. I didn’t have class this past Monday but last week we spent the morning making bread from scratch and it was so much fun. I’ll be doing this a lot more in the future.

Challah Bread

First we made some Challah. I’ve actually never had Challah before but I’ve seen recipes for it online and I’ve wanted to try making it for a long time, so I was excited about this. We did three-strand braids for both loaves and I topped one with some black sesame seeds and left the other plain. This bread didn’t last long at my house. It was a rich, soft, chewy bread that was good hot with a little butter. It was a lot easier to make than I thought it would be so I’ll be making this again soon.

Baguette

Then we took the poolish we had started the week before and made baguettes. These are a good dense bread with a nice crispy crust and they would make a really good sandwich. I liked these a lot but not as much as the Challah.

So, bread was fun and now I can’t wait to take my bread class next fall. Next week in baking we’re doing laminated dough and making pinwheels and turnovers and the week after that is pies. Yum.

I had my savory cooking class today and we broke down chicken, made stock, and then we took some of the chicken breast and sautéed it, made a supreme sauce and served it with our choice of starch and a vegetable. I made some boiled new potatoes with a little salt, pepper and fresh parsley and stir-fried some asparagus with lemon juice and a tiny bit of garlic. The potatoes and asparagus were good but I didn’t taste the chicken. The sauce was pretty good, though. It’s really hard being a vegetarian in that class. Not just because I don’t get to taste much of the food but I haven’t cooked meat in a long time and it’s just as gross as I remember. The class is fun, though. Next week in that class we’re doing sandwiches and bound salads (these are salads that have a thick dressing, like a potato or chicken salad or cole slaw). Maybe I can sneak a vegetarian meal in there.

Now, I’m also blocking my shawl today and I’ll try to post something about it Friday.

What a Week

I feel like I’ve been running a thousand miles an hour this week, it has flown. Today in school I made some Béchamel sauce that I turned into Alfredo sauce and served up with some fettuccini and pan fried chicken (my cooking partner made the chicken and I didn’t eat it). The Alfredo sauce was delicious and super easy to make. I actually felt a little like this:

noidea

the whole time I was cooking, but it came out okay. Today I learned that Béchamel sauce is totally not as hard to make as it looks when you read the directions.

Monday was a whole other story. Get me baking and I’m fine, in the savory part of the kitchen I’m lost even though I cook at home all the time.

Double Chocolate Bread Pudding

Case in fact: double chocolate bread pudding. This stuff is yummy. It’s like a super rich, moist chocolate cake. Actually, it started out as a dense fudgy cake that was broken into chunks and soaked in chocolate custard sauce, topped with cinnamon and sugar and chocolate chips and then baked. Holy crap this stuff is amazing. It’s a little crisp on top and then moist and soft inside. I could eat a huge pan of it every day.

I am still loving school. Everyday after class I come home and I’m so happy and so full of adrenaline that I just can’t sit down, so I’ve been cooking at home, too. Small things usually, heating up something quick for lunch Monday and then a big pot of soup yesterday. I finally have the feeling that I’m where I belong and I never would have dreamed it would be in a kitchen.

I’ve been knitting at night, too, and I’ll try to have some kind of update Friday. Have a great rest of the week!

First Day in the Kitchen

Strawberry Rhubarb Cobbler

Today was our first day in the kitchen in my baking class. I had so much fun, it was just what I expected. We made a chocolate cake that we’re going to use to make bread pudding next week and then we made strawberry rhubarb cobblers with pâte brisée crust. Everything was made from scratch and it took a long time. Plus there were tons of dishes to wash (yes, we wash our own dishes) and a huge mess to clean up when we were done. Honestly, the dishes weren’t that bad, but there were a lot of of them. I had a blast cooking, I always do. I’m really starting think I found something that fits. I’ve been trying to find something I really love to do for a long and I never dreamed it would be any kind of cooking but here I am.

I’m out of school tomorrow and then I have my cooking class Wednesday and we’re starting stocks, sauces, and knife skills. I think we’re going to make soup, too. I’m really looking forward to it.

Have Some Cupcakes

I have things that I really need to be doing this week but I’m putting it all off, I just have no motivation. Yesterday I needed to go buy my uniforms and books but I made cupcakes instead and today I had planned on cleaning out my closet but I’m washing some Shetland fleece. I know that I could do both, wash the fleece while I’m cleaning my closet but I don’t want to.

Anyway I made some really yummy cupcakes yesterday so if you would like to make them, too, here’s how.

Dickinson's Creme Coconut Curd

This little jar is the secret to these cupcakes. I filled them with this coconut crème curd and it is so good, it’s all creamy and smooth and there are these tiny bits of coconut, yum. I found it at the grocery store with the jelly.

Cupcakes

Here’s my finished cupcakes. I didn’t even try to frost them neatly, this frosting didn’t want to stick to the tops of the cupcakes so I just kind of piled it on and smoothed it out a little. They still taste good.

Pineapple Cupcakes with Coconut Curd Filling and Vanilla Frosting with Toasted Coconut

First, make the cupcakes. These are adapted from Who You Callin’ Cupcake? by Michelle Garcia

Ingredients:

  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1 2/3 (that’s one and two thirds, it looks weird to me) cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 1/2 cup milk, divided
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 Tablespoon vanilla extract
  • About a cup of pineapple tidbits or you could used crushed pineapple. Next time I make these, I’m going to use a little more pineapple.

How to:

  1. Preheat oven to 350° and line a cupcake pan with liners.
  2. In a medium bowl, mix together the sugar, flour, baking powder and salt.
  3. Add the butter and mix (I did this by hand, you can use a mixer) until the butter is completely mixed in and there is a mealy consistency. It’s going to be dry, like sand.
  4. Add 1/4 cup of the milk and mix slowly to make a dough-like paste. This should break up any lumps that are forming.
  5. In a separate bowl, combine the eggs with the rest of the milk and the vanilla, and slowly pour this mixture into the batter. Mix for about ten seconds with a mixer or by hand until combined.
  6. Fold in the pineapple.
  7. Fill the cups in the cupcake pan about 3/4 full and bake for ten to fifteen minutes. The cupcake tops will slightly golden.
  8. Let them cool.
  9. This will make 12 cupcakes

Make the Frosting:

  • 4 Tablespoons unsalted butter, room temp.
  • 2 cups confectioners’ sugar (powdered sugar)
  • 2 Tablespoons milk
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt
  1. Mix everything together until light and fluffy, easy.
  2. I don’t know where I got this recipe, I found it on a post-it in a drawer in my kitchen. Yay, organization!

Toast the coconut:

  1. Preheat your oven to 400°.
  2. Spread out a handful of coconut and let it cook for about five minutes, then stir and let it cook for five more minutes. Repeat as necessary until your coconut is toasted.

Put it all together:

  1. Fill the cupcakes with the coconut curd using whatever method works for you. I poked a hole in the top of my cupcakes with a spoon handle and used a Ziplock bag to pipe some of the coconut curd into the middle of the cupcakes. If you have a piping bag use that.
  2. Plop some frosting on the tops of the cupcakes.
  3. Top with toasted coconut.
  4. Eat the extra toasted coconut because you made way too much. That could just be me, though.

And that is it. The coconut curd needs to be refrigerated so I would keep these cupcakes in the refrigerator, not that they’re going to last very long.

Candy!

Hey! I made some candy. Wanna know how to make it, too? Let me tell you. These are a no-bake version of cake balls. You heard me, no-bake. They are good. They have a different texture from regular cake balls but you don’t have to bake your cake first. And that makes them awesome.

I didn’t get pictures of all the steps, deal with it. These things are so easy to make you could do it blind folded standing on your head. Not really, but they’re easy.

First things first, get a cake mix. Any cake mix, any flavor. Dump it in a bowl. Mix in a can of frosting. Mix it good. It should look like Play-Doh. Pinch off a bit and roll it in a ball. It will look like this picture below. I used a Funfetti cake mix with creamy vanilla frosting.

Making Candy

Now, put your balls in the refrigerator for about 30 minutes or the freezer for about ten. You want them to be hard.  Dip them in some melted chocolate or almond bark and let them sit up for a while. Then stuff them all in your mouth at once. Well, don’t do that. You might be tempted to, though.

Finished My Candy!

And that’s that. These have sprinkles ‘cause sprinkles are cool. Easy peasy.