If you were ordering dessert, which would you choose?
Angel Food CakeBrownies
Lemon Meringue PieVanilla Cake with Chocolate Icing
Strawberry ShortcakeChocolate Cake with Chocolate Icing
Ice CreamCarrot Cake
Dessert ProfileAngel Food CakeSweet, loving, cuddly. You love all warm and fuzzy items. A little nutty at times. Sometimes you need an ice cream cone at the end of the day. Others perceive you as being childlike and immature at times.
BrowniesYou are adventurous, love new ideas, are a champion of underdogs and a slayer of dragons. When tempers flare up, you whip out your saber. You are always the oddball with a unique sense of humor and direction. You tend to be very loyal.
Lemon Meringue PieSmooth, sexy and articulate with your hands, you are an excellent after- dinner speaker and a good teacher. But don’t try to walk and chew gum at the same time. A bit of a diva at times, but you have many friends.
Vanilla Cake with Chocolate IcingFun-loving, sassy, humorous. Not very grounded in life; very indecisive and lack motivation. Everyone enjoys being around you, but you are a practical joker. Others should be cautious in making you mad. However, you are a friend for life.
Dessert Profile (cont)Strawberry Short CakeRomantic, warm, loving. You care about other people and can be counted on in a pinch. You tend to melt. You can be overly emotional and annoying at times.
Chocolate Cake with Chocolate IcingSexy, always ready to give and receive. Very creative, adventurous, ambitious and passionate. You have a cold exterior but are warm on the inside. Not afraid to take chances. Will not settle for anything average in life. Love to laugh.
Ice CreamYou like sports, whether it be baseball, football, basketball or soccer. If you could, you would like to participate, but you enjoy watching sports. You don’t like to give up the remote control. You tend to be self centered and high maintenance.
Carrot CakeYou are a very fun loving person, who like to laugh. You are fun to be with. People like to hang out with you. You are a very warm hearted person and a little quirky at times. You have many loyal friends.
Types of Strengtheners• Bread flour – high in gluten (protein – that when kneaded
becomes elastic and stretchy)• Cake flour – low in gluten, pure white in color• Pastry flour – not as strong as bread flour, not as delicate as
cake flour• All purpose – falls between pastry and bread flour• Purpose: Provide Stability
Other Ingredients What do they do?• Fat- butter, shortening, oil – flavor, freshness, moisture• Sweetener- Sugars, honey – flavor, tenderness, color• Flavorings – Cocoa, spices, salt, extracts – taste and color• Leaveners – baking powder, baking soda, yeast, air –
makes food item rise• Thickeners- gelatin, flour, starch, eggs - thickens• Liquid – water, milk, cream, honey, butter – moisture,
develops gluten• Additives – Food coloring – adds color
Bakers Percentage
Weight of ingredient ------------------------------ = % of ingredient
Weight of flour x 100%
For Example:
10 lb of flour x 20% = 2 lb sugar
Sifting
Why sift? Adds air, removes lumps & impuritiesAlternatives to sifting? Weigh ingredients, fluff if
measuring.
Lean Dough vs Rich Dough• Lean dough – flour, water, yeast, salt – little or no sugar or fat.
French Bread or Hard Rolls are examples.• Rich dough – fat, sugar, eggs, milk, etc… Richer texture. Rolls,
Danish, cinnamon rolls are examples.
Sponge Method
• Mix all the yeast, ½ the liquid and ½ the flour. Let rise until double. Add remaining ingredients.
• Makes a lighter texture and more unique flavor
Starter• A mixture of water, yeast and
flour that has been fermented until it has a sour smell.
• Sourdough Bread
Proofing• Once the dough is in the pan – it proof or rises a second time. This
should be at 95-115 degrees. Should double in size before baking.
10 Steps to Bread• Scaling – measure accurately• Mixing & Kneading – develop gluten• Fermentation – yeast acts on sugars to produce carbon dioxide and
alcohol. CO2 gets caught in gluten and pushes up• Punching Down – expel and redistribute gas pockets• Portioning – divide into equal parts• Rounding – smooth into round balls, outer layer of gluten becomes
smooth and holds in gasses• Shaping – change form as desired• Proofing – raise second time – double in size• Baking – usually about 400 degrees, golden brown color• Cooling & Storing – remove from pans, cool at room temperature –
store in moisture proof bags after completely cooled
What is Quick Bread?• Snack or dessert that is quick to make• Biscuits, scones, muffins• Uses chemicals to leaven not yeast – rising is not required.
Difference?
• Dough• Stiff, but pliable
• Batter• Semi-liquid, usually thin
enough to be poured. Typically has more fat and sugar than a dough
Preparation Methods• Creaming – fat and sugar are creamed together cake is an
example• Foaming – foam of whole eggs, yolks or white provide
structure, as in angel food cake• Straight dough – all ingredients at once – corn bread or
muffins are examples• Two-Stage – ½ of liquid is added and mixed. Then remaining
liquid is gradually added. Batter with a high sugar ratio.
Biscuit Method• Rub or cut fat into the flour until the mixture is mealy in
appearance. Sometimes it is briefly kneaded, but not for long – will get too tough.
Why Icing?• Improve qualities by protecting the cake• Contribute flavor and richness• Improve appearance
Types of Icing
• Buttercream – sugar & fat (butter is best – shortening has a greasy mouth feel) • Foam – boiled icing, made with hot sugar syrup• Fondant – sugar, water and glucose, smooth• Fudge – cocoa, sugar, butter and milk or water, use while
warm (Texas Sheet Cake)• Ganache – chocolate and cream • Glaze – corn syrup, fruit, chocolate, really thin, usually
poured, can use heated jam, looks shiney• Royal – Dries brittle, sugar and egg whites – gingerbread
houses
Steamed Pudding • Batter that is more stable than a soufflé, very moist• Examples – baked custard and chocolate sponge pudding
Soufflés• Batter that is lightened with beaten egg white and baked. Not
stable. Soufflé rises and moisture evaporates and the batter sets – can fall easily.
Pie
• 3-2-1 – 3 parts flour, 2 parts fat, 1 part water• Overhanding creates a tough crust – don’t work the gluten!!!• Baking Blind: preparing a pre-baked
pie shell. Why would you do that?
Successful blind baking – dock the bottom with a fork, cover with parchment and use weights to hold down the bottom (baking weights, dry rice or beans)
Springform Pan• Straight sided pan with removable sides so you can get the cake out
with destroying it.
Roll-in Dough• Used to make Danish, croissants and puff pastry. • Roll dough, spread with butter, fold in thirds, chill. Roll spread with
butter, fold in thirds, etc…hundreds of layers when done.
Other Pastry Doughs• Puff Pastry – Danish – may layers• Phyllo – super thin dough – layered when used with butter-
baklava• Pate a choux –
cream puffs and eclairs
Cookies
• Bagged: Pastry Bag - Macaroons• Bar: Bake strips of dough, then cut - Biscotti • Dropped: Spoon or Scoop - Chocolate Chip• Icebox: Rolled in Log, Chilled and Sliced -
Chocolate Icebox• Molded: Rolled in hands - Peanut Butter• Rolled: Stiff dough, rolled and cut - Sugar• Sheet: Batter covers entire pan - Brownies
Chocolate History• Mayans believed it was a divine food from the gods.• French thought it to be a dangerous drug• Love, romance
Chocolate preparation• Comes from cocoa beans from
cacao trees.
• Roast cocoa beans – dry fermentation
Continued• Loosen outer shell and crack bean
shown: shells, used in gardens
• Beans are broken into small piecescalled nibs
Continued• Crushed into paste – completely
unsweetened, called chocolateliquour
• Pressed to separate the liquid from the solid. Liquid is cocoa butter. This can be combined with chocolate liquour to make eating chocolate.
Types of ChocolateType Description FormChocolate, bitter sweet Solid chocolate 35-50%
chocolate liquor, 15% cocoa butter and 35-50% sugar
Blocks, bars, chunks & chips
Chocolate liquor Chocolate flavored portion of the chocolate
Blocks or bars
Chocolate semi-sweet Solid chocolate about 45% chocolate liquor, 15% cocoa butter and 40% sugar
Blocks, bars, chunks & chips
Chocolate, unsweetened 90% chocolate liquor, 5% cocoa butter, maybe 5% sugar
Blocks or bars
Cocoa Only 10-25% of cocoa butter remains
Powdered
Cocoa butter Vegetable fat portion of chocolate, added for chocolate
Wrapped in plastic at room temperature
Tasting Chocolate• Cleanse your palate• Chocolate needs to be room temperature• Allow the chocolate to dissolve in your mouth – don’t bite or chew• Describe what you taste at the beginning, during and after
Storage• Cool, dry place. • Wrap carefully• Refrigeration causes moisture to condense. May need to
refrigerate in hot humid weather.• Bloom – cocoa butter has melted and recrystallized on the
surface. No change in flavor, but looks funny.• Should keep several months.
Tempering Chocolate• Why?• So it will harden evenly and have a good shine • Can be purchased already tempered
• How?• Finely chop 1 pound of chocolate. • Put in a heat proof bowl set over a pan of simmering water.
Don’t let the water near the chocolate.• Melt the chocolate to 105 degrees, stirring. Stir in more
chocolate until melted. Keep stirring until the temperature drops to 87 degrees. Place back over simmering water. Heat back to 92 over hot water. Re-heat to 92 if it gets too thick.
Frozen Desserts• Ice cream – Vanilla must have a minimum of 10% milk fat
other flavors 8%• Quality Ice Cream – Custard (cream, milk, eggs)• Gelato – Italian Ice Cream no eggs, whole milk not cream• Sherbet – fruit puree, milk and/or egg• Sorbet – No dairy just fruit with sweeteners• Frozen Yogurt – Yogurt – can be low-fat or non-fat
Poached Fruit and Tortes• Fruit with sugar, spices and wine or water – cook until tender• The more sugar the more firm the fruit will be
• Torte – many layer cake filled with buttercream or jam
Dessert Sauces and Creams• Crème anglaise – vanilla flavored custard sauce made from
milk, egg yolks and sugar• Coulis – Fruit sauce – cooked lightly to activate thickener,
strain seeds thicken with cornstarch or arrowroot, don’t cook much – fresh fruit taste
• Fruit Syrup – cooked sugar based juice – sugar is the thickener• Caramel Sauce – Sugar and butter sometimes with cream,
cook to change color and thicken• Butter-Scotch Sauce – Caramel with vanilla and brown sugar• Sabayon – Foam of egg yolk, sugar and wine – can not be held• Pastry Cream – filling for eclairs, eggs, sugar, flour or
cornstarch, milk and cream – this is a basic is many kitchens.• Bavarian Cream – vanilla sauce, gelatin and whipped cream.
Used as a filling.